NASW Foundation National
Programs
NASW Social Work Pioneers®
Frances Marion Allen (1908- )
Frances Allen received a Certificate from the Southwest Social
Services Institute Dallas, Texas and a BA from the University of Texas in 1929. She
attended evening college at the University of Chicago, School of Social Sciences 1931 to
1935. She received a master's of social work degree from Tulane University in 1948 and an
advanced certificate from Smith College of Social Work in 1952.
Her most outstanding contributions were during the last 19 years of her career - the
1950's and '60s when she joined the staff of the Child Guidance Clinic of Ft. Worth and
Torrant County. She became social work supervisor and eventually associate director. She
worked as an advocate for on-going staff development and excellence in practice. She was
instrumental in the clinic's application for membership in the Association of Psychiatric
Clinics for Children.
Allen contributed as a pioneer in the early days of public welfare in Chicago as well
as in Texas. She worked in Illinois at the L&R Relief Commission in Chicago from 1931
to 1935. As the case work supervisor for this department, she experienced a near fatal
assault with a razor by a relief client who considered her personally responsible for
agency policies. After 3 months, recovering from her wounds, she worked again as a
supervisor in a different district office. At the time, she was the supervisor of a worker
who was shot to death in a client's home by a man and his mother who later came to the
district office and killed the district supervisor and seriously injured 2 other workers
in a random shooting spree.
Allen worked in Texas in the State Department of Public Welfare as the regional
supervisor from 1939 to 1941 in the Austin area where she conducted an extensive
in-service training program which had been defined by the state consultant. In the Lubbock
area, she assembled a staff development library, established strong relationships with
county commissions and developed agency referral packages. During World War II she worked
for the Ft. Worth chapter of the American Red Cross from 1941 to 1945 as the supervisor of
volunteers. Her periodic orientation courses were attended by an outstanding group of
dedicated volunteers. She also supervised new social work graduates.
She helped to create a family service agency in Ft. Worth and she later served as local
co-chairman for the council social agency health committee to study how other communities
were handling duplication and gaps to services to children.
She held professional memberships in NASW, the Psychiatric Association, the University
of Texas of School of Social Work advisory committees, and was a member of state and local
mental health associations. Mrs. Allen resides in Fort Worth, Texas. |