Background
Barbara Ingalls Shook was born on September 28, 1938.
Barbara Ingalls Shook was born on September 28, 1938.
She graduated from Mount Vernon College for Women in Washington, District of Columbia
She was a prominent patron of the arts in Birmingham, Alabama. She also served on the Advisory Board of the National Cancer Institute in the Reagan administration. She had a sister, Elesabeth Ingalls Gillet, and a step-brother Lathrop Winchester Smith.
(which later merged with the George Washington University), with an Associate degree in 1958.
She was a noted philanthropist in Birmingham, Alabama, through the Barbara Ingalls Shook Foundation. She was a patron to the Birmingham Museum of Art, Alabama Symphony Orchestra, and the Alabama Ballet.
Her philanthropy extended to healthcare, as she donated to Street Vincent"s Birmingham and the Montclair Baptist Medical Center. She also donated to the Jimmie Hale Mission, a homeless shelter, and the Big Oak Ranch, a residence for at-risk youth.
Additionally, she donated to the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
She was also active in philanthropy in Aspen, Colorado. Indeed, she founded Challenge Aspen, a non-profit organization to support sports among the disabled in Aspen. She was also a distinguished philanthropist nationally.
Indeed, President Ronald Reagan appointed her to the Advisory Board of the National Cancer Institute.
She was also honored posthumously at the Hope Gala hosted by the American Cancer Society in 2009. She died on September 26, 2008, at the age of sixty-nine.
She was buried in Elmwood Cemetery in Birmingham. Seven years later, the Birmingham Zoo opened a new exhibit named after her known as the Barbara Ingalls Shook Black Bear Trail.
lieutenant is home to American black bears from Big Sky, Montana.
Her paternal grandfather, Robert Ingersoll Ingalls, Senior (1882-1951), was the founder of Ingalls Iron Works, the largest privately owned steel manufacturer in the Southern United States, and Ingalls Shipbuilding, the largest shipyard in the Gulf Coast of the United States. As a result, she received the Woman of the Year award from the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in 1986.