The General Federation of Womenâs Clubs (GFWC) announced in June that long-time local Womanâs Club Board member and past president Jolie Frankfurth, is now the 2016-18 GFWC Director of Junior Clubs.
Frankfurth was named Director Elect in 2014, and installed the weekend of June 25-29 of this year in Baltimore. She is the first Florida woman since 1972 to hold this position.
âIâm ready for this,ââ Frankfurth said.
Her first day on the new job was Saturday, Aug. 6. âShe was elected by a membership of more than 80,000, has been with the organization a substantial amount of time and her charity work has been outstanding,ââ said Michelle Furman, the GFWC director of communications.
Frankfurth has risen through the ranks of the GFWC, which specializes in grassroots charity work with more than 27 various non-profit organizations such as St. Judeâs Childrenâs Research Hospital, since starting with the GFWC New Tampa Junior Womanâs Club (NTJWC) 20 years ago.
At the time, she said, the New Tampa area was still just mostly a road to S.R. 54.
âThere were a lot of young families with children moving to the area,ââ she said, adding that the New Tampa Juniors was a perfect fit for her.
Frankfurth is a University of South Florida graduate, with a Bachelorâs degree in Business Education and a Masterâs degree in Educational Leadership.
Locally, Frankfurth has made an impact on all levels of membership. She has been an Advisor of the GFWC New Tampa Juniorette Club the past five years and has been president of both the GFWC Womanâs Club of New Tampa and the NTJWC.
âThe richness of our great Federation is in the character, diversity and passion of its membership,ââ Frankfurth said. âOur work these next two years should be about attitude and actions to making good things happen in our local communities.â
Tampa Palms resident Melanie Otte remembers her grandfatherâs stories about World War II. He would regale the family about his wartime exploits, as they leafed through his photo albums, and proudly show off a picture of the Enola Gay â the first aircraft ever to drop an atomic bomb â that he had to jump a fence to take the photo with a small spy camera.
It never really hit her, though, what his service meant to him until she recently chose to take part in an Honor Flight.
Otte and Wesley Chapel resident Jennifer Lee, both members of the Greater Federation of Womenâs Clubs (GFWC)âs New Tampa Junior Womanâs Club, served as volunteer guardians to a pair of U.S. Military veterans on Sept. 22, an experience that left both amazed, appreciative and very much in awe.
Jennifer Lee (left) and Melanie Otte
âI had been to Washington, DC, as a kid, but this was a much more moving experience,ââ Otte says. âI mean, standing there with a person who lived it, that was just something totally different.â
Honor Flights are one-day trips organized by non-profit organizations dedicated to providing a way for veterans to visit the monuments created in the name of their service scattered throughout the nationâs capital.
Last year, the New Tampa Junior Womanâs Club donated $400 so one veteran could make the trip. That inspired Otte and Lee to get involved as Honor Flight volunteers this year.
Otte served as a volunteer guardian to 80-year-old Korean War U.S. Air Force Military Police veteran Frank Kynion, who lives in St. Petersburg, while Lee escorted Laura Tilton, a 92-year-old Venice resident and World War II veteran.
The day of the Honor Flight began with alarm clocks going off at 3 a.m. for the volunteers, a donated breakfast from McDonaldâs at the St. Petersburg-Clearwater Airport, and a 4 a.m. flight to the Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport with about 80 other veterans and their guardians.
When they got off the plane, the spunky Tilton asked Lee if the wheelchair had a speed limit, and Lee asked if she was pushing too fast.
âNo, pick it up, we got things to see,ââ Tilton told her with glee.
A contingent of military personnel was there to greet the veterans at the airport, setting off a whirlwind day of emotional sightseeing.
âWhen we were at the Korean War Memorial, it was very somber,â says Otte. âFrank was visibly taken aback. You could tell he was welling up.â
Otte said the listing of the Koreanâs Warâs U.S. fatalities (almost 40,000, with more than 100,000 injured) and the 19 haunting seven-foot-tall stainless steel statues standing in a patch of juniper bushes at the memorial was overwhelming.
Lee pushed Tilton around, although the former Naval Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN)/pharmacy maid, was able to stand and walk for short periods of time.
âShe was a lot of fun,ââ Lee says. âI think a lot of them just appreciated the one-on-one attention. She told me, âI had so much fun. I like to giggle, you like to giggle. She told me I was now her third daughter.â
As the vets returned to Florida, they read dozens of letters written to them by school children and adults, thanking them for their service and dedication. When the plane landed back in Clearwater, a throng of roughly 800 people, including a band, were there to greet them.
Kynion, who married a Japanese woman after the war, says he faced discrimination as a result, and also lived through the anti-military era of the Vietnam War, so he was humbled by the support. In fact, many of the veterans, on multiple occasions, asked why everyone was doing this for them.
Otte told him the answer was simple: âBecause you are our heros.â
The GFWC New Tampa Junior Womanâs Club meets the second Monday of every month at 6:30 p.m. at the New Tampa YMCA (16221 Compton Dr. in Tampa Palms). For more info, visit GFWCNewTampaJuniors.org.