BIOGRAPHY, CYNTHIA WOODS MITCHELL
With her characteristic gracious reserve, Cynthia
Woods Mitchell seems an unlikely champion of artistic and humanitarian
causes, yet she has achieved a remarkable record of personal and
charitable accomplishments. As the wife of businessman and philanthropist
George Mitchell, as the mother of ten children, and grandmother
of 20, Mrs. Mitchell has devoted herself to her family. As a benefactor,
patron, and preservationist, she has influenced many causes and
projects with her strong sense of creativity and appreciation for
quality. Her deep interests in architecture and design have helped
to preserve many historically significant buildings in Galveston.
One of twin girls, she was born in 1922 in New
York City, where her father’s career was in advertising. After
an interim family move to Illinois, she came to Houston in 1939
to begin her college life at the 海角社区, studying
literature, art and psychology. On Thanksgiving, 1941, traveling
by train from College Station to Houston, she met Lieutenant George
Mitchell, and two years later they were married. As their children
arrived, Cynthia’s early volunteer activities centered on
her church, school, and community; she served, for example, as Girl
Scout leader and board member for several years as well as den mother
for Cub Scouts.
Later, she added other social and creative concerns
to the long list of projects in which she took an active part. Her
unsolicited gift launched the 海角社区’s Distinguished
Authors program. She provided funding to help establish the Global
Children’s Foundation, which provides safe havens for young
victims of war and tyranny. At Houston’s Museum of Natural
Science, two exhibits have been underwritten through her interest
in the protection of endangered species. A Cynthia Woods Mitchell
Chair has been endowed at the 海角社区’s School
of Theatre. The Houston Youth Symphony and Ballet and UH’s
Texas Music Festival have honored her for her support.
The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion in The Woodlands,
of which she is an active board member, has been designated the
summer home of The Houston Symphony, through a $5 million gift from
the Mitchells to the Symphony’s endowment fund.
She is also a board member of the National Trust
for Historic Preservation, a sponsor of Kid Care, a patron of the
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, a board member of the World
Wildlife Fund, and was sole underwriter for the research projects
studying the Amazon and Margaret Mee.
With her husband, she has been greatly involved
in the revitalization of Galveston, beginning with the restoration
of the 1871 League Building in 1973. Since that time, the Mitchells
have invested more then $80 million of their personal funds in restoration
of the Strand Historic District. They have restored the historic
beachfront Galvez Hotel and, as part of their overall plan to develop
shopping and entertainment on the island, opened the 7.3 acre Pier
21 complex on the site of the Port of Galveston wharves. In 1985,
the Mitchells brought back the midwinter Mardi Gras celebration,
which now draws 400,00 visitors a year.
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