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Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer (1804-1894)

American Eras | 1997 | Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (1804-1894)

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Kindergarten pioneer

Background. Looking back over the course of Elizabeth Palmer Pea-bodys life, every important development in her early years seems to have prepared her for a life in educational reform and a role as Americas foremost advocate of kindergarten education. Her mother, Elizabeth Palmer, was an independent, well educated woman who managed a boardinghouse for students in Atkinson, New Hampshire, and went by the name of the Walking Dictionary because her extensive reading enabled her to answer all questions put to her by the boarders. Palmer married Nathaniel Peabody, a teacher at the academy, in November 1802 and moved to Andover, Massachusetts, where they administered the North Andover Free School. In 1804 they moved again, to Billerica, Massachusetts, where Elizabeth Palmer Peabody was born on 16 May. There Elizabeths mother established a boarding school for girls but abandoned it after two years and moved again to Cambridge and finally to Salem, where Peabody spent the remainder of her childhood. In Salem, Elizabeths mother established a school for children and pioneered an innovative approach to early childhood education that would make a lasting impression on her daughter. It seems to me, she remarked some years later, that the self-activity of the mind was cultivated by my mothers method in her school. Not so much was poured inmore was brought out. Peabody followed in her mothers footsteps in one other important way: education was at the center of her life from an early age. Elizabeths father instructed her in Latin, and she eventually learned ten other languages; by 1820, at the age of sixteen, she had established her own school in Lancaster, Massachusetts.

The Unitarian Legacy. Peabodys life as a reformer was shaped very profoundly by the reform impulse that animated Bostons social and intellectual elite from the 1830s through the third quarter of the nineteenth century. She was raised, as Peabody herself put it, in the bosom of Unitarianism, at a time when deep philosophical and religious differences within the Unitarian Church itself were generating a lively intellectual ferment and spilling over into animated discussions about the need for reform in American society. (Unitarianism stressed individual freedom of belief, the free use of reason in religion, a united world community, and liberal social action.) Some Unitarians charged that their doctrine was becoming a religion of the commercial classes, and as a result the churchs tradition of tolerance increasingly gave way to attempts to stop reform, to set limits on free thought and inquiry.

Channing and Alcott. Peabody came of age just as this schism reached its peak, and as a young adult she straddled both sides of the debate, maintaining relationships with individuals who were at the center of the controversy. Probably the single individual who exerted