Jessica Garretson Finch

Jessica Garretson Finch (August 19, 1871 – October 31, 1949) was an American educator, author, women's rights activist, founder of the Lennox School for girls, and founding president of Finch College.

Early life

Finch was born on August 19, 1871, the daughter of Congregational minister Rev. Ferdinand Van De Vere Garretson and Helen Philbrick Garretson.[1] When she was 12, the family moved from New York, where her father was rector of Grace Chapel on West 22nd Street, to Franconia, New Hampshire.[1] She attended Dow Academy and the Cambridge Latin School before entering Barnard College.[1] Finch received her A.B. from Barnard College in 1893, the first graduating class of the new, women's college.[2] She applied to attend law school at Columbia University, and was formally refused on the grounds that the Law School did not admit women.[2] She earned her LL.B. from New York University School of Law in 1898.[1]

Career

She was a well-known suffragette, president of the New York Equal Franchise Society.[3][4] Finch was an advocate of careers for women.[5] Although in 1912 she self-described as an "orthodox Socialist", her views shifted and she was later described as a political "liberal".[2]

She gave paid, public talks on the subject to young ladies as a part-time job to help support herself when she was a college student in the 1890s.[1][2][6] She continued to lecture to young ladies on a range of topics, and also worked as a tutor in subjects including Greek after graduating form college.[1][2][6]

She was a founding member of the Colony Club[2] and was an author, penning such books as Mothers and Daughters, Psychology of Youth, and Flower and Kitchen Gardens.[1]

In a February 1908 talk that Finch gave at the Civitas Club in New York City, she said:

"Evolutionary and revolutionary methods [of education] will bring the real resurrection, the Renaissance of man! We are passing through an economic age, and though conservative folk are usually the most popular it is our real work to enlarge the social conscience; our ancestors barely kept themselves alive, we have made a living, and our descendants will pass ascetic beautiful lives, never selfishly nor foolishly, but on a solid foundation and for the advancement of all”.[7]

— Finch on the low ebb of education in 1908

In June 1949 she was given a Doctorate of Humane Letters, honoris causa, by New York University. The citation described her as a graduate of the university's law school who had founded a women's college, "on the unorthodox postulate that every graduate should mother at least four children and cultivate a non-domestic avocation fore and aft."[8]

Finch College

Finch founded the Finch school to provide career training for young women, saying that her own education at Barnard College had not given her or her classmates the skills needed to earn a living.[6][9] Ironically, Finch became not a career-oriented college, but rather "one of the most famed of U.S. girls' finishing schools."[5][9]

Finch founded the Finch School, later Finch Junior College, and, after 1952, Finch College, to enact her conviction that women ought to be prepared for careers.[6] She envisioned a world in which women would work until they wed, at about age 25, bear and rear children for about fifteen years, before resuming paid employment at about age 40 and working for another three decades.[1]

Finch founded the college as the Finch School, a secondary school for girls. In 1916 she founded the Lennox School, a primary school to prepare girls to enter the Finch School.[2]

Family

She was married to James Wells Finch with whom she had a daughter, Elsie; the couple divorced.[1] In 1913 Finch married John O'Hara Cosgrave, an editor of the New York World,[10] who died in 1947.[1][2][3][6]

She was the mother of Elsie Finch McKeogh, a New York literary agent.[11]

Death

Finch died at her home in Manhattan on October 31, 1949.[2][12]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Mrs. John Cosgrave Is Dead Founded Finch Junior College: Was Institution's President Nearly 50 Years; Coined 'Current Events' Phrase". New York Herald Tribune. 1 November 1949.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "JESSICA COSGRAVE, EDUCATOR,. 78, DIES: Founded Girls' School, Now Finch Junior College – Was Widow of Editor". The New York Times. 1 November 1949. Retrieved 20 November 2015. (subscription required (help)).
  3. 1 2 "Personal Note". Publishers Weekly. 83: 108. 11 January 1913.
  4. "JOHN O'H. COSGRAVE WEDS.: Editor Marries Mrs. J.G. Finch of the Equal Franchise Society.". The New York Times. 5 January 1913. Retrieved 20 November 2015. (subscription required (help)).
  5. 1 2 "Finch & Current Events". Time Magazine. 30 March 1942.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Martin, Willa (11 November 1945). "Mrs. Cosgrave Waited for Times To Catch Up With 'Radical' Ideas (profile)". The Washington Post.
  7. "Women's Clubs". Brooklyn Life. Brooklyn, NY. February 29, 1908. p. 18.
  8. "N. Y. U. Honors Founder of Finch Junior College". The New York Times. 23 May 1949. Retrieved 20 November 2015. (subscription required (help)).
  9. 1 2 Pascale, Amy (2014). Joss Whedon: The Biography. Chicago Review Press. p. 13. ISBN 1613741049.
  10. "Founder of School for Girls Dies at 78". Alton Evening Telegraph. Alton, IL. November 1, 1949. p. 15.
  11. "Elsie F. McKeogh, Literary Agent (obituary)". New York Herald Tribune. 30 October 1955.
  12. "Finch School Founder Dies Monday Night". The Eagle. Bryan, TX. November 1, 1949. p. 1 via Newspapers.com.
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