Fannie E. S. Heck

Fannie E. S. Heck
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Short Name: Fannie E. S. Heck
Full Name: Heck, Fannie E. S. (Exile Scudder), 1862-1915
Birth Year: 1862
Death Year: 1915

Born: June 16, 1862, Buffalo Lithia Springs, Virginia.
Died: August 25, 1915, Raleigh, North Carolina.
Buried: Oakwood Cemetery, Raleigh, North Carolina.

Fannie received the name "Exile" in memory of her birthplace, to which her mother had fled from Morgantown, West Virginia, during the American civil war (in which Fannie’s lawyer father served as a lieutenant colonel). After the war, the Heck family moved to Raleigh, North Carolina. She attended the Hobgood Seminary girls’ school there, and later the Hollins Institute near Roanoke, Virginia. She taught Sunday School at the First Baptist Church in Raleigh, and went on to become vice-president of the Southern Sociological Congress, a member of the North Carolina Society of Social Work, president of the Woman’s Missionary Union of North Carolina (1886-1915), and president of the Baptist Convention’s Woman’s Missionary Union (1892-94, 1895-99 and 1906-15). She also helped found the Woman’s Missionary Union Training School (later renamed the Carver School of Missions and Social Work), Louisville, Kentucky. Her works include:

In Royal Service, 1913
Everyday Gladness, 1915
Sunrise and Other Poems, 1916
The Pageant of the Golden Rule, 1916

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