3039M Fall 2019 Edition

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ABOUT OUR LEAGUE

A LASTING LEAGUE LEGACY AND COMMUNITY COMMITMENT

C

By Kristen Archer

ampbell Frank did not always think the Junior League Club, and a board member of the Children’s Hospital Child of Washington (JLW) was for her. This seems ironic, Health Center. She also contributed to the history of the Sulgrave given her family’s ties to the League—her maternal Club and St. Albans School and was the “Topics” columnist for grandmother served as President of the Junior League the Washington Times from 1982 to 1985. of Portland, ME, and her mother was a member of the Though Waldrop Frank’s accomplishments were numerous, the Junior League of the City of New York. value of The City of Washington cannot be overstated. Not only It was Frank’s paternal grandmother’s commitment to was the book groundbreaking for the time, but it visually docuJLW, however, which cemented her family’s legacy with the League mented a deep history. The City of Washington featured images and her connection to Washington, DC, which persists today. from private collections from well-connected League members Judith “Judy” Lanier Waldrop Frank, a native Washingtonian, and Waldrop Frank’s Washingtonian roots, never previously been served as President of JLW from 1966 to 1968. Writing and editing, released to the public at large. skills she would employ throughout her time with JLW and beyond, Campbell Frank describes her grandmother as an enterprising were paramount in Waldrop Frank’s family. Her father had served as person—very social, innovative, energized—who loved entertaining. editor-in-chief of the Washington Times-Herald. After graduating from When Frank was a child, she says she treasured the feeling of her Bryn Mawr College in 1953, Waldrop Frank won a contest sponsored grandmother treating her as an individual and an equal. Frank recalls by Condé Nast and became a writer for Vogue magazine. joining her grandmother on trips to visit her adult friends, run errands, In 1955, Waldrop Frank married Dr. Randolph Adams Frank Sr.; and attend activities. the couple had three children, the youngest of whom is Frank’s father, Lanier Frank. Growing up in the family home in the Spring Valley section of Washington, DC, he recalls attending countless meetings at the Klingle Mansion, JLW’s Headquarters at the time. Frank has shared many memories of his mother’s term as president of JLW and her work as an editor on The City of Washington: An Illustrated History. He fondly recalls a 25-foot dining table was brought into the family living room and filled from end to end with typewriters to produce the book. Waldrop Frank would go on to edit the Nineteenth Century magazine, published by the Victorian Society of America, and serve as a member of St. David’s Episcopal Church, the National Society of Colonial Dames of America, the Sulgrave Club, and the Chevy Chase Judith Frank with the Chairman of the Board of Security Storage Company of Washington (left), and Club. Over the years, she has also served the 1966 Holiday Shop Cover (right). At the time, Junior League members would go ask for sponsoras co-chair of the Washington Antiques ships in person and travel with a photographer to secure the images. This image is one of twenty that Show, president of the Evergreen Garden appeared in the 1966 brochure.

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Fall 2019


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3039M Fall 2019 Edition by Junior League of Washington - Issuu