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Anne Steytler

Anne W. Steytler (1921–2010) was an American activist and feminist who became known for her pioneering social justice work. She and Ellen Berliner co-founded the Women's Center & Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh in 1974. One of the first six domestic violence response and prevention centers in the United States, the Women's Center helped to pave the way for the creation of similar help centers in every state across the nation by piloting programs and services to help women and children affected by intimate partner violence and/or sexual assault while educating government, law enforcement, medical professionals, and the general public about the causes and impact of such violence and potential ways to interrupt and prevent the cyclical problem.[1][2][3]

Anne W. Steytler
Born
Charlotte Anne Webster

January 10, 1921
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
DiedSeptember 13, 2010
Pennsylvania, United States
Occupation(s)Social worker, social justice advocate and peace activist
Years active1960s – 2010
Notable workCo-founder, with Ellen Berliner, of the Women's Center & Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh
SpouseEdmund John Steytler (m. 1951)
Parent(s)Royden Webster and Jessie E. (Beebe) Webster

In 2004, she was presented with the Benjamin Rush Award for her contributions to society and the field of social work.[4]

Formative years and family edit

Born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on January 10, 1921,[5] Anne Steytler earned her first master's degree from the University of Wisconsin.[6]

Following her early professional years as a teacher and brief residencies in North Carolina, Kentucky, Virginia, and Cleveland, Ohio, where she earned a second master's degree from Case Western Reserve University in 1967, she relocated to the Pittsburgh region in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, where she remained for the duration of her life.[7]

A longtime resident of Pittsburgh's Allegheny-West neighborhood with her husband, Edmund Steytler, a professor of history at Point Park College (now Point Park University), she was a mother of three daughters and one son.[8][9]

Social work career and social justice activism edit

After completing her master's degree in social work and relocating to Pennsylvania, Steytler embarked on a career in social work.[10]

During the early 1970s, Steytler provided marriage counseling services to adults in the Greater Pittsburgh area.[11] She also collaborated with Ellen Berliner to plan, launch and secure non-profit status for the Women's Center & Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh. Using their own money to establish the center, their first planning meeting was held in Berliner's living room. They subsequently rented a small storefront location on West Liberty Avenue in order to open a crisis center for women and children experiencing domestic violence and then secured a $5,000 grant from the Pittsburgh Presbytery to rent a house in Dormont, where they established their first shelter. That shelter initially offered safety for up to six women at a time, and cost roughly two thousand dollars per year to operate. As word of their efforts spread, they began receiving pledges of financial support from area residents, which quickly reached roughly four hundred dollars per month. The Women's Center & Shelter of Pittsburgh was officially incorporated in April 1974.[12][13][14]

One of the first six domestic violence response and prevention centers ever created in the United States, the center pioneered programs that helped women and children survive, escape and heal from the cycle of domestic violence and/or sexual assault. As Berliner and Steytler became more familiar with the number of women and children affected by these crimes, they established and operated a telephone hotline to provide victims with a safe way of requesting help. Their initiatives were subsequently used as models for the launch of similar centers and programs by other civic leaders across the nation.[15][16][17] From 1975 through 1977, their program provided housing assistance to five hundred and twenty-eight women and three hundred and eleven children. More than fifty percent of those women and children had experienced domestic violence.[18]

By 1979, the center had a yearly budget of $160,000, which was funded by grants from the federal government, the Allegheny County Board of Public Assistance, the Attorney Generals Public Health Trust, the Hillman Foundation, and the Pittsburgh Foundation, as well as individual donations from area residents. That year, the center's hotline averaged roughly seventy-five calls daily.[19] By 1992, the center employed a staff of thirty-five and had an operating budget of $1.5 million.[20][21][22] That year, more than twelve thousand calls for assistance were made to the center's hotline. In 1993, more than seven hundred women and children were housed by the center's shelter.[23]

Also during this same period, Steytler and the Berliner family were part of a group of fifty parents, students and other community members who filed suit in the Common Pleas Court of Pennsylvania "to prohibit Mt. Lebanon School District from including prayers in its commencement exercises."[24]

Steytler was also active with the National Organization for Women, serving on the board of directors of NOW's North Hills, Pennsylvania chapter and as secretary of that board during the early 1980s.[25] In 1984, she was a consultant to the Parent & Child Guidance Center in Castle Shannon, Pennsylvania, and presented a six-part training series for parents of pre-school and elementary school-aged children at the Mt. Lebanon United Methodist Church.[26]

In 1982, Steytler and Berliner expanded their anti-domestic violence work by developing educational outreach programs for, and lobbying on behalf of, the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Violence. In 1983, they lobbied local and state officials for stronger legal reporting requirements in elder abuse cases and protective services funding for victims of mental and physical abuse. They also planned and implemented the National Day of Unity in October 1982 to commemorate the deaths of women who were killed in domestic violence-related incidents.[27]

