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May 1, 2003
Maine Humanities Council's Center for the Book
is Named for Harriet P. Henry, Maine's First Woman Judge
Governor Baldacci joined a crowd of well-wishers in Portland
on the evening of April 28 to honor Harriet P. Henry as the
Maine Humanities Council named its Center for the Book for
her. He proclaimed the 28th the "Harriet P. Henry Center
for the Book Day". Dorothy Schwartz, executive director
of the Council thanked the many donors who made possible the
home for the Center for the Book. "The Council has grown
tremendously in the last five years and it is because of Harriet's
influence that our programs have expanded to new audiences.
The Center for the Book programs use literature and discussion
to bring us to a better understanding of ourselves and others.
We reach thousands of Mainers--pre-school children and their
parents and care providers, men and women who are just learning
to read, prisoners and probationers, youth at risk, and general
readers."
The Harriet P. Henry Center for the Book
In 1997, the Library of Congress chose the Maine Humanities
Council to host the Maine Center for the Book. The home of
the Council's reading and early literacy programs, the Center
is now named for Harriet P. Henry, a long-time supporter of
the Council, former board chair, and Maine's first woman judge.
A challenge grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities
(NEH) made possible a campaign to raise funds to buy and renovate
the Center for the Book offices (674 Brighton Avenue in Portland)
and to create the nucleus of a program endowment. The Council
has now raised more than the first million of the $1.15 million
campaign, completing the NEH challenge.
Bruce Cole, Chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities,
sent congratulations to both the Council and its donors, saying,
"We thank them all on behalf of the humanities in America.
We are confident that the new home for the Council and the
Harriet P. Henry Center for the Book will servethe citizens
of Maine well as they continue to seek deeper understanding
of the humanities, of our nation, and of the world."
Harriet Putnam Henry
Nationally recognized as an expert in marine law and coastal
management, Harriet P. Henry became Maine's first woman judge
in 1973. She soon became known as an advocate for women judges,
and for her work in the areas of child abuse and child welfare.
Harriet Henry is a graduate of Smith College and received
her law degree from George Washington University and moved
to Maine in 1958 with her husband Merton G. Henry where they
raised three children.
Harriet's extensive civic service includes membership on
the board of the original Maine Commission on the Status of
Women and the Cumberland County Child Abuse and Neglect Council.
She chaired the Portland Housing Authority, the Maine Commission
on the Future of the Courts, the Professional Ethics and Judicial
Responsibility Committee of the National Conference of Special
Court Judges, and the Child Abuse Committee of the Women Judges
Foundation for Justice.
Among Harriet's many honors are an Honorary Doctor of Laws
from Bowdoin College and from the University of Maine, and
the Maine Commission on Women¹s Woman of the Year Award.
Her board service includes, in addition to the Maine Humanities
Council, the Maine Historical Society, Westbrook College,
Sweetser Children's Services, the National Center for State
Courts and, as a charter member, the National Association
of Women Judges.
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