HENRIETTA LARSON
(1894-1983)
What was necessary in the
early 1900's for a young girl to go
from a small-town in Minnesota to the
faculty of one of the finest
universities in the world? The life of
Henrietta Larson, the first woman
promoted to full professor at the
Harvard School of Business
Administration and a pioneer in the
field of business history, might give
us some clues.
Henrietta was born in Preston,
Minnesota on September 24, 1894 to a
family that included four daughters
and one son. Her parents, both
children of Norwegian immigrants and
devout Lutherans, valued hard work,
perseverance and education. It was
assumed that all five children would
to go college. When asked why he
wanted his daughters to attend
college, even though they would
probably get married and have
children, H.O. Larson replied that it
was even more important for women to
be educated than men, because women
raised the children. True to her
parents' values, Henrietta earned a
bachelor's degree from St. Olaf
College in Northfield, Minnesota, and
master's and doctoral degrees from
Columbia University in New York City.
After completing her formal
education, Henrietta taught for a year
at Bethany College in Lindsborg,
Kansas. Then she applied for a
position at Southern Illinois
University at Carbondale. The
university president said that she
would be hired if no man could be
found to fill the position. It was
Cardondale's good fortune that
Henrietta was ultimately offered the
job, because she was the only Ph.D. on
the faculty. The chair of the history
department, whose education had ended
after the eighth grade, failed to see
the importance of Henrietta's use of
essay exams or research papers in her
teaching. His students always earned
passing grades. By the end of her
first semester at Carbondale,
Henrietta had failed twenty percent of
her students! She expected to lose her
job, but the university president saw
the value of her methods. In addition
to teaching duties, Henrietta was
given administrative responsibilities
to help raise teaching standards for
the whole university.
During her second year at
Carbondale, Henrietta was contacted by
Norman S.B. Gras, one of her graduate
school professors. Dr. Gras was now at
the Harvard School of Business
Administration, where he held the
first chair in the nation in business
history. He asked Henrietta to come to
Harvard as his research assistant,
help him establish the field of
business history, and develop study
and research materials. Henrietta gave
a lot of though to this offer. Several
factors weighed against it. She would
have to leave the Midwest, give up
teaching, and accept a pay cut of
one-third. The challenges and
opportunities were too great to
ignore, however, so in 1928, Henrietta
headed for Harvard.
Because of Harvard's policy
toward women, Henrietta was not able
to teach, but she supervised master's
and doctoral students and lectured
occasionally in addition to her
research work. In the 1950's, she
taught business history, although it
had to be done under the name of a
young man on the faculty. In 1961, a
year before her retirement, Henrietta
was promoted to full professor. She
was the first woman at the Business
School to achieve this rank, and only
the fourth woman in Harvard's history
to do so.
During her thirty-four years
at Harvard, Henrietta's devotion to
scholarly integrity and impartiality
did an enormous amount to establish
business history as an accepted field
of study. One of the crown jewels of
her career was in helping to write the
first analytical history of a major
American corporation, Standard Oil of
New Jersey. When she knew that enough
company records were available and
that their work would not be censored,
Henrietta and a team of scholars began
the project. Many years of hard work
resulted in a multivolume set of books
chronicling the history of Standard
Oil of New Jersey. This work was
praised by business historians for its
critical, analytical approach which
placed a major corporation in its
historical context.
Because of her impartiality
and integrity, Henrietta was known to
criticize scholars who she felt molded
history to fit their own philosophies.
She spoke and wrote of the need to
look at all sides of an issue and to
think clearly: "As for our thought, if
it is to deal with the complex
problems that press upon us, it must
be able to deal with realities, and to
make judgments about them in the light
of values that are important and
enduring."
Regarding the role of the
business historian, she wrote, "What
we have done is . . . to put business
in its broader political and cultural
setting. .. We are not out to defend
business, but to try to do an
impartial, scholarly investigation of
an important American institution."
Retirement from Harvard in
1962 did not mean an end to
Henrietta's career. She finished work
on the Standard Oil project, edited
manuscripts for the series of books
called Harvard Studies in Business
History, and spent six months in India
as a consulting business historian.
Along the way, she received many
awards and honors which recognized the
excellence of her work. The
Distinguished Service Award which the
Harvard Business School presented to
her in 1979 stated, "This gallant
lady's enduring self-reliance and
quiet willingness to work with others
has prospered the cause of business
history at Harvard and across the
civilized world."
The life of Henrietta Larson
is a chronicle of hard work,
perseverance, and a sense of
confidence in her own worth. These
elements, provided by her upbringing
and her own efforts, helped her
succeed in an occupation dominated by
men, make lasting contributions to the
field of business history, and help
forge a pathway for women in higher
education.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
"The Larson Sisters: Three Careers in
Contrast," by Carol Jenson, in Women
of Minnesota, Selected Biographical
Essays, edited by Barbara Stuhler and
Gretchen Kreuter
"Henrietta
Larson, An Appreciation," by Ralph W.
& Muriel E. Hidy, in The Business
History Review, Vol. 36, No. 1, Spring
1962
Minneapolis
Star Tribune, Thursday, September 1,
1983
Newsweek,
January 2, 1961
Minneapolis
Sunday Tribune, November 17, 1963
Conversations
with Emilie Larson, Northfield,
Minnesota, niece of Henrietta Larson
The author of this
article, Carolyn Nitz, is a
freelance writer and works at the
Center for Lifelong Learning at
St. Olaf College in Northfield,
Minnesota. She holds a B.A. in
history from St. Olaf, a master's
degree in education from Harvard
University, and is certified as a
Montessori teacher. |