CLARA COOK HELVIE: UNITARIAN MINISTRY PIONEER
1876-1969
By Catherine F. Hitchings, Author
of Universalist and Unitarian Women Ministers
Clara
Cook Helvie was ordained in a period when there was decided
prejudice against women as Unitarian ministers.
She was born in Chaumont, New York January 24, 1876 to James
H. and Marge (Beckwith) Cook. She was descended from eleven
Mayflower pilgrims and was a cousin of William Howard Taft.
Her mother died when she was very young, and her father became
a recluse in the Adirondack Mountains.
Clara Cook lived with relatives who renamed her Clara Bailey,
she attended public schools in Buffalo, New York and Sunday
School at the First Unitarian Church. Despite many difficulties,
she obtained a good education, graduating from Canton's Business
College in Buffalo and attending Emerson College of Oratory
in Boston in 1901. She worked for many years as a secretary.
One job took her to Puerto Rico, and upon her return she collected
a substantial gift of books for the San Juan Public Library.
She married Charles Elmer Helvie April 3, 1902
in Newton, Massachusetts. For the next eight years the Helvies
lived in Manila P.I. and travelled in Japan and China. She edited
the women's page of The Manila Times, then the leading
paper in the Philippinespublished a series of articles on
old institutions in the city, directed the erection of a soldiers'
monument at Fort William commemorating the Spanish-American War,
raised a hospital fund for charged soldiers, and was a social
activist.
She returned to the United States in 1910 and worked as Correspondence
Clerk for the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company
in Buffalo.
Widowed by 1916, she attended Meadville Theological School
and graduated in 1917. For five summers she returned for postgraduate
study and attended Harvard Summer School of Theology for one
summer. When she applied for ordination to the Unitarian ministry,
she found that no woman had been ordained into the denomination
since Rowena Morse Mann in 1906, and many men were adverse to
women ministers despite the fact that thirty-nine women had
been ordained since 1871. She was told, essentially, that women
hadn't contributed any worthwhile work except Margaret Bowers
Barnard. This highly conservative opinion discounted the important
work of the Iowa sisterhood in establishing societies in the
midwest and untold other contributions made by women over the
previous forty-six years.
Clara Cook Helvie's case was finally supported by several prominent
men at the General Conference in Montreal in 1917, and several
churches offered to ordain her. She accepted the offer of the
Wheeling, West Virginia Unitarian church and was ordained there
at the age of forty-one. She worked continuously, except for
about one and one-half years, until 1936 when the Depression
overtook her; as was the case in many other fields, men often
had first choice of jobs. She felt there was "an unreasoned
opposition to women ministers" and continued: "Of course a woman
gets only the most difficult posts, but this challenge adds
zest to the work.... I can think of no greater blessing that
could come to them than to have a group of mature women ministers
take over their pulpits for a few years and nurse them back
to life and service. When that time comes, however, like all
adolescents, they will grow too superior for 'mother's ministrations,'
and will long for a man minister."
She was minister for the parishes of Wheeling, West Virginia
1917-1921, Moline, Indiana 1921-1926, Westboro 1927, Middleboro,
Massachusetts 1930-1936, and Milford, New Hampshire 1938-1942.
She retired April 1, 1942.
Clara pursued her interest in women ministers in the 1920's
by compiling a manuscript titled "Unitarian Women Ministers"
which was never published. Thirty years later she collected
short biographies of Universalist women ministers. She corresponded
with many who were still alive at that time, asking for autobiographical
information and seeking their answers to questions on what,
if any, difficulties they had found as women ministers and would
they recommend it as a career for other women. Clara Cook Helvie
herself felt that a young woman would be "greatly handicapped,
even if she should secure a church, but that a mature older
woman with varying experience to draw upon and "no competing
interests" (presumably including husband and children) would
probably have a much better chance of making a meaningful life.
She worked on many denominational committees, and was the only
woman minister to take part in the dedication service of the
Unitarian Headquarters at 25 Beacon Street and of the First
Church in Washington, D.C. She was active outside the church
also.
Clara Cook Helvie was keen minded, warm and generous. After
retirement she lived in Middleboro until hardening of the arteries
necessitated her hospitalization at the Taunton State Hospital.
She bequeathed most of her estate to the American Unitarian
Association, the income of which was to assist needy ministers.
She died in her eighty-third year, July 22, 1969.
From The Journal of
the Universalist Historical Society, Volume X, 1975.
In contrast to the foregoing situation,
Helen Cohen, minister of the First Parish in Lexington, Massachusetts,
tells of hearing stories of children now asking whether boys can
be ministers. Dr. Cohen herself had wanted to be a minister when
she was 15, but when she applied to enter divinity school in 1977,
she had never even seen a woman minister. Now, at the beginning
of the twenty-first century, there are more active female ministers
in fellowship in the Unitarian Universalist Association than male
ministers. Nevertheless, from 1900 to 1917, when Clara Cook Helvie
was ordained as a Unitarian minister, the number of women ministers
ordained was zero.
"Leaping From Our Spheres: The Impact of Women
on the Unitarian Universalist Ministry" edited by Gretchen
Woods (Boston: UUMA CENTER Committee, 2000).
Notable Universalist and Unitarian
Women (Malden, MA: Unitarian Universalist Women's Heritage
Society, 7th Edition, 2000).
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