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The Trouble with Coeducation: Mann and Women at Antioch, 1853–1860

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

John Rury
Affiliation:
Ohio State University
Glenn Harper
Affiliation:
Ball State University

Extract

Olympia Brown came to Ohio's Antioch College in 1856 in search of a liberal education. At Mount Holyoke Female Seminary she had found too many rules and restrictions: “young ladies are not allowed to stand in the doorway”; “young ladies are not allowed to linger in the halls”; and “we never examine young ladies in Algebra.” Reared in Michigan under the influence of a mother determined to see her daughters fully educated, Brown was attracted to Antioch “by evidence of a broader spirit.” She graduated four years later and went on to become the country's first ordained female Universalist minister, a women's rights activist, and a vice president of the National Women's Suffrage Association. In the 1850s, however, she was particularly interested in what Antioch's first president, Horace Mann, described as its “Great Experiment”: coeducation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1986 by the History of Education Society 

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References

1. Willis, Gwendolyn, ed., Olympia Brown, Autobiography (Racine, Wis., 1960), 1718.Google Scholar

2. Catalogue of Antioch College, 1853–1854 (Cincinnati, 1853).Google Scholar

3. The best biography of Mann is Jonathan Messerli, Horace Mann: A Biography (New York, 1972); also useful is Tyack, David B. and Hansot, Elisabeth, Managers of Virtue: Public School Leadership in America, 1820–1980 (New York, 1982), 56–63. Both of these accounts emphasize the importance of Mann's religious background for his later career, particularly his inability to accept the Calvinist tenet of original depravity.Google Scholar

4. Mann to Austin Craig, 13 May 1852, comp. Robert L. Straker, Mann Notes, p. 2578 (an unpublished copy of Horace Mann correspondence, available in Antiochiana Collection, Antioch College Archives). For an overview of the early history of Antioch, see Vallance, Harvard F., “A History of Antioch College” (Ph.D. diss., Ohio State University, 1936).Google Scholar

5. A useful summary of early coeducation programs can be found in Newcomer, Mabel, A Century of Higher Education for American Women (New York, 1959), 6. For statistics on enrollment see page 46.Google Scholar

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8. A study of the Antioch catalogues from the 1850s provides details about enrollment (students were listed by name), the curriculum, and the faculty. See Antioch College Catalogue, 1853–55; Antioch College Catalogue, 1856–57 (Springfield, Ohio, 1856); Antioch College Catalogue, 1858–59 (Cincinnati, 1858). Also see Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody, Life of Horace Mann (Boston, 1865), 427. For a useful account of the curriculum at the female seminaries, see Green, Elizabeth Alden, Mary Lyon and Mount Holyoke: Opening the Gates (Hanover, N.H., 1979), especially chs. 4, 5, and 6.Google Scholar

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25. The faculty member was Rebecca Pennell, Mann's niece, who threatened to resign in late 1853 because she was receiving only half the pay of the male faculty. In asking to be released as an officer of the college and appointed to the Preparatory Department, she noted, “my name would not then be paraded before the world, as a show of anything false or unreal.” Letter from Pennell to the Antioch College trustees, 13 Jan. 1854, Straker, Mann Notes, 3124-26. Pennell remained on the college faculty until 1858.Google Scholar

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33. Quoted in Straker, Robert, “The Apprenticeship of G. Stanley Hall, 1872-76,” Antioch Alumni Bulletin 5 (May 1934): 6.Google Scholar

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35. A good overview of early student societies at Antioch is provided by Stein, Geoffrey N., “Antioch's Literary Societies in the 1850's” (Undergraduate thesis, Antioch College, 1965).Google Scholar

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38. “Alethezetean Record,” 2, 9, and 10 Mar. 1885.Google Scholar

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43. In a letter that Mary Mann wrote to her sister, Sophia Hawthorne, she explained that Ada Shepard—a recent Antioch graduate and tutor for the Hawthorne children—had not gotten her women's rights ideas at the college. “Her coming has saved her from being a furious womens rights woman. All the influence exerted here is adverse to the thing. But as this is where women can be fully educated it brings among others that very class of women greatly to Mr. Mann's annoyance. He makes them inexpressibly uncomfortable here but he tries to modify them.” Mary Mann to Sophia Hawthorne, 18 May 1858, Straker, Mann Notes, 2026.Google Scholar

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46. Quoted in the Christian Palladium, 1 Aug. 1857, 188.Google Scholar

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48. See Rice, , “Antioch in the Fifties,” 63.Google Scholar

49. See the Cincinnati Gazette, 30 June 1857. Events at the college were often featured in local newspapers. See Stein, , “Antioch's Literary Societies,” 73.Google Scholar

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51. This letter is filed in the Antiochiana Collection, Antioch College Archives.Google Scholar

52. Mann, , Life of Horace Mann, 527.Google Scholar

53. Brown, Olympia, Acquaintances, Old and New among Reformers (Milwaukee, Wis., 1911), 16.Google Scholar

54. Ibid., 21.Google Scholar

55. Address by Mrs. S.W. Dodds of St. Louis, Mo., to Crescent Society of Antioch College, Antiochiana Collection, Antioch College Archives.Google Scholar

56. Stein, , “Antioch's Literary Societies,” 56.Google Scholar

57. See Antiochian, 2d ser., 9 (1884): 2934.Google Scholar

58. For information on the marriage rates and careers of collegiate women, see Solomon, Barbara Miller, In the Company of Educated Women: A History of Women and Higher Education in America (New Haven, Conn., 1985), ch. 8; also see Sklar, Kathryn Kish, “The Founding of Mount Holyoke College,” in Women of America: A History, ed. Berkin, Carol Ruth and Norton, Mary Beth (Boston, 1979), 177–201. Marriage rates for women from all institutions, coed or all-female, were between 70 to 80 percent in this period, and the overwhelming preponderance of graduates went into education. Women like Olympia Brown, or Oberlin graduate Antoinette Brown, who became ministers were extremely rare.Google Scholar

59. Brown, , Acquaintances, Old and New among Reformers, 17.Google Scholar