November 3. On this date in 1932, Florence Maria Kelley, nee Ullrich, was born in Chicago, Illinois, into a prominent Bahá'í family. Her uncle, LeRoy Ioas, was a Hand of the Cause of God. She was named a Knight of Bahá’u’lláh for Monaco.
From the Bahá'í Chronicles entry titled "Florence Maria Ullrich Kelley" authored by her son Kevin Kelley...
Florence Maria Kelley,
nee Ullrich, was born and raised mostly in Chicago, Illinois. Her father
was an architect and determined amateur golfer and her mother was a
member of a prominent Baha’i Family, The Ioas Family. Florence’s mother
and her siblings met
Abdul-Baha, the son of the Founder of the Baha’i Faith. Her uncle,
LeRoy Ioas, was given the title of Hand of the Cause of God for his
services to the Faith.
She graduated from Oak
Park High School and went to DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana,
where she double-majored in bacteriology and psychology. Following
College, Florence debated taking a fellowship in psychology. What she
did instead was accept
the challenge to pioneer—as going to places with no Baha’is or few
Baha’is is called—to teach the Faith. She went
to
Monte Carlo, Monaco. Since she was so young—believed to be the youngest
of these pioneers who are
now called Knights of Baha’u’llah—she was sent with an older woman,
Olivia Kelsey as a combination chaperone and guide. One of the
requirements of pioneering is to work in the area to which one goes:
Florence went to work for the Onassis Shipping Company as
an English-language secretary—she took dictation from him once, and I
recall that her opinion of Mr. Onassis was not favorable.
Then things changed for
Miss Ullrich. Lawrence Kelley was a naval officer and his ship literally
sailed into port. There was a party for Americans, and both Florence
and Lieutenant Kelley [not certain of the rank] were there and met. Not
long thereafter,
Lieutenant Commander Kelley was posted to Rome in the Military Advisory
and Assistance Group (MAAG). He courted Florence over the next year by
taking the train up from Rome almost every weekend. (As a side note, the
family visited Monte Carlo some fifteen
plus years later and he was still remembered by some of the staff at
the pension/hotel where he used to stay.) Probably helped by recordings
of Renata Tebaldi in various operas—as Florence always did like singing,
both to listen to and to do—Florence said
yes.
With permission, she left her pioneering position in Monte Carlo and went to Rome to marry. In
Baha’i terms, the wedding was interesting. More accurately, the weddings,
plural, as the Baha’i ceremony was not valid in Italy at the
time. In the first ceremony, the Baha’i one, her uncle LeRoy Ioas
conducted the proceedings. In the second one, the Italian civil one,
another person to be designated as a Hand of the Cause
of God, Dr. Ugo Giachery, made the arrangements in the Campidoglio and
translated the ceremony for the Kelleys. Their son, Kevin, was born over
a year later.
Less than year after
that, the Kelleys were transferred to Key West Florida, and relatively
soon after that, to Long Beach, California. And thence to Pearl Harbor,
where some of you first met my mother, Florence Kelley.
While in Hawaii, Mom was
on the first, Local Spiritual Assembly of Ewa and the in 1966 elected
to the National Spiritual Assembly (NSA) of Hawaiian Islands. As a
member of the NSA, she went to elect the first Universal House of
Justice in Haifa, Israel.
Also in Hawaii, her
husband was skipper of two ships, the destroyer USS Walker and an oiler,
the USS Chipola, which plied the waters off of Vietnam. As the
skipper’s wife, she had duties with the other officer wives—support,
advice, keeping up morale, and
the like. She did those well, enjoyed the wifely comradery, and enjoyed
the Navy social scene. When Dad retired from the Navy, she may have
missed it more than he did.
From Hawaii, we went to
northern Virginia, and from there to Seoul, Korea. In Korea, the Navy
wife aspect was changed in tone to the more general American officer’s
wife. In addition to the purely social circuit, Mom took part in charity
events connected
with the Seoul Area American Officer’s Wives Club. One contribution in
particular from the group was machines to help make bricks after a
devastating flood in northern South Korea. And she was on the Korean
National Spiritual Assembly as their English Language
Secretary.
Captain Kelley retired
in Korea. The theory then went, throw the kid into boarding school and
the parents would travel. It was a short lived theory. When they were
visiting me for parent’s weekend at the Hawaii Preparatory Academy, Dad
was offered a job
to teach at Pacific Maritime Institute. And there was this new business
coming along, an inter-island hydrofoil company named Seaflite. My
parents moved back to Oahu, and left their son on the Big Island for a
couple years. When Seaflite was folded, a new
opportunity for Captain Kelley came along and he became involved with
the start of cruise ships (vs ships to go from A to B, like the
passenger part of the Matson and President’s Line business) in
Hawaii—American Hawaii Cruises. There he was best known as
the skipper of the SS Independence, although he skippered the SS
Constitution as well.
In the new time in
Hawaii, Florence got more involved in the Hawaii culture than she did
before. Some hula classes, a language class, and religion class. But she
became a volunteer docent at the ‘Iolani Palace—which involved more
learning about Hawaiian
history, culture, and some politics. After a number of years at the
Palace, she became a docent at Washington Place, the last residence of
Queen Liliuokalani and the official home of the governors.
