The Commercial Appeal

Mary Davis ‘aged, but she never got old’

- DAVID WATERS COLUMNIST

The older I get, the older old becomes.

The thresh-old has been running about 25 years before whatever age I happen to be.

The extraordin­ary life of Mary McClintock Davis, who died last week at age 103, has me thinking about doubling that estimate.

Mary “retired” as a dean at St. Mary’s Episcopal School in 1979. That was the year I got married.

I feel like I’ve lived a lifetime in that time. I’ve got two kids in their 30s, and none at home. I’m old enough to join the AARP.

Heck, I’m old enough to remember when cells held prisoners, apples grew on trees and computers scribbled figures on ledgers.

Mary Davis hired a tutor to teach her to use an iPad when she was 102, after her fingers no longer would type on her computer.

Her first book, a history of St. Mary’s School, was published when she was in her 80s. She wrote her sec- ond book, a personal h i stor y, when she was 99.

She enrolled at Memph i s Theologica­l Seminary as she was about to turn 100.

She delivered MIFA Meals on Wheels to “seniors” who were decades younger than she was.

A few years ago, Mary and her friend, Carmine Vaughan, took a meal to a sketchy apartment complex. “I said, ‘Mary, I don’t know if we should be in this place,’” said Vaughan, a former St. Mary’s teacher.

“She said, ‘Carmine, I’m 98 years old. I’ve never been frightened in my life and I don’t intend to start now.’ She had such faith.”

Faith. Spirit. Moxie. Spunk. Pluck. Mary was blessed with so much of it she gave it away.

Mary played field hock- ey and basketball in college in the same decade the 19th Amendment gave women the right to vote.

She was a widow for 67 years. Her husband, David Davis, died while trying to save others after a boating accident in Florida in 1947.

After the accident, Mary moved her three daughters, ages 1-8, from the Chicago suburbs to Laurel, Miss., where her father was a Presbyteri­an pastor.

Realizing she needed income and better educationa­l opportunit­ies for herself and her girls, Mary moved to Memphis in 1954.

“She always told us that women must question the establishe­d order and be leaders for change,” said her friend, Anne Fisher, a former St. Mary’s teacher and dean.

Mary worked as a secretary and then a business manager for Hutchison School while she earned a master’s degree at Memphis State.

In 1964, she ran into the headmaster of St. Mary’s School, who offered her the position of Dean of Girls.

“He wrote a salary figure down on a piece of paper and gave it to her,” Vaughan said. “She looked at it for a moment, then gave it back to him and said, ‘No, I’m worth more than that.’ Can you imagine?”

Mary got the job and a higher salary.

She was dean for 15 years. She served as the school’s acting head twice, once after she retired. She also was the alumnae director and developmen­t officer after retirement.

In her 90s, she was a volunteer for MIFA, Church Health Center, Calvary Street Ministry and More Than a Meal at Idlewild Presbyteri­an Church, where she was an elder in every sense of the word.

“The day before she died, she told me, ‘Life boils down to two things: loving and giving,’” said Dr. Steve Montgomery, Idlewild’s senior pastor. “I can honestly say that I have never met anyone who touched more lives than Mary.”

Mary was born in China, the daughter of missionari­es who started a school there. Her first language was Chinese.

She often gave people a copy of a quote from “Walking on Water” by Madeleine L’Engle: “We do not draw people to Christ by loudly discrediti­ng what they believe, by telling them how wrong they are and how right we are, but by showing them a light that is so lovely that they want with all their hearts to know the source of it.”

No one doubted the source of Mary’s light.

“Mary aged, but she never got old,” Vaughan said. “Even as she was dying, she kept saying, ‘I am so blessed.’”

The older we get, the more blessed we become.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Mary M. Davis
Mary M. Davis

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States