Cherilla Storrs Lowrey Explained

Cherilla Storrs Lowrey
Birth Name:Cherilla Lillian Storrs
Birth Date:August 18, 1861
Birth Place:Utica, New York
Death Date:January 9, 1918 (aged 56)
Death Place:Honolulu, Hawai'i
Occupation:Clubwoman, educator
Relatives:William Richards Castle (brother-in-law); William Richards Castle Jr. (nephew)

Cherilla Lillian Storrs Lowrey (August 18, 1861 – January 9, 1918) was an American educator and clubwoman based in Hawaii. She was a founder and first chairwoman of The Outdoor Circle, "Hawaii's oldest environmental organization".[1]

Early life

Storrs was born in Utica, New York. She moved to California as a girl with her widowed mother.

Career

Lowrey moved to Hawaii in 1882 to teach at Kawaiahao Seminary, a girls' school.[2] She also taught at the Punahou School, and was an assistant principal there in 1883.[3] She was active in the Free Kindergarten and Children's Aid Association (FKCAA),[4] the Women's Board of Missions, the YWCA, and Women's War Council.[5] [6] She was one of the first two women to serve on the Honolulu Planning Commission.[7] [8]

In 1912, Lowrey was one of the original seven members and the first president of The Outdoor Circle,[9] a women's organization based in Honolulu, initially under the auspices of the Kilohana Art League. The Circle was dedicated to city beautification,[10] especially against billboards and in favor of public fountains, parks, playgrounds, and gardens,[11] and "to conserve and develop the natural beauties of the landscape by encouraging the growth of native trees and shrubs, and the introduction of such new ones as belong to tropical life".[5] [12] The Outdoor Circle had hundreds of members by 1915, many of them wives of wealthy white sugar and lumber executives, like Lowrey, whose husband was president of the Oahu Sugar Company and the Waiahole Water Company, and vice-president of the Honolulu Gas Company.[5]

Personal life and legacy

Storrs married merchant Frederick Jewett Lowrey in 1884. They had four children together. She died after a stroke in 1918, aged 56 years, in Honolulu.[13]

The Outdoor Circle and other friends commissioned a marble fountain by sculptor Roger Noble Burnham, in memory of Lowrey.[14] [15] [16] A species of loulou palm, Pritchardia lowreyana, was named for Lowrey by botanist Joseph F. Rock.[17] Every year during Cemetery Pupu Theatre, an actress portraying Lowrey tells cemetery visitors her story, near her gravesite in Oahu Cemetery.[18] The Outdoor Circle continues into the 21st century as an environmental organization in Hawai'i. "No environmental group has had such a profound, positive impact on Hawai'i as The Outdoor Circle," Duke Bainum said in a 2000 newspaper interview.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Canalejas. Laurent. 2012-07-25. The Outdoor Circle goes centennial. live. 2022-01-02. The Garden Island. en-US. https://web.archive.org/web/20211105144843/https://www.thegardenisland.com/2012/07/25/hawaii-news/the-outdoor-circle-goes-centennial/ . 2021-11-05 .
  2. Book: Bonura, Sandra E.. Light in the Queen's Garden: Ida May Pope, Pioneer for Hawai'i's Daughters, 1862–1914. 2017-10-31. University of Hawaii Press. 978-0-8248-6647-1. 223. en.
  3. Web site: History of Punahou. live. 2022-01-02. Punahou School. https://web.archive.org/web/20200927112713/https://www.punahou.edu/archives/history-of-punahou . 2020-09-27 .
  4. Book: Castle, Alfred L.. A Century of Philanthropy: A History of the Samuel N. and Mary Castle Foundation. 2004-01-01. University of Hawaii Press. 978-0-8248-2873-8. 33. en.
  5. Margit Misangyi Watts, High Tea at Halekulani: Feminist Theory and American Clubwomen (PhD dissertation, University of Hawai'i, 1989): 91-96, quote on page 95. Published as a book by Carlson Publications in 1993.
  6. October 1917. What Can We Do for the Soldier?. The Friend. 75. 222.
  7. News: October 1, 1999. Millennium Moments: Wonder Woman. Star-Bulletin.
  8. February 1918. A Heart at Leisure from Itself. The Friend. 76. 37.
  9. Book: Riley, Glenda. Women and Nature: Saving the "Wild" West. 1999-01-01. U of Nebraska Press. 978-0-8032-8975-8. 108. en.
  10. News: 1982-03-28. Women Preserve, Enhance Hawaii's Natural Beauty. 76. Hawaii Tribune-Herald. 2022-01-02. Newspapers.com.
  11. Web site: Wianecki. Shannon. The Green Warriors. live. 2022-01-02. Hana Hou!. https://web.archive.org/web/20220102175204/https://hanahou.com/18.6/the-green-warriors . 2022-01-02 .
  12. Lowrey. Cherilla L.. December 1916. A Plea for a More Tropical Honolulu. Paradise of the Pacific. 29. 30–33.
  13. January 1918. Mrs. Frederick J. Lowrey. The Friend. 15.
  14. July 1919. Cherilla A. Lowrey Memorial Fountain. The Friend. 88. 153–154.
  15. News: 1919-06-18. Beautiful Memorial to Mrs. Cherilla Lowrey Dedicated by Friends. 7. The Honolulu Advertiser. 2022-01-02. Newspapers.com.
  16. News: 1918-09-09. Circle Decides on Memorial for Mrs. Cherilla Lowrey. 7. The Honolulu Advertiser. 2022-01-02. Newspapers.com.
  17. Web site: TOC Historical Facts. 2022-01-02. Lani-Kailua Outdoor Circle. en.
  18. Web site: Gebers. Samie. June 30, 2018. Bringing the dead to life: Hawaii actors perform at Oahu gravesite. live. 2022-01-02. Hawaii News Now. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20180701054424/http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/38549495/graveyard-performance-brings-historical-figures-to-life . 2018-07-01 .