Wooster Students Shine Spotlight on Two Unsung Heroes
WOOSTER, Ohio – Someone you meet in college can change your life. It might be a roommate, or a mentor, a spiritual leader, or the guy who punched your lunch ticket every day. And every so often, it may be someone you met as the subject of your Independent Study project.

Abigail Helvering and Kristen Estabrook
Such was the case for two students this spring: history and religious studies major Kristen Estabrook and history major Abigail Helvering. Both discovered heroes that history had ignored.
Reverend James M. Lawson, Jr.
As Kristen Estabrook dug into the life and work of pacifist and civil rights activist Reverend James M. Lawson, Jr., she listened to speeches, read news reports, pored over interview transcripts, and studied lectures. When she finally began phone interviews with the 87-year-old Lawson, she described the experience as 鈥渁mazing and surreal.鈥 鈥淗e would say, 鈥楴ow Kristen, listen closely. History got this bit wrong.鈥欌
In her I.S. titled 鈥淭he Scholar, the Teacher, the Saint: The Life Work, and Nonviolent Philosophy of Reverend James M. Lawson, Jr.,鈥 Estabrook traces the history and influence of a man little known for his contributions. Lawson began living his convictions when he was in college in 1951, serving 13 months of imprisonment for resisting the draft for the Korean War. In Nashville, Tenn., he organized the Nashville Sit-In Movement to end racial segregation at lunch counters, work that resulted in his expulsion from the Vanderbilt Divinity School, and condemnation as a 鈥渞adical and a communist, becoming the most feared man Nashville, and the most hated man in Memphis,鈥 writes Estabrook. She also details Rev. Lawson鈥檚 work organizing the Memphis Sanitation Workers Strike, significant because it fought against oppression of all kinds and against all people.
A double major in religious studies and history, Estabrook said she has embraced Rev. Lawson鈥檚 ideas both spiritually and practically. Co-president of Wooster鈥檚 student movement to offer a living wage to its hourly workers, Estabrook has used Lawson鈥檚 strategy鈥攆ocused, planful, deliberate communication鈥攊n her organizing efforts. As a result, she says the Living Wage Campaign has gained significant momentum throughout the year, with growing student support and increased administrative responsiveness. By the time the Board of Trustees met on campus in March, the students had a plan. On the first day of the Board鈥檚 scheduled meetings, trustee members walked to their 7: 30 a.m. breakfast meeting through a hallway lined with 175 silent students holding posters stating why they supported a living wage.
鈥淲e didn鈥檛 use protest language. It was non aggressive and non intrusive,鈥 says Estabrook. Conversations and engagement with board members was thoughtful and respectful, she said. 鈥淪ome said 鈥楾his makes sense to me in theory, but not in practice鈥 or 鈥楾his is the right thing to do, but the College is a business and this would be a financial risk.鈥欌
In her acknowledgements, Estabrook writes, 鈥淭hank you, Reverend Lawson, for your generosity in sharing your time and your wisdom with me. You have changed the way I think, the way I organize, and the way I live, and I feel tremendously indebted to you for your profound influence upon me, and upon our world.鈥
Estabrook will be serving as an elementary special education teacher for Teach for America in Tulsa, Oklahoma next year.
Virginia Hall
Abigail Helvering鈥檚 66-page Independent Study reads like fiction. But its truth makes it all the more gripping. In 鈥淎n Unlikely Hero: How Virginia Hall Became the Most Feared Allied Spy in Occupied France and Why You鈥檝e Never Head of Her,鈥 Helvering tells the comprehensive story鈥攙ery likely for the first time鈥攐f an American woman who succeeded both in spite of and because of her gender.
Heir to a fortune, Virginia Hall attended the most prestigious and exclusive undergraduate and graduate colleges in America and in Europe, studying international and diplomatic relations and becoming fluent in four languages. 鈥淗er lifelong goal鈥攁 position in the State Department as a diplomatic officer鈥攚as one she would never achieve,鈥 writes Helvering. The sexism of the time was compounded and facilitated by a hunting accident when Hall was 27 years old that left her with a wooden leg. The State Department decided that because of her disability, she was suited only for a clerical position.
Not only did the U.S. government trail behind its European counterparts in issues of gender equality, it also lagged in World War II espionage operations. 鈥淭he prevailing mentality of the U.S. with regard to spying was best summed up by Secretary of State Henry Stimson,鈥 writes Helvering. 鈥 鈥楪entlemen do not read each other鈥檚 mail.鈥欌
England held no such behavioral restrictions for either gentlemen or ladies and hired Virginia Hall into their Special Operations Executive (S.O.E.) intelligence service. Hall was supremely successful in the years that followed in various capacities with the British and American governments. 鈥淏y procuring and relying upon female agents, the S.O.E. took advantage of the blatant sexism exhibited in Europe: Nazis simply didn鈥檛 suspect that they could be duped by a woman,鈥 writes Helvering. And when realization struck, fury followed. Hall was targeted by the notorious Gestapo officer Klaus Barbie, as evidenced in a Nazi cable that read, 鈥淭he woman who limps is one of the most dangerous Allied agents in France. We must find and destroy her.鈥
Helvering tells the story of Virginia Hall鈥檚 life鈥攐f her multiple covers as a journalist, a social worker, and a milkmaid; of her winter trek over the Spanish Pyrenees evading Nazi patrols; of jail time, prestigious awards, multiple groundbreaking experiences as the first woman in a leadership role. Punctuating the story is its subtext鈥攖he silence of historians about an American hero who happened to be a woman.
This fall, Helvering will work for the House Select Committee investigating the 2012 Benghazi attack. Her long-term goal is to work in the area of international security and intelligence.
She is also writing a screenplay on the life of Virginia Hall. 鈥淚 thought it would be an incredible movie. My brother works for the movie industry in Hollywood, and he鈥檚 been reading the script and helping me edit. We鈥檙e excited!鈥
Helvering received a Mellon Grant from the College for the excellence of her trailer on Virginia Hall, which聽.
Posted in News on June 22, 2016.
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