Difference between revisions of "Byler, Edna Ruth (1904-1976)"

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[[File:1994-14-489.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Edna Byler, 1971. Scan
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[[File:1994-14-489.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Edna Byler, 1971.<br />
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Scan courtesy [https://uwaterloo.ca/mennonite-archives-ontario/ Mennonite Archives of Ontario]. Photo 1994-14.489'']]   
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Edna Ruth Byler, born 22 May 1904, was the daughter of Benjamin Miller and Anna May Weaver and grew up near Hesston, [[Kansas (USA)|Kansas]]. She attended a one-room school, and a Mennonite church made up mostly of Pennsylvania Dutch people. She graduated from [[Hesston College (Hesston, Kansas, USA)|Hesston College]] in 1923. While at the college, Professor J. N. Byler (d. 14 February 1962) noticed her, and they were married in 1925. He was 30, she was 21. By 1928 they had their first child, Donna Lou. Delmar was born in 1930.
  
courtesy [http://grebel.uwaterloo.ca/mao/ Mennonite  
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In 1939 they moved to Boulder, [[Colorado (USA)|Colorado]], where J. N. Byler pursued a PhD degree. They returned to Hesston in 1941, then traveled to the East, where [[Mennonite Central Committee (International)|Mennonite Central Committee]] (MCC) administrators asked J. N. Byler to oversee what eventually became relief work in unoccupied [[France]]. Edna stayed behind with the two children and became housemother for the unit workers at MCC headquarters in [[Akron (Pennsylvania, USA)|Akron, Pennsylvania]]. When her husband returned in 1942, the workers were calling her "Mrs. B."
  
Archives of Ontario]. Photo
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On a trip to [[Puerto Rico]] with her husband, Edna saw the needlework of poor women and agreed to market it. With crafts added later, this became the MCC SELFHELP Crafts program (later [[Ten Thousand Villages]]). She also operated a gift shop until her death on 6 July 1976.
 
 
1994-14.489'']]    Edna Ruth Byler, born 22 May 1904, was the daughter of Benjamin Miller and Anna May Weaver and grew up near Hesston, [[Kansas (USA)|Kansas]]. She attended a one-room school, and a Mennonite church made up mostly of Pennsylvania Dutch people. She graduated from [[Hesston College (Hesston, Kansas, USA)|Hesston College]] in 1923. While at the college, Professor J. N. Byler (d. 14 February 1962) noticed her, and they were married in 1925. He was 30, she was 21. By 1928 they had their first child, Donna Lou. Delmar was born in 1930.
 
 
 
In 1939 they moved to Boulder, [[Colorado (USA)|Colorado]], where J. N. Byler pursued a PhD degree. They returned to Hesston in 1941, then traveled to the East, where [[Mennonite Central Committee (International)|Mennonite Central Committee]] (MCC) administrators asked J. N. Byler to oversee what eventually became relief work in unoccupied [[France|France]]. Edna stayed behind with the two children and became housemother for the unit workers at MCC headquarters in [[Akron (Pennsylvania, USA)|Akron, Pennsylvania]]. When her husband returned in 1942, the workers were calling her "Mrs. B."
 
 
 
On a trip to [[Puerto Rico|Puerto Rico]] with her husband, Edna saw the needlework of poor women and agreed to market it. With crafts added later, this became the MCC SELFHELP Crafts program (later [[Ten Thousand Villages|Ten Thousand Villages]]). She also operated a gift shop until her death on 6 July 1976.
 
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=Vol. 5, p. 116|date=1986|a1_last=Preheim|a1_first=Marion Keeney|a2_last= |a2_first= }}
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=Vol. 5, p. 116|date=1986|a1_last=Preheim|a1_first=Marion Keeney|a2_last= |a2_first= }}

Latest revision as of 20:34, 12 December 2013

Edna Byler, 1971.
Scan courtesy Mennonite Archives of Ontario. Photo 1994-14.489

Edna Ruth Byler, born 22 May 1904, was the daughter of Benjamin Miller and Anna May Weaver and grew up near Hesston, Kansas. She attended a one-room school, and a Mennonite church made up mostly of Pennsylvania Dutch people. She graduated from Hesston College in 1923. While at the college, Professor J. N. Byler (d. 14 February 1962) noticed her, and they were married in 1925. He was 30, she was 21. By 1928 they had their first child, Donna Lou. Delmar was born in 1930.

In 1939 they moved to Boulder, Colorado, where J. N. Byler pursued a PhD degree. They returned to Hesston in 1941, then traveled to the East, where Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) administrators asked J. N. Byler to oversee what eventually became relief work in unoccupied France. Edna stayed behind with the two children and became housemother for the unit workers at MCC headquarters in Akron, Pennsylvania. When her husband returned in 1942, the workers were calling her "Mrs. B."

On a trip to Puerto Rico with her husband, Edna saw the needlework of poor women and agreed to market it. With crafts added later, this became the MCC SELFHELP Crafts program (later Ten Thousand Villages). She also operated a gift shop until her death on 6 July 1976.


Author(s) Marion Keeney Preheim
Date Published 1986

Cite This Article

MLA style

Preheim, Marion Keeney. "Byler, Edna Ruth (1904-1976)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1986. Web. 25 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Byler,_Edna_Ruth_(1904-1976)&oldid=104966.

APA style

Preheim, Marion Keeney. (1986). Byler, Edna Ruth (1904-1976). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 25 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Byler,_Edna_Ruth_(1904-1976)&oldid=104966.




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Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 5, p. 116. All rights reserved.


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