In 1907, a small group of Westport
Women organized for the purpose of cleaning the town streets, caring for and
planting trees and laying sidewalks. They called themselves "The Women's Town
Improvement Association", later the name was changed to The Westport Woman's
Club.
The programs the Woman's Club has
initiated to the town are numerous. The "greening of the Post Road" and Canal
Park are but two firsts. The Visiting Nurse Service was started in 1925 and
funded by the Club for 35 years when it was turned over to the town in 1960.
Free dental clinics, vaccination clinics, well-child clinics, tuberculosis
campaigns, free milk distribution, polio saliva tests, a lending service of
sickroom equipment - all these were inaugurated by the Club.
The Club pioneered classes for
children with learning disabilities by conducting experimental classes with a
trained teacher and volunteer for three years until the program was integrated
into the local schools. The Club has worked closely with the schools on many
projects from the earliest years and presently awards academic scholarships to
deserving students. It was the Club that introduced the idea of "visiting
teacher" to consult with parents, the counterpart of today's Guidance Counselor.
It also gave Westport its first school nurse, dental hygienist and district
nurse.
In 1975 the Club started an
Emergency Food Distribution Program for the local needy under the leadership of
Westport Department of Human Services. It is now known as the Food Closet and
continues to this day.
In sum, the Westport Woman's Club
has a successful history of answering calls for "help where needed" and in
recognizing areas of need before calls for help go out.

The
House
In 1948, the Club acquired its own
Clubhouse, the 1881 Sidney Watts house. This gracious old house on Imperial
Avenue grew in 1950 with the addition of the "Sunday school meeting house" of
the Saugatuck Congregational Church. It is now the Club's auditorium and meeting
room for the monthly meetings. To help defray some of the costs of maintaining
an historical house, it is rented to members and non-members for a variety of
functions throughout the year. Also various philanthropic, educational and civic
organizations have been encouraged to use the facilities.