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  1. The school’s emphasis on a full education meant schoolwork on par with that of a male educational institution. Students of the Female Seminary were schooled in courses such as Latin, and hours of time were dedicated to writing essays. When Harriet’s father and sister moved the family to Cincinnati in 1832, Harriet joined them.

  2. The Hartford Female Seminary, Catharine Beecher's first contribu-tion to higher education for women, was founded in i823.' This school and the Troy Female Seminary, an achievement of Emma Willard, served as models for Mount Holyoke Seminary which Mary Lyon established in I837. In i838 when Emma Willard was fifty-one years of

  3. Publication date 1829 Title variation Suggestions on education Series Nineteenth Century Collections Online: Religion, Reform, and Society Note "Catalogue of the officers, teachers, and pupils of the Hartford Female Seminary, for the two terms of 1829": p.

  4. Keith, Melder, “ Mask of Oppression: The Female Seminary Movement in the United States,” New York History 55 (1974): 261 – 279 Google Scholar; Nancy, Green, “ Female Education and School Competition: 1820–1850,” History of Education Quarterly 18 (1978): 129 – 142 Google Scholar; Ellis, Elizabeth L., “Educating Daughters of the Patriarchy: Female Academies in the American South ...

  5. 13 de oct. de 2021 · The Hartford Seminary is now the Hartford International University for Religion and Peace, ... Founded in 1834, the university was the first seminary in the U.S. to welcome female students, ...

  6. Suggestions respecting improvements in education ; Suggestions on education ; presented to the trustees of the Hartford Female Seminary, and published at their request Creator / Contributor Beecher, Catharine Esther, 1800-1878, creator Hartford Female Seminary (Hartford, Conn.) Date 1829 Place Of Origin Connecticut Hartford Publisher Packer ...

  7. In 1831, Beecher moved west when her father became president of Lane Theological Seminary, a progressive Cincinnati institution on the Ohio frontier. There, she opened the Western Female Institute, which struggled financially. She also worked on the McGuffey readers, the first nationally-adopted textbooks for elementary students.