(continued)
The house is used
as a civic center and is operated by the Allen House Board. The house is a classic Greek revival style and the front of the
house is dominated by ten Ionic two-story columns and a wrought
iron Greek patterned balcony. The entry is a beveled glass door
flanked by leaded-beveled glass sidelights and overlights. Floors
throughout the house are oak. The original brass chandeliers
are still in the house. In the center of the house is the impressive
staircase featuring the original stained glass window at the
first landing. This restored mansion is set among majestic oak
trees and indeed is a sight for all to see.
Hazel M .Bennett Falconer Goddard, friend to one and all, philanthropist of the highest order, community benefactor, and civic leader died Sunday, May 21, 2000. Services were held at 2:00 pm Tues at St.john’s Episcopal Church in marlin. Interment at Calvary Cemetery in Marlin. Mrs. Goddard was born Jan 16, 1907 in Limestone county, the daughter of Benjamin Theadore Bennett and Maud Henderson Bennett. She married Dr. Bolivar Lang Falconer in 1946. he died in 1953. In 1968 she married The Rt. Reverend Frederick Percy Goddard. He died in 1983. It would take years tallying all the good works that Hazel Falconer-Goddard leaves behind from her long and meaningful life. Her useful career as a nurse, an unpaid public servant, a benefactor, and a true Christian, rank her among the greatest humanitarians this area has ever known. During the twenties, the young Hazel Bennett, after being reared on a farm and learning from the experiences of crop failures and the “Great Depression”, began her working life in marlin. In the thirties, she began her career as a totally dedicated medical professional. In the fifties, Mrs. Goddard, in her own quiet and innovative way, embarked on a dedicated mission as a model leader in virtually every movement for the betterment of the community. A mission of involvement in public affairs, the sacrificing of personal time and energy as well as the giving of financial aid, all of which were typical of her goodwill toward fellow men.
Mrs. Goddard graduated from Marlin High School in 1922. She began her Public Health Nursing career when she worked as a receptionist at the Shaw Clinic and Hospital in marlin. From 1923 until 1932 she completed short courses at Baylor Medical School and passed the National Board requirements to become a registered Medical Technologist. In 1933, The University of Chicago, in co-operation with the American Hospital Association, offered the first ever course in hospital administration. She took a year’s leave of absence to complete that study. She returned to Marlin’s Shaw Hospital, where she worked until its closing in 1935. Mrs. Falconer-Goddard graduated from Cornell University School of Nursing in 1940. Upon graduation, she was given a scholarship to Vanderbilt Univ. for the study of Public Health Nursing. Following her successful completion of that study, she started work for the Texas Dept. of Health a a staff nurse. During that time, she worked with Health Departments in Dallas, Bishop, Austin, and Angleton, In Sept. , 1942, she entered the U.S. Army Nurses Corps as a First Lieutenant and served at Fort Deolas, Massachusetts; Brisbane, Australia; Good Enough Island, New Guinea; and the Philippine Islands. Following her discharge from the Army, Mrs. Goddard entered the Teachers’ College of Columbia Univ., New York City. She earned her Bachelor of Science Degree in 1947.
Beginning in 1946 when she married Dr. Falconer in New York City, they spent two years traveling around the world. One of the highlights of the trip and a precursor to Mrs. Falconer-Goddard’s humanitarian inclinations was in Cape Town, South Africa, where the couple enrolled in an extremely interesting and worth-while course of “Race Relations” at the University. They later traveled 61 days from Cape Town to Cairo, Egypt, via buses, trains, private cars, horseback, and lake-streamers. The Falconers spent a week as guests of renowned anthropologist Pat Putman, whom Harvard Univ. had sent to the Belgian Congo to study the Pygmies. He had been there for twenty years. Mr. Putman’s camp was on the Equator, deep in the Ituria Forest. They were taken on a Pygmy hunt and also attended the tribe’s two hour ceremonial rites of a 12 year old boy being inducted into manhood.
In 1952, Mrs. Falconer-Goddard received her Masters Degree in Nursing Education from Columbia Univ. and completed the requirements for a Doctor of Education Degree. Dr. Falconer died in 1953. Immediately prior to presenting her doctoral dissertation in 1955, she was summoned to Marlin because of a family need. She returned to marlin, married Bishop Goddard in 1968, where she spent the remainder of her life, a life devoted to her fine and caring husbands, her family, her church and the community that adopted her as the “Grand Lady of Marlin.”
During
this era, spanning nearly four decades, Mrs. Goddard was very
involved in her community, serving on too-many-to-name committees and
boards, but she was proud of her involvement in the Community Garden Club,
Civic Club, Falls County Heart Association, Women’s Study Club,
and Business and Professional Women’s Club. She was also proud to
be a financial “Patron” contributor
to Marlin’s Palace Theatre, the Waco Symphony Women’s Council,
the Waco Symphony, the Waco Hippodrome Theatre, and Waco Junior
League. Mrs. Goddard cherished her membership in the Central Texas Area
Museum at Salado. During her marriage to Bishop Goddard, she accompanied
him throughout the Episcopal Diocese of Texas as he performed many church
services, ceremonies, baptisms, and ordinations. During those
times, Mrs. Goddard enthusiastically participated in all organizations
of the Episcopal Churchwomen. Mrs. Goddard served her church as President
of St.John’s
Episcopal Churchwomen, also President of the Guild, and a Board
member of the Diocese of Texas Churchwomen. She was a member of the Board
of Directors of the Marlin Public Library, united Charities, Civic’s
Center, St. John’s Day School, Parent-Child Neighborhood Center,
and Marlin Industrial Foundation. She was also President of the
Marlin School District Board of Trustees. In 1967, the Marlin Chamber
of Commerce honored Mrs. Falconer-Goddard as “Woman of the Year.” That
same year, the Board of Advisory Editors named her an “Outstanding
Civic Leader.” In 1976, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority in Marlin named
her “Woman
of the Year.”
In the 1980’s the Marlin Chamber of Commerce established the Hazel Falconer-Goddard Outstanding Citizen Service Award. This award is still presented each year to a citizen for lifetime achievement and service to the community. In 1990, the Beta Nu Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma Society International commended Mrs. Goddard for her “Distinctive Service.” In the same decade she was also honored as a member of President George Bush’s Task Force Advisory Committee. From the beginning of her life as a shy farm girl, Hazel Goddard emerged as a distinguished woman with a rather different pedigree.
Mrs.
Goddard’s monetary contributions and her labors of love may eventually
be forgotten, but she will long be remembered by the material
legacies she gave to her community for all to enjoy. Hazel Falconer-Goddard
gave “The
Allen House” with all the charm of an old southern mansion and a
popular gathering setting even today, to the care and trust of
the Allen House Board. “The Falconer Park on Perry Street”,
o be enjoyed by old and young, was also entrusted by Mrs. Goddard to the
City of Marlin for perpetual care.