Emily Howland
*Emily Howland was born on this date in 1827. She was a white-American philanthropist, abolitionist, and educator.
Emily Howland was born in Sherwood, Cayuga County, New York. She was the daughter of Slocum and Hannah Tallcot Howland, who were prominent in the Society of Friends. Her brother, William Howland, served in the 106th New York State Legislature. She was educated in small private schools in the community and the Margaret Robinson School, a Friends school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
She taught at Normal School for Colored Girls (now University of the District of Columbia) in Washington, D.C., from 1857 to 1859. During the American Civil War, she worked at the contraband refugee settlement of Camp Todd in Arlington, Virginia, teaching freed slaves to read and write and administering to the sick during a smallpox outbreak and ultimately serving as director of the camp from 1864-1866.
Beginning in 1867, she started a community for freed people in Heathsville, Northumberland County, Virginia, called Arcadia, on 400 acres purchased by her father, including a school for the education of children of freed slaves, the Howland Chapel School. She maintained an active interest in Black education, donating money and materials and visiting and corresponding with administrators at many schools. Returning to Sherwood, NY, after her father died in 1881, she inherited $50,000 (roughly $2 million in 21st-century dollars). She ran the Sherwood Select School until 1926, when it became a public school and was renamed the Emily Howland Elementary School by the state of New York.
Howland was also active in women's suffrage, peace, and temperance movements and was a member of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. In 1858, she began organizing women's rights lectures and meetings with Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. In 1878, she spoke at the 30th anniversary of the Seneca Falls women's rights convention and, in 1894, at the New York State legislature. When the suffrage movement split into two groups, the National Woman Suffrage Association, and the American Woman Suffrage Association, Howland did not take sides but attended meetings of both groups. In 1903, she had tea with Queen Victoria on a trip to London for an international suffrage meeting. In 1904, she spoke in front of Congress and attended the 1912 and 1913 suffrage parades in New York. She has been credited with persuading Ezra Cornell that, as a Quaker, he should make Cornell University a coeducational institution.
In 1926, she received an honorary Litt.D. degree from the University of the State of NY in Albany, the first woman to have this honor conferred upon her from this institution. She was also the author of a historical sketch of early Quaker history in Cayuga County, NY: Historical Sketch of Friends in Cayuga County. Emily Howland became one of the first female directors of a national bank in the United States at the First National Bank of Aurora in Aurora, New York, in 1890, serving until her death on June 29, 1929. Especially known for her activities and interest in the education of Blacks, she was also a strong supporter of women's rights and the temperance movement. Howland personally financed the education of many black students and contributed to institutions such as the Tuskegee Institute.
Several universities, including Cornell University, Haverford College, and Swarthmore College hold her papers. A photo album containing family, friends, and colleagues, as well as souvenir images of notable abolitionists and famous figures during the 1860s and 1870s, is jointly owned by the National Museum of African American History and Culture and the Library of Congress.
To Become a School Principal
To Become an Elementary School Teacher