
IOWA WOMEN’S ARCHIVES
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA LIBRARIES
IOWA CITY, IOWA
KATHRYN STONE (1906-1995)
PAPERS, 1930-1932,
1995
5 items
|
ACQUISITION: |
The papers (donor no. 278) were donated
by Shirley Briggs in 1995. |
|
ACCESS: |
The papers are open for research. |
|
COPYRIGHT: |
»Copyright has been transferred to the University of Iowa. |
|
PHOTOGRAPHS: |
»In folder 1. |
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PROCESSED
BY: |
Your name, year»Kristen Rassbach, 1997, Margaret Richardson, 1998. |
|
REVISED: |
Margaret Richardson, July 16, 1998, version WORD97. |
Biography
Kathryn Haeseler Meyers Stone, Virginia State
legislator, was born in Mt. Vernon, Iowa in 1906 and attended Cornell College
and the State University of Iowa (now the University of Iowa), receiving a
master’s degree in American History.
Stone taught school in Michigan and Louisiana and in 1931-33 taught in
the University High School in Iowa City.
She married Harold A. Stone in 1936.
Kathryn Stone was active in the League of Women Voters and the
Commission on Human Resources of the Washington Center for Metropolitan
Studies.
Stone represented Arlington, Virginia, in the
Virginia House of Delegates from 1954 to 1966.
She was the first woman to be elected to the Virginia Legislature from
northern Virginia and was a proponent of desegregation in the public
schools. After the 1960 Census, she was
one of four plaintiffs in a lawsuit challenging Virginia’s reapportionment
plan, gaining a ruling that state legislatures be apportioned on the basis of
population. Stone played an important
role in the creation of the Virginia community college system, and she helped
establish the first regional detention home for juveniles in the state. Stone died in 1995.
Scope and Content Note
The Kathryn Stone papers date from 1930 to 1932 and 1995 and consist of 5 items: three photographs
and two clippings, an obituary and a tribute, from the May 1995
Washington Post.
Related Collections
The bulk of Stone's papers
are on deposit at the University of Virginia Library, Special Collections
Department, Charlottesville, VA 22904, (804) 924-3025.