Bartlesville Area History Museum receives grant from Kansas City Community Foundation

John Wilbur Starr and Martha Jane Phillips Starr
John Wilbur Starr and Martha Jane Phillips Starr

The Bartlesville Area History Museum has received a $25,000 grant from the Martha Jane Phillips Starr Field of Interest Fund, directed by the Greater Kansas City Community Foundation.

This grant will allow the museum to purchase important archival supplies and pay the salaries of two museum clerks who will devote their time to digitizing important documents and photographs into the museum database and greatly enhance the amount of information available to assist researching visitors. This grant is invaluable in allowing the museum to continue preserving the history of Bartlesville and the surrounding communities.

Martha Jane Phillips Starr was the daughter of L.E. Phillips, co-founder of Phillips Petroleum Company. She spent her life dedicated to volunteerism and philanthropy. She volunteered as the chairman of Nurse's Aides during World War II, and in 1963, Martha Jane became the first woman elected trustee at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, allowing her to establish the Family Study Center Endowment.

In 1965, Martha Jane was appointed by Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation W.W. Keeler as the "Ambassador of Good Will" and given the Cherokee name Nah-Tsah-NeeKah-Lah-Gah, which means "Rising Star." She founded the UMKC Women's Council and the Starr Symposium, served as the President of Planned Parenthood, offered scholarships for women in women's studies, and was the President of the UMKC Women's Council from 1967-1968. She was also the first woman to be awarded the UMKC Chancellor's Medal for Career Contributions.

In 2000, Martha Jane was heavily involved in the establishment of the Bartlesville Area History Museum. Her legacy continues to support the museum through grants that aid the preservation of local history.

This article originally appeared on Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise: Bartlesville Area History Museum's grant will fund supplies, salaries