Title
Table
of Contents
Biographical
Note
Scope
and Content Note
Correspondence
Scrapbooks
Subject
Series
Wellesley
College
Publications
The
Hall of Fame
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CAROLINE HAZARD
PAPERS
1871-1939
MSG# 7
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
Caroline Hazard, educator and author, was born in Peace
Dale, Rhode Island, to Rowland and Margaret (Rood) Hazard on June 10, 1856. She was
educated by private tutors at Mary A. Shaw's School in Providence and through private
study in Europe. She subsequently assisted her father in his various business interests,
in addition to maintaining a welfare center in Peace Dale where she taught sewing and other
domestic skills.
In 1899 Hazard was elected to the presidency of Wellesley
College, where she remained until her resignation for health reasons in 1910. As president
of Wellesley, Hazard introduced household economics into the curriculum, placed the
department on an academic basis, established a department of hygiene and physical
education, founded the college choir, and had built with her own funds the home
subsequently occupied by Wellesley College presidents. She presented the college library
with 284 letters of Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning and, in her will, left the
college a water color by John Ruskin.
In 1926 Hazard donated twenty thousand dollars to the Yale
Divinity School for the Two Brothers Fellowship for biblical study abroad. The gift was
made in memory of her two brothers, Frederick Rowland and Rowland Gibson Hazard.
In addition to her accomplishments in education, Hazard was
also a prolific writer. During her long career, she authored The Memoirs of J.L. Diman
(1886), Thomas Hazard, Son of Robert, Called College Tom (1893), Narragansett
Ballads (1894), The Narragansett Friends Meeting (3 vols. 1899), Some
Ideals in the Education of Women (1900), Scallop Shell of Quiet (1908), A
Brief Pilgrimage in the Holy Land (1909), The College Year (1910), The
Yosemite and Other Verse (1917), Anchors of Tradition (1924), From
College Gates (1925), Songs in the Sun (1927), Transplanted
Puritan (a novel, 1927), Homing (verse, 1929), A Precious
Heritage (1929), Shards and Scarabs (verse, 1931), Threads From
the Distaff (1934), The Golden State (verse, 1939), and Introduction to
an Academic Courtship (1940). She also edited The Works of Rowland Gibson Hazard (4
vols.,1899), Esther B. Carpenter's South County Studies (1924), John Saffin,
His Book,1664-1707 (1928), and Nailer Tom's Diary, 1778-1840 (1930). In
addition, she was a frequent contributor of articles, essays, and verse to magazines and
newspapers, including a column entitled "The Distaff" for the Providence
Evening Bulletin.
As well as being an educator and author, Hazard was an
active member of many philanthropic and cultural organizations. Her activities included
the Gilbert Stuart Memorial, Inc. (president), the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History
(honorary president), Rhode Island Historical Society (life member), American Academy of
Political and Social Sciences, American Historical Association, American Political Science
Association, Archaeological Institute of America, New England Historic Genealogical
Society, Religious Educational Association, Daughters of the American Revolution
(corporate member), Colonial Dames of Rhode Island, American Board of "Commissioners
for Foreign Missions of the Congregational Church," and the Hall of Fame of New York
University (elector).
During her life, Hazard was the recipient of honorary
degrees from the University of Michigan and Brown University in 1899, Tufts College in
1905, Wellesley College in 1925, Mills College in 1931, and Rhode Island State College in
1942. Caroline Hazard died in Santa Barbara, California on March 19, 1945.
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