Eolyn Carolyn Klugh Guy (born about 1901 – died October 9, 1963) was an African-American social worker, active with the
YWCA.
Early life
Eolyn Carolyn Klugh was raised in
New Haven, Connecticut and
Boston, the daughter of David Simpson Klugh and Adella Plyman Klugh. Her father was a prominent Baptist clergyman in Boston;[1] her mother was an alumna of
Spelman Seminary and active in churchwomen's organizations.[2] She attended Spelman Seminary and earned a bachelor's degree at
Radcliffe College in 1922.[3] She received a master's degree from
Simmons College in 1928.[4][5]
Career
As a young woman, Klugh lived and worked at the Robert Gould Shaw House, a
settlement house in Boston's South End.[6] She attended the national meeting of the
YWCA in 1924, as Girl Reserve and industrial secretary of the St. Aubin Branch of the YWCA in Detroit.[7][8] In 1930 she attended the National Conference of Social Work in 1930, when it met in Boston.[9][10]
She published her research as "Colored Girls at Work in Boston" (1928) in Opportunity, the magazine of the
National Urban League.[11][12] She spoke at
Wellesley College in 1932 on "Extra-Curricular Activities for the Negro".[13] In 1946 Eolyn Guy was named program director of the 12th Avenue Center YWCA in
Tucson, Arizona.[14][15] She also served on the board of the YWCA in Tucson.[16][17][18]
Personal life
Eolyn Klugh was a bridesmaid at the wedding of poet and social worker
Clarissa Scott Delany in 1926, and attended her funeral the following year.[19] Eolyn Klugh married Harry Maurice Guy in 1932. They had a son, Harry Maurice Guy Jr. Eolyn Klugh Guy died in 1963.[20] Her papers are archived in the
Bancroft Library at the
University of California, Berkeley.[21]