Later years edit

Still active as a practicing social worker during her early seventies, Steytler also continued to be an advocate for LGBTQ and women's rights. In 1992, she was employed as a staff therapist with the Persad Center in Bloomfield.[28]

A decades-long lay leader at the Unitarian Universalist Church of the South Hills in Mt. Lebanon, Pennsylvania (also known as the Sunnyhill Church), she officiated at wedding ceremonies there with her longtime friend, Bea Carter, and remained active with the Thomas Merton Center, serving on its board of directors.[29]

She was preceded in death by her husband, Edmund, who died from pneumonia at the age of seventy-six on May 26, 1998, at the Forbes Nursing Center in East Liberty.[30]

Illness and death edit

Diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease during the last decade of her life, Anne Steytler died from complications related to that disease on September 13, 2010. She was eighty-nine years old. Her memorial service was held at the Sunnyhill Church in Mt. Lebanon on October 9 of that same year.[31]

Awards and other honors edit

Steytler was the recipient of multiple awards during her lifetime, including the:[32][33][34][35]


  • Humanitarian of the Year Award (with Ellen Berliner), Greater Pittsburgh Unitarian Universalist Council, 1983;
  • New Person Award, Thomas Merton Center, 1996;
  • JC Penney Golden Rule Award 1997;
  • Jefferson Award for Public Service, American Institute for Public Service, 1998; and the
  • Benjamin Rush Award for outstanding health services, 2004.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gibb, Emily. "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4 (subscription required).
  2. ^ Park, Katie. "Ellen Berliner: Founder of Women's Center and Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh" (obituary). Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 8, 2011, p. B3 (subscription required).
  3. ^ Jones, Diana Nelson. "She Never Hesitates to Help." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 4, 1992, pp. 9 and 13 (subscription required).
  4. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  5. ^ "Steytler, Anne W.," in "U.S. Social Security Death Index," September 13, 2010. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Social Security Administration, retrieved online June 14, 2023.
  6. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  7. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  8. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  9. ^ Schackner, Bill. "Edmund Steytler: Popular Point Park history professor." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, May 29, 1998, p. B5 (subscription required).
  10. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  11. ^ Hritz, Thomas M. "'Tis Football Madness Season, Yet Most Wives to Mourn." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 1, 1978, p. 2 (subscription required).
  12. ^ Jones, "She Never Hesitates to Help," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 4, 1992, pp. 9 and 13.
  13. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  14. ^ Walker, Connie. "Women in Distress Find Haven at Center." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: The Pittsburgh Press, October 15, 1974, p. 17 (subscription required).
  15. ^ Park, "Ellen Berliner: Founder of Women's Center and Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 8, 2011, p. B3.
  16. ^ Jones, "She Never Hesitates to Help," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 4, 1992, pp. 9 and 13.
  17. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  18. ^ Hirschl, Beatrice Paul. "A Safe Harbor." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, May 31, 1994, p. D1 (subscription required).
  19. ^ Wisser, William. "Battered Women Cry Out, and City Shelter Answers." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: The Pittsburgh Press, February 9, 1979, p. B1 (subscription required).
  20. ^ Park, "Ellen Berliner: Founder of Women's Center and Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 8, 2011, p. B3.
  21. ^ Jones, "She Never Hesitates to Help," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 4, 1992, pp. 9 and 13.
  22. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  23. ^ Hirschl, "A Safe Harbor," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, May 31, 1994, pp. D1-D2.
  24. ^ "Court Suit Asks Ban on Prayers at Mt. Lebanon." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, April 26, 1973, pp. 1–2 (subscription required).
  25. ^ "NOW Elects New Officers." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: The Pittsburgh Press, December 1, 1982, p. 5 (subscription required).
  26. ^ "Monday," in "Coming Up." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: The Pittsburgh Press, March 1, 1984, p. S10 (subscription required).
  27. ^ "2 to share Humanitarian award." North Hills, Pennsylvania: News Record, May 13, 1983, p. 16 (subscription required).
  28. ^ Miller, Virginia. "AIDS Hits Home." North Hills, Pennsylvania: News Record, September 4, 1992, p. C1 (subscription required).
  29. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  30. ^ Schackner, "Edmund Steytler: Popular Point Park history professor," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, May 29, 1998, p. B5.
  31. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  32. ^ Gibb, "Social activist co-founded Women's Center and Shelter," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 18, 2010, p. B4.
  33. ^ "Religion notes." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, May 14, 1983, p. 19 (subscription required).
  34. ^ "These finalists quietly make a difference in their neighbors' lives." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 31, 1998, p. D3 (subscription required).
  35. ^ Miller, Virginia. "New Person awards," in "North Hills People." North Hills, Pennsylvania: News Record, June 10, 1996, p. A2 (subscription required).

