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Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper

Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper (December 12, 1835 – December 11, 1896) was an American educator, author, evangelist, philanthropist, and civic activist. She is remember as a religious teacher and her efforts to increase the wide interest in kindergarten work. Cooper served as first president of the International Kindergarten Union, president of the National Kindergarten Union, president and vice-president of the Woman's Press Association, president of the Woman's Suffrage Association, and president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union.[1]

Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper
Born
Sarah Brown Ingersoll

(1835-12-12)December 12, 1835
Cazenovia, New York
DiedDecember 11, 1896(1896-12-11) (aged 60)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materCazenovia Seminary, Troy Female Seminary
Occupation(s)Educator, suffragist
Spouse
Halsey Fenimore Cooper
(m. 1855; died 1885)
Signature

She served as vice-president of the Century Club, treasurer of the World's Federation of Woman's Clubs, a director of the Associated Charities, and one of the five women elected to the Pan-Republican Congress. At the 1893 World's Fair, she delivered thirty-six addresses, and on her return, helped to organize the Woman's Congress of which she was president for two years and at the time of her death. Several years before her death, Mrs. Cooper became a convert to equal suffrage and was president of the Amendment Campaign Committee.[2] A few months before her death, Cooper stated that she was an officer of nineteen societies for charitable purposes.[3][4]

She dealt with a voluminous correspondence.[2] The assertion was made that the letters which she answered in the year before she died numbered 11,000.[1] She wrote extensively on topics related to women, children, and education.[5]

Early life and education edit

Sarah Brown Ingersoll was born in Cazenovia, New York, December 12, 1835.[a] She had two younger sisters who became Mrs. J. A. Skilton and Mrs. Reese M. Rawlings.[7] Her mother died when she was a little child, and she was adopted by her great-aunt, over 70 years of age.[2] Col. Robert G. Ingersoll was a cousin.[4][8]

When twelve years old, she appeared in print in the village paper, the Madison County Whig, and from that time, she was more or less engaged in literary work on papers and magazines. When but fourteen years of age, she opened a Sunday-school class in Eagle Village, 8 miles (13 km) from Cazenovia, and that class was the start of what became a church congregation.[3] When she started the school, some of the committeemen came to her and told her that, while they believed her to be qualified in every way to teach, at the same time they would all like it better if she would go home and lengthen her skirts. [6]

She was graduated from the Cazenovia Seminary in 1853, the first coeducational institution in the U.S., and numbering among its graduates Leland Stanford, Phillip Armour, and Charles Dudley Warner—all lifelong friends of Mrs. Cooper.[2] She subsequently attended the Troy Female Seminary,[6] of which Frances Willard was principal, studying music and modern languages.[1]

Career edit

After her graduation from college, she went to Augusta, Georgia, as a governess in the family of Governor William Schley. On the Governor's plantation, there were 500 or more slaves,[3] and Cooper (then Miss Ingersoll), used to gather them about her to teach them Holy Scripture.[6]

While in Augusta in 1855, she married Halsey Fenimore Cooper, also a Cazenovia Seminary graduate,[3] who had been appointed by President Franklin Pierce to the office of surveyor and inspector of the port of Chattanooga, Tennessee. They also worked as editors on The Advertiser, with Mrs. Cooper assisting Mr. Cooper. They had two daughters, Harriet ("Hattie") (b. 1856) and Mollie (b. 1861), as well as two sons, who died in infancy.[2]

As abolitionists,[3] the Coopers went north at the start of the Civil War.[6] [9] They settled briefly in Washington, D.C., then moved to Memphis, Tennessee in 1863, where Mr. Cooper was appointed assessor of internal revenue. There, Mrs. Cooper was elected president of the Society for the Aid of Refugees. She taught a large Bible class, which comprised from 100 to 300 soldiers. In 1864, after Mollie died, Mrs. Cooper began to suffer from depression and illness. For two years, she attempted to recuperate in Saint Paul, Minnesota. She recovered when the family moved to San Francisco, California in 1869, where Mr. Cooper worked for the IRS.[9][6] She became a staff member of the Overland Monthly, workinging as a proof-reader, essayist, and book reviewer. She also penned articles for the religious press, and researched and wrote field reports regarding education in California for the U.S. government in Washington, D.C.[10]

Her first Bible class in San Francisco was in the Howard Presbyterian Church, where Dr. Scudder was filling the pulpit. From there, she went to the Calvary Presbyterian Church.[6] It was there that Mrs. Cooper was tried for heresy, because she could not conscientiously subscribe to the doctrines of infant damnation or everlasting punishment. Mrs. Cooper was welcomed to the First Congregational Church, where she afterward remained.[2]

