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Mary Clark Brittingham, continued
Mary Brittingham served multiple terms as chair of the Women's Club education and social committees, sat on the Advisory Board, and filled the post of corresponding secretary. She was a member for over 30 years, but her leadership roles were concentrated during the group's most influential period, the first decade of the 20th century. Among the results of the club's efforts were the introduction of garbage collection, milk inspection, kindergartens in public schools, and a children's library. The club was also the main proponent of a new city hospital, and acted as the driving force behind the initial fundraising campaign for what would become Madison General Hospital.
Ultimately, the club was more egalitarian in its public efforts than with its members. Membership in the elite club was capped, spawning a large waiting list and a number of similar organizations. To their credit, groups like the Civics Club, the Catholic Women's Club, and the Girls Civic League also helped to affect civic policy, but they never quite matched the high society allure of the Women's Club.
A Wisconsin Journal article on her husband gave Mary a few lines of attention, describing her as a "university woman [who] combines home making with the Woman's club and other events of the larger life that interests [sic] bright women in these latter days."2 UW-Madison's Alumni Association was the hub of many of those "other events." Mary served on the WAA's Board of Directors from 1906 until her death in 1929, including several terms as vice president. She was also the galvanizing force behind her class reunions; in fact, Mary was busy planning her class's 40th reunion when she died, missing the event by days.
Mary passed away on June 19, 1929, after a stay in a sanatorium in Tucson, Arizona. While in Tucson, she wrote to former classmate Annie A. Nunns, the formidable assistant to the director of the Wisconsin Historical Society, indicating that she was busy planning their next class reunion.3 The day following her death, the Capitol Times led with the blaring headline "Mrs. T.E. Brittingham, Senior is Dead."4 Her will left money supplementing her late husband's grant to the University of Wisconsin-Madison; together, their bequests became known as the Brittingham Fund, which has enriched the university for decades and is still managed by Thomas and Mary's descendants.