Page:Sketches of representative women of New England.djvu/448

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
REPRESENTATIVE WOMEN OF NEW ENGLAND
331

and she works with untiring zeal to accomplish the end in view. Mrs. Whiton has the confidence and esteem of those with whom she has been so long and ultimately associated in club work and other benevolent endeavor to which her life has been devoted.


MARIA WILDER GOING, Department President Massachusetts Woman's Relief Corps in 1901, was born in Littleton, Mass., August 7, 1845, the eldest daughter of Deacon Henry Tufts and Martha (Wilder) Taylor. Her father, born in Littleton, July 22, 1816, was the son of William Taylor, a native of Concord, Mass., and Lydia Whitcomb, his wife, whose birthplace was Littleton. The Taylor family was of English origin. Mrs. Going's maternal grand-parents were Harrison and Keziah (Powers) Wilder, both natives of Sterling, Mass. Some of her Wilder ancestors were soldiers in the Revolutionary War. Deacon Henry Tufts Taylor filled many honorable positions in Littleton. For nineteen consecutive years he was principal of one of the public schools, and for several years he served as chairman of the School Committee. He was recognized as a teacher of unusual ability and as an earnest, devoted man, with rare talents for leadership. To his inspiring influence his daughter attributes her interest in public affairs. He married April 28, 1841, Martha Wilder, of Sterling,' who was born in that town, April 21, 1817. Settling in Littleton, they became identified with its public interests, and were prominent members of the Unitarian church for fifty-one years.

Mrs. Going was educated in the public schools of her native town and at Lawrence Academy, Groton, and soon after her graduation she became a teacher. Inheriting from her parents an intense love of music, she began its study when she was only ten years old, and before reaching her twelfth birthday was organist in the Unitarian church, which had the first pipe organ in the town. She subsequently devoted much time to musical studies, and in 1890 organized and equipped an orchestra, of which she became the managing director. The marriage of Maria Wilder Taylor and Myron Francis Going took place on the 25th of December, 1867. Mr. Going is a native of Townsend, Mass. On October 18, 1861, he enlisted for three years in the Twenty-sixth Massachusetts Regiment of Volunteers. At the expiration of this term of service he was honorably discharged. He re-enlisted as a private, and was promoted to Commissary Sergeant. For several years he has been a member of Abraham Lincoln Post, No. 11, G. A. R., of Charlestown. This post's auxiliary, Abraham Lincoln Relief Corps, No. 39, Mrs. Going joined m 1888. After filling several minor offices in the corps, she was elected president, and performed her duties in such a creditable manner that higher honors in the order were bestowed upon her. As Department Aide, Assistant Inspector, and Installing Officer, she attended many corps meetings in different parts of the State. In 1898 she was elected a member of the Department Executive Board; in 1899 Department Junior Vice-President. The following year she became Senior Vice-President, and at the annual convention in 1901 was unanimously elected Department President.

During her term of office Mrs. Going travelled several thousand miles, participating in various patriotic assemblies. A summary of her year's work was given in her address to the Department Convention held in the Park Street Church, Boston, in February, 1902.

Referring to Memorial Day, she said; "The interesting report of the Department Chaplain will show that this sacred day was appropriately and universally observed throughout the State. Our corps, moved by a common impulse, united with their respective posts, in paying homage to our fallen heroes. As year by year rolls by, Memorial Day brings to each of us a deeper and more lasting significance, not only to the survivors of the Civil War, but to every loyal citizen of this nation. With sadness we recount each passing year a diminution in the rank and file of the Grand Army of the Republic. . . . While we speak of the brave and dauntless soldier, let us not forget the gallant sailors who lie so silently sleeping in the depths of the sea, whose rolling, restless billows chant their only requiem."

In regard to the strewing of flowers on the