Still later, opened the class in the First Congregational Church. That class numbered over 300 members and embraced persons representing many religious sects, including the Jewish and the Roman Catholic faiths. While the credit of establishing the first free kindergarten in San Francisco is due to Prof. Felix Adler and a few of his friends, yet the credit of the extraordinary growth of the work is almost entirely due to Mrs. Cooper, who paid a visit to the Silver Street Free Kindergarten in November, 1878, and from that moment became the leader of the kindergarten work and the friend of the training school for kindergarten teachers.[6]

The rapid growth of the free kindergarten system in California had its first impulse in six articles written by Mrs. Cooper for the San Francisco Bulletin in 1879. The first of these was entitled "The Kindergarten, a Remedy for Hoodlumism," and was of vital interest to the public, for just at that time, ruffianism was so terrific, that a vigilance committee was organized to protect the citizens. The second article was "The History of the Silver Street Free Kindergarten."[citation needed]

In the early part of 1878, there was not a free Kindergarten on the western side of the Rocky Mountains; by 1892, there were 65 in San Francisco, and several others in progress of organization. Outside of San Francisco, they extended from the extreme northern part of Washington to Southern California and New Mexico, and they formed in Oregon, Nevada, and Colorado, and in almost every large city and town in California. Mrs. Cooper attributed the rapid strides in that work in San Francisco to the fact that wealthy persons, induced to study the work for themselves, became convinced of its permanent and essential value to the State. The second free kindergarten in San Francisco was opened under the auspices of Cooper's Bible class, in October, 1879.[11] She founded the "Jackson Street Kindergarten Association" in 1879.[b]

 
Cooper in an undated photo

In 1882, Mrs. Leland Stanford, who had been an active helper in the work from the very first, dedicated a large sum for the establishment of free kindergartens, in San Francisco and in adjacent towns, in memory of her son. Then other memorial kindergartens were endowed. By 1892, 32 kindergartens were under the care of Mrs. Cooper and her daughter, Harriet. Over US$300,000 was donated to Mrs. Cooper to carry on this work in San Francisco, and over 10,000 children were trained in these schools. Her notable and historical trial for heresy in 1881 made her famous as a religious teacher and did much to increase the wide interest in her kindergarten work. Mrs. Cooper is a philanthropist and devotes all her time to benevolent work.[11]

Cooper served as a director of the Associated Charities, vice-president of the Pacific Coast Women's Press Association, member of the Century Club and the leader of one of the largest Bible classes in the United States. Considered to be one of the best-known and best-loved women on the Pacific coast, she was elected a member of the Pan-Republic Kindergarten Congress of 1893, one of five women of the world who had that distinguished honor,[11] along with Mary Simmerson Cunningham Logan, Mary Virginia Ellet Cabell, president of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Frances Willard, and Clara Barton, of the American Red Cross.[13] She was also a speaker while at the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893).[14]

She was elected treasurer of the World's Federation of Women's Clubs in 1894.[4]

In 1895, she served as president of the National Kindergarten Union.[15] She was the first president of the International Kindergarten Union.[16]

Personal life edit

In 1879, Halsey lost his job as Deputy Surveyor and the family suffered financial difficulties. As a result of the strain, he committed suicide in 1885. After attempting to clear her husband's name, Sarah continued her philanthropic career. She taught both the Bible School and Kindergarten, and was involved with women's rights groups. Her daughter, Harriet had quit her teaching job to assist Sarah, but suffered from bouts of depression, especially following the death of her father. Harriet asphyxiated her mother and herself on December 11, 1896,[9][17][18] by turning on the gas, with suicidal intent, after her mother (who would have turned 61 the following day) had fallen asleep.[4]