Also with this new time
in Hawaii, Florence branched out and took trips. There were, of course,
trips to visit her mother and sister—and me on the way over or back. But
she also got involved in various women’s groups, and made trips with or
on behalf of
them. The Pan-Pacific Southeast Asia Women’s Association (PPSEWA) was
one group that Mom spent a lot of time working with. She also became one
of its officers for I think two terms. Being a member of PPSEAWA let
her travel to the South Pacific. But, the most
trips Florence took were to various United Nation’s Non-Governmental
Organizations (UN NGOs) women’s conferences on the status of women, and
how to improve the conditions for women around the world. For these
trips she represented the Baha’i International
Community. She attended conferences in Nairobi, Kenya, and Brazil, as
well as more regular ones in New York City, held at the UN headquarters
except when they were being renovated. If possible, I would travel up
from northern Virginia to see her in New York
for a couple of days with those trips.
Mom loved singing. I
remember her singing lullabies. She was in choruses in Hawaii and
Virginia. Her first time in Hawaii, she was in the Honolulu Chorale,
which held rehearsals at the old Armed Forces YMCA near the Capitol
building, and the chorus for a
musical that was trying to get enough steam to go to Broadway, “Thank
Heaven for the Heathen”. In her second stint in Hawaii, she was a part
of several groups, including those conducted by Tim Carney, as well as
the Honolulu Symphony Chorus. And she was a
member of the Hawaiian group for a music festival in Tallinn, Estonia,
with tours in Russia and Eastern Europe.
Scattered throughout
these remarks have been reference to the Baha’i Faith. The Baha’i Faith
was the most important thing in her life. She remembers listening with
her sister from the head of the stairs after they were supposed to have
been in bed to talks
in their home. She gave tours at the beginning stages of the Baha’i
House of Worship in Wilmette, Illinois. She joined her family and others
in long drives for teaching trips to the South and other areas of the
country. She and her sister were in London for
the First Baha’i World Congress. Later she was in New York City with
her son and several other relatives for the Second Congress. And the
desire to teach the Faith led her to Monte Carlo, where she got married
and began a new way to teach the Faith. Even from
Hawaii she made trips related to the Faith, although in later years the
trips were for more conference and events than actual teaching. One of
the trips she took was to Samoa for an event relating to the House of
Worship there. Another trip took her to Turkey
for a conference, which concluded with a motor tour in England with her
husband and son.
Related to Mom’s Baha’i
work was work in several interfaith groups in Hawaii. She was both one
of the regular attendees—always important—and sometimes helped organize
presentations and events.
But her family was also
important to her. One of the things she was most pleased about in her
child rearing—other than I didn’t turn out to be a criminal—is that she
was always home when I came home. And there was never any question that
wherever Dad’s naval
career took him, there she (and her I) would be as well.
Volunteer work took up a
fair amount of Florence’s time and energy over the years. Outdoor
Circle, the United Nations Association of the United States, American
Association of University Women, PPSEAWA, are some of the groups in
Hawaii.
There were two major
regrets in Florence’s life. This first is that her son did not marry and
have children. The second is that she never got to set up her “women’s
center”—always a dream, but never attained. There, she figured, women
could have a safe place
to sit and talk story and read and maybe have classes and something for
the children.
Florence’s eldest nephew
had an interesting view of her life. Drawing on the Baha’i analogy of
the complementarity and equality of men and women being like the wings
of a bird, he compared Florence and Larry’s marriage to that bird. They
always worked together
for a good marriage. He provided all that she needed to be able to do
volunteer and Baha’i work. She, in return, provided a loving home
environment from which he could head out to slay the various sea
dragons.
Some of the things that I
have heard this past month about Mom were really no surprise. I had
been told them before, and seen some of them myself. Her energy and her
smile were probably the most common comments about her. Independence,
especially in the
last nine years after Dad died, and intelligence, and warmth were also
remarked on.
Editor’s Note:
On August 21, 2015, our email correspondence began with Mrs. Kelley. We asked to get her fresh input on the story of Olivia Kelsey she had written years ago. She immediately re-edited as she noticed minor errors in the previous publications on other sites, so we corrected them. She shared many ‘aside’ stories with us and was told to not include but will remain in our hearts as treasures. We asked for her story and sweetly she responded, “my story is varied, i haven’t written anything either; am not sure a few questions will cover my years. you can send them, but i won’t promise success”. She then said she would write her story for us. Well that didn’t happen and we are so ever thankful to be have been in Hawai’i for her funeral and to hear first hand these words from her beloved son Kevin. Her memorial/funeral was an afternoon of happy stories, lovely luau tribute and wonderful storyboard display of her life.
On August 21, 2015, our email correspondence began with Mrs. Kelley. We asked to get her fresh input on the story of Olivia Kelsey she had written years ago. She immediately re-edited as she noticed minor errors in the previous publications on other sites, so we corrected them. She shared many ‘aside’ stories with us and was told to not include but will remain in our hearts as treasures. We asked for her story and sweetly she responded, “my story is varied, i haven’t written anything either; am not sure a few questions will cover my years. you can send them, but i won’t promise success”. She then said she would write her story for us. Well that didn’t happen and we are so ever thankful to be have been in Hawai’i for her funeral and to hear first hand these words from her beloved son Kevin. Her memorial/funeral was an afternoon of happy stories, lovely luau tribute and wonderful storyboard display of her life.
Images:
Baha’i World Centre Archives
(c) Baha’i Chronicles
Source:
Kevin Kelley wrote this eulogy February 23, 2016
Kevin Kelley wrote this eulogy February 23, 2016
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