In 1891 she was sent by the National Bureau of Education to investigate conditions of higher education of women in Great Britain and other European countries. She became assistant professor of English at University of College from 1892 to 1900 and then Northwestern University in Illinois from 1900 to 1905 as assistant professor of English and dean of women.∼Martha Foote Crow, educator and writer, was born in 1854 in Sackets Harbor, New York, the daughter of the Reverend John B. and Mary Pendexter (Stilphen) Foote. She received a Ph.D. in 1885 from Syracuse University. In 1884 she married archaeologist John M. Crow, who died in 1891.
Mrs. Crow served on the faculty of Ives Seminary, Waynesburg College, and Wellesley College, becoming principal of Grinnell College in 1884. In 1891 she became assistant professor of English literature at the University of Chicago, and in 1900 was appointed dean of women at Northwestern University.
In addition to lecturing before many scholarly societies, Crow was an active member of the Browning Society, the League of American Pen Women, the Poetry Society of America, and the General Foundation of Women's Clubs. Among her published works are Elizabethan Sonnet Cycles (1896), The World Above (1905), Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1907), Harriet Beecher Stowe, a Biography (1913), The American Country Girl (1915), Lafayette (1916), and Christ in the Poetry of Today (1917).
Mrs. Crow's home was in Chicago, Illinois, where she died on January 1, 1924.
From the guide to the Martha Foote Crow Papers, 1885-1921., (Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries)
Martha Crow (75225603)
Suggested edit: Martha Foote Crow, educator and writer, was born in 1854 in Sackets Harbor, New York, the daughter of the Reverend John B. and Mary Pendexter (Stilphen) Foote. She received a Ph.D. in 1885 from Syracuse University. In 1884 she married archaeologist John M. Crow, who died in 1891.
Mrs. Crow served on the faculty of Ives Seminary, Waynesburg College, and Wellesley College, becoming principal of Grinnell College in 1884. In 1891 she became assistant professor of English literature at the University of Chicago, and in 1900 was appointed dean of women at Northwestern University.
In addition to lecturing before many scholarly societies, Crow was an active member of the Browning Society, the League of American Pen Women, the Poetry Society of America, and the General Foundation of Women's Clubs. Among her published works are Elizabethan Sonnet Cycles (1896), The World Above (1905), Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1907), Harriet Beecher Stowe, a Biography (1913), The American Country Girl (1915), Lafayette (1916), and Christ in the Poetry of Today (1917).
Mrs. Crow's home was in Chicago, Illinois, where she died on January 1, 1924.
___________________________________
SOURCE: https://snaccooperative.org/view/55579688
Contributor: 47305175 (47305175)∼Buried on January 3, 1924. (Death Certificate Transcription)
Occupation on above: Literary Work
Source of birth-date: Page 613, Volume III, Part I - "Alumni Record and General Catalogue of Syracuse University, 1872 -1910" - Edited by Frank Smalley - Alumni Association of Syracuse University, New York - 1911
She was the first national president of Alpha Phi sorority.
Married on August 7, 1884.
Famous Authoress. She is remembered especially as an early science-fiction writer for her "The World Above: A Duologue", 1905.
In 1891 she was sent by the National Bureau of Education to investigate conditions of higher education of women in Great Britain and other European countries. She became assistant professor of English at University of College from 1892 to 1900 and then Northwestern University in Illinois from 1900 to 1905 as assistant professor of English and dean of women.∼Martha Foote Crow, educator and writer, was born in 1854 in Sackets Harbor, New York, the daughter of the Reverend John B. and Mary Pendexter (Stilphen) Foote. She received a Ph.D. in 1885 from Syracuse University. In 1884 she married archaeologist John M. Crow, who died in 1891.
Mrs. Crow served on the faculty of Ives Seminary, Waynesburg College, and Wellesley College, becoming principal of Grinnell College in 1884. In 1891 she became assistant professor of English literature at the University of Chicago, and in 1900 was appointed dean of women at Northwestern University.
In addition to lecturing before many scholarly societies, Crow was an active member of the Browning Society, the League of American Pen Women, the Poetry Society of America, and the General Foundation of Women's Clubs. Among her published works are Elizabethan Sonnet Cycles (1896), The World Above (1905), Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1907), Harriet Beecher Stowe, a Biography (1913), The American Country Girl (1915), Lafayette (1916), and Christ in the Poetry of Today (1917).
Mrs. Crow's home was in Chicago, Illinois, where she died on January 1, 1924.
From the guide to the Martha Foote Crow Papers, 1885-1921., (Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries)
Martha Crow (75225603)
Suggested edit: Martha Foote Crow, educator and writer, was born in 1854 in Sackets Harbor, New York, the daughter of the Reverend John B. and Mary Pendexter (Stilphen) Foote. She received a Ph.D. in 1885 from Syracuse University. In 1884 she married archaeologist John M. Crow, who died in 1891.
Mrs. Crow served on the faculty of Ives Seminary, Waynesburg College, and Wellesley College, becoming principal of Grinnell College in 1884. In 1891 she became assistant professor of English literature at the University of Chicago, and in 1900 was appointed dean of women at Northwestern University.
In addition to lecturing before many scholarly societies, Crow was an active member of the Browning Society, the League of American Pen Women, the Poetry Society of America, and the General Foundation of Women's Clubs. Among her published works are Elizabethan Sonnet Cycles (1896), The World Above (1905), Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1907), Harriet Beecher Stowe, a Biography (1913), The American Country Girl (1915), Lafayette (1916), and Christ in the Poetry of Today (1917).
Mrs. Crow's home was in Chicago, Illinois, where she died on January 1, 1924.
___________________________________
SOURCE: https://snaccooperative.org/view/55579688
Contributor: 47305175 (47305175)∼Buried on January 3, 1924. (Death Certificate Transcription)
Occupation on above: Literary Work
Source of birth-date: Page 613, Volume III, Part I - "Alumni Record and General Catalogue of Syracuse University, 1872 -1910" - Edited by Frank Smalley - Alumni Association of Syracuse University, New York - 1911
She was the first national president of Alpha Phi sorority.
Married on August 7, 1884.
Famous Authoress. She is remembered especially as an early science-fiction writer for her "The World Above: A Duologue", 1905.
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