Martha Parsons

Martha Parsons (December 6, 1869 – March 19, 1965) was an American businesswoman who worked for Landers, Frary & Clark, eventually becoming executive secretary. She was inducted into the Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame in 2010.

Biography

Parsons was born on December 6, 1869 to John and Juliette Allen Parsons. Her father was a prosperous merchant who died in 1880, when she was eleven. Later she graduated from Enfield High School. One of the first to learn Gregg shorthand, Parsons took a job with Morgan Envelope Company, working as a stenographer, earning $10-$12 a week. In 1893, she was hired by Landers, Frary & Clark, based in New Britain, Connecticut, also beginning as a stenographer. By 1912 however, she had become executive secretary of the company, becoming the "first female business executive in Connecticut's history to earn her position on the basis of merit." Parsons signed her mail "M. A. Parsons" so that people she was interacting with would not know that she was a woman. In 1917, she founded the universal war relief association at Landers.[1]

Martha Parsons held her position at Landers, Frary & Clark until her retirement in 1919, whereupon she moved to New Hartford, Connecticut in order to live with her sisters, Julia and Mary. In 1928, Parsons hired Ethel Rebecca Twining to work in the house. The two women developed a strong friendship, and Twining was even included in Parsons' will, until Twinning died.[2] Parsons died in 1965, leaving her house to the historical society. That house is now a site on the Connecticut Women's Heritage Trail. The house of Martha Parsons was built in 1782 by John Meacham. The house was originally called "Sycamore Hall," but was renamed Parsons house after Martha Parsons.[3]

gollark: I suppose it's reasonable to just blame other people's different preferences and the high capital cost of phone manufacturing rather than just "the market" but meh.
gollark: I want a phone which doesn't look terrible, but I also don't care that much about aesthetics and want something cheap, durable, and functional, and apparently the market doesn't want to provide that.
gollark: Great, *more* expensive pointless designs.
gollark: I mean, anyone behind you could see what's on the screen, and you wouldn't be able to see stuff against some backgrounds.
gollark: Oh, I don't think those are a great design either, honestly, but it would be... cool, briefly.

References

  1. "Martha Parsons | Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame". cwhf.org. Retrieved 2017-11-11.
  2. "A Pioneering Woman in Business: Martha Parsons of Enfield | ConnecticutHistory.org". connecticuthistory.org. March 2017. Retrieved 2017-11-11.
  3. "The Martha A. Parsons House Museum". The Enfield Historical Society. Retrieved 2017-11-11.
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