Services for Toastmasters Int’l President Helen Blanchard

Helen BlanchardIn Celebration of Toastmasters Trailblazer
Helen Blanchard

International President, 1985–1986

Services are to be held Saturday, June 15, 2013, from 11am-2pm at the First United Methodist Church, 2111 Camino del Rio South (Mission Valley west of Texas St.), San Diego, CA 92108 in Mission Valley (San Diego), California.

Toastmasters Executive Director Dan Rex and hundreds of members will be present. The reception following the service is hosted by Toastmaster members, offering 2-minute tributes.

To attend this event, pre-registration is requested to help accommodate seating and parking, go here: http://events.constantcontact.com/register/event?llr=w5a664dab&oeidk=a07e7j1vnfqc75953b3

Cards for the family can be sent to Helens’ daughter:
Cheryl Blanchard Sonnenwald
6048 E Inglewood Street
Mesa, AZ 85205  USA

Donations in Helen’s Memory can be made to the following organizations:

  1. Ralph Smedley Fund at Toastmasters International
  2. District 5 Toastmasters
    (Make check payable to “District 5 Toastmasters” and note “Homer”)
    PO Box 1543, El Cajon, CA 92022
  3. First United Methodist Church
    2111 Camino del Rio South , San Diego, CA 92108

Sign Helen’s Virtual Guestbook at http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/utsandiego/obituary.aspx?n=helen-m-blanchard&pid=165293537#fbLoggedOut

Toastmasters International posted this tribute:

Helen Blanchard, a trailblazing Toastmaster who rose through the ranks of the organization to become Toastmasters International’s first female president, passed away on Saturday, May 11, at the age of 86.

Helen began attending club meetings in 1970—a time when Toastmasters was still an all-male organization. That didn’t deter her, or the club she chose: Naval R&D Toastmasters in San Diego. (At the time, Blanchard was working at what was then called the U.S. Navy Research and Development Center in San Diego.) When a club leader submitted her membership application, they slyly disguised her gender, turning in the paperwork under the name “H. Blanchard.”

“World Headquarters then requested my first name, and the club president asked me what kind of male name I’d like to use,” Blanchard recalled in a 2008 Toastmaster magazine article. “I told him I’d never thought about it. So the members decided to name me during Table Topics, and they came up with ‘Homer.’”

By 1973, women were allowed to join Toastmasters, and “Homer” could go back to being Helen. Blanchard took on one leadership position after another in the organization, and in 1985 she was elected International President.

Along with the Naval R&D club, she eventually joined two other San Diego clubs: Undersea Toastmasters and Excelsior Toastmasters, a club she started in the late ‘70s.

Blanchard also achieved distinction in her professional career. She worked in a department of the Navy that tested sonar systems to identify if new torpedoes were hitting their targets, and she eventually oversaw 130 U.S. government employees responsible for providing support to Navy scientists and engineers.

In 2008, Blanchard wrote her autobiography, Breaking the Ice. Whether thriving in the workplace or leading fellow Toastmasters, she says she lived by the motto “Commit to excellence.”

Time and again, Blanchard wrote in Breaking the Ice, “I accepted challenges that made me reach far beyond my comfort zone.” Helen has been a mentor to hundreds of Toastmasters during the past 40 years, and an inspiration to thousands of men and women through her courage, her tenacity and her positivity. She will be greatly missed.

http://www.toastmasters.org/Members/SpotlightArticles/InMemoryofHelenBlanchardToastmastersInternationalPresident19851986.aspx

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