Millicent Fenwick Barnardsville Mr Local History Cartoon
It’s strange how you can walk back and forth a hundred times and never notice something, and then one day, you slow down and become mindful. I had that experience the other day as I walked past the iconic Millicent Fenwick bronze statue in Bernardsville and started to think…. this has to be an interesting story. Here’s what we found.
Especially in times like these I am very interested in keeping Mrs. Fenwick’s record of service and her views in front of the public.
Helen Cavaluzzo Walton -Millicent Fenwick Monument Association
The statue that stands in Bernardsville wasn’t a foregone conclusion. Sure, Congresswoman Millicent Fenwick was a local icon in the community. After her death, this story is three years in the making resulting in a lasting icon that quietly opens her arms, embracing the town and gracing those who learn the history of this stalwart female pioneer. The statue was dedicated Oct. 15, 1995 and was was the first female outdoor sculpture in New Jersey.
Locals love the Fenwick statue so much that tradition tells us to step up and dress Congresswoman Fenwick for the season and the times.
Dana Toomey, a Goshen, Connecticut resident, and former Bernardsville native, sculpted the life-size bronze statue.
Fenwick espoused several causes, including civil rights, peace in Vietnam, aid for asbestos victims, help for the poor, prison reforms, strip-mining controls, urban renewal, gun control, reduction of military programs, and restrictions on capital punishment.
U.S. Republican Congresswoman who was celebrated for her political independence. Name variations: Millicent Hammond Fenwick. Born Millicent Vernon Hammond in New York City on February 25, 1910; died on September 16, 1992, of heart failure at her home in Bernardsville, New Jersey; second of three children of Ogden Haggerty Hammond (a financier and state representative) and Mary Picton Stevens Hammond (an heiress and humanitarian); attended Foxcroft School, Middleburg, Virginia; studied philosophy under Bertrand Russell at the New School for Social Research; attended classes at Columbia University’s extension school in 1933; married Hugh Fenwick, in 1934 (divorced 1945); children: Hugh H. Fenwick; Mary Fenwick Reckford.
Elected councilwoman for Bernardsville, N.J. (1958–64); elected New Jersey State Assemblywoman (1969–72); appointed New Jersey director of consumer affairs (1972); elected U.S. Congresswoman (1974–83); served as U.S. envoy to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (1983–87).
Local residents have been involving their own Millicent Fenwick for years. They cover her when she is cold, put on a bonnet for Easter, and even recently protected her from the pandemic and BLM rallies.
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Mr.Localhistory looks great!!! Especially in times like these I am very interested in keeping Mrs. Fenwick's record of service and her views in front of the public.
BTW thank you for helping to keep alive the memory of Mrs Fenwick and what she meant to our country. It is by preserving the history of service like this that we will hope to inspire a new wind of cooperation and peace in the world and a Republican party that more closely emulates the values held by Mrs. Fenwick.
Got me thinking of other great female statues. Love this one of "FEARLESS GIRL" https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQW_k4cXe14ADw-zbIYpi-nGqyRcgj8qI3xBQ&usqp=CAU
Millicent Fenwick was my idol. She greeted everyone warmly with a smile. She was a true woman of knowledge, grace and elegance. I'm quite sure I was the first one to adorn her with a scarf. Someone removed it the next day. I love seeing her remembered and decorated regularly.