SPARA KPAR@`ÿÿÿÿÿÿ ËTEXT` ½Bennett, Belle Harris 1852Ð1922 church worker Born on December 3, 1852, in Whitehall, near Richmond, Kentucky, Isabel (known always as Belle) Bennett was educated privately in Kentucky and Ohio. She became a member of the Southern Methodist Church in 1876 and soon began teaching in a Sunday school. In 1889, having obtained information from the Chicago Training School for City, Home, and Foreign Missions (founded by Lucy R. Meyer for the Northern Methodist Church a few years earlier), she won adoption by the Southern Methodist WomanÕs Board of Foreign Missions of a plan to establish a similar training school. Appointed agent to collect funds, she traveled and spoke widely throughout the South for that purpose. A major benefaction from Dr. Nathan Scarritt of Kansas City, Missouri, made possible the early realization of the plan, and in September, 1892 the Scarritt Bible and Training School was dedicated in Kansas City. In all, her efforts raised over $130,000 for building and endowing the school. (In 1924 the school was relocated to Nashville, Tennessee, and renamed Scarritt College for Christian Workers.) In 1897 she opened the Sue Bennett Memorial School, named for an older sister, in London, Kentucky. In 1892 Bennett was named to the central committee of the WomanÕs Parsonage and Home Mission Society; in 1896 she was chosen president of the society, and in 1898 she moved up to the presidency of the newly organized WomanÕs Board of Home Missions. Under her the board became active in the field of urban missions, and a system of more than 40 ÒWesley Community HousesÓ for white people and ÒBethlehem HousesÓ for African-Americans was established throughout the South. In 1902 she successfully urged the board to set up a program of lay deaconesses to staff the houses and other home mission projects. In 1910 she became president of the unified WomanÕs Missionary Council, responsible for both home and foreign mission work, and she retained the post until her death. She was particularly active in the establishment of a womanÕs college (later named for her) in Rio de Janeiro and of the WomanÕs Christian Medical College in Shanghai. When her campaign of a dozen years finally resulted in the admission of women to full lay status in the Southern Methodist Church in 1919, she became the first woman to be elected a delegate to the churchÕs General Conference. Before the conference convened, however, she died in Richmond, Kentucky, on July 20, 1922. ^styl`!5ª5ª 5ª/!Ilink`