External links edit

  • "Ellen Berliner and Anne Steytler, founders of WC&S" (photo), in "History of WC&S." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Women's Center & Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh, retrieved online June 20, 2023.

anne, steytler, anne, steytler, 1921, 2010, american, activist, feminist, became, known, pioneering, social, justice, work, ellen, berliner, founded, women, center, shelter, greater, pittsburgh, 1974, first, domestic, violence, response, prevention, centers, u. Anne W Steytler 1921 2010 was an American activist and feminist who became known for her pioneering social justice work She and Ellen Berliner co founded the Women s Center amp Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh in 1974 One of the first six domestic violence response and prevention centers in the United States the Women s Center helped to pave the way for the creation of similar help centers in every state across the nation by piloting programs and services to help women and children affected by intimate partner violence and or sexual assault while educating government law enforcement medical professionals and the general public about the causes and impact of such violence and potential ways to interrupt and prevent the cyclical problem 1 2 3 Anne W SteytlerBornCharlotte Anne WebsterJanuary 10 1921Milwaukee Wisconsin United StatesDiedSeptember 13 2010Pennsylvania United StatesOccupation s Social worker social justice advocate and peace activistYears active1960s 2010Notable workCo founder with Ellen Berliner of the Women s Center amp Shelter of Greater PittsburghSpouseEdmund John Steytler m 1951 Parent s Royden Webster and Jessie E Beebe Webster In 2004 she was presented with the Benjamin Rush Award for her contributions to society and the field of social work 4 Contents 1 Formative years and family 2 Social work career and social justice activism 3 Later years 4 Illness and death 5 Awards and other honors 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksFormative years and family editBorn in Milwaukee Wisconsin on January 10 1921 5 Anne Steytler earned her first master s degree from the University of Wisconsin 6 Following her early professional years as a teacher and brief residencies in North Carolina Kentucky Virginia and Cleveland Ohio where she earned a second master s degree from Case Western Reserve University in 1967 she relocated to the Pittsburgh region in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania where she remained for the duration of her life 7 A longtime resident of Pittsburgh s Allegheny West neighborhood with her husband Edmund Steytler a professor of history at Point Park College now Point Park University she was a mother of three daughters and one son 8 9 Social work career and social justice activism editAfter completing her master s degree in social work and relocating to Pennsylvania Steytler embarked on a career in social work 10 During the early 1970s Steytler provided marriage counseling services to adults in the Greater Pittsburgh area 11 She also collaborated with Ellen Berliner to plan launch and secure non profit status for the Women s Center amp Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh Using their own money to establish the center their first planning meeting was held in Berliner s living room They subsequently rented a small storefront location on West Liberty Avenue in order to open a crisis center for women and children experiencing domestic violence and then secured a 5 000 grant from the Pittsburgh Presbytery to rent a house in Dormont where they established their first shelter That shelter initially offered safety for up to six women at a time and cost roughly two thousand dollars per year to operate As word of their efforts spread they began receiving pledges of financial support from area residents which quickly reached roughly four hundred dollars per month The Women s Center amp Shelter of Pittsburgh was officially incorporated in April 1974 12 13 14 One of the first six domestic violence response and prevention centers ever created in the United States the center pioneered programs that helped women and children survive escape and heal from the cycle of domestic violence and or sexual assault As Berliner and Steytler became more familiar with the number of women and children affected by these crimes they established and operated a telephone hotline to provide victims with a safe way of requesting help Their initiatives were subsequently used as models for the launch of similar centers and programs by other civic leaders across the nation 15 16 17 From 1975 through 1977 their program provided housing assistance to five hundred and twenty eight women and three hundred and eleven children More than fifty percent of those women and children had experienced domestic violence 18 By 1979 the center had a yearly budget of 160 000 which was funded by grants from the federal government the Allegheny County Board of Public Assistance the Attorney Generals Public Health Trust the Hillman Foundation and the Pittsburgh Foundation as well as individual donations from area residents That year the center s hotline averaged roughly seventy five calls daily 19 By 1992 the center employed a staff of thirty five and had an operating budget of 1 5 million 20 21 22 That year more than twelve thousand calls for assistance were made to the center s hotline In 1993 more than seven hundred women and children were housed by the center s shelter 23 Also during this same period Steytler and the Berliner family were part of a group of fifty parents students and other community members who filed suit in the Common Pleas Court of Pennsylvania to prohibit Mt Lebanon School District from including prayers in its commencement exercises 24 Steytler was also active with the National Organization for Women serving on the board of directors of NOW s North Hills Pennsylvania chapter and as secretary of that board during the early 1980s 25 In 1984 she was a consultant to the Parent amp Child Guidance Center in Castle Shannon Pennsylvania and presented a six part training series for parents of pre school and elementary school aged