Elizabeth Peabody | |
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Born | May 16, 1804 Billerica, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | January 3, 1894 Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, U.S. | (aged 89)
Burial place | Sleepy Hollow Cemetery |
Education | Tutored in Greek by Ralph Waldo Emerson |
Occupation(s) | Teacher, schoolmistress, writer, editor, and publisher |
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Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (May 16, 1804 – January 3, 1894) was an American educator who opened the first English-language kindergarten in the United States. Long before most educators, Peabody embraced the premise that children's play has intrinsic developmental and educational value.
With a grounding in history and literature and a reading knowledge of ten languages, in 1840, she also opened a bookstore that held Margaret Fuller's "Conversations". She published books from Nathaniel Hawthorne and others in addition to the periodicals The Dial and Æsthetic Papers. She was an advocate of antislavery and of Transcendentalism.
Peabody also led efforts for the rights of the Paiute Indians.[1] She was the first translator into English of the Buddhist scripture the Lotus Sutra, translating a chapter from its French translation in 1844. It was the first English version of any Buddhist scripture.[2][3]