Monday, July 20, 2009

America's First Kindergarten

Susan Blow opened the first kindergarten in the United States, in St. Louis. While in Germany with her father, Susan saw first hand how Friedrich Froebel's theories (the founder of kindergarten or “children’s garden”) were being applied to early child education. She saw the importance and need back in America. So in 1873 she founded the first successful public kindergarten at Des Peres School in Carondelet, St. Louis Missouri, and ran it for the next eleven years without any pay. Blow taught children in the morning and teachers in the afternoon.

While most classrooms were plain, Blow’s kindergarten classroom was bright and cheerful. It had low tables and short benches just right for small children. The room contained many plants, books, and toys for children to use during work and play. Students learned about color, shapes, and fractions by using simple objects like balls and blocks. They also learned about keeping themselves clean, eating well, and getting regular exercise.

By 1883 every St. Louis public school had a kindergarten, making the city a model for the nation. Devoting her life to early education, Susan Blow was instrumental in establishing kindergartens throughout America.

She died in 1916 and was buried at Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis. You can also see a bust of Ms Blow in the Hall of Famous Missourians in the State Capitol in Jefferson City.


Sunday, July 19, 2009

Janeaceisms


A Kansas City native, Jane Ace was a popular radio actress from the 1930s-50s. Her given name was Jane Epstein and she married Goodman Ace, a journalist & her former schoolmate.
Jane & Goodman Ace developed and starred in a domestic comedy radio show called Easy Aces. Jane had no formal acting training, and was known for her distinctive nasal voice and her comedic effect of confusing similar sounding words. These phrases were coined Janeaceisms by her husband and included phrases such as: "We're all cremated equal," "Awfully-wedded wife," and "I am a member of the weeper sex ".
Her comedic acting ability contributed greatly to the success of the show, which grew from local Kansas City audiences to nation syndication. Easy Aces was inducted in the Radio Hall of Fame in 1990. Jane Ace died in New York City in 1974 and was buried in Mt. Carmel Cemetery in Raytown, Missouri.

Her husband wrote the following eulogy about his wife after her passing:

"...now alone at a funeral home...the questions...the softly spoken suggestions...repeated, and repeated... because ...because during all the arrangements, through my mind there ran a constant rerun, a line she spoke on radio...on the brotherhood of man ...in her casual, malapropian style ... we are all cremated equal ... they kept urging for an answer...a wooden casket? ... a metal casket? ...it's the name of their game ... a tisket a casket...and then transporting it to Kansas City, Mo. ...the plane ride... smoking or non-smoking section? somebody asked ... the non-thinking section was what I wanted.... ...a soft sprinkle of snow as we huddled around her...the first of the season, they told me ... lasted only through the short service ...snow stopped the instant the last words were spoken. He had the grace to celebrate her arrival with a handful of His confetti ..."

First generation Radio Archives
Museum of Broadcast Communications

An Appropriate Beginning

Women's Rights Activist Susan B. Anthony came to Springfield in April 1875 and gave a lecture on Social Purity in the theater of the Rogers & Baldwin Hardware Co. at 225-227 South Ave. Anthony argued that women were victims of men's intemperance, forced into poverty and prostitution because of their constant dependence on men. The only way to make change was for women to be allowed to vote and hold office, women being the keepers of the moral fiber of the human race.





The building is now on the National Register of Historic Places and the last I saw it, was being operated as an art gallery and furniture store.



The Trial of Susan B. Anthony

Missouri History - Not All About Men, no, seriously.

Welcome all,
This blog is dedicated to Women's History in Missouri. I'll be featuring biographies, gravesites, and other info on prominent Missouri women. Yes, believe it or not, women DO figure prominently in Missouri history. Check back for updates very, VERY soon. Thanks!

Greta