children at the Mt Lebanon United Methodist Church 26 In 1982 Steytler and Berliner expanded their anti domestic violence work by developing educational outreach programs for and lobbying on behalf of the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Violence In 1983 they lobbied local and state officials for stronger legal reporting requirements in elder abuse cases and protective services funding for victims of mental and physical abuse They also planned and implemented the National Day of Unity in October 1982 to commemorate the deaths of women who were killed in domestic violence related incidents 27 Later years editStill active as a practicing social worker during her early seventies Steytler also continued to be an advocate for LGBTQ and women s rights In 1992 she was employed as a staff therapist with the Persad Center in Bloomfield 28 A decades long lay leader at the Unitarian Universalist Church of the South Hills in Mt Lebanon Pennsylvania also known as the Sunnyhill Church she officiated at wedding ceremonies there with her longtime friend Bea Carter and remained active with the Thomas Merton Center serving on its board of directors 29 She was preceded in death by her husband Edmund who died from pneumonia at the age of seventy six on May 26 1998 at the Forbes Nursing Center in East Liberty 30 Illness and death editDiagnosed with Alzheimer s disease during the last decade of her life Anne Steytler died from complications related to that disease on September 13 2010 She was eighty nine years old Her memorial service was held at the Sunnyhill Church in Mt Lebanon on October 9 of that same year 31 Awards and other honors editSteytler was the recipient of multiple awards during her lifetime including the 32 33 34 35 Humanitarian of the Year Award with Ellen Berliner Greater Pittsburgh Unitarian Universalist Council 1983 New Person Award Thomas Merton Center 1996 JC Penney Golden Rule Award 1997 Jefferson Award for Public Service American Institute for Public Service 1998 and the Benjamin Rush Award for outstanding health services 2004 See also editList of civil rights leaders List of feminists List of women s rights activistsReferences edit Gibb Emily Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 subscription required Park Katie Ellen Berliner Founder of Women s Center and Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh obituary Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 8 2011 p B3 subscription required Jones Diana Nelson She Never Hesitates to Help Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post Gazette January 4 1992 pp 9 and 13 subscription required Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Steytler Anne W in U S Social Security Death Index September 13 2010 Washington D C U S Social Security Administration retrieved online June 14 2023 Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Schackner Bill Edmund Steytler Popular Point Park history professor Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 29 1998 p B5 subscription required Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Hritz Thomas M Tis Football Madness Season Yet Most Wives to Mourn Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 1 1978 p 2 subscription required Jones She Never Hesitates to Help Pittsburgh Post Gazette January 4 1992 pp 9 and 13 Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Walker Connie Women in Distress Find Haven at Center Pittsburgh Pennsylvania The Pittsburgh Press October 15 1974 p 17 subscription required Park Ellen Berliner Founder of Women s Center and Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 8 2011 p B3 Jones She Never Hesitates to Help Pittsburgh Post Gazette January 4 1992 pp 9 and 13 Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Hirschl Beatrice Paul A Safe Harbor Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 31 1994 p D1 subscription required Wisser William Battered Women Cry Out and City Shelter Answers Pittsburgh Pennsylvania The Pittsburgh Press February 9 1979 p B1 subscription required Park Ellen Berliner Founder of Women s Center and Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 8 2011 p B3 Jones She Never Hesitates to Help Pittsburgh Post Gazette January 4 1992 pp 9 and 13 Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Hirschl A Safe Harbor Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 31 1994 pp D1 D2 Court Suit Asks Ban on Prayers at Mt Lebanon Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post Gazette April 26 1973 pp 1 2 subscription required NOW Elects New Officers Pittsburgh Pennsylvania The Pittsburgh Press December 1 1982 p 5 subscription required Monday in Coming Up Pittsburgh Pennsylvania The Pittsburgh Press March 1 1984 p S10 subscription required 2 to share Humanitarian award North Hills Pennsylvania News Record May 13 1983 p 16 subscription required Miller Virginia AIDS Hits Home North Hills Pennsylvania News Record September 4 1992 p C1 subscription required Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Schackner Edmund Steytler Popular Point Park history professor Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 29 1998 p B5 Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Gibb Social activist co founded Women s Center and Shelter Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 18 2010 p B4 Religion notes Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 14 1983 p 19 subscription required These finalists quietly make a difference in their neighbors lives Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post Gazette December 31 1998 p D3 subscription required Miller Virginia New Person awards in North Hills People North Hills Pennsylvania News Record June 10 1996 p A2 subscription required External links edit Ellen Berliner and Anne Steytler founders of WC amp S photo in History of WC amp S Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Women s Center amp Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh retrieved online June 20 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anne Steytler amp oldid 1217507499, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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