Fanny Yarborough Bickett

Fanny Yarborough Bickett
President of the North Carolina Railroad
In role
1929–1933
GovernorOliver Max Gardner
Succeeded byCora Lily Woodard Aycock
Wake County Superintendent of Public Welfare
In role
1924–unknown
Head of the Infant and Maternal Welfare Bureau of the State Department of Health
In role
1922–1924
GovernorCameron A. Morrison
First Lady of North Carolina
In role
1917–1921
GovernorThomas Walter Bickett
Preceded byAnnie Burgin Locke Craig
Succeeded byAngelia Lawrance Morrison
Personal details
Born
Fanny Neal Yarborough

October 11, 1870
Louisburg, North Carolina, U.S.
DiedJuly 3, 1941(1941-07-03) (aged 70)
Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S.
Resting placeOak Lawn Memorial Cemetery
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseThomas Walter Bickett
Children3
Parent(s)William Henry Yarborough
Lucy Massenburg Davis
ResidenceExecutive Mansion (official)
EducationLouisburg College
St. Mary's Junior College
University of Chicago
Harvard University
UNC Chapel Hill
Wake Forest University
Occupationsocial worker, political hostess, lobbyist, lawyer

Fanny Neal Yarborough Bickett[a] (October 11, 1870 – July 3, 1941) was an American social worker, public official, lawyer, and lobbyist. She served as the First Lady of North Carolina from 1917 to 1921, as the wife of Governor Thomas W. Bickett, and used her influence in his administration to enact social reforms and support women's suffrage. During World War I, she maintained a victory garden at the North Carolina Executive Mansion and promoted home gardens to support the war effort. Bickett was the commandant of the Southeastern District of the U.S. Training Corps and visited American troops in France as a representative of the YMCA.

After serving as first lady, Bickett served in various civic roles, including as a member of the board of governors of the North Carolina School for the Blind and Deaf, as the Head of the Infant and Maternal Welfare Bureau of the North Carolina State Department of Health, and as the Superintendent of Public Welfare for Wake County. In 1929, she was appointed by Governor O. Max Gardner as the first woman president of the North Carolina Railroad. She was a national officer of the Colonial Dames of America and an active member of the Daughters of the American Revolution and the United Daughters of the Confederacy. In her later life, she earned a law degree from Wake Forest University and passed the state bar.
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