Mary Frances Eastman | |
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Born | October 20, 1833 Lowell, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | November 1, 1908 Tewksbury, Massachusetts | (aged 75)
Occupation |
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Alma mater | Lowell High School |
Mary F. Eastman (October 20, 1833 - November 1, 1908) was an American educator, lecturer, writer, and suffragist of the long nineteenth century. A native of Lowell, Massachusetts, she resided in Tewksbury for many years. She taught in the high and normal school for girls in Boston, and was among the first to be thought competent to teach and control the students of a winter school in Lowell. Her later teaching was in Boston's Charlestown and also Somerville, Massachusetts.[1] At the request of Horace Mann, she went to Ohio to aid in the work of education which he had undertaken at Antioch College.[2] Eastman thought that suffrage was the highway to all other reforms.[3] She is remembered for her expertise in the lecture-field of women's rights.[4]