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Delia C. Kenyon
| Born | July 16, 1858 |
| Birthplace | County Line (Orleans County), New York |
| Died | November 1945 |
| Grave Site | Honeoye Falls Cemetery, Honeoye Falls, New York |
| Contribution | Businesswoman, suffragist and clubwoman |
Delia Kenyon was born in County Line (near Lyndonville in Orleans County), New York, on July 16, 1858.
Kenyon graduated from Rochester Business School and afterwards she moved to Honeoye Falls, New York, a village in the town of Mendon. Honeoye Falls is about fifteen miles southeast of Rochester. French’s Gazetteer for Monroe County described Honeoye Falls in 1860 as containing "4 churches 3 flouring mills, 1 gristmill, a sawmill, 2 woolen factories, a plaster mill, a manufactory of agricultural implements, and a stone quarry." It was "a station on the Canandaigua & Niagara Falls Branch of the N.Y.C.R.R." (New York Central Railroad) with a population of "about 1,100."
Kenyon initially took a job as a secretary and bookkeeper at a mill owned
by
H.E. Boardman on North Main Street. She remained in the milling business and
ultimately advanced to form a partnership with Roscoe and Samuel Tomkinson. The
firm of Tomkinson, Kenyon and Tomkinson (TK&T) leased a mill on North Main
Street. Although the mill had its difficulties (it burned down in 1901 and the
inside had to be rebuilt), by the First World War, TK&T was exporting flour
to France.
In addition to her flourishing business, Kenyon was involved in a variety of community activities. She was a long-term member of the Honeoye Falls School Board. She helped to establish the Mendon Public Library and served as the president of its governing board. A member of the Methodist Church, she taught what was called the "Kenyon Class" for over twenty-five years. During World War II, she vowed to knit one hundred sweaters that would be distributed by the Red Cross and given to servicemen.
Kenyon’s commitment to women’s rights is evidenced in the role she played
in
the Fortnightly Club. The club, a women’s group established with the
purpose of the advancement of women in Honeoye Falls, was formed over one
hundred years ago and remains in existence. Kenyon was instrumental in
organizing the Club, and acted as its President. A glance at the program for
March 31, 1915, a year in which she served as President, shows the club’s
concern for women’s issues. "The Benefits of Equal Suffrage" was
discussed, and women also
spoke and heard about "Clara
Barton and the Red Cross," the "Growth of Temperance," and
"The Grange." Clara Barton was herself a suffragist, and by 1914 both
the New York State Grange and the Women’s Christian Temperance Union had
endorsed the cause of women’s suffrage. The program concluded with a
"Roll Call of Women Reformers."
Delia Kenyon died in November, 1945. She was eighty-seven years old. She was buried in the Honeoye Falls Cemetery on North Main Street.
| Bibliography of Suggested Books & Articles | |
| For the bulk of the biographical material in this essay, we are indebted to Anne Bullock, historian of Honeoye Falls. (See Anne Bullock, "Delia Kenyon," typed manuscript.) Bullock also provided a photocopy of a program of the "Fortnightly Club, 1914-1915" for March 31st. | |
| Vacca, Carolyn, Monroe County Historian, No Ordinary Women: 29 Remarkable Women of Monroe County, Rochester NY: Office of the Monroe County Historian (Delia Kenyon is No. 26) | |
| Bibliography of Suggested Web Sites | |
| French, J.H., Historical and Statistical Gazetteer of New York State (French’s Gazetteer for Monroe County, NY), 1860 at http://www.rootsweb.com/~nymonroe/french.htm. Version current at 4/3/01. | |
| Halsey, Richard T., comp. Richard T. Halsey has compiled a selected list of people buried in Monroe County Cemeteries. The list of people buried at Honeoye Falls Cemetery, including Delia C. Kenyon, can be found at http://www.rootsweb.com/~nymonroe/cem/honeoye.htm. Version current at 4/19/00. | |
| "Honeoye Falls, NY Hometown Page," (Canandaigua National Bank and Trust) at http://www.honeoyefalls.com/towns/HoneoyeFalls/standing/index.html. Version current at 4/19/00. | |
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