ODELL, ROBERTA ELIZABETH (Tilton), social reformer; b. 20 Sept. 1837 in Whiting, Maine, daughter of Daniel Ingalls Odell and Hannah Elizabeth Peavey; m. 11 Nov. 1858, in Eastport, Maine, John Tilton of Saint John; d. 28 May 1925 in Ottawa and was buried 1 June in Beechwood Cemetery.
Roberta E. Tilton was an imposing figure of high Victorian Ottawa society. Tall, attractive, and energetic, she was a convincing writer and impressive public speaker in championing women’s public role in society, and she helped to forge an enduring female culture through her work in several women’s organizations.
She arrived in Ottawa in January 1868, her husband having abandoned his commercial business at Saint John in order to join the federal civil service. Her first known public involvement came in 1878, when she was elected first vice-president of the Ontario Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. Three years later she became a founding member of the Ottawa WCTU; she was made president of this body and chair of its Sunday school department, both by acclamation. Devoted to the eradication of alcohol, tobacco, and violence against women and children, the WCTU quickly added to its mission the correction of a host of other social ills. Chief among its goals were the protection of the Christian family unit, the inculcation of a sense of personal and social responsibility in youth through education, and resistance to the hedonism associated with rampant commercialism and secularism.
Tilton was in the forefront of the movement. One of the public projects she promoted in this early period was the establishment of a coffee house in the By Ward Market, where alcoholic refreshments were distressingly bountiful. Even though her husband dismissed the plan as naive, she and her colleagues pushed the initiative through without any help from the WCTU’s male advisers. “The ladies had but one mind and one object,” she wrote, “to win souls.” “Our minds had been fixed on the Master and his love, our object to win souls for Him.” Raised in a Unitarian family, Tilton had joined the Church of England at the time of her marriage and her faith was grounded in Anglican evangelicalism. A true believer, she maintained, could aid in another’s salvation by forcing a reckoning with sins committed and by creating the means to shun sin in the future.
Like other prominent local and provincial WCTU members, Tilton also served her organization at the dominion level, as superintendent of sabbath observance (1889), treasurer (1892–95), superintendent of soldiers and volunteer camps/militia (1895–97), and official auditor (1898–1901). She had introduced a department of narcotics to the provincial body in 1890 and served as its superintendent until 1891; in 1890 as well she was an Ontario delegate to the annual convention of the Dominion WCTU.
Tilton was also the main founder of the Woman’s Auxiliary to the Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada. She presented her proposal for the new body in April 1885 as the head of a seven-woman delegation to the management board of the church’s Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society. In her words, “There are in the Church to-day Marys who have chosen the better part; there are the restless serving Marthas, who only want the opportunity to do something for Jesus; the Magdalens, who tell the story of our blessed Lord’s resurrection; the Phoebes, who convey messages of love and Christian greeting; the Tryphenas, and Tryphosas, Dorcases, who are never weary in well doing . . . yes, in the Church of Canada – from Victoria to Sydney – there are women longing to labor more abundantly, to consecrate all their talents to the Lord’s work.” The board enthusiastically accepted the offer. Tilton was invited to be secretary of the auxiliary in the diocese of Ontario, the first branch to be established [see John Travers Lewis*]. She became corresponding secretary of the WA at the ecclesiastical provincial level when it was formed in 1886, and in 1891 was elected its president, a post she would occupy for a decade. Between 1902 and 1908 she served as president of the dominion auxiliary. Throughout this period she remained active in her diocesan body, where she accepted a number of executive roles. Under Tilton’s leadership the WA supported a variety of causes but gradually came to specialize in support of missions and “lady missionaries” and especially in funding the education of missionaries’ children who lived far from schools. It became the largest women’s association within the Church of England in Canada – at her death it numbered around 70,000 in 3,000 branches – and remains the church’s oldest continuous national organization.
