Willard, Emma, School

From Archiplanet

Jump to: navigation, search
Willard, Emma, School
Designer Cummings, Fred, M.
Location Troy, New York, USA
Date
Building Type Education
Construction System Slate, Steel, Concrete
Architectural Style Jacobethan Revival
Street Address Pawling and Elmgrove Aves. Walk Score
Notes

Contents


[edit] Images

[edit] Discussion

National Register of Historic Places
Name Willard, Emma, School
ID Number 79001625
NRHP Status Listed In The National Register
Certification Date 08/30/1979
Level of Significance National
NRHP Documents Text (pdf) ; Photos (pdf)


The Emma Willard School, built between 1910-1927 and designed in a Jacobethan Revival style common to educational facilities of the era, is recognized as the country's first secondary school for females and was the product of Emma Willard's pioneering efforts to expand educational opportunities for women. Born Emma Hart in 1787 in Berlin, Connecticut, she married John Willard in 1808. An innovative teacher since age 17, Willard opened the Middlebury Female Seminary in 1814 in response to the local college's refusal to admit women. Brimming with confidence over the success of her seminary, the graduates, and her own teaching techniques, Willard moved to Troy, New York and opened the Troy Female Seminary in hopes of attracting public funding opportunities. Though she failed to secure such funding, Willard's industriousness created a network of philanthropy which supported the Seminary and enabled the graduation of over 200 women teachers. Willard's success demonstrated the importance of educational opportunities for women and the need for seminaries to introduce "more substantial subject matter" to overcome critics. Her publications on behalf of women's education earned the support of such luminaries as James Monroe and Thomas Jefferson. Among the illustrious graduates of the Seminary was Margaret Slocum Sage, wife of Russell Sage and America's foremost woman philanthropist. Sage donated the Seminary's current campus and financed the construction of several school buildings. Although a dedicated educational reformer, Willard was emblematic of her class and age by focusing on middle and upper-class girls whose upbringing was conducive to the values and morals Willard coupled with formal education. In 1895 the Seminary was renamed the Emma Willard School as a posthumous honor to its founder.

[edit] Maps

[edit] References

National Register of Historic Places


[edit] External Links

  • Emma Willard School on Places Where Women Made History - A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary