The stained glass windows found inside the Little Chapel were designed to the theme "Women Ministering to the Human Needs." Each window pays respect to women in that particular profession. Graduate student Beatrice Paschall supervised the careful design and construction of each window. The stained glass windows found inside the Little Chapel were designed to the theme "Women Ministering to the Human Needs." Each window pays respect to women in that particular profession. Graduate student Beatrice Paschall supervised the careful design and construction of each window. The Motherhood Window sits directly over the altar and symbolizes woman as Mother. It is the largest of all the windows in the chapel and the most prominent in position. The illustrations found within the stained glass represent ideals derived from the Biblical conception of motherhood found in Proverbs. These include spiritual strength, desire, leadership, kindness, loyalty and love.
This window is designed in three panels with motifs at the top, middle, and bottom. The panels illustrate ideas derived from the Biblical conception of the mother in the characterizing words of
King Lemuel Proverbs Two yukka borders extend from base to top on either side of the figures. They symbolize vitality of the heart and mind, and the resilience of the spirit in women. The Nursing Window is dedicated to woman as nurse. This window pays homage to all of the women who paved the road toward modern day nursing. The large figure in the center of the window represents the ideal nurse: the women of history whose life work was establishing the service of nursing, the second symbol representing medical care and nursing on the
Texas Woman’s University campus, and third, a large central figure representing the ideal or universal nurse. Historical figures represented in the window are
Florence Nightingale, the founder of modern nursing, and
Clara Barton, the founder of the International Red Cross. ==References==