Connaught Marshner

Connaught Coyne Marshner (born 1951), also known as Connie Marshner, is an American religious conservative political activist and commentator, associated with the second wave of the American New Right. She was executive vice-president of the Free Congress Foundation[1], and chair of Ronald Reagan's Family Policy Advisory Board.[2] She is the author of Blackboard Tyranny and Decent Exposure: How to Teach Your Children About Sex, among other works.

Connaught Marshner
Born
Connaught Coyne

1951 (age 6869)
Other names
  • Connaught Coyne Marshner
  • Connie Marshner
Alma materUniversity of South Carolina
OccupationPolitical activist
Movement
Spouse(s)
(
m. 1973)
Children5

Political activism

Marshner's political career began in 1971 at the University of South Carolina, where she was heavily involved in Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative political organization. After college, she became assistant to the editor of its magazine, the New Guard. She wrote an influential critique of Walter Mondale's Child Development Bill that eventually led to its defeat.[1] In 1973 she joined the Heritage Foundation as a researcher.

Marshner was one of the leaders of the Kanawha County textbook controversy in 1974. At the time she was education director at the Heritage Foundation and a speechwriter for conservative Republican congressmen such as Phil Crane. She led the organization of a series of "Citizens' Workshops" to defend the rights of parents to select their own textbooks and discuss the possibility of starting parent-run schools. Her experiences in Kanawha County inspired her to write Blackboard Tyranny, which instructed conservative parents on how to start their own schools.[3] By 1984, she was executive vice-president of the Free Congress Foundation, making her the highest ranking woman in the New Right. She left Washington to concentrate on raising her three surviving children in 1987, accepting a position as general editor for a Christian publishing house and setting up a home office.[1]

Personal life

Her father was a captain in the US Navy and she lived in several states as a child. She graduated from the University of South Carolina with a degree in secondary education in English. Since 1973, she has been married to William Marshner, a Thomistic theologian, ethicist, and a founding professor at Christendom College in Front Royal, Virginia, with whom she has five children, four surviving.[4]

gollark: It is not a solution to all security problems. Maybe it happened to fix your *particular* one due to the weird and mildly insane way you do storage, but it is not a general fix.
gollark: No. It really isn't. Aaaaaaaaa.
gollark: Which means I can't forget to do that, as it's an opt-*in* thing to directly include raw HTML.
gollark: Yeees, but good templating engines also handle that for me when I write code.
gollark: The second way can fix all the escapey messes pretty simply and easily, since I'm not meddling with just sticking the user data directly into a string in the first place.

See also

References

  1. Faludi, Susan (1993). Backlash: The Undeclared War Against Women. London: Vintage. pp. 272–279. ISBN 978-1-4090-4344-7.
  2. Critchlow, Donald T. (2005). Phyllis Schlafly and Grassroots Conservatism: A Woman's Crusade. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-0-691-07002-5.
  3. Williams, Daniel K. (2010). God's Own Party: The Making of the Christian Right. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 135–136. ISBN 978-0-19-534084-6.
  4. "Welcome Aboard!" (PDF). Heritage Society Chronicle. Vol. 72. Front Royal, Virginia: Warren Heritage Society. December 2018. p. 4. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
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