The
PLF Club (Progressive, Literary Fraternal Club) of Bellingham was organized in 1900, as a community
organization for educated Bellingham women. The PLF club was federated in
Washington State in October 1900, and remained an
active member of the Washington State Federation of Women’s Clubs throughout its
sixty-seven year history. Founding members included Ella Higginson, who was a Washington State poet laureate, and
Mrs. Frances Axtell, the first club president. Originally, the club's main focus was to “establish and maintain a
social club, provide reading rooms, provide and give instruction for the
diffusion of scientific, artistic, musical or historical purposes.” (Roth, 686)
Early activities of the PLF Club included sponsoring lectures by visiting notables, including actors,
writers, and politicians. In 1904, the club raised $2200.00 and built a
club house, known as Garden Hall, at the corner of Holly and Garden streets in
downtown Bellingham. This was the first women’s club house in Washington State.
The club house served as a venue for lectures, readings, and other club events,
and in June 1908, it hosted the annual meeting of the State Federation for the
first time. The PLF Club also used the club house to generate revenue by renting
it out for social occasions. However, in 1914 the club sold the house when it
became too burdensome to maintain. Later, the building’s name was changed to
Tabernacle Hall.
Over time, charitable and
social causes came to dominate the club’s activities. The PLF Club worked for
city improvements in the water supply, food sanitation, public parks, education,
and libraries. The club raised and donated funds for local organizations such as
the City Mission, the Young Women's Christian Association of Bellingham, the Red Cross Milk Fund, Campfire Girls, the
Salvation Army, and the Orthopedic Hospital. Beginning in 1941, the PLF
participated in Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs' efforts to acquire and preserve forested land along the
Snoqualmie highway, near Enumclaw. The "Federation Forest," which came to
include 619 acres of old growth forest, later became the Federation Forest State
Park. In 1952, one parcel of forest was dedicated as "Ella Higginson Grove."
In the 1950s and 1960s, one of the club’s primary causes was the museum fund,
to support the renovation and modernization of the Whatcom Museum of History and
Art. The club raised and donated thousands of dollars to the museum.
In 1933, the PLF Club
spearheaded the formation of a Whatcom County branch of the Washington State Federation of Women’s Clubs, along
with other local women’s clubs such as the Women’s Club of Sumas and the Lynden Study Club.
They were soon joined by local chapters of the Business and Professional Women’s
Club and the American Association of University Women.
Many notable Bellingham
women were members of the PLF Club, which started with a membership of twenty in
1900, and never experienced a roster of more than forty. Most members were
lifelong devotees. PLF Club Presidents included Mrs. Frances Axtell, Mrs. Edwin
Twitmeyer, Mrs. Victor Roeder, Mrs. Pearl Bennett, Mrs. W.S. Anderson, Mrs.
Nellie Abbott, Mrs. F.M. Reasoner, and Mrs. Edna Frick.
Information based on:
CPNWS PLF Club Records and
Roth, Lottie Roeder. History of Whatcom County. Seattle:
Pioneer Historical Publishing Company, 1926.
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