Jacqueline Noel

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Born
Jacqueline Noel

(1886-06-28)June 28, 1886
Washington, D.C.
Died1964(1964-00-00) (aged 77–78)
OccupationTacoma City Librarian
Knownforexpand Washington State's public library system and coining the name for the popular candy, Almond Roca
Jacqueline Noel
Born
Jacqueline Noel

(1886-06-28)June 28, 1886
Washington, D.C.
Died1964(1964-00-00) (aged 77–78)
OccupationTacoma City Librarian
Known forexpand Washington State's public library system and coining the name for the popular candy, Almond Roca

Jacqueline Noel (June 28, 1886 – 1964) was an American librarian for the city of Tacoma, Washington. She was a leader in promoting the colonial history of the United States and helped to expand Washington State's public library system. Noel is also credited with coining the name for the popular candy, Almond Roca.

Jacqueline Noel was born in Washington, D.C., on June 28, 1886, the daughter of Jacob Edmund Noel (died 1918), general secretary of the Scottish Rite bodies in the Tacoma jurisdiction, and Eleanor Freaneau Leadbeater. She had one sister, Anita Noel, who later married a Mr. Thomas W. Mason.[1][2] The Noel family moved to Tacoma, WA in 1889 where Jacob Noel took up civil engineering.[3]

In 1896 at the age of 10, Noel was elected secretary of the Mary Lampheer Society, Washington state's first chapter of Children of the American Revolution (C.A.R. for short). The C.A.R. had been proposed as a young people's division of the Daughters of the American Revolution at the C.A.R.'s Fourth Continental Congress in February 1895 and promptly chartered by the United States Congress.[4][5] The Mary Lampheer Society first met on the one year anniversary of the C.A.R.'s formation at the Noel home in Tacoma with Jacqueline's mother, serving as president. As Washington was a new state at the time, its citizens had gathered little of historical interest to themselves, and the Society therefore devoted its attention to papers relating to the American Revolution and U.S. history with the purpose of celebrating the anniversaries of important events of revolutionary times.[6]

Noel moved to New York City to attend the Pratt Institute, from which she graduated in 1913. She then returned to the Pacific Northwest to embark on her career.[7] Miss Noel was an assistant librarian in La Grande and Portland, Oregon before joining the Tacoma Public Library staff in July 1924 as an assistant in the reference department.[3]

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