Helen Ruth HENDERSON, American Member, Liberal Arts College Commission. Member: Daughters of American Revolution.
Background
The daughter of Helen Timmons Henderson, she was elected to her mother"s old seat in the Virginia House of Delegates, entering in 1928 and serving one term. Henderson was born in Jefferson City, Tennessee, and moved with her family to Virginia in 1907. When her parents moved to Buchanan County, she and her brother came along as well, though locals advised against lieutenant
Education
She was educated at Virginia Intermont College and Westhampton College, and later gained a Doctor of Philosophy from Columbia University. There her dissertation was on the subject of educational challenges facing Buchanan County.
Career
This made the two the first mother-daughter pair to serve in the Virginia General Assembly and, indeed, in any state legislature. They were followed soon after by Nellie Nugent Somerville and Lucy Somerville Howorth of Mississippi. lieutenant was published in 1937 as A curriculum study of a mountain district.
She began her teaching career in a one-room schoolhouse, and would go on to head the mission school founded by her mother.
Henderson served as a Democrat in the Virginia House of Delegates for a single two-year term, leaving in 1930. She was one of four women serving in the legislature during her tenure.
The other three were Sallie C. Booker, Nancy Melvina Caldwell, and Sarah Lee Fain, who had previously served alongside her mother. Though some sources claim that she was the second woman elected to the General Assembly, she was in fact the fifth.
Upon leaving office she joined the Virginia Department of Education.
There she spent thirteen years, rising from assistant supervisor to supervisor of elementary education, in which role she spearheaded the establishment of nurseries in public schools to support women working in war plants during World World War World War II She later became executive secretary of the International Division of the Girl Scouts of America. Henderson died in Knoxville, Tennessee.
Membership
She was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and was appointed by the governor of Virginia to work with the National Advisory Council on Illiteracy.