Betsy Mix Cowles Papers
Scope and Contents
The Oberlin College Archives' collection of the papers of Betsy Mix Cowles is a reference-only collection, drawn from the much larger collection located at Kent State University. The papers (photocopies) consist of biographical articles, letters received by Cowles, and additional information about the collection at Kent State. The materials in this collection primarily relate to Betsy Cowles' life as an educator, abolitionist, and women's rights activist. Though the collection contains a good deal of correspondence between Cowles and her siblings, there is no information about her parents, or about her life before 1835.
The Betsy Mix Cowles Papers are organized into three record series: I. Biographical File; II. Correspondence; and III. Finding Aids Relating to the Betsy Mix Cowles Papers (Kent State University). The documents in all series are arranged chronologically.
Cowles' biographical file is scant, containing three articles detailing her life as an activist (1937, 1981, 1989). The folder containing correspondence with her siblings is composed of personal letters which mention her education and travels from 1835 to 1840. Later correspondence describes her relationship to Abby Kelley Foster, her work with the Anti-Slavery Society of Ashtabula County, and other work with other abolitionists. The collection contains photocopies of finding aids for the Betsy Mix Cowles Papers held by Kent State University. The finding aids consist of a calendar (1979) and updated inventory (2004) and are filed with the collection to assist researchers.
Dates
- Creation: 1835 - 2004
- Creation: Majority of material found in 1835-1868
- Other: Date acquired: 11/23/1979
Creator
- Cowles, Betsy Mix (Person)
Conditions Governing Access
For reference use only. Originals are held by Kent State University.
Biographical Sketch
Betsy (also spelled Betsey) Mix Cowles was born on February 9, 1810 in Bristol, Connecticut, to the Reverend Giles Hooker Cowles (1766-1835) and Sally White (1774-1830). He had many siblings, Edwin Weed (1794-1861), Sally Berrien (1796-1872), William Elbert (1798-1882), Edward Giles Hooker (1801-1823), Martha Hooker (1804-1887), Lysander Mix (1807-1857), Cornelia Rachel (1807-1869), and Lewis Davenport (1812-1861). In 1811, the Cowles family moved to Austinburg, Ohio, where Betsy's father became the pastor at the Congregational church. Though little is known about Betsy's primary education, we know that she herself became an educator early in her life, teaching at area schools and in southeastern New York by 1826, when she was sixteen years old.
Cowles' particular educational interest was in "infant school," and in the early 1830s she joined a movement to create programs to teach basic skills to the very young, such as reading, writing, and right conduct. In 1832, Cowles founded an infant school at Kinsman, Ohio. Then, in 1834, through her great belief that women were meant for more than marriage, she helped to establish the "Young Ladies Society for Intellectual Improvement" in her hometown of Austinburg.
In order to advance her own education, Cowles attended the "Ladies' Course" at Oberlin College in 1838. She was among the third group of young women to graduate from the course in 1840. After her graduation, Cowles returned to teaching in Massillon, Ohio, as well as taking on a number of administrative positions, including serving as the superintendent of the girls' grammar and high schools in Canton, Ohio from 1850 to 1855. As her organizational talents began to be recognized, she was appointed to the position of superintendent of schools in Painesville, Ohio in 1858, becoming one of the first women to hold such an office.
As a result of an eye problem, Cowles retired from teaching in 1862 and returned to Austinburg.
In addition to her advocacy for women's education, Betsy Cowles was also an influential abolitionist in Ohio. In 1835, Cowles became the leader of the Female Anti-Slavery Society of Ashtabula County. Among her friends and acquaintances were such affecting personalities as FFrederick Douglass (1818-1895), William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879), and Abby Kelley Foster (1811-1887). By 1845, Cowles was a Garrisonian Abolitionist, and wrote many articles for the AntiSlavery Bugle of Salem, Ohio, a major publication of the movement.
Through her activist stance in abolition, Cowles became a devotee of the cause of women's rights. She helped to run the first Ohio Women's Convention in 1850, and supported such ideas as equal pay for equal work, and a woman's right to hold property.
Betsy Mix Cowles never married. She died in 1876 in Austinburg, Ohio.
Extent
0.20 Linear Feet
Language of Materials
English
Method of Acquisition
The Oberlin College Archives received the papers of Betsy Mix Cowles in two installments from James W. Geary, archivist at Kent State University: in 1978, and again in 1979.
Accruals and Additions
Accession No: 1979/25.
- Title
- Betsy Mix Cowles Papers Finding Guide
- Author
- Emma Anderson
- Date
- 10/26/2006
- Description rules
- Rules for Archival Description
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Oberlin College Archives Repository
420 Mudd Center
148 West College Street
Oberlin OH 44074-1532 US
440-775-8014
440-775-8016 (Fax)
archive@oberlin.edu