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  1. Mary Harriman Rumsey (November 17, 1881 – December 18, 1934) was an American social activist and government official. She was the founder of The Junior League for the Promotion of Settlement Movements, later known as the Junior League of the City of New York of the Association of Junior Leagues International Inc, and served as ...

  2. The founder of The Junior League, Mary Harriman Rumsey, was a young woman ahead of her time. The daughter of Union Pacific Railroad titan and financier, E.H. Harriman, she traveled extensively with her father on business trips, family wilderness trips, and scientific expeditions.

  3. American social welfare leader. Name variations: Mary Harriman. Born Mary Harriman on November 17, 1881, in New York City; died on December 18, 1934, in Washington, D.C.; daughter of Edward Henry Harriman (a financier and railroad magnate) and Mary Williamson (Averell) Harriman; sister of W. Averell Harriman (ambassador to the Soviet Union and ...

  4. 14. März 2021 · She had been living with Mary Harriman Rumsey, a widow and the daughter of railroad tycoon E.H. Harriman. Rumsey founded the Junior League to help the poor and a magazine that later became Newsweek. In Washington, Perkins and Rumsey were “roomies” in a large house in Georgetown.

  5. Wikipedia: Mary Harriman Rumsey (online August 2015) Mary married sculptor and polo player Charles Cary Rumsey in 1910, shortly after the death of her father. Rumsey had been working at Arden House, creating one of the principal fireplace surrounds, as well as other decorative sculpture. Together they had a daughter and two sons.

  6. Mary Harriman Rumsey (November 17, 1881– December 18, 1934) was a reformer who believed in cooperation rather than competition as a vehicle for social and economic enterprise.

  7. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s encounter with Mary Harriman Rumsey (1881–1934), one of the most powerful women in America during the author’s lifetime, has gone largely unnoticed. The following assessment of that relationship is an extension.