Southern Women at Vassar: The Poppenheim Family Letters, 1882-1916

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Univ of South Carolina Press, 2002 - Biography & Autobiography - 258 pages
The northern education of two southern women in postbellum America; When sisters Mary and Louisa Poppenheim, daughters of a prominent Charleston, South Carolina, mercantile family, left their childhood home in the 1880s to attend Vassar College in New York, they entered a world that challenged their beliefs about women and society. First Mary and then Louisa pursued degrees at one of the most rigorous and progressive women's colleges in the country. In a stream of letters home, the sisters chronicled the opportunities and ideals they encountered. Their mother, alarmed by such influences, replied with gentle yet firm counsel on the proper responses of a southern lady. Intimate and searching, these letters reveal the struggle of two young women to resolve conventional southern expectations of women's roles with their interest in women's activism. Their letters also illuminate the tension between progress and tradition that characterized the New South. Particularly interesting because both mother and daughters go far beyond a recitation of their daily routines and health, the correspondence includes thoughtful discussions of society and manners, family and friendship, literature and
 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
THREE College Life Fall 1886Spring 1887
120
FOUR Graduation Under the Shadow of the Palmetto
174
FIVE The Ladies of the Club PostVassar Letters 18911916
212
NOTES
231
INDEX
255
Copyright

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About the author (2002)

Joan Marie Johnson holds a Ph.D. in history from the University of California at Los Angeles and is currently a scholar-in-residence at the Newberry Library in Chicago. As the recipient of a Spencer Foundation research grant, she is conducting research on the higher education of southern women. She has also published articles on southern women, race, gender, and reform. Johnson lives in Evanston, Illinois.