Born: 23 February 1787, United States
Died: 15 April 1870
Country most active: United States
Also known as: NA
From Famous Women: An Outline of Feminine Achievement Through the Ages With Life Stories of Five Hundred Noted Women. Written by Joseph Adelman, published 1926 by Ellis M Lonow Company:
Emma Hart Willard, a leader in the American movement for the higher education of women, founder of the Troy Female Seminary, and active in the great national revival of common schools in the United States.
She was born at Berlin, Conn., and was the sixteenth of a family of seventeen children. She began her career as a teacher in 1803, and in 1809 was married to Dr. John Willard. In 1814, at her home in Middlebury, Vt., she opened a boarding-school for girls in which she introduced various improvements in methods of instruction and also taught subjects hitherto not included in the curriculum of girls’ schools.
Desiring a broader field for the development of her ideas of eduction, she addressed to the New York Legislature in 1819 a treatise entitled A Plan for Improving Female Education.” It was an able exposition of excellent ideas and found favor with Governor John Clinton, resulting in the establishment in that year of a seminary for girls at Waterford, New York, which was incorporated and was partially supported by the State. Mrs. Willard removed to Troy, New York, in 1821 where she was presented by the city with a suitable building, henceforth known as the Troy Female Seminary, which served as the Vassar College of New York State a half century before the establishment of the institution at Poughkeeppsie. The seminary not only gave women collegiate education, but it trained a large number of women teachers.
After conducting this school for seventeen years, Mrs. Willard resigned her duties into the hands of her son, and gave herself to educational missionary work. During the years 1845 – 1847 she traveled 8,000 miles by packet boat, stage coach, and private carriage through the States of the South and West, agitating and counseling in the matter of public education.
Her European influence extended to the founding of a school for girls in Athens, Greece, and in 1854 she was present at the World’s Educational Convention in London.
Emma Willard is one of the most prominent figures in the history of higher education for women in the United States. She was not only an advocate of advancement but a practical worker for it, and brought to her task great earnestness of purpose, coupled with high abilities and executive capacity. Her school books were widely used and were translated into European and Asiatic languages. Sjhe also wrote some excellent verse, which includes the famous Rocked in the Cradle Deep.
A statue was unveiled to her memory at Troy in 1905.
From Woman: Her Position, Influence and Achievement Throughout the Civilized World. Designed and Arranged by William C. King. Published in 1900 by The King-Richardson Co. Copyright 1903 The King-Richardson Co.:
EMMA HART WILLARD WHO ON THIS SPOT ESTABLISHED THE FIRST PERMANENT SEMINARY IN AMERICA FOR THE ADVANCED EDUCATION OF WOMEN. ERECTED BY HER PUPILS AND FRIENDS, A. D. 1895.
HER MOST ENDURING MONUMENT, THE GRATITUDE OF EDUCATED WOMEN.
So reads the inscription of the statue at “ Sage Hall,” Troy, N. Y.
This pioneer educator of women was born in Berlin, Connecticut. She was one of seventeen of her father’s children and one of ten which her own mother had home him. Hers was a struggle for an education and to a remarkable degree she was self-taught. We see her a girl of fourteen rising at four o’clock of a winter morning to study the stars. She taught the village school at an early age and was at the same time pursuing advanced studies, fitting herself for larger fields.
At twenty years of age she was called to important positions in three different states. She went to Middlebury, Vt, where she took charge of the academy. Two years afterward she married Dr. John Willard. For a few years she gave up teaching, but owing to financial losses she again resumed it. Had Dr. Willard been financially prosperous he world might have been deprived of a noted educator. She opened a boarding school for girls and was at the same time planning for something more extensive. She determined to secure for young women the same collegiate advantages that young men enjoyed. Like all pioneers she was alone and found little sympathy and less aid.
In 1818 she sent to Gov. Clinton of New York a plan for a female seminary. The governor recommended the plan to the Legislature. The equal rights of women in education were then for the first time advocated in legislative halls.* A female academy was incorporated and located at Waterford. It was afterwards removed to Troy.
* The Troy Female Seminary has been the educational home of six thousand young women. It was also the parent institution from which sprang our seminaries and colleges for the education of women.