Emily James Smith, scholar, author, educator

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Emily James Smith, scholar, author, educator

Birthdate:
Birthplace: New York, United States
Death: September 08, 1944 (79)
St. Andrew Parish, Surrey County, Crown Colony, British West Indies
Immediate Family:

Daughter of James Cosslett Smith and Emily Ward Smith
Wife of Maj. George Haven Putnam, U.S.V, book publisher
Mother of Bertha Haven Putnam; Willis Haven Putnam and Palmer Cosslett Putnam, wind-power pioneer

Managed by: Susan Angeline Schumacher Lostetter
Last Updated:

About Emily James Smith, scholar, author, educator

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_James_Smith_Putnam

Emily James Smith Putnam (born Canandaigua, 15 April 1865; died 1944) was a United States author and educator

Biography

She was the daughter of Justice James C. Smith. She graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1889 and studied at Girton College, Cambridge University, in 1889-90. She was teacher of Greek at the Packer Collegiate Institute, Brooklyn, in 1891-93. She was a fellow in Greek at the University of Chicago in 1893-94, and dean of Barnard College in 1894-1900. She married George Haven Putnam in 1899.

She was a trustee of Barnard College in 1900-05, and vice-president and manager of the Women's University Club, New York City, in 1907-11. In 1901-04 she was president of the League for Political Education.

Works

Selections from Lucian (1891)

The Lady (1910)
Greek Religion (1913)
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Emily James Smith Putnam, née Emily James Smith (born April 15, 1865, Canandaigua, N.Y., U.S.—died Sept. 7, 1944, Kingston, Jamaica), American educator and historian, remembered especially for her early influence on the academic quality of Barnard College in New York City.

Emily Smith graduated from Bryn Mawr (Pennsylvania) College with the first class, that of 1889, and then attended Girton College, Cambridge, for two years. She taught at the Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn, New York (1891–93), and was a fellow in Greek at the University of Chicago (1893–94).

In 1894 she was appointed first dean of the five-year-old Barnard College, which had been established in 1889 as the “women’s annex” of Columbia University. Over the next six years she succeeded in greatly strengthening Barnard’s academic standing by establishing a more equitable relationship with Columbia. Columbia professors were made more accessible; other scholars of similar qualifications were added to the Barnard faculty; and Columbia’s graduate courses, libraries, and other facilities were opened to Barnard women. During that period Smith also taught courses in Greek literature and philosophy. In 1899 she married publisher George H. Putnam, and the next year she resigned as dean.

From 1901 to 1904 Emily Putnam served as president of the League for Political Education, and from 1901 to 1905 she was a trustee of Barnard. In 1910 she published The Lady: Studies of Certain Significant Phases of Her History, a major historical study of women in society. She resumed teaching at Barnard in 1914 in the history department and from 1920 taught in the department of Greek. In 1926 she published Candaules’ Wife and Other Old Stories, a study of Herodotus. She also published translations of Selections from Lucian (1892), Émile Fauget’s Dread of Responsibility (1914), Marcel Berger’s The Secret of the Marne (1918), and Raymond Escholier’s The Illusion (1921). Putnam helped establish the New School for Social Research (1919) and was a regular lecturer there (1920–32). She retired from Barnard in 1930. She lived in Spain until 1936 and thereafter in Jamaica.

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Emily James Smith, scholar, author, educator's Timeline

1865
April 15, 1865
New York, United States
1872
1872
1882
December 10, 1882
1900
July 13, 1900
Canandaigua, Ontario County, New York, United States
1944
September 8, 1944
Age 79
St. Andrew Parish, Surrey County, Crown Colony, British West Indies