In August 1945 she married the Reverend Dr.
Douglas Horton (died 1968), the dean of the
divinity school at
Harvard University, and took on her husband's last name becoming Mildred Helen McAfee Horton. In 1948, McAfee was asked to address the
World Council of Churches, making her one of the first few women to do so. She told the council, "that the secular institutions need to be supplemented by a virile church, alert to its unique mission to keep man conscious of his relation to the loving, judging, living God." In 1950, McAfee became a vice-president at large of the
National Council of Churches, upon its founding. She had previously been serving as the first female vice-president of the
Federal Council of Churches, which had been working to merge eight interdenominational boards to form the National Council. While holding this office with the National Council of Churches, she also sat on the boards of
NBC and
RCA in order to develop religious programming. She would later become the president of the
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. As an advocate for the ordination of women in the
U.S. Presbyterian Church, McAfee wrote an article entitled "Second-Class Citizens or Partners in Policy", in which she challenged the church stating, "The crucial question about the place of women in the church is whether or not the church will accept the pattern of the secular society (with which most women are fully content) or will take the lead within its own life demonstrating the truth of ultimate worth, whether it be male or female." McAfee Hall at Wellesley is named in her honor, as is Horton Hall at the
University of New Hampshire (UNH). She was President of the UNH Board of Trustees, serving on the board from 1963 to 1974. She died in
Berlin, New Hampshire in 1994 at the age of 94, and is buried in Durand Road Cemetery. ==References==