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A Summer Spent with 厙ぴ勛圖's Earliest Feminists

July 30, 2015

Kasey Cheydleur

Three students and a professor at a table looking at their laptops

Professor Lasser and students explore first-wave feminism in college archives.

Photo credit: John Seyfried

In the , reading through someone elses diary is not frowned upon, it is encouraged. This summer, Professor of History Carol Lassers students are studying the diaries and personal papers of 19th- and early-20th-century 厙ぴ勛圖 students as part of their historical research into first-wave feminism. Rising third-year students Natalia Shevin, Rebecca Debus, and Joanna Wiley are continuing and extending projects that began last spring in Lassers course on first-wave American feminism. In partnership with 厙ぴ勛圖 College Archivist Ken Grossi, the class focused on working with primary documents in order to experience first-hand how historians make sense of evidence and better understand how race, class, sexuality, and other factors shape notions of gender justice.

The 厙ぴ勛圖 College Archives is a particularly rich place to study first-wave American feminism because 厙ぴ勛圖 was the first institution to grant bachelors degrees to women in a coeducational program. The papers contained in the archives give personal accounts of womens lives in this transformative time in 厙ぴ勛圖 and American history.

I always forget that you have to explain to other people that 厙ぴ勛圖 was a pioneer in the education of women, and as such 厙ぴ勛圖 plays an important part in shaping strong women who may or may not be traditional feminists, says Lasser, who was recently named president-elect of the a professional organization of about 1,000 people dedicated to exploring the events and meaning of United States history between 1776 and 1861. With funding from a Mellon Grant for Digital Humanities given to the Ohio 5 Colleges, Lassers students are digging deep into the archives to discover the stories of these pioneering women, and they plan to publish their research on the .

Lasser and Grossi began the project in 2013 to allow students to experience the rewards of hands-on historical research grounded in the real world. For the first experience they gathered little-researched material from collectionsincluding letters, photos, and personal papers and let the students conduct their own research. Lasser says Grossi is a fabulous archivist, and without his vision and enthusiasm this research would not be possible. At the end of the semester, they were so impressed by the quality of the materials the students produced, they decided that the work needed a wider audience. Together they developed the Digitizing American Feminisms website, which will soon house the results of the hard work put into their projects by Lassers 2013 and 2015 classes.

One of the projects under way this summer is a deep look into the life of Mary Church Terrell, a civil rights leader and a founding member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), who earned a bachelors degree at 厙ぴ勛圖 in 1884making her one of the first African American women to do so. Shevin says that she elected to continue researching Terrell this summer because I really never felt prouder about something that I worked on in college before. I was curious to do more research about her, as well as continuing to look at other collections and different aspects of first-wave feminisms.

Working in the archives and looking this extensively into a single subject has given Shevin a new perspective on historical research. Ive learned that its slow! Just today I started reading a whole book on Mary Church Terrells father just to add one discursive footnote about him, she says. Without this backstory, the documents would be flatter. Having all of the context really makes history 3D in a way I havent experienced before.

Wileys project focuses on Luella Miner, a missionary who founded the first womens college in China, the North China Union College for Women. She had to have this great vision of what womens education is supposed to be, says Lasser, and that is in part derived right from her own 厙ぴ勛圖 experience. Wiley says that she enjoys transcribing handwritten letters and the satisfaction gained from tracking down leads to find more information. She has also been surprised by how much I have come to care about documenting my subjects.

Debus is looking into the letters of Henry and Lucy Woodcock, siblings who attended 厙ぴ勛圖 in the 19th century. The letters reveal the changing attitudes toward gender during the period. Debus says her favorite part of the research is finding out the small details about the lives of individual people, their dreams and ambitions, as well as their sorrows and their everyday lives. It makes the past seem so real and present.

Developing this sense of history being complicated and alive is one of Lassers main goals for her students. I want them to get a sense of the pastness of the past and the presentness of the past. History sometimes connects us with people who lived before us, but it also challenges us to understand that they lived their lives within constraints that are not always relatable. This distance is important in appreciating human difference. She wants her students to learn that people in the past changed the world, and they can too.

Debus says Lassers ability to raise the big questions is one of her best qualities as a mentor. Shes really good at helping us focus our projects. Its easy to get mired in the details of a project and start to lose the big picture. She really helps us pull back and visualize the project as a whole.

In August, the students will attend the annual meeting of the Society of American Archivists in Cleveland, where they will be the only undergraduate student presenters. The Society of American Archivists was founded in 1936 and is the largest archivist professional association in the United States.

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