During Women’s
History month the MRL Reference Blog features Crystal Theodore, a local artist
and educator whose determined efforts raised the profile of the arts and of artists
in the Shenandoah Valley.
Crystal Theodore
was born in Greenville, SC on July 27, 1917.
Her father, James, was a Greek immigrant who was a chocolatier, and her
mother, Florence Bell, was from an old South Carolina family. Crystal entered Winthrop College (now
University) as a member of the class of 1938.
She took art classes, but, she majored in English and Latin as job
prospects were thought to be better with this background. Ironically, after graduation Winthrop College
hired her to teach drawing and design, which she did for four years. She was a loyal alumnus and the University
awarded her professional achievement awards in 1986 and 1998. In the fall of 2008, Theodore was included
in an Alumni Art Exhibition at the University. She was the oldest contributor.[i] Oddly, the Director of University art
collection reports that the University does not have any of her work in its
collection.[ii]
Wanting to be engaged in the war effort,
Theodore left the University and joined the Tennessee Valley Authority as a
junior draft engineer in the topographical division. She much preferred to join the Marine Corps,
but was rejected as she was already “employed in a vital industry…[and]…she
was already contributing to the war effort.”[iii] She chose the Marine Corps because it was
considered the most challenging branch of the military services. In the spring of 1944, the TVA, during a
downsizing, released her.
“One of the Few:” April 1944 –
June 1946
On
April 24, 1944, on the occasion of her enlistment, the Governor of South
Carolina, Olin D. Johnston, in quaint language, designated Crystal Theodore a
“living symbol of this momentous event and you shall be known by this Citation
as a Patriot in The Governor’s Maids Militaire of South Carolina.” [iv]
This “Maid Militaire” was tall, underweight, brown haired with piercing brown
eyes, a bad back, broken nose, and bad eyesight. She entered boot camp in May 1944 at Camp
Lejeune, NC. She did not think boot
camp was too difficult and she liked the precision marching because it felt
like dancing. From Lejeune, she was sent to Washington, DC, where her
experience at the TVA and artistic talent were employed. Most of her service during the War was
considered top secret intelligence and she spent it in two windowless rooms
across from the Commandant’s Office. In
this space Lt. Theodore plotted daily troop advances and retreats in the South
Pacific on 12’ by 16’ maps. The
sensitivity of her work required Theodore to live in an apartment off-base in
Washington, DC. In this environment she
could engage in her art.
After the War,
Theodore was heart-broken when ordered to supervise the burning of her
maps. This she considered a
short-sighted decision by the military, especially while there was a need to
follow covert activities. She left
active duty in the Service on June 22, 1946 as a Second Lieutenant, but
remained in reserve status until 1957. On March 10, 1948, she was promoted to 1st
Lieutenant.
Theodore
decided not to stay in the military because the GI Bills and funding grants
were available to pay for a doctorate degree.
She also considered herself an “outside the box” type of person, which
did not fit well with the regimen of the military. Theodore was glad to serve; she was glad to
leave. In 2005, at a local gathering
for the Marine Corps birthday celebration, she (at age 88) still said that
during her service [she] “never worked so hard in her life. [The War] was a terrible time [and] I felt I
had to do these things.” Though she did
not specifically follow the role of women in the military, Theodore maintained
a life long interest in the role of women in society and their rights. [v]
[vi]
The be continued: Crystal Theodore: The Teacher, The Activist,
The Artist.
[i]
www.winthrop.edu.
[ii]
Winthrop University Gallery Director, Karen Dirksen.
[iii]
Veterans History Project. Letter to
Crystal Theodore from John L. Clark, Captain, USMCR. 17 February 1944.
[iv]
Veterans History Project.
[v] Daily
News Record. November 11, 2005.
[vi]
In 2006, Cheryl Metz edited for the Library of Congress Veterans Project a
volume on Crystal Theodore. A copy of
this volume is available in the Library’s Genealogy Room. A taped interview between Theodore and Metz
accompanies the volume.
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