Katharine Coman

Katharine Coman

Katharine Coman (23 November 1857 – 11 January 1915) was a social activist and distinguished economist. She specialized in teaching about the development of the American West. Wellesley College named a professorship in her honor.

She was born to Levi Parsons Coman and Martha Seymour in Newark, Ohio, and graduated from the University of Michigan in 1880.

She was professor of history (1883-1900), then chaired the Economics Department, and was dean of Wellesley College. Coman lived in a Boston marriage with fellow professor Katharine Lee Bates (author of "America the Beautiful") for 25 years, from 1890 until Coman's death from breast cancer in 1915.[1]

Author

Further reading

References

  1. Leopold, Ellen (2006). "My Soul is Among Lions: Katharine Lee Bates' Account of the Illness and Death of Katharine Coman". Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies 23 (1): 60–73. doi:10.1353/leg.2006.0008.

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