Background
Marion Harvie was born in September, 1874 Cheshire, England to Thomas and Elizabeth (Watt) Harvie.
Marion Harvie was born in September, 1874 Cheshire, England to Thomas and Elizabeth (Watt) Harvie.
She graduated Phi Beta Kappa with a degree in philosophy.
She taught at a private girls’ school in New England before attending Brown University from 1898 to 1902. In 1905, the couple moved to Indianapolis, Indiana. Barnard became involved in reviving the defunct Indiana suffragist movement.
At a meeting held in May, 1906, in Kokomo, she was elected to serve as treasurer of the Indiana Auxiliary of the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
At a suffrage convention held between 16 and 17 March 1909 in Logansport, Barnard was re-elected treasurer. Barnard was still serving as treasurer of the Indiana Auxiliary in 1914 and archival records at the Indiana Historical Society show she had correspondence with Carrie Chapman Catt.
In 1909, the Woman’s Franchise League of Indiana was formed to try to get a woman elected on the school board. The Women"s Club was involved in sanitation efforts such as cleaning up markets and groceries, safe drinking water, and waste disposal.
Her husband who was the director of the Indiana State Food and Drug Commission, supported these efforts closing down bakeries and unsanitary businesses that handled food.
Barnard died 5 March 1969 in Indianapolis and was buried at Washington Park East Cemetery in Indianapolis.
She was a member of the Woman’s Franchise League of Indiana and the treasurer of the Indiana Equal Suffrage Association. Barnard was a member of the organization, and a member of the Irvington Women's Club. Barnard also started the Indianapolis Social Register and was one of the founding members of the Irvington Dancing Club.