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to Willard & Livermore (1893), Sarah Brown Ingersoll was born December 12, 1836.[6]
  2. ^ According to Faithfull (1884), Cooper opened the first Kindergarten in the American West.[9][12]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c M. Bradley Company 1896, p. 205.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Mrs. Cooper's Life Work". San Francisco Chronicle. December 12, 1896. p. 10. Retrieved February 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ a b c d e Arena Publishing Company 1897, pp. 929–34.
  4. ^ a b c d "Mrs. Cooper's Unhappy Death. Asphyxiated By Her Daughter, Who Ended Her Own Life". The Times. Philadelphia. December 13, 1896. p. 4. Retrieved February 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ Lindley & Stebner 2008, p. 48.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Willard & Livermore 1893, p. 206.
  7. ^ M. Bradley Company 1896, p. 207.
  8. ^ "Both Dead, And By The Daughter's Hand". The San Francisco Call. December 12, 1896. p. 2. Retrieved February 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ a b c d Staff (2003). "Guide to the Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper Papers, 1813-1921". Cornell University Library. Retrieved 2007-11-28.
  10. ^ Starr 1986, p. 219.
  11. ^ a b c Willard & Livermore 1893, p. 207.
  12. ^ Faithfull, Emily (1884). Three Visits to America. New York: Fowler & Wells Co., Publishers. pp. 229–234.
  13. ^ Golden Gate Kindergarten Association 1886, p. 118.
  14. ^ James, James & Boyer 1971, p. 381.
  15. ^ "International Kindergarten Union". The Washington Times. Washington, D.C. 17 February 1895. p. 5. Retrieved February 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  16. ^ "Distinguished American Woman". El Paso Times. September 5, 1975. p. 21. Retrieved February 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ Staff (December 12, 1896). "They Met Death Together". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-11-28.
  18. ^ "Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper American educator". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved July 19, 2020.

Attribution edit

  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Arena Publishing Company (1897). "A Woman From Altruria, by Gertrude G. De Aguirre". The Arena. Vol. 17 (Public domain ed.). Arena Publishing Company.
  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Golden Gate Kindergarten Association (1886). "Opportunity for Kindergarten Enlargement". Annual Report. Vol. 7–13 (Public domain ed.). San Francisco: G. Spaulding & Company, printers.
  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: M. Bradley Company (1896). "Mrs. Cooper's Life and Death, by the Editor.". Kindergarten Review. Vol. 7 (Public domain ed.). M. Bradley Company.
  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Willard, Frances Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). "Sarah Brown Cooper". A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life (Public domain ed.). Charles Wells Moulton.

Bibliography edit

  • James, Edward T.; James, Janet Wilson; Boyer, Paul S. (1971). Radcliffe College (ed.). Notable American Women, 1607-1950: A Biographical Dictionary. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-62734-5.
  • Lindley, Susan Hill; Stebner, Eleanor J. (1 January 2008). "Cooper, Sarah Brown Ingersoll by Robynne Rogers Healey". The Westminster Handbook to Women in American Religious History. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-22454-7.
  • Starr, Kevin (4 December 1986). Inventing the Dream: California through the Progressive Era. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-992326-7.

External links edit

  •   Works related to Woman of the Century/Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper at Wikisource
  • "A Pacific Heretic", Cooper's trial (Unity, vol. 7–8, pp. 349–50)

