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Beginning in 1901, she served as State president of the Maine division of the ISS (known as the
Reliance Branch), and incorporated it. In this position, she wrote no less than 60 letters a week. There were approximately 150 daily and weekly papers reporting "Sunshine" news and Heald was appointed the
211:"With your energetic president, Mrs. Heald, of Portland, the State is becoming thoroughly organized. In fact, it is the best organized in Sunshine work of any State in the Union. There are now two thousand and sixty-six well-organized Sunshine branches reporting regularly..."
219:. She was on the executive board of many of the well-known Portland, Maine associations, including the Women's Literary Union. She was a member of the advisory board, Free Hospital for Crippled Children. She was also a member of the Elizabeth Wadsworth Chapter,
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A Cutler
Memorial and Genealogical History: Containing the Names of a Large Proportion of the Cutlers in the United States and Canada, and a Record of Many Individual Members of the Family, with an Account Also of Other Families Allied to the Cutlers by
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in 1852, became the first appraiser at the port, and was holding this office at the time of his death, in May 1868. His wife survived him many years, dying in May 1884. Heald's siblings including Mary, Charles, Sarah, and Fred.
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when she was very young. A student of creeds, she studied ancient and modern philosophy, science, theosophy, and the works of deep thinkers of all ages, not for diversion, but to find truth. Her creed was, "Love thy neighbor".
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The family home being in
Portland during Heald's childhood and youth, she was educated in the city schools, and attended the Girls' High School. Her education continued later through general reading, specializing in
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For a number of years, she was active in charitable and club work. It was she who was instrumental in forming the
Cumberland Relief Cure, an organization which raised funds to send 25 men to the
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247:, one of the early settlers, a prominent and wealthy man in his day. Lydia and John had one daughter, who died in infancy.
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102:; 1842–1932) was an American social leader and philanthropic worker. Active in charitable and club work in the State of
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122:, October 24, 1842. She was the daughter of Otis and Emeline Robinson Seavy Cutler. Her father, moving to
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Otis Cutler was of the seventh generation of that branch of the Cutler family in
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Lineage Book of the
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Heald was for five years the president of the
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At
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This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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Howe, Julia Ward; Graves, Mary Hannah (1904). "L. ISABEL HEALD".
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Lydia Isabel Heald died in
Portland, Maine, January 24, 1932.
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289:. New England Historical Publishing Company. pp. 167–68
370:. Press of E. A. Hall & Company. 1889. p. 426
405:"Obituary. Mrs. L. Isabel Heald Dies, Aged 89 Years"
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Representative women of New
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