Mira Sharpless Townsend
Mira Sharpless Townsend (26 September 1798 - 20 November 1859)[1][2] was a Quaker social activist and reformer in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[3][4] Townsend was the driving force behind the creation of the Rosine Association, which supported destitute women, and was the first organization of its kind run entirely by and for women.[1] Early lifeMira Sharpless was born in Philadelphia on 26 September 1798, the daughter of Jesse Sharpless, a saddle and harness maker, and Joanna Townsend Sharpless., both birthright members of the Concord Monthly Meeting.[5][6][1] She was directly descended from Richard Townsend, who had come to America with William Penn on the ship Welcome.[1] She attended Friends Select School, where she excelled, and was noted for her skill in writing.[1] Most of Sharpless' siblings were active in the Society of Friends. In 1828, Sharpless married Samuel Townsend (1800-1887), a fellow Quaker.[1] Of the couple's six children, only two survived to adulthood: Emily Sharpless Townsend and Clara Gordon Townsend.[3][1] ActivismFrom the 1840s, Townsend became an outspoken social activist, publishing articles and poetry expressing her views on subjects including capital punishment, temperance, women's rights, and slavery.[4] Townsend spearheaded the creation of the Rosine Association, which focused on providing assistance to women.[4] Her hopes were first announced at a meeting of the Society for the Abolition of Capital Punishment in January 1847, when Townsend expressed a desire to form "a society to open a house for the reformation and employment and instruction of unfortunate women who had led immoral lives."[4][1] This was established as the Rosina Home.[1] As the first organization of its kind run entirely by and for women, the Rosine Association was unique and trailblazing.[7][1] Sharpless wrote of her feeling that:
As one of a five-person committee, Townsend helped to create the Association's constitution.[4] She served as a manager and treasurer until her death.[4] In 1854, Townsend and Sophia Lewis successfully petitioned the legislature in Harrisburg for funding to support the Rosine Association.[4] Detailed casebooks, held today by Swarthmore College, contain accounts of the "Rosines": women who passed through the Rosine Home.[7] These women were supported in learning skills, and supporting themselves by selling wares they produced.[7] The Rosina Home inspired similar institutions in Baltimore, New Orleans, Providence, and Cincinnati.[1] In 1849, Townsend, her sister Eliza Parker, and others, established a boarding house for destitute women and children, the Temporary Home.[4][1] This was described as:
Death and legacyMira Sharpless Townsend died on 20 November 1859[1] and was buried at Fair Hill Burial Ground.[7] Sharpless' papers are held today in the Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College, which describes her as "a major Quaker social activist and reformer".[4] Speaking on the acquisition of the papers, the Friends Historical Library curator, Jordan Landes, said of Sharpless that:
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