When Tilton retired from the executive of the dominion WA in 1908, she was presented with a sizeable cash gift by the grateful organization. She decided to donate the money to support aged women missionaries. The Ottawa diocesan auxiliary, of which she had been a member since the diocese was formed in 1896, further honoured her after her death by the purchase in 1925 of a memorial house in her name as its headquarters. These marks of respect were bestowed in the full knowledge that Tilton had been instrumental in redefining the role of Anglican women. Formerly seen as adjuncts and helpmates in church activities defined for them, women through the auxiliary that Tilton had initiated insisted on their right to identify projects of special significance to other women and to find funding for those projects within their own membership.
Other Anglican women’s organizations received the benefit of Tilton’s leadership. In April 1889 she had reorganized the Ottawa branch of the Girls’ Friendly Society in Canada. Ready and able to use the same strategies she had pioneered in creating, with the WA, a diocesan and ultimately a national organization of older women, she was eager to recreate a structure in which mature Christian women would mentor their younger sisters. Her leadership of the diocesan GFS demonstrates the interlocking nature of women’s organizations which so characterized the period. For example, the GFS worked with several organizations in outfitting a room in the Children’s Hospital and in providing volunteers and financial aid for the interdenominational mission in Anglesea Square. Its members worked with the Local Council of Women on various projects and benefited from speakers sent by the Young Women’s Christian Association, where the director was a friend of Tilton’s. Through her involvement with the Anglican diocesan Mothers’ Union and Girls’ Auxiliary, Tilton further strengthened networks of Christian women. Beyond the church, she was one of the founders of the National Council of Women of Canada, where she was to take a special interest in immigration; at the request of Lady Aberdeen[Marjoribanks*] she represented the GFS at the council’s organizing meeting. She sat as well on the executive of the Local Council and of the Orphans’ Home of the City of Ottawa, with its Refuge Branch for aged women.
Tilton’s husband, John, who had risen to become a deputy minister and had served as commander of the Governor General’s Foot Guards, predeceased her in 1914. At some point they had adopted a son, baptized Silas, who had died before reaching manhood. In her journal for 1912 Tilton marked his birthday, noting that, had he been spared, “he would have been married and had children probably & that would have been a great pleasure to us all.” “But,” she added, “I do not doubt that God did what was best.” After a full and dutiful life, she herself died in May 1925. She had earned the commendation to which the WA as a whole aspired: “She hath done what she could, not what she would like to do, nor what others thought she ought to do, but what she could.” Her life of service is commemorated by the Anglican Church of Canada on 30 May.
Sharon Anne Cook
ACC, Diocese of Ottawa Arch., Girls' Friendly Soc. and Ottawa Diocesan Council, minute-book, 1894; General Synod Arch. (Toronto), GS 76-15 (Woman's Auxiliary papers), R. E. Tilton, journals. ...AO, F 885, MU 8397–98, 8406–7, 8425.10; RG 80-8-0-988, no.9405....NA, RG 31, C1, 1901, Ottawa, B, 4: 23, no.39 (mfm. at AO). ...Ottawa Citizen, 29 May 1925. ...Church of England in Canada, Board of Domestic and Foreign Missions, Woman's Auxiliary, Letter leaflet (Toronto), November 1896. ...S. A. Cook, “To ‘bear the burdens of others profitably’: the changing role of women in the diocese of Ottawa, 1896–1996,” in Anglicanism in the Ottawa valley, ed. F. A. Peake (Ottawa, 1997), 129–53. ...Mrs Willoughby Cummings [E. A. McC. Shortt], Our story: some pages from the history of the Woman's Auxiliary to the Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada, 1885 to 1929 (Toronto, [1929?]). ...Key Eliot, “History of the Woman's Auxiliary in Carleton deanery” (typescript, Ottawa, 1957; copy in ACC, Diocese of Ottawa Arch.)....National Council of Women of Canada, Year book (Ottawa; Toronto). ...Vital statistics from N.B. newspapers (Johnson), 17, no.864. ...[L. C. W.], Sketch of the life and work of Roberta E. Tilton, by one of her first W.A. members ([Ottawa?], n.d.).
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Roberta E. Tilton was an imposing figure of high Victorian Ottawa society. Tall, attractive, and energetic, she was a convincing writer and impressive public speaker in championing women’s public role in society, and she helped to forge an enduring female culture through her work in several women’s organizations.
