Known Women Philanthropists Born During Colonial Times to 1822
Colonial
women set patterns for aiding children and the aged, and supported what we call
self-help by encouraging education and teaching marketable skills. Succeeding generations of women continued
these efforts and changed America
with their notable, creative and often original contributions. Thousands of
women from every economic level worked on a variety of humanitarian projects to
aid those less fortunate than they. They
used their leadership and organizational skills; they led publicity drives;
they investigated and documented conditions and then lobbied government
officials for redress.
Some women also used their great good fortune of
inheritance or personal wealth to fund these humanitarian efforts. These
philanthropic endeavors have been recognized by later generations, but often
without including the monetary investment which accompanied these deeds. Many women felt it unseemly to allow the
amount of their largesse to become public information, and this reticence has
continued. The real value of known gifts
can be better understood when translated into today’s rough equivalents. A dollar in 1800 would be worth almost $14
today; 1850’s dollar, more than $22 and 1900’s dollar, $20. These are the
stories of some of those women, presented by their birth years.
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Elizabeth Perkins (1735/36-1807) was married to a successful Boston merchant and
patriot. Widowed in 1773 she established
her own store and was able to give $1,000 to the Continental Army. In 1800 she helped found the Boston Female
Asylum, the first charitable institution established in Boston by a woman. Her 5 daughters and 3 sons became leaders in
many fields. The Perkins School
for the Blind was named for her benefactor son, Thomas.
Isabella
Graham (? – 1814) was born in Scotland
and came to New York
in 1789. Although not wealthy, she set
aside a tenth of her earnings to aid good causes. In 1795 she received $1000 dollars from the
sale of a lease and immediately set aside $100 to aid the poor. She was the first directress of a society
providing relief for poor widows and in 1806 helped found an orphan-asylum. The embargo of 1807-1808 brought hardships to
the poor who were unable to get the raw materials they needed. Graham bought flax and lent spinning wheels
with which the poor made linen tablecloths and towels. She was also president of the board managing
the Magdalen Asylum.
Sophia Smith
(1796-1870) received a large inheritance in 1861 when she was 65 years
old. After much advice and great
deliberation she decided to provide the foundation of a woman’s college in Northampton, Massachusetts. In her “Plan for a Woman’s College” she
expressed her aim “to furnish women with means of usefulness, happiness, and
honor now withheld from them.” With her
$393,105 gift, Smith College opened in 1875 with 14 students.
Sarah Worthington King Peter
(1800-1877) began her philanthropic work as one of the founders of the
Cincinnati Protestant Orphan Asylum in 1833, now called the Children’s
Convalescent Home. Moving to Philadelphia with her
second husband, Sarah Peter helped women gain marketable skills in art. In 1848 she began the Philadelphia School of
Design in her home. This pioneer school
for industrial art was praised by Sarah Hale, editor of Godey’s Lady’s Book. (It joined the Franklin Institute in 1850 and
in 1932 merged into the Moore Institute of Art, Science, and Industry.)
Returning to Cincinnati,
Peter fostered and was first president of the Cincinnati Academy of Fine Arts.
During the Civil War she assisted at military prisons and nursed soldiers after
the battle at Shiloh. Well educated, she also translated French
history and books on education into English.
Not all
philanthropists were well educated, well-to-do from birth or inherited wealth.
Margaret Haughery (1813- Feb. 7, 1882) was an illiterate Irish woman who
immigrated to Baltimore at age 5, married in
1835, moved to New Orleans
and was soon widowed. She worked as a
hotel laundress, and soon was able to buy a few cows. By 1840 she had 40 cows and became known for
her generosity toward the poor and hungry.
She helped the Sisters of Charity build 11 orphanages and asylums for
infants. In 1858 she acquired a bakery
in payment of a debt. She established
the first steam bakery in the South. Her
bakery and packaged crackers became the city’s largest export business. During the Civil War she aided soldiers and
their families from both sides. In the
1870s she turned to the needs of the elderly.
A grateful New Orleans
honors her work annually on February 9, designated “Margaret Haughery Day” by
the mayor.
