History professors to speak at Goostree Symposium
The Annual Goostree Symposium proudly announces Elizabeth Alexander and Brenda Taylor-Matthews, History Professors, as this year's featured speakers. They will give their address at 12:15 p.m. on February 16 in Martin Hall.
The topic of Alexander's and Taylor-Matthew's presentation is "Becoming Texas Wesleyan." They will discuss some of the more interesting facts of how Texas Weslyan came into existance along with several of the unusual traditions that were a mainstay of Texas Wesleyan in it's early years.
Elizabeth Alexander is the A.M. Pate Professor of Early American History at Texas Wesleyan University where she teaches courses in Colonial and Revolutionary American History, Early National United States History and the Civil War. She received her Ph.D. from Texas Christian University in 1998. Her book, Notorious Woman: The Celebrated Case of Myra Clark Gaines (LSU Press, 2001), won the 2002 David J. Langum Prize for Legal History/Biography and the Willie Lee Rose Prize for the Best Book in Southern History by a Woman, presented by the Southern Association for Women Historians.
Brenda Taylor Matthews is Pate Professor of History and Chair of the Social Science Department at Texas Wesleyan University. After receiving her Ph.D. from Texas Christian University in 1994, Dr. Matthews began teaching courses in Texas History, Women’s studies, Latin America and World War II. During the 1998-99 academic year, she was a Fulbright Professor in American Studies at the University of Stuttgart, Germany, where she taught courses on the American West and the New South. Her publications including chapters on New Deal Health, Texas Music, and a chapter in each of the books, Grace and Gumption: Stories of Fort Worth Women and Grace and Gumption: The Cookbook on the Sisters of Saint Mary of Namur at Our Lady of Victory.
About Faye C. Goostree
A woman who gave of herself, of her time and of her heart, Faye C. Goostree established the Women’s Symposium at Texas Wesleyan University in 1981.
This annual symposium was only one example of her lifelong commitment to Christian stewardship and civic responsibility. Faye Goostree led an exemplary life to all citizens, but especially to young women. Her philosophy was simple but profound: “Everyone has something to give and a responsibility to develop it and share it with others.”
In response to Goostree’s commitment to social responsibility and collaborative sharing, the Faye C. Goostree Women’s Symposium Planning committee at Texas Wesleyan University plans an intellectually and culturally stimulating event focusing on aspects of life relating to women. All members of the greater Fort Worth community are invited and encouraged to participate.