She arrived in Ottawa in January 1868, her husband having abandoned his commercial business at Saint John in order to join the federal civil service. Her first known public involvement came in 1878, when she was elected first vice-president of the Ontario Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. Three years later she became a founding member of the Ottawa WCTU; she was made president of this body and chair of its Sunday school department, both by acclamation. Devoted to the eradication of alcohol, tobacco, and violence against women and children, the WCTU quickly added to its mission the correction of a host of other social ills. Chief among its goals were the protection of the Christian family unit, the inculcation of a sense of personal and social responsibility in youth through education, and resistance to the hedonism associated with rampant commercialism and secularism.
Tilton was in the forefront of the movement. One of the public projects she promoted in this early period was the establishment of a coffee house in the By Ward Market, where alcoholic refreshments were distressingly bountiful. Even though her husband dismissed the plan as naive, she and her colleagues pushed the initiative through without any help from the WCTU’s male advisers. “The ladies had but one mind and one object,” she wrote, “to win souls.” “Our minds had been fixed on the Master and his love, our object to win souls for Him.” Raised in a Unitarian family, Tilton had joined the Church of England at the time of her marriage and her faith was grounded in Anglican evangelicalism. A true believer, she maintained, could aid in another’s salvation by forcing a reckoning with sins committed and by creating the means to shun sin in the future.
Like other prominent local and provincial WCTU members, Tilton also served her organization at the dominion level, as superintendent of sabbath observance (1889), treasurer (1892–95), superintendent of soldiers and volunteer camps/militia (1895–97), and official auditor (1898–1901). She had introduced a department of narcotics to the provincial body in 1890 and served as its superintendent until 1891; in 1890 as well she was an Ontario delegate to the annual convention of the Dominion WCTU.
Tilton was also the main founder of the Woman’s Auxiliary to the Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada. She presented her proposal for the new body in April 1885 as the head of a seven-woman delegation to the management board of the church’s Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society. In her words, “There are in the Church to-day Marys who have chosen the better part; there are the restless serving Marthas, who only want the opportunity to do something for Jesus; the Magdalens, who tell the story of our blessed Lord’s resurrection; the Phoebes, who convey messages of love and Christian greeting; the Tryphenas, and Tryphosas, Dorcases, who are never weary in well doing . . . yes, in the Church of Canada – from Victoria to Sydney – there are women longing to labor more abundantly, to consecrate all their talents to the Lord’s work.” The board enthusiastically accepted the offer. Tilton was invited to be secretary of the auxiliary in the diocese of Ontario, the first branch to be established [see John Travers Lewis*]. She became corresponding secretary of the WA at the ecclesiastical provincial level when it was formed in 1886, and in 1891 was elected its president, a post she would occupy for a decade. Between 1902 and 1908 she served as president of the dominion auxiliary. Throughout this period she remained active in her diocesan body, where she accepted a number of executive roles. Under Tilton’s leadership the WA supported a variety of causes but gradually came to specialize in support of missions and “lady missionaries” and especially in funding the education of missionaries’ children who lived far from schools. It became the largest women’s association within the Church of England in Canada – at her death it numbered around 70,000 in 3,000 branches – and remains the church’s oldest continuous national organization.
When Tilton retired from the executive of the dominion WA in 1908, she was presented with a sizeable cash gift by the grateful organization. She decided to donate the money to support aged women missionaries. The Ottawa diocesan auxiliary, of which she had been a member since the diocese was formed in 1896, further honoured her after her death by the purchase in 1925 of a memorial house in her name as its headquarters. These marks of respect were bestowed in the full knowledge that Tilton had been instrumental in redefining the role of Anglican women. Formerly seen as adjuncts and helpmates in church activities defined for them, women through the auxiliary that Tilton had initiated insisted on their right to identify projects of special significance to other women and to find funding for those projects within their own membership.
