Mary Lyon
Noted Female Educator
“There is nothing in the universe that I fear,
but that I shall not
know all my duty, or shall fail to do it”
~ Mary Lyon
In the nineteenth century, there were not many
educational opportunities for women. But thanks
to Mary Lyon, a pioneer in the struggle to
establish institutions of higher education for
women, women found a place to receive an
education equal to that of men.
Mary Lyon founded the Mount Holyoke Female
Seminary in 1837 at South Hadley, Massachusetts,
which became the model for institutions of
higher education for women in the United States.
Mary Lyon was born on February 28, 1797 on the
family’s 100 acre farm near Buckland,
Massachusetts to Aaron and Jemina (Shepard)
Lyon. Her parents were from strong New England
Stock, her father being a veteran of the
Revolutionary War. Mary grew up in the Christian
faith passed down to her from generations. One
of her great-grandfathers was a Congregational
minister while another was a lay patriarch of
the local Baptists whose faith he had planted
there and whose right to worship without
taxation he had won in 1773 after a long
struggle. The family lived in a comfortable,
story –and- a –half farmhouse surrounded by
relatives living on the hillside and attended
services in the local church.
When Mary was a child in the early 19th century,
schooling for girls was considered by many to be
a waste of time. A girls education was uneven,
at best, and frequently non-existent. Most felt
that girls did not need to be educated to become
wives, mothers, and caretakers of the house. In
most New England towns the school year was
typically ten months long and divided into
winter and summer terms. In many towns girls
could only attend school in the summer, when
boys were needed to do farm work. In these towns
if girls were allowed to attend at all during
the winter, they would have to sit on the school
steps, hoping to catch bits of the teacher’s
lessons. Mary was fortunate that the school in
Buckland allowed girls to attend school year
round and, though she left school at the age of
thirteen, she had more education than most
girls, who knew little more than the basics of
reading, writing, and math, if that much at all.
In 1802, when Mary was only five years old, her
father died, leaving his wife to raise seven
children and run the family farm. At her
mother’s side Mary learned the skills and crafts
necessary for a 19th century New England farm
girl. She cooked on an open hearth, baked
breads, spun and dyed wool from family sheep,
wove blankets, sewed clothes, preserved farm
produce, churned butter, made cheese, jam, soap,
and candles, cured meat, washed clothes, and
swept floors. Mrs. Lyon remarried when Mary was
thirteen and left the girl behind when she moved
into her new husband’s home. Mary was considered
a grown woman at thirteen! Mary stayed on at the
family farm and kept house for her brother,
Aaron, earning a weekly wage of one silver
dollar, much of which she saved to further her
education.
In 1814, when Mary was just seventeen, she was
offered her first teaching job at a summer
school in the nearby town of Shelburne Falls. At
that time teachers needed no formal training,
only a good reputation as a student, which Mary
had. The job paid seventy-five cents a week,
which was far less than the $10-$12 per month
that male teachers received to teach the winter
term. As was the custom of the day, Mary
“boarded around” in the homes of her students,
often having to move residences every five days.
It was a difficult job teaching children from
the ages of four to ten in the crowded one room
school house, and it was even worse on rainy
days when the older boys came in from the fields
to attend school. However, Mary worked hard to
improve her teaching skills and her ability to
keep order in the schoolhouse.
Her experience teaching became the catalyst for
Mary to seek to further her own education, which
was no small task for a nineteenth century woman
who had little money. While there were some
private female schools springing up in New
England, women of modest means, like Mary, could
not afford their tuition. Besides the financial
concerns, these schools offered mainly
“lady-like” curriculums such as drawing and
needlework, which were far less challenging than
at male schools where students studied subjects
like Latin and the sciences.
Though there were obstacles in her path, related
to both finances and gender, Mary was determined
to further her education. She spent the next
several years partly in front of the classroom
as a teacher and partly struggling to find a
place for herself in classrooms and lecture
halls so she could learn more and fill in the
gaps of her education. She sometimes traveled
three days by carriage to enroll at a school.
