Alice Gertrude Eldred Gertrude Case

(1901-1977)

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Alice Gertrude Eldred (who went by Gertrude) worked in the Laboratory with her sisters when she graduated high school in 1918. Women made up a substantial portion of the workforce in the Laboratory, including secretaries, bookkeepers, machinists, and glass blowers. Gertrude herself was a glassblower, and through her work in the Lab she came to intrigue Ted Case. The two were married that same year.

Gertrude and Case would eventually have four children together, and by the time Case ended his work with Fox-Case Corporation, had more time to devote to her own interests and became heavily involved with volunteer projects in New York City (where she was primarily residing at the time). She and Case would divorce in 1941. She was the National President of the Episcopal Church Mission of Help from 1940-1942 and worked with  that organization for many more years. During the 1940s she also served as a Director at the Museum of Modern Art and during WWII she volunteered with the American Red Cross, meeting incoming and outgoing soldiers at NYC piers. 

In 1958 she moved to Washington D.C. and became the Social Director for the Cuban Embassy until the Cuban Revolution. Leaving Washington for Connecticut, she kept up with her volunteer work until her death in 1977.

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