Contents


Collection Overview

Historical Note

Scope and Contents of the Collection

Organization of the Collection

Search Terms

Mary C. Whitman Eddy Papers, 1837-1875

Finding Aid

Finding aid prepared by Patricia J. Albright.

© 2007

Collection Overview

Creator: Eddy, Mary C. Whitman, 1809-1875
Title: Mary C. Whitman Eddy Papers
Dates: 1837-1875
Abstract: Eddy, Mary Coolidge Whitman, 1809-1875; teacher and college principal. Mount Holyoke Female Seminary graduate, 1839, teacher and Associate Principal, 1842-1849, and Principal, 1849-1850. Papers consist of correspondence, a notebook, biographical information, photographs and a portrait concerning both her personal life and her work at Mount Holyoke. Letters by Eddy are chiefly addressed to Hannah Porter and include references to Mary Lyon, the missionary work of Fidelia Fiske, and activities of the National Board of Popular Education; one letter (1848) mentions of Emily Dickinson as a student.
Extent: 1 box( 0.2 linear ft.)
Language: English
Identification: MS 0851
Location: LD 7082.25 1849

Historical Note

Mary Coolidge Whitman Eddy, a student, teacher and administrator at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, was born on August 4, 1809 in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. She worked as a teacher before entering Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in 1837. After graduating in 1839, she taught at Mount Holyoke and served as Associate Principal from 1842-1849. She became Principal of Mount Holyoke in 1849 after the death of the school's founder, Mary Lyon. Whitman resigned because of poor health in 1850 and married Morton Eddy in 1851. She died in Fall River, Massachusetts in 1875.

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Scope and Contents of the Collection

The Mary C. Whitman Eddy Papers consist of correspondence, a notebook, biographical information, photographs, and a portrait. These materials date from 1837-1875 and concern both her personal life and her work as a teacher and administrator at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. Most of her letters are addressed to Hannah Porter, wife of Mount Holyoke Trustee Andrew Porter. Eddy frequently discusses Mary Lyon, the health of students and teachers, and religious life at the Seminary. In a letter dated January 17, 1848 she mentions the presence of Emily Dickinson (then a student at Mount Holyoke) at a meeting of "those who felt unusually anxious to choose the service of God." Correspondence also refers to the work of alumnae missionaries, particularly Fidelia Fiske's activities in Persia, and the efforts of the National Board of Popular Education and other organizations to recruit teachers to serve in the western part of the United States. Correspondence also includes four applications for admission to Mount Holyoke and Eddy's letter of resignation to the Board of Trustees in the spring of 1850. The notebook that she kept from 1849-1850 describes the duties of teachers, the daily schedule, and domestic work activities. This volume also includes notes for her remarks on "What is Character?" and "What is it to be a steward?" and a list of "Groceries to be bought in Boston." Biographical information consists of a published notice of her marriage to Morton Eddy in 1851. There are two copies of a daguerreotype of her in these papers, circa 1850, and a copy of a portrait of her painted after her death in 1875.

Material from this collection is available in an online digital format.

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Search Terms

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Organization of the Collection

This collection is organized into four series:

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