Anna Uhl
Ottendorfer (1815-1884), born in Bavaria,
emigrated with her husband in 1836 to New
York where they bought a German newspaper, the Staats-Zeitung. Anna shared the typesetting and printing as
well as the management. Widowed in 1852,
she continued the newspaper with her second husband, increasing its stature in
the German settlements. The paper
supported the Union in the Civil War and
opposed Tammany Hall. In 1875
Ottendorfer founded the Isabella
Home for aged
German-Americans with $100,000. It was
named for a deceased daughter. Another
$100,000 set up the Herman Uhl Memorial in 1881 to promote the study of German
in the schools. Other gifts included
$225,000 to the woman’s pavilion at New York’s
German Hospital in 1882. She supported the Children’s Aid Society and
the States Charity Aid Association. At
her death city flags were lowered to half-staff as her cortege proceeded
through the streets. Her will provided
$25,000 to be divided among the newspaper employees and $250,000 to various
German-American institutions.
Catharine Wolfe Bruce (1816-1900) inherited her
fortune from her father who designed script types and was the country’s
foremost typographer. In 1887 Catharine donated $50,000 to the George Bruce
Branch of what became the New York Public Library. Always interested in
astronomy, Catharine was appalled to hear a government astronomer suggest in
1889 that most significant discoveries in astronomy had already been made. So at age 73, Bliss financed the construction
of a powerful photographic telescope for the Harvard College Observatory. Her donations included grants to students,
salaries, and publications to continue investigations of the skies. In 1897 she endowed a gold medal for
distinguished service to astronomy. Her
donations here and in Europe amounted to about
$175,000.
Josephine Newcomb (1816-1901)
inherited a small fortune when her husband died. She turned her dispair when her daughter
Harriott died at age 15 into running the business which prospered and gave her
a huge fortune. After donations to Washington and Lee
University, a Confederate Orphan Home,
a school for poor girls, a New York hospital
and a New York City school for the deaf, a
friend suggested establishing a college for women in connection with Tulane University. She donated $100,000 to create the H. Sophie
Newcomb Memorial College which opened in October, 1887, the country’s first
“co-ordinate college.” Over the years
she gave funds for new buildings and other needs.
Mary Hemenway (1820-1894) began her
philanthropic work with funds from her husband’s business affairs and after the
death of her eldest daughter in 1865.
Her main interests were to improve education for white and black
children in the South and to spread knowledge of American history to all. In 1871 she established the Tileston Normal School
(named for her father) in Wilmington,
North Carolina to educate poor
white children; she supported it until it closed in1891. She aided General Armstrong in Hampton and
Booker Washington in Tuskegee. She also established sewing and cooking
classes in Boston
and in 1887 founded the Boston Normal School of Cookery to train teachers. She set up the Boston Normal School of
Gymnastics to train physical education teachers. This was later taken over by Wellesley.
Turning to the preservation of National Buildings, she contributed
$100,000 in 1876 to save Old South Meeting House in Boston.
She supported lecture series on American history, publication of
leaflets, and awards for student essays.
In 1886 she met a group of Zuni Indians and, impressed with their
culture, financed a 7 -year study of Hopi and Zuni tribes. Then she financed publication of the results
of the study in 5 volumes of the Journal of American Ethnology and Archaeology.
Elizabeth Thompson (1821-1899) was
widowed in 1869 with an annual income of more than $50,000 which enabled her to
subsidize needy relatives and others.
She supported and contributed to the suffrage and temperance
movements. She bought Carpenter’s
painting, “The First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation by President
Lincoln to His Cabinet” for $25,000 and presented it to Congress in 1878. When Congress failed to vote funds to stop
yellow fever in the Southern states, she gave $10,000 to establish a Yellow
Fever Commission. In 1879 she gave $1000
to Bronson Alcott’s Concord School of Philosophy. The next year she gave $1000 to enable Susan
Anthony to begin publication of the History
of Woman Suffrage. A great proponent of scientific
research, about 1885 she set up a fund with Dr. Minot of Harvard – an early
endowment for “the advancement and prosecution of scientific research in its
broadest sense” – named the Elizabeth Thompson Science Fund.
Anna Jeanes (1822-1907) received a
huge inheritance in 1894 and set to work distributing about $2,000,000 in the
next decade. She used $200,000 to help
set up 8 homes for elderly Quakers and others.
In her final year she used $1,000,000 to establish the “Negro Rural
School Fund, Anna T. Jeanes Foundation” to improve education in rural
elementary schools in the South. “Jeanes
teachers” went from school to school to organize trade classes until 1937. One item in her will established a 3 million
dollar unit on the family estate at Fox Chase, Pennsylvania for treating a variety of
illnesses.
I will continue to add more philanthropists
from the 19th century when I have completed my research on these
great women.