social worker, political hostess, lobbyist, lawyer
Fanny Neal Yarborough Bickett[a] (October 11, 1870 – July 3, 1941) was an American social worker, public official, lawyer, and lobbyist. She served as the First Lady of North Carolina from 1917 to 1921, as the wife of Governor Thomas W. Bickett, and used her influence in his administration to enact social reforms and support women's suffrage. During World War I, she maintained a victory garden at the North Carolina Executive Mansion and promoted home gardens to support the war effort. Bickett was the commandant of the Southeastern District of the U.S. Training Corps and visited American troops in France as a representative of the YMCA.
Bickett was born Fanny Neal Yarborough on October 11, 1870, at Rose Hill, her family's plantation in Franklin County.[1] Her father, Colonel William Henry Yarborough, was a planter and former officer in the Confederate States Army.[2] Her mother, Lucy "Lula" Massenburg Davis Yarborough, died when she was three years old.[2] Her father raised her with the help of an aunt, Fannie Yarborough Neal of Louisburg, North Carolina, for whom she was named.[3]
Bickett became First Lady of North Carolina in 1917, upon the election of her husband, Thomas Walter Bickett, as the 54th Governor of the state.[2] She was among the most formally educated first ladies and one of the first to have a separate profession.[2] She pioneered efforts for public assistance and was a lobbyist for the development of North Carolina's welfare system.[3] Due to her influence, her husband's administration introduced social reforms including the establishment of juvenile courts, stricter regulations regarding the employment of minors, better treatment and living conditions for incarcerated people, and an increase in public health services.[3]
When she and her husband moved into the North Carolina Executive Mansion, she brought her own household staff from Louisburg.[2] She employed the architect James Salter to conduct a complete inspection of the North Carolina Executive Mansion, and supported his suggestions to improve the building, forwarding the request to the North Carolina General Assembly's Joint Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds.[4] The initial request for $65,000 to fund renovations did not pass in the general assembly, but a measure enacted in March 1917 for $4,000 was granted, and a subsequent allocation of another $4,000 in 1919 went towards renovation costs.[4] In 1920, Bickett had the second-floor ballroom converted into a bedroom, bathroom, closets, and a corridor to connect other family bedrooms together.[4] She purchased dining room furniture, a four-poster bed for the mansion's guest room, and a consul table with a mirror for the grand hallway.[4]
During World War I, Bickett promoted home gardens to aid in the war effort, and maintained a victory garden at the governor's mansion.[3] She was actively involved in the Young Men's Christian Association and the Young Women's Christian Association and, in 1918, visited American troops in France as a representative of the YMCA.[4] Bickett provided housing for soldiers passing through Raleigh during the war, allowing them to stay at the governor's mansion, setting up sixty cots in the ballroom.[4] She worked with the Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps to improve the physical conditions of women working in war offices and in war-related capacities.[3] Bickett was the commandant of the Southeastern District of the Training Corps, serving for several summers at a camp near Asheville.[3]
In 1920, Bickett and her husband appeared before a joint session of the North Carolina State Senate and the North Carolina House of Representatives in support of women's suffrage.[2] Less than a year after her husband's term as governor ended, he died in December 1921.[2] Shortly after his death, Bickett became the head of the Infant and Maternal Welfare Bureau of the State Department of Health, serving in this capacity until 1924.[2] In 1924, she became the Superintendent of Public Welfare for Wake County.[4] She was known to have progressive views on racial policy, and hired several African-American people for professional and clerical positions in her office.[4]
On November 29, 1898, she married Thomas Walter Bickett, a country lawyer whom she met in Louisburg.[2] They had three children: William Yarborough Bickett, Thomas Walter Bickett, Jr., and Mary Covington Bickett.[2]
She died on July 2, 1941, at Rex Hospital, following a heart attack.[4] Her funeral was held at Christ Church.[4] She was buried beside her husband at Oak Lawn Memorial Cemetery in Louisburg.[2]
^ abcdefMoore, Jeanelle Coulter; Hamrick, Grace Rutledge (1981). The First Ladies of North Carolina, First Ladies from 1776-1889; Brief Biographies of the First Ladies Who Have Lived in the Present Mansion (1889-1981). Raleigh, North Carolina: The Executive Mansion Fine Arts Committee, The Bicentennial Foundation, and the Mary Duke Biddle Foundation. pp. 33–34.
^ abcdefghijklmnoHam, Marie Sharpe; Blake, Debra A.; Morris, C. Edwards (2000). North Carolina's First Ladies 1891-2001, Who Have Resided in the Executive Mansion At 200 North Blount Street. Raleigh, North Carolina: The North Carolina Executive Mansion Fine Arts Committee and the North Carolina Executive Mansion Fund, Inc. pp. 27–30. ISBN0-86526-294-2.