Mary Fletcher Wells | |
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Born | |
Occupation | educator |
Known for | Trinity School |
Mary Fletcher Wells (died September 14, 1893) was a philanthropist, educator, and founder of the Trinity School.[1] Wells was unable to formally matriculate at Michigan University and instead studied there under private tutelage.[1] She taught in high schools and seminaries in Indiana.[1]
Wells was born in Villenova, New York to Roderick Wells and Mary Greenleaf, the sixth of ten children.[1]
After the Civil War, she was determined to educate formerly enslaved people and their children, and relocated to Athens, Alabama, initially to care for wounded Union soldiers as a Baptist missionary.[2] She founded the Trinity School.[3] The school was sponsored by the Western Freedmen’s Aid Commission and the American Missionary Association, located in a Baptist church in 1865.[4]
Wells initially taught under the protection of armed guards.[5] It was the only high school for black students in the county and the first school in the northern half of the state offering kindergarten for black children.[6][4] The school had an integrated faculty by 1892.[7] Wells would teach, can fruits and vegetables for the winter, and return north to raise funds for the school in the summers.[4] She remained at the school for twenty-seven years.[1] Trinity was closed after court-ordered desegregation in 1970.[4]
While teaching at Trinity, Wells made the acquaintance of Patti Malone and Alice Vassar LaCour who performed with the Fisk Jubilee Singers.[4] She traveled with the singers for the first four months of their US tour.[1] She retired back to her summer home in Chautauqua, New York, where she was an early member of the Chatauqua Literary and Scientific Circle.[1]