Home > Carnegie Center > Arizona Women's Hall of Fame > Inductees > Woody, Clara T.
Clara T. Woody
1887-1981
Inducted in 1987

Used by permission from the Arizona Historical Society
”Since I have material that no one else can get today – those
who told it to me are dead – I want to get it written.”
-- Clara Woody to Sadie Schmidt of the Arizona Historical
Society
Clara Thompson Woody was neither an academician nor a politician, but
when the Gila County Archaeological and Historical Society opened a museum
in her name in 1972, important members of both these fields attended the
dedication ceremonies. Governor Jack Williams, state senators and representatives,
the mayors of Globe and Miami, and Globe and Miami school administrators
all turned out to honor this local historian.
Born in Belleville, Kansas in 1885, Clara Thompson lived in New Mexico
and California before moving to Globe in 1917 to work as a secretary to
county attorney Hugh Foster. Less than a year after moving to Globe, Clara
met and married Clarence Woody of West Virginia. Mr. Woody was a soldier
in the 1st U.S. Cavalry, which was called to Arizona to break up a mineworkers’ strike.
Clara followed her husband to Texas and Oklahoma, and had two children,
John and Jean. After Clarence was discharged, the family moved back to
Globe.
From the time she worked at the county attorney’s office, Clara
was interested in Arizona’s pioneer history. Accounts of how she
began her vast collection of information about Gila County history vary. Some
say a librarian from the State Library in Phoenix asked her to collect
data on Gila County; in a 1972 interview, Clara said that a Phoenix newspaper
asked her to write an article about the history of Globe. In any case,
she was a very successful interviewer; survivors of the pioneer days gave
her information that they would not impart to anyone else, often swearing
her to secrecy until the parties had died. Her collecting interests did
not stop with “oral history” but extended to historic photographs
and artifacts as well.
Clara dreamed of writing four books: two about Arizona, one about New
Mexico, and one about her family, who were “Ohio pioneer Quakers.” Unfortunately,
the need to care for her family and hard times kept her from achieving
her dream. She did, however, gather large amounts of historical data from
interviews, newspapers, and court records, and she wrote many pamphlets
and newspaper articles, including a series in Globe’s Arizona
Record in 1956. She joined the board of directors of the Arizona Historical
Society, and traveled to Tucson for their meetings as long as her health
would permit.
In 1974, the Historical Society helped Clara realize her dream of writing
a book about the history of Globe. Milton Schwartz, a graduate student
at the University of Arizona, collected and edited Clara’s notes,
transcripts, and articles. Schwartz and various members of the Society
assembled the book, which was approved by Clara, and her son, John, also
a historian. Globe, Arizona: Early times in a Little World of Copper
and Cattle was published in 1977.
Clara Woody died on April 5, 1981, at the age of ninety-five.
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