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Marian de Forest

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Name
  
Marian Forest

Role
  
Journalist

Education
  
Buffalo Seminary


Marian de Forest wwwbuffaloahcomhdeforestdef4injpg

Died
  
February 17, 1935, Buffalo, New York, United States

Books
  
Little Women (De Forest), Little women

Similar People
  
Samuel Wilkeson, George W Clinton, Philip Becker

Marian de Forest | Wikipedia audio article


Marian de Forest (February 27, 1864 – February 17, 1935) was an American journalist, playwright, major force in the progressive women's movement, and founder of Zonta (later Zonta International), a service organization of women professionals.

She graduated from Buffalo Seminary and became the youngest graduate at that time. Thereafter, she became one of the first female reporters in Western New York State and wrote for The Buffalo Evening News and then with The Buffalo Commercial.

Herself a leading playwright, she supported women's role in the theater. De Forest also co-founded the Buffalo Musical Foundation, thereby bringing the American Opera Company to Western New York. She also played a prominent role in the formation of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.

In 1919, she founded Zonta, "a service organization of executive women working to improve the legal, political, economic and professional status of women worldwide." Zonta is a Lakota Sioux Indian word that means "honest and trustworthy." In one of her early speeches, de Forest explained, "Zonta stands for the highest standards in the business and professional world ... seeks cooperation rather than competition and considers the Golden Rule not only good ethics but good business". De Forest envisioned Zonta to become an international organization. In her own words, "This is the woman's age and in distant lands and foreign climes women of all nations are rallying to the call … Zonta is given the opportunity of uniting them into one great, glorious whole."

De Forest's drama papers are in the collection of the Buffalo History Museum.

References

Marian de Forest Wikipedia