sarah, brown, ingersoll, cooper, december, 1835, december, 1896, american, educator, author, evangelist, philanthropist, civic, activist, remember, religious, teacher, efforts, increase, wide, interest, kindergarten, work, cooper, served, first, president, int. Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper December 12 1835 December 11 1896 was an American educator author evangelist philanthropist and civic activist She is remember as a religious teacher and her efforts to increase the wide interest in kindergarten work Cooper served as first president of the International Kindergarten Union president of the National Kindergarten Union president and vice president of the Woman s Press Association president of the Woman s Suffrage Association and president of the Woman s Christian Temperance Union 1 Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper A Woman of the Century BornSarah Brown Ingersoll 1835 12 12 December 12 1835Cazenovia New YorkDiedDecember 11 1896 1896 12 11 aged 60 NationalityAmericanAlma materCazenovia Seminary Troy Female SeminaryOccupation s Educator suffragistSpouseHalsey Fenimore Cooper m 1855 died 1885 wbr SignatureShe served as vice president of the Century Club treasurer of the World s Federation of Woman s Clubs a director of the Associated Charities and one of the five women elected to the Pan Republican Congress At the 1893 World s Fair she delivered thirty six addresses and on her return helped to organize the Woman s Congress of which she was president for two years and at the time of her death Several years before her death Mrs Cooper became a convert to equal suffrage and was president of the Amendment Campaign Committee 2 A few months before her death Cooper stated that she was an officer of nineteen societies for charitable purposes 3 4 She dealt with a voluminous correspondence 2 The assertion was made that the letters which she answered in the year before she died numbered 11 000 1 She wrote extensively on topics related to women children and education 5 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Personal life 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Attribution 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksEarly life and education editSarah Brown Ingersoll was born in Cazenovia New York December 12 1835 a She had two younger sisters who became Mrs J A Skilton and Mrs Reese M Rawlings 7 Her mother died when she was a little child and she was adopted by her great aunt over 70 years of age 2 Col Robert G Ingersoll was a cousin 4 8 When twelve years old she appeared in print in the village paper the Madison County Whig and from that time she was more or less engaged in literary work on papers and magazines When but fourteen years of age she opened a Sunday school class in Eagle Village 8 miles 13 km from Cazenovia and that class was the start of what became a church congregation 3 When she started the school some of the committeemen came to her and told her that while they believed her to be qualified in every way to teach at the same time they would all like it better if she would go home and lengthen her skirts 6 She was graduated from the Cazenovia Seminary in 1853 the first coeducational institution in the U S and numbering among its graduates Leland Stanford Phillip Armour and Charles Dudley Warner all lifelong friends of Mrs Cooper 2 She subsequently attended the Troy Female Seminary 6 of which Frances Willard was principal studying music and modern languages 1 Career editAfter her graduation from college she went to Augusta Georgia as a governess in the family of Governor William Schley On the Governor s plantation there were 500 or more slaves 3 and Cooper then Miss Ingersoll used to gather them about her to teach them Holy Scripture 6 While in Augusta in 1855 she married Halsey Fenimore Cooper also a Cazenovia Seminary graduate 3 who had been appointed by President Franklin Pierce to the office of surveyor and inspector of the port of Chattanooga Tennessee They also worked as editors on The Advertiser with Mrs Cooper assisting Mr Cooper They had two daughters Harriet Hattie b 1856 and Mollie b 1861 as well as two sons who died in infancy 2 As abolitionists 3 the Coopers went north at the start of the Civil War 6 9 They settled briefly in Washington D C then moved to Memphis Tennessee in 1863 where Mr Cooper was appointed assessor of internal revenue There Mrs Cooper was elected president of the Society for the Aid of Refugees She taught a large Bible class which comprised from 100 to 300 soldiers In 1864 after Mollie died Mrs Cooper began to suffer from depression and illness For two years she attempted to recuperate in Saint Paul Minnesota She recovered when the family moved to San Francisco California in 1869 where Mr Cooper worked for the IRS 9 6 She became a staff member of the Overland Monthly workinging as a proof reader essayist and book reviewer She also penned articles for the religious press and researched and wrote field reports regarding education in California for the U S government in Washington D C 10 Her first Bible class in San Francisco was in the Howard Presbyterian Church where Dr Scudder was filling the pulpit From there she went to the Calvary Presbyterian Church 6 It was there that Mrs Cooper was tried for heresy because she could not conscientiously subscribe to the doctrines of infant damnation or everlasting punishment Mrs Cooper was welcomed to the First Congregational Church where she afterward remained 2 Still later opened the class in the First Congregational Church That class numbered over 300 members and embraced persons representing many religious sects including the Jewish and the Roman Catholic faiths While the credit of establishing the first free kindergarten in San Francisco is due to Prof Felix Adler and a few of his friends yet the credit of the extraordinary growth of the work is almost entirely due to Mrs Cooper who paid a visit to the Silver Street Free Kindergarten in November 1878 and from that moment became the leader of the kindergarten work and the friend of the training school for kindergarten teachers 6 The rapid growth of the free kindergarten system in California had its first impulse in six articles written by Mrs Cooper for the San Francisco Bulletin in 1879 The first of these was entitled The Kindergarten a Remedy for Hoodlumism and was of vital interest to the public for just at that time ruffianism was so terrific that a vigilance committee was organized to protect the citizens The second article was The History of the Silver Street Free Kindergarten citation needed In the early part of 1878 there was not a free Kindergarten on