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Margaret
Reynolds Schauffler was born in Cleveland, Ohio on June 4, 1896
as the youngest of the ten children of Dr. Henry A. Schauffler,
a clergyman and missionary. Together, he and his wife, Clara Hobart
Schauffler, founded the Schauffler Missionary Training School (Cleveland,
Ohio). The school, which later became Schauffler College, merged
with the Oberlin College Graduate School of Theology (Oberlin,
Ohio) in 1954. Currently, its endowment supports the Schauffler
programs in religious education and social work at Defiance College
(Defiance, Ohio).
After graduating from Fowler Elementary School in Cleveland and
Oberlin High School, Miss Schauffler entered Oberlin College where
she majored
in music. In 1914, she joined the Musical Union in which she sang
as late as 1987, thus probably becoming the longest-standing member
of the organization. She received the AB degree and earned Phi
Beta Kappa honors from Oberlin in 1918. She then embarked upon
a four-year
program of art studies at the Cleveland Institution of Art and
earned a diploma in 1922. She subsequently taught art at the Elyria
(Ohio)
High School (1922-23) before becoming an instructor in art at Oberlin
College in 1923. In 1926, she was promoted to the rank of assistant
professor and in 1959 to associate professor. Following her retirement
from Oberlin College in 1961, she taught art at Ashland College
(Ashland, Ohio) for eight years and for several years chaired the
department.
In 1962, she returned to Oberlin where she taught painting, enamel
work and calligraphy privately and through the Firelands Association
for the Visual Arts (FAVA).
Throughout her career, Miss Schauffler continued to study art
and exhibit her own works. In 1931, she received an MA degree in
art
from Western Reserve University (now Case Western Reserve University)
in Cleveland. During summers and sabbaticals, she studied art at
the Breckenbridge School of Painting in Gloucester, Massachusetts,
The Berkshire (New Hampshire) Sumner School of Art, Syracuse University
(Syracuse, New York), Columbia University (New York City) and the
New York University School of Fine and Applied Arts in Paris (France).
In 1940 she won a research grant to study art at the summer session
of University of Chicago (Illinois). During a sabbatical leave
in 1955-56, she studied Japanese art at the Boston Museum of Fine
Arts
(Massachusetts) and later worked in Tokyo (Japan) under Michiko
Hirayama. She also studied privately with William 0. Forrest and
Abel G. Warshawsky.
A specialist in painting and crafts, Miss Schauffler exhibited
her works widely at art centers and universities both within and
outside
Ohio, including the Allen Memorial Art Museum (Oberlin College),
the Cleveland Museum of Art, Case Western Reserve University, and
also at the Ohio State Fair. Nationally, she participated in exhibitions
in Ogunquit (Maine), the University of Illinois (Champaign-Urbana),
the University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia), and Wichita State
University (Kansas), where the then-governor of the state bought
one of her paintings. In 1933, she designed the Oberlin College
Alumni Medal that is awarded annually.
Margaret Schauffler was a member of several professional organizations:
The American Association of University Professors, the American
Federation of Artists and the College Art Association. She also
continued her
parents' dedication to promoting social and civic causes. She was
a staunch advocate for temperance and sought to prohibit the sale
of alcohol in Oberlin. For many years she was a member of the Oberlin
Consumers Cooperative, serving as secretary during 1949-51. As
a member of the social action committee of First Church, she organized
candidates' nights and forums on community concerns. Also active
in the church's sewing circle, she made clothing for Appalachian
and Native American Children on South Dakota reservations. As life-long
pacifist, she joined other members of the national pacifist organization,
Peacemakers, in refusing to pay income taxes in 1949. Schauffler
stated that "A large percentage of our federal taxes are used
for vast military expenditures surely leading toward atomic war
[which I believe] would be a crime against humanity." In 1953,
she participated in a social action seminar and traveled to several
European
countries under the auspices of the social action committee of
Congregational Christian churches. She sponsored the education
of a Hong Kong student,
Kwok-Sang, which enabled him to earn a PhD in Engineering. At its
May 30, 1988 commencement ceremonies (also Miss Schauffler's 70th
class reunion), Oberlin College presented her an award for distinguished
service to the community.
In 1993, Miss Schauffler gave to Oberlin College President S.
Frederick Starr a lithograph portrait of Tomas Masaryk, the first
president
of Czechoslovakia. Subsequently, President Starr arranged for United
States President George Herbert Walker Bush to present it to Vaclav
Havel who placed it in Prague Castle.
Margaret Reynolds Schauffler died in the Elyria (Ohio) United
Methodist Home on February 23, 1994 at the age of 97.Many members
of her
family attended Oberlin College including her sister Grace, AB
1916, her
half-sister, Mary (Mrs. F. G. Platt), L.B., 1888, and her brother
Lawrence, AB 1915; Mmus, 1949. A great-grand niece, Nancy, and
a great-grand nephew, David, graduated in 1918 and 1983 respectively.
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