Against the advice of her family Mary also
cashed in a small inheritance from her father to
pay for her education. Since she lived very
frugally Mary was able to save a portion of her
small salary and trade homemade blankets for her
room and board as well.
Mary’s reputation as an educator spread all over
the New England region. For the next twenty
years she taught at schools in Massachusetts and
in New Hampshire. She became an authority on the
education of women and it was during these years
that Mary developed her educational philosophy
and gained experience in managing a school.
During this time she taught at the Sanderson
Academy, opened her own school in her hometown
of Buckland, spent summers teaching at the Adams
Female Seminary in New Hampshire and then became
the assistant principal at Ipswich Female
Seminary.
Her struggle in obtaining a good education gave
Mary a new idea. Mary decided to establish an
affordable college for women with an advanced
curriculum equal to that available to men; one
that prepared women for more than homemaking and
teaching. In 1834 she left Ipswich to begin the
fulfillment of her dream. In pursuit of her
dream Mary traveled and fundraised to win
support for her ideas and in 1837 she opened Mt.
Holyoke Female Seminary. Eighty students were in
that first class and the next year 200 women
applied for 90 available seats. The cause of
female education had entered a new era.
Mary’s innovative goals for Mount Holyoke set
her school apart from other female seminaries of
the day. They included:
~A curriculum equivalent to those at men’s
colleges. An educator ahead of her time, Mary
required seven courses in the sciences and
mathematics for graduation, a requirement
unheard of at other female seminaries. She also
introduced science-laboratory experiments to the
women, which they performed themselves, often
collecting their own specimens for lab work from
field trips. She also invited distinguished
scientists to lecture at the school and inspired
women to pursue careers in the sciences as
college teachers and researchers. Mary herself,
taught chemistry, one of her favorite subjects.
~A minimum entrance age of 17.
~Rigorous entrance examinations to make sure
students were adequately prepared.
~Low tuition to make education affordable to
students of modest means. When it opened,
tuition at Mount Holyoke was $60 a year.
~Domestic work by students to keep operating
expenses down.
~A wide base of financial support from people of
various backgrounds.
~Independence. Mary Lyon sought no affiliations
with a specific religious denomination or
wealthy sponsor. Instead she formed a Board of
Trustees, a group of dedicated male supporters,
who donated their time to help Mount Holyoke
succeed. I would like to note, however, that
while the school was not affiliated with any one
religious group, Mary’s devout Christian faith
influenced the spiritual life of the seminary.
Students were required to attend church services
of their choice, chapel talks, prayer meetings,
and Bible study groups. Twice a day teachers and
students spent time in private devotions. Every
dorm room had two large lighted closets to give
roommates privacy during their devotional time.
The success of Mount Holyoke proved that women
were as intellectually capable as men and opened
the doors of higher education for women. It also
proved that a school for women offering a
regular college curriculum could survive
financially. . Mary’s impact on education was
felt not only in America, but world-wide.
Students from Mount Holyoke Female Seminary
carried Mary Lyon’s ideals and teaching methods
into schools which they founded or taught at all
over the world. Through the work of Mount
Holyoke’s alumnae teachers, the quality of
elementary and high school education improved
throughout the nation and the presence of
well-educated female teachers in the classroom
offered role models for young women who aspired
to make a difference in their worlds.
Mary Lyon served as the principal of Mount
Holyoke for 12 years, during which time the
curriculum and the school was expanded. Her
energy and clear vision of her goal were the key
ingredients in the school’s early success. In
1888 the school became Mount Holyoke Seminary
and College and in 1895 it became Mount Holyoke
College. It remains, today, as one of the
leading institutions of higher education for
women in the United States. For more information
on Mount Holyoke College and Mary Lyon visit
their website at: www.mtholyoke.edu
Resources:
Mount Holyoke College Webiste -
www.mtholyoke.edu
Medifast Coupons -
http://www.medifastcoupons.org
Teacher Heroes: Mary Lyon, by Lu Stone –
www.myhero.com
The National Women’s Hall of Fame –
www.greatwomen.org
Encyclopedia Britannica – www.britannica.com
Creative Quotations –
www.bemorecreative.com
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