Other Anglican women’s organizations received the benefit of Tilton’s leadership. In April 1889 she had reorganized the Ottawa branch of the Girls’ Friendly Society in Canada. Ready and able to use the same strategies she had pioneered in creating, with the WA, a diocesan and ultimately a national organization of older women, she was eager to recreate a structure in which mature Christian women would mentor their younger sisters. Her leadership of the diocesan GFS demonstrates the interlocking nature of women’s organizations which so characterized the period. For example, the GFS worked with several organizations in outfitting a room in the Children’s Hospital and in providing volunteers and financial aid for the interdenominational mission in Anglesea Square. Its members worked with the Local Council of Women on various projects and benefited from speakers sent by the Young Women’s Christian Association, where the director was a friend of Tilton’s. Through her involvement with the Anglican diocesan Mothers’ Union and Girls’ Auxiliary, Tilton further strengthened networks of Christian women. Beyond the church, she was one of the founders of the National Council of Women of Canada, where she was to take a special interest in immigration; at the request of Lady Aberdeen[Marjoribanks*] she represented the GFS at the council’s organizing meeting. She sat as well on the executive of the Local Council and of the Orphans’ Home of the City of Ottawa, with its Refuge Branch for aged women.
Tilton’s husband, John, who had risen to become a deputy minister and had served as commander of the Governor General’s Foot Guards, predeceased her in 1914. At some point they had adopted a son, baptized Silas, who had died before reaching manhood. In her journal for 1912 Tilton marked his birthday, noting that, had he been spared, “he would have been married and had children probably & that would have been a great pleasure to us all.” “But,” she added, “I do not doubt that God did what was best.” After a full and dutiful life, she herself died in May 1925. She had earned the commendation to which the WA as a whole aspired: “She hath done what she could, not what she would like to do, nor what others thought she ought to do, but what she could.” Her life of service is commemorated by the Anglican Church of Canada on 30 May.
Sharon Anne Cook
ACC, Diocese of Ottawa Arch., Girls' Friendly Soc. and Ottawa Diocesan Council, minute-book, 1894; General Synod Arch. (Toronto), GS 76-15 (Woman's Auxiliary papers), R. E. Tilton, journals. ...AO, F 885, MU 8397–98, 8406–7, 8425.10; RG 80-8-0-988, no.9405....NA, RG 31, C1, 1901, Ottawa, B, 4: 23, no.39 (mfm. at AO). ...Ottawa Citizen, 29 May 1925. ...Church of England in Canada, Board of Domestic and Foreign Missions, Woman's Auxiliary, Letter leaflet (Toronto), November 1896. ...S. A. Cook, “To ‘bear the burdens of others profitably’: the changing role of women in the diocese of Ottawa, 1896–1996,” in Anglicanism in the Ottawa valley, ed. F. A. Peake (Ottawa, 1997), 129–53. ...Mrs Willoughby Cummings [E. A. McC. Shortt], Our story: some pages from the history of the Woman's Auxiliary to the Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada, 1885 to 1929 (Toronto, [1929?]). ...Key Eliot, “History of the Woman's Auxiliary in Carleton deanery” (typescript, Ottawa, 1957; copy in ACC, Diocese of Ottawa Arch.)....National Council of Women of Canada, Year book (Ottawa; Toronto). ...Vital statistics from N.B. newspapers (Johnson), 17, no.864. ...[L. C. W.], Sketch of the life and work of Roberta E. Tilton, by one of her first W.A. members ([Ottawa?], n.d.).
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Our Histories, Our Hearts
Our Histories, Our Hearts tells the story of the Anglican Women's Auxillary and, after 1967, the Anglican Church Women or ACW: Their contributions to the church and to Canada since 1870. In 1885, a bold group of seven committed women, led by Roberta Tilton at St. Georges Anglican Church in Ottawa, formed what became the Women's Auxillary or WA. There is much we can learn from the stories of these women who were certainly not boring or dull.
In the nineteenth century, women could not vote, run for office or even own a bank account. In Ottawa there were too many churches and not enough money for 'mission work'. Under British law, women were not even legally persons. The church was run by ordained men. Women were not allowed to attend synods or other major church governing bodies, nor could they be ordained as priests or bishops. Women got permission to become involved in fund raising and 'mission work' however. Much of their work and their legacy is little known even though these women lived their lives with great courage, made great sacrifices, and developed Canada in ways that have now largely been forgotten. This video has been adapted in Ken Burns 'Civil War' style from a slide show prepared by the Anglican Women's Unit for a conference in 1982. Narrated by the Reverend Jessica Worden, it has been revised and greatly augmented by the Reverend Jim Collins with the help of the Ottawa ACW and archivists from across Canada.
Also included on the DVD is a promo version of Jim Collins' Taking Time - The Heroine of Hull as a special feature. Starring Joanna Reynolds in the leading role of this twenty four minute docudrama, this is the related story of Bertha Wright who founded the Ottawa YWCA in the early 1890s and became Canada's first YWCA president.
In 1910, Eva Hasell became involved as a fund raiser in the Archbishop's Western Canada Fund in England. In 1914 she got a driver's licence and trained for mission work at St. Christopher's in London. She came to Canada for the first time in 1920 and continued her ministry into the 1960s. Every year she raised money in England during the winter and bought a new van to travel in different parts of western Canada to do mission work. She is one of the women profiled in Our Histories, Our Hearts.
Copies of Our Histories, Our Hearts DVD are available for a donation of $20 (plus $10 for shipping and handling) c/o: The Ottawa Diocesan ACW, 71 Bronson Avenue. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1R 6G6. Please mark on the envelope "Our Histories, Our Hearts DVD". For more information contact Leslie Worden at (613) 233-6271 ext. 243. Produced by the Anglican Diocese of Ottawa ACW and Naklik Productions Inc. © 2007
Our Histories, Our Hearts tells the story of the Anglican Women's Auxillary and, after 1967, the Anglican Church Women or ACW: Their contributions to the church and to Canada since 1870. In 1885, a bold group of seven committed women, led by Roberta Tilton at St. Georges Anglican Church in Ottawa, formed what became the Women's Auxillary or WA. There is much we can learn from the stories of these women who were certainly not boring or dull.
In the nineteenth century, women could not vote, run for office or even own a bank account. In Ottawa there were too many churches and not enough money for 'mission work'. Under British law, women were not even legally persons. The church was run by ordained men. Women were not allowed to attend synods or other major church governing bodies, nor could they be ordained as priests or bishops. Women got permission to become involved in fund raising and 'mission work' however. Much of their work and their legacy is little known even though these women lived their lives with great courage, made great sacrifices, and developed Canada in ways that have now largely been forgotten. This video has been adapted in Ken Burns 'Civil War' style from a slide show prepared by the Anglican Women's Unit for a conference in 1982. Narrated by the Reverend Jessica Worden, it has been revised and greatly augmented by the Reverend Jim Collins with the help of the Ottawa ACW and archivists from across Canada.
Also included on the DVD is a promo version of Jim Collins' Taking Time - The Heroine of Hull as a special feature. Starring Joanna Reynolds in the leading role of this twenty four minute docudrama, this is the related story of Bertha Wright who founded the Ottawa YWCA in the early 1890s and became Canada's first YWCA president.
In 1910, Eva Hasell became involved as a fund raiser in the Archbishop's Western Canada Fund in England. In 1914 she got a driver's licence and trained for mission work at St. Christopher's in London. She came to Canada for the first time in 1920 and continued her ministry into the 1960s. Every year she raised money in England during the winter and bought a new van to travel in different parts of western Canada to do mission work. She is one of the women profiled in Our Histories, Our Hearts.
Copies of Our Histories, Our Hearts DVD are available for a donation of $20 (plus $10 for shipping and handling) c/o: The Ottawa Diocesan ACW, 71 Bronson Avenue. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1R 6G6. Please mark on the envelope "Our Histories, Our Hearts DVD". For more information contact Leslie Worden at (613) 233-6271 ext. 243. Produced by the Anglican Diocese of Ottawa ACW and Naklik Productions Inc. © 2007