the western side of the Rocky Mountains by 1892 there were 65 in San Francisco and several others in progress of organization Outside of San Francisco they extended from the extreme northern part of Washington to Southern California and New Mexico and they formed in Oregon Nevada and Colorado and in almost every large city and town in California Mrs Cooper attributed the rapid strides in that work in San Francisco to the fact that wealthy persons induced to study the work for themselves became convinced of its permanent and essential value to the State The second free kindergarten in San Francisco was opened under the auspices of Cooper s Bible class in October 1879 11 She founded the Jackson Street Kindergarten Association in 1879 b nbsp Cooper in an undated photoIn 1882 Mrs Leland Stanford who had been an active helper in the work from the very first dedicated a large sum for the establishment of free kindergartens in San Francisco and in adjacent towns in memory of her son Then other memorial kindergartens were endowed By 1892 32 kindergartens were under the care of Mrs Cooper and her daughter Harriet Over US 300 000 was donated to Mrs Cooper to carry on this work in San Francisco and over 10 000 children were trained in these schools Her notable and historical trial for heresy in 1881 made her famous as a religious teacher and did much to increase the wide interest in her kindergarten work Mrs Cooper is a philanthropist and devotes all her time to benevolent work 11 Cooper served as a director of the Associated Charities vice president of the Pacific Coast Women s Press Association member of the Century Club and the leader of one of the largest Bible classes in the United States Considered to be one of the best known and best loved women on the Pacific coast she was elected a member of the Pan Republic Kindergarten Congress of 1893 one of five women of the world who had that distinguished honor 11 along with Mary Simmerson Cunningham Logan Mary Virginia Ellet Cabell president of the Daughters of the American Revolution Frances Willard and Clara Barton of the American Red Cross 13 She was also a speaker while at the World s Columbian Exposition Chicago 1893 14 She was elected treasurer of the World s Federation of Women s Clubs in 1894 4 In 1895 she served as president of the National Kindergarten Union 15 She was the first president of the International Kindergarten Union 16 Personal life editIn 1879 Halsey lost his job as Deputy Surveyor and the family suffered financial difficulties As a result of the strain he committed suicide in 1885 After attempting to clear her husband s name Sarah continued her philanthropic career She taught both the Bible School and Kindergarten and was involved with women s rights groups Her daughter Harriet had quit her teaching job to assist Sarah but suffered from bouts of depression especially following the death of her father Harriet asphyxiated her mother and herself on December 11 1896 9 17 18 by turning on the gas with suicidal intent after her mother who would have turned 61 the following day had fallen asleep 4 Notes edit According to Willard amp Livermore 1893 Sarah Brown Ingersoll was born December 12 1836 6 According to Faithfull 1884 Cooper opened the first Kindergarten in the American West 9 12 References edit a b c M Bradley Company 1896 p 205 a b c d e f Mrs Cooper s Life Work San Francisco Chronicle December 12 1896 p 10 Retrieved February 22 2021 via Newspapers com a b c d e Arena Publishing Company 1897 pp 929 34 a b c d Mrs Cooper s Unhappy Death Asphyxiated By Her Daughter Who Ended Her Own Life The Times Philadelphia December 13 1896 p 4 Retrieved February 22 2021 via Newspapers com Lindley amp Stebner 2008 p 48 a b c d e f g h Willard amp Livermore 1893 p 206 M Bradley Company 1896 p 207 Both Dead And By The Daughter s Hand The San Francisco Call December 12 1896 p 2 Retrieved February 22 2021 via Newspapers com a b c d Staff 2003 Guide to the Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper Papers 1813 1921 Cornell University Library Retrieved 2007 11 28 Starr 1986 p 219 a b c Willard amp Livermore 1893 p 207 Faithfull Emily 1884 Three Visits to America New York Fowler amp Wells Co Publishers pp 229 234 Golden Gate Kindergarten Association 1886 p 118 James James amp Boyer 1971 p 381 International Kindergarten Union The Washington Times Washington D C 17 February 1895 p 5 Retrieved February 22 2021 via Newspapers com Distinguished American Woman El Paso Times September 5 1975 p 21 Retrieved February 22 2021 via Newspapers com Staff December 12 1896 They Met Death Together The New York Times Retrieved 2007 11 28 Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper American educator Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved July 19 2020 Attribution edit nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Arena Publishing Company 1897 A Woman From Altruria by Gertrude G De Aguirre The Arena Vol 17 Public domain ed Arena Publishing Company nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Golden Gate Kindergarten Association 1886 Opportunity for Kindergarten Enlargement Annual Report Vol 7 13 Public domain ed San Francisco G Spaulding amp Company printers nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain M Bradley Company 1896 Mrs Cooper s Life and Death by the Editor Kindergarten Review Vol 7 Public domain ed M Bradley Company nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Willard Frances Elizabeth Livermore Mary Ashton Rice 1893 Sarah Brown Cooper A Woman of the Century Fourteen Hundred seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life Public domain ed Charles Wells Moulton Bibliography edit James Edward T James Janet Wilson Boyer Paul S 1971 Radcliffe College ed Notable American Women 1607 1950 A Biographical Dictionary Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 62734 5 Lindley Susan Hill Stebner Eleanor J 1 January 2008 Cooper Sarah Brown Ingersoll by Robynne Rogers Healey The Westminster Handbook to Women in American Religious History Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22454 7 Starr Kevin 4 December 1986 Inventing the Dream California through the Progressive Era Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 992326 7 External links edit nbsp Works related to Woman of the Century Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper at Wikisource A Pacific Heretic Cooper s trial Unity vol 7 8 pp 349 50 nbsp Biography portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sarah Brown Ingersoll Cooper amp oldid 1205903411, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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