Elizabeth Harrison (educator)

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Elizabeth Harrison
portrait of Elizabeth Harrison
Photograph from Sketches Along Life's Road
Born(1849-09-01)September 1, 1849
Athens, Kentucky, U.S.
DiedOctober 31, 1927(1927-10-31) (aged 78)
San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
Pen nameElizabeth Harrison
OccupationCollege President, founder, educator, and author

Elizabeth Harrison (September 1, 1849 – October 31, 1927) was an American educator from Kentucky. She was the founder and first president of what is today National Louis University in Chicago, Illinois.[1] Harrison was a pioneer in creating professional standards for early childhood teachers and in promoting early childhood education.[2]

Life

Elizabeth Harrison was born in Athens, Kentucky, the fourth child of Elizabeth Thompson Bullock and Isaac Webb Harrison. According to the 1850 census, Isaac Harrison was a merchant there. The family moved to Midway, Kentucky, then to Davenport, Iowa, where by 1870 he was described in the census as a land agent.[3] Elizabeth Harrison was invited to Chicago in 1879 by her friend Mrs. W.O. Richardson to pursue a career in education.[4] After encountering the early kindergarten movement in Chicago and studying with early kindergarten educator Alice Putnam, Harrison sought further training in St. Louis and New York.[2][5] She then taught kindergarten in Iowa and Chicago.

Educational leadership

Involving mothers in education, Harrison and Putnam founded the Chicago Kindergarten Club in 1883, influenced by the book Mothers at Play by Friedrich Fröbel.[5] In 1886, Harrison founded a training school for kindergarten teachers in Chicago. Intrigued by the ideas used by a German woman working at her school, Harrison decided to find out more. She tracked these ideas back to the Pestalozzi-Fröbel-Haus in Berlin and in 1889 she traveled there to study. On her return she renamed her institution the Chicago Kindergarten Training College.[6] Harrison's school became an innovative college of education.[7] She was president of the college, expanded to the National Kindergarten and Elementary College, until her retirement in 1920. It is now part of National Louis University.

Later life and death

Belle Woodson, Supervisor of Kindergarten Practice Schools and Faculty Member at National Louis University, circa 1917

In 1903 Harrison co-wrote The Kindergarten Building Gifts with Belle Woodson, Instructor in Gifts and Occupations of the Chicago Kindergarten College.[8] According to the 1910 census, Woodson (aged 41) and Harrison (aged 60) were living together on North Waller Avenue in Chicago. Woodson became the supervisor of Kindergarten Practice Schools and faculty for psychology, literature, architecture. Harrison's chronic bronchitis was perhaps the reason they moved to San Antonio, Texas, in 1922. Woodson and Harrison lived at 505 West Mulberry Street where, according to her death certificate, Harrison died from an asthma attack on October 31, 1927.[9]

Writings

During her career, Harrison wrote a number of books, including: A Study of Child Nature (1890 – which saw 50 editions published in the following years[2]), In Storyland (1895), Some Silent Teachers (1903), Misunderstood Children (1908), Montessori and the Kindergarten (1913) and The Unseen Side of Child Life (1922). In 1893, the college published Harrison's book, The Kindergarten as an Influence in Modern Civilization, in which she explained, "how to teach the child from the beginning of his existence that all things are connected [and] how to lead him to this vital truth from his own observation . . .."[10] Harrison's autobiography, Sketches Along Life's Road, was edited and published in Boston in 1930, after her death.[11][12]

Influence

Nobel Peace Prize winner, Jane Addams of Hull House, said of her colleague and friend, that Elizabeth Harrison "has done more good than any woman I know. She has brought light and power to all the educational world."[13]

In the 1890s, Harrison organized a series of annual conferences in Chicago, which led to the founding of what is today the National Parent Teachers Association (PTA).[2]

References

  1. ^ "Our History: The Evolution of NLU". National-Louis University. Archived from the original on February 29, 2012. Retrieved September 11, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d "Elizabeth Harrison". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved September 11, 2016.
  3. ^ "Elizabeth Harrison's Writings: A Biography in Brief". Digital Commons at NLU. National Louis University. Retrieved 9 March 2021.
  4. ^ "Miss Harrison and the Chicago Kindergarten College". The Kindergarten Magazine. 5 (10): 739–745. June 1893. hdl:2027/hvd.32044102793619. Retrieved 9 March 2021.
  5. ^ a b Beatty, Barbara (1997). Preschool Education in America: The Culture of Young Children from the Colonial Era to the Present. Yale University Press. pp. 86–87. ISBN 9780300072730..
  6. ^ Geitz, Henry; Heideking, Jürgen; Herbst, Jurgen (1995). German Influences on Education in the United States to 1917. German Historical Institute (Washington, D.C.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 95–98. ISBN 978-0-521-47083-4.
  7. ^ Fenton, Sarah (2005). "National-Louis University". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society.
  8. ^ Harrison, Elizabeth; Woodson, Belle (1903). "The Kindergarten Building Gifts". Elizabeth Harrison's Writings. St. Louis, Mo. & Chicago, Ill.: Sigma Pub. Co. Retrieved 9 March 2021.
  9. ^ "Miss Elizabeth Harrison, Death Certificate". Texas Department of State Health Services. Texas Death Certificates, 1903–1982. Ancestry.com. Retrieved 9 March 2021.
  10. ^ Harrison, Elizabeth (1893). The Kindergarten as an Influence in Modern Civilization. Chicago Kindergarten College.
  11. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries. New Series: 1930. Copyright Office, Library of Congress. 1931. p. 910.
  12. ^ "Elizabeth Harrison, 1849–1927". National Louis University Archives and Special Collections.
  13. ^ "A History of Innovation." 2010. History: National-Louis University (retrieved, July 30, 2010) Archived February 29, 2012, at the Wayback Machine[failed verification]

External links and sources