Mary Mason Lyon was an American pioneer in women's education during the 19th century
@Pioneer in Women's Education, Birthday and Childhood
Mary Mason Lyon was an American pioneer in women's education during the 19th century
Mary Lyon born at
Mary Lyon died at the age of 52 on 5th March 1849 at her apartment at Mount Holyoke in South Hadley, Massachusetts, due to erysipelas.
Mary Mason Lyon was born to Aaron Lyon and Jemima Lyon in the hilly town of Buckland in western Massachusetts on 28th February 1797. Her father Aaron died when Mary was five years old.
As a child she learned many skills like cooking, baking, sewing, preserving consumables of family garden, churning butter, jam making, cheese and candle making and helped her mother in these chores.
She received elementary education in the village school and when it shifted, she had to live with her extended family or with locals during the school terms and paid for her boarding doing various chores.
At 13, when her mother left the house and re-married, she supported her brother, who looked after the 100 acre family farm. He paid her one silver dollar as weekly wage.
She studied in different district schools till the age of 13 and thereafter she started imparting education in those schools from 1814.
From 1814 onwards she started imparting education in schools she had studied. The schools she worked included her own school ‘Sanderson’ in Buckland and two schools run by Grant namely the ‘Adams Female Academy’ and the ‘Ipswich Female Seminary’.
In 1833, she surveyed different schools outside New England with the vision of setting up an affordable school of higher education for women. To achieve an endowment of $30,000, for three years she raised funds by door-to-door collection. In South Hadley, $8,000 was donated by the male town officials.
In 1834, in Norton, Massachusetts, she assisted Laban Wheaton and Eliza Baylies Chapin Wheaton (Laban’s daughter-in-law) on their call to establish the ‘Wheaton Female Seminary’ now known as ‘Wheaton College’. She formed the first course of study aiming it to be at par with curriculum of men’s colleges.
The ‘Wheaton Female Seminary’ started with fifty students on April 22, 1835 while the number of teachers was three. Eunice Caldwell, the first principal of the college was chosen by Mary Lyon. Later Eunice Caldwell left with Lyon and eight students of the college to establish the ‘Mount Holyoke Female Seminary’.
‘The Mount Holyoke Female Seminary’ was formally started by her in 1836 with the vision to provide higher education to women from diverse economic backgrounds specially the middle class and the less privileged ones. It was opened in September 1837. The school started with 80 students, but the number kept increasing. In 1895, it became ‘Mount Holyoke College’.
‘The Mount Holyoke Female Seminary’ established by Mary Lyon remains an inspiration in the field of higher education for women. Mary Lyon encouraged others by her tireless effort and dedication to make higher education affordable to the underprivileged women. Following her footsteps, many such schools were later established.