Anna Augusta Truitt

Anna Augusta Truitt (1837 – June 9, 1920) was an American philanthropist, temperance reformer, and essayist. For many years, she provided services for the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), acting as delegate from the local to the district, state and national conventions.[1] Her essays, addresses and reports showed her to be a talented writer.[2] Benevolence was said to be the one underlying trait of her character.[3]

Anna Augusta Truitt
"A woman of the century"
BornAnna Augusta Pattin
1837 (1837)
Canaan, New Hampshire, United States
Died (aged 83)
Muncie, Indiana, United States
Resting placeBeech Grove Cemetery, Muncie, Indiana, U.S.
OccupationPhilanthropist, reformer, essayist
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
Alma materCollege Hills Seminary
Literary movementTemperance
Spouse
John P. Ramsey
(
m. 1860; died 1864)
Joshua Truitt
(
m. 1864; died 1894)
RelativesSalmon P. Chase
John Greenleaf Whittier

Signature

Early years and education

Anna Augusta Pattin was born in Canaan, New Hampshire, in 1837. Her father was Daniel G. Pattin. Her mother, Ruth Chase Whittier, was related to Governor Salmon P. Chase and the poet John Greenleaf Whittier.[4]

At an early age, her father emigrated to Upstate New York, where she was educated by private tutors. She subsequently spent two years in College Hills Seminary.[5][4]

Career

She married John P. Ramsey in 1860.[1] They settled in the South, where they resided until the American Civil War, when, on account of diametrical differences of opinion between themselves and the inhabitants, they returned to the North, but at a large sacrifice of personal and other property. Here, in 1864, Mr. Ramsey died.[1][5]

Joshua Truitt

On May 17, 1864, in Mansfield, Ohio, she married Joshua Truitt (1830–1894), a business man of Muncie, Indiana. He brought with him two children, Lola and Stanley, his first wife having died the previous December.[1] The family made their home in Muncie, where Truitt became actively engaged in benevolent and philanthropic work. During the Civil War, she was untiring in her labors in behalf of the Union Army, preparing bandages and scraping lint for the use of the surgeons, and collecting provisions, clothing, blankets, and hundreds of other things useful and needful to the soldiers.[1] She marched, sang and prayed with them.[5]

After the war, she became engaged in the work of the WCTU. She served as president of the Delaware County, Indiana WCTU for several years,[2] and was selected by the Union to represent them in state and district meetings, as well as in the national convention in Tennessee in November l887.[6] She was the Indiana temperance delegate to the International Sunday School Convention held at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in June 1890, and her report of its proceedings was accepted without alteration or amendment, which spoke well for her accuracy, lucidity, and logical trend of thought.[1] In the WCTU, she adhered to the principle of nonpartisan, nonsectarian work. In a blue-ribbon temperance club, she was an untiring worker and spared neither time, effort nor means in advancing its interests. She was also an advocate of suffrage, believing that woman's vote would go far towards the cause of temperance.[5][2]

For years, she was identified with the industrial school of Muncie, serving as an officer, as well as performing duties in its meetings and those pertaining to the executive department. Her presence was familiar in the homes of the poor, carrying sympathy, counsel and needed food and clothing.[5] In this connection, there was probably no other one woman in Muncie known to more children than Truitt, who was constantly performing for them some work of kindness.[1]

Personal life

She had no children of her own, but she took into her family the four children of her deceased brother, taking on the role of their mother. [5][1] For many years, Truitt was an attendant of the Presbyterian church.[1] She died June 9, 1920, and was buried at Beech Grove Cemetery, in Muncie.[7]

gollark: Well, it sounds very triangular of him to do that, we should *deal with* him.
gollark: Rust code actually uses negative RAM.
gollark: Rust programs are literally incapable* of having bugs.
gollark: Oh, right, my *religion* is Rust.
gollark: I'm a worshipper of Athe, who doesn't exist.

References

  1. A. W. Bowen & Company 1894, p. 483.
  2. Logan 1912, p. 690.
  3. A. W. Bowen & Company 1894, p. 484.
  4. A. W. Bowen & Company 1894, p. 482.
  5. Willard & Livermore 1893, p. 724.
  6. Jimerson, Blouin & Isetts 1977, p. 63.
  7. "Mrs. Anna A. Truitt Dies". The Star Press. June 10, 1920. p. 16. Retrieved January 6, 2020 via Newspapers.com.

Attribution

Bibliography

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