McCulloch, Rhoda E. (Rhoda Elizabeth), 1884-

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Rhoda McCulloch, undated

Rhoda Elizabeth McCulloch was born October 17, 1884 in Fremont, Ohio, to Rollin Smiley and Fannie Sargent (Wise) McCulloch. McCulloch graduated from Fremont High School in 1902. While attending Oberlin College (1906-10), McCulloch first joined the YWCA, eventually becoming President of the campus Association. A Latin and Greek major, she earned her BA in 1910.

McCulloch studied at the YWCA National Training School in New York City for the 1910-11 academic year. She served as General Secretary (chief executive) of the Colorado Springs YWCA from 1911 to 1913, then moved to the national YWCA staff at its headquarters in New York City. McCulloch started as a Special Worker in the Department of Conventions and Conferences (1913-14), moving from there to the Publications Department, where she would remain until retirement. In Publications, McCulloch worked her way up from Special Worker (1914-15) to Editorial Secretary (1916-18) to Editor (1918-23) to Editor-in-Chief of publications in 1923. In this capacity McCulloch edited the YWCA's monthly magazine The Womans Press * and oversaw production of a large catalog of technical materials and pamphlets for the Association use as well as a catalog of general interest titles. Retirement tributes cite her "spacious and all-embracing" purpose, "social vision, dynamic faith," and "great powers as an interpreter."

From 1922 to 1927 McCulloch and E.C. Carter shared executive duties for the Conference on the Christian Way of Life, later known as The Inquiry. A national organization, The Inquiry sought to foster discussion on "industrial, racial, and international problems in the hope of discovering whether there is a modern Christian way of living…."

McCulloch's activities in the 1930s and 40s included work for the World Alliance for International Friendship Through Religion, the National Conference of Christians and Jews, the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, the National Conference on the Cause and Cure of War, and the American Council of the Institute of Pacific Relations. McCulloch was on the editorial board of Reinhold Niebuhr's "bi-weekly journal of Christian opinion," Christianity in Crisis, from its founding in 1941 until 1948, and a contributing editor until 1951.

McCulloch retired from the post of Editor-in-Chief at the YWCA in 1944, but remained involved in the organization, chairing the planning for the 1946 and 1949 National Conventions, and planning the five-week International Study Conference on Women in World Reconstruction, a special project for the YWCA's Foreign Division that took place in the summer of 1948. She also served as Secretary of YWCA's Constitution and Membership Commissions.

McCulloch shared her home in New York City and a "spinster's shack" at 23 Talmadge Hill Rd. in New Canaan, Connecticut, with Henrietta Roelofs of the national YWCA staff. Roelofs was the daughter of George and Mary Dykema Roelofs of Grand Rapids, Michigan. She earned a BA from Lake Erie College in 1906 and then attended the YWCA precursor organization's Secretarial Training Institute. She joined the YWCA of the U.S.A. Home Department staff in 1908. From then until her retirement in 1939, Roelofs worked in various capacities for the National Association.

Roelofs and McCulloch shared many interests. Like McCulloch, Roelofs was a member of the National Committee on the Cause and Cure of War and she was also active in the League of Nations Association. These two avid gardeners and cat lovers welcomed friends and family to New Canaan. After Roelofs' death in 1942, another YWCA staffer, Lazelle Alway, lived with McCulloch until McCulloch's death on March 15, 1978, in New Canaan.

* During McCulloch's tenure, the name of the YWCA's publishing house and magazine, Womans Press, was spelled without an apostrophe. After McCulloch's retirement, the apostrophe was added--Woman's Press.

From the guide to the Rhoda Elizabeth McCulloch Papers MS 98., 1884-1978, 1915-1944, (Sophia Smith Collection)

Editor; YWCA worker; Women's rights advocate; Pacifist.

Born Fremont, Ohio, 1884; graduated Oberlin College, 1910. Had life-long association with Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA). In 1913 she joined the National Board in New York City, serving first on the convention staff and then assuming editorial duties. Became editor of The Woman's Press, 1922, a position she held until retirement in 1944. In addition to YWCA work she served on editorial boards of Christianity and Crisis and The Inquiry. Was also a member of the executive committees of the National Conference of Christians and Jews and the World Alliance for International Friendship Through the Churches. McCulloch died in 1977.

From the description of Papers, 1880s-1978. (Smith College). WorldCat record id: 50492131

Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith McCulloch, Rhoda Elizabeth, 1884- person
associatedWith National Committee on the Cause and Cure of War (U.S.) corporateBody
associatedWith National Conference on the Christian Way of Life corporateBody
associatedWith Roelofs, Henrietta, 1878-1942 person
associatedWith The Woman's Press corporateBody
associatedWith Young Women's Christian Association of the U.S.A. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
United States
Sources
Subject
Female friendship
Female friendship
Leadership in women
Leadership in women
Peace
Women and peace
Women and religion
Women editors
Women editors
Women's periodicals, American
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1884

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