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Grace Taylor Rodenbough

Grace Pemberton Taylor Rodenbough was an American educator and politician. She was elected to the North Carolina House of Representatives in 1953 and was the first woman from Stokes County to serve in a state office.

Early life and education
Rodenbough was born Grace Pemberton Taylor on October 5, 1897 in Danbury, North Carolina to James Spotswood Taylor, a wealthy tobacco farmer, and Nellie Pemberton Moon, a Quaker and daughter of the evangelist and missionary Mary Moon Meredith. Her father was the second-largest grower of fluecured tobacco in the world. She spent her summers at the Piedmont Springs Hotel, a mineral resort owned by her parents. Two of her brothers, Ed and John, were members of the North Carolina General Assembly. Rodenbough was raised in both her mother's Quaker faith and her father's Methodist faith. She was educated in public schools. She graduated from Guilford College with an bachelor of arts degree in 1917. She earned a masters degree in education from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 1952. She was a member of Delta Kappa Gamma. == Career ==
Career
Following graduating from Guilford College, Rodenbough worked as a teacher in Stokes County and Rockingham County. In 1948, she was appointed schools supervisor for Stokes County. During her last term in office, in 1965, she served as chairwoman of the Committee on the Statues of Women. She focused on education and agriculture and was a supporter of Governors William B. Umstead, Luther H. Hodges, and Terry Sanford. She initially supported L. Richardson Preyer in the 1964 gubernatorial election but later endorsed Dan K. Moore. == Personal life ==
Personal life
On November 12, 1929, she married Rex Exum Stuart and divorced him on November 24, 1936. She married a second time, to Stanley Leigh Rodenbough Jr., on August 4, 1947. They purchased and restored the Covington House near Walnut Cove. Upon her second marriage, she converted to Presbyterianism. Rodenbough was active in civic endeavors and was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, North Carolina Literary and Historical Association, North Carolina Society for the Preservation of Antiquities, and the American Association of University Women. She died on January 8, 1967 at the Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem. == References ==
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