Luella St. Clair Moss

First they moved to Montrose, Colorado for Franklin to drink the waters from the newly dug "Iron Mike" artesian well in the center of town.

St. Clair became a founding member in 1899 of the Tuesday Club which took on civic improvements such as developing the city's public library.

This change in leadership forced out Hamilton's current president, Barton C. Hagerman, the husband of Mary Campbell who was the granddaughter of the founder of the Disciples Church.

[10] The Kentucky Equal Rights Association had organized ten days of activities focused on women's role in the new century, and they featured national suffragists and peace activists such as Reverend Anna Howard Shaw and Dr. Sophonisba Breckinridge, in addition to the state's leaders in women's education.

[12] St. Clair was invited to speak again at the second Woman's Council organized by the Kentucky Equal Rights Association again in the summer of 1904.

[13] Jenkins supported St. Clair's ambitious efforts and the College grew at an unprecedented rate: a 47% increase in student enrollment within the next decade and new faculty for music, art and the newly designed domestic sciences curriculum—while at the same time introducing sports such as basketball and hockey.

(1852–1920), department chair of the medical faculty at University of Missouri[16] and internal medicine doctor at Parker Memorial Hospital.

[2] That same year St. Clair Moss won the nomination for the Eighth District to the U.S. House of Representatives on the Democratic ticket.

In 1930 St. Clair Moss was the first woman to be elected as a vice president of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) international convention.

In 1937 Culver-Stockton College, affiliated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and the first chartered co-educational institution west of the Mississippi River, awarded St. Clair Moss an honorary LL.D.

Faithfully yours, Luella Wilcox St. Clair
Luella St. Clair Moss, LL.D.