Swift was president of the Century Club in San Francisco. She was also active in the Women's Relief Corps[9] the California Women's Suffrage Association,[1][10] the Colonial Dames of America, the Society of the Mayflower, and the national Daughters of the American Revolution.[11][12][13] "The Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution should not be devoted to ancestor-worship and to preserving history," she told the organization in a speech in 1906, "but it should bend its energies also to making history and to creating better conditions for posterity." In the same speech, she expressed opposition to immigration into the United States, and her support for Americanization and literacy programs.[14]
Personal life
Mary Wood married American diplomat John Franklin Swift. They lived in San Francisco but were often abroad for Swift's work, until he died in Tokyo in 1891. She was left with a significant fortune in widowhood.[7] After the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, she moved to Berkeley, California.[15] She died in 1927, in Berkeley, aged 86 years.[16]
References
^ abJordan, Victoria. "Biographical Sketch of Mary Wood Swift". Biographical Database of NAWSA Suffragists, 1890–1920, Alexander Street Documents. Retrieved 2020-05-27.