Manchester Magazine Fall 2017 | Page 28

MU | F e a t u r e s A n aptitude test once suggested that Irma Gall ’55 should be an engineer. Her mother wanted her to be a teacher. For her part, Irma dreamed of becoming a self-supporting missionary in the style of Mother Teresa. So it should have surprised no one that, when she needed to draw upon her talents to survive in the deep recesses of Appalachian Kentucky, she became all three. Manchester’s first female peace studies graduate, Gall co-founded the Lend-A- Hand Center, a nonprofit community organization in the Stinking Creek watershed of Knox County, Ky., in 1958. In those early years, she rode horseback to teach in a one-room schoolhouse, learned how to shoot rattlesnakes, survived floods, and endured the deep suspicion of some of her mountain neighbors. The mission she launched with nurse midwife Peggy Kemner eventually drew national attention and involved the women in President Johnson’s War on Poverty in the mid-1960s. But while Gall and Kemner had to deal with the effects of their neighbors’ poverty, they really just wanted to live out their faith with purpose and compassion. “I came to be a common person at Stinking Creek,” says Gall. Irma Gall grew up on a farm near Syracuse, Ind., and was raised in the Church of the Brethren. At Manchester, she studied everything that interested her, including mathematics, art, drama and, of course, peace studies. In Oakwood Hall, she roomed with Jean Childs ’54 Young, who later married civil rights leader Andrew Young, and Dorothy Hummer ’54 Gall, who would become Irma’s sister-in-law. “The three of us were about as different as could be,” reflects Irma, but they became 28 | lifelong friends. Gall attended Jean and Andrew’s wedding in Alabama in 1954 and recalls driving caravan-style to New Orleans for the reception. Gall’s car was the only one with white people in it, arousing the suspicion of Mississippi police who detained and questioned the wedding party before allowing them to continue their journey. “It was an eye-opener for us,” says Gall. “For the first time, we really saw segregation as it was.” At Manchester, Gall’s mentors were two legendary professors. Paul Keller ’35 taught her that effective communication empowers people. Peace studies pioneer Gladdys Muir was demanding, but inspired Gall to follow her dreams. Gall wasn’t dreaming so much as looking for a job when she answered the call to teach in southeastern Kentucky in 1955. She arrived at Flat Creek Mission, then operated by the Church of the Brethren, a few months after earning her degree. Not long after, she met Kemner, a young nurse midwife from Pennsylvania and a graduate of Johns Hopkins. Strong-willed, idealistic and independent, Gall and Kemner created a self-supporting mission, Lend-A-Hand. With an old car, a dog, a horse, $1,000 and a lot of faith, the women headed to an isolated community called Stinking Creek where Gall could teach and Kemner could deliver babies. They fixed up a dilapidated house, cleaned up several inches of flood mud on its floors, and put down roots. “We didn’t go there to evangelize or tell them how to live,” Gall says. “We were just living. We were just doing what comes naturally.” What came naturally to them would seem extraordinary to most. For 50 years, Kemner delivered babies in homes, woodsheds and chicken coops and operated a small clinic that provided prenatal care, health screenings and immunizations. Gall taught in country schools for a decade. The women bought property and Gall applied her aptitude for engineering to design a dike and a bridge to deal with flooding. She also designed a house, a barn and various other structures, constructed with the help of volunteer groups. They created a chapel and picked up local children for Sunday school. They farmed for their own sustenance and taught others to do the same. Gall drew upon her farming childhood to teach herself animal husbandry. The women provided health programs, home improvement programs, educational programs and youth programs which included a summer day camp and a 4-H chapter. They helped mountain women plan their families through a Planned Parenthood program. For years they provided transportation for people to get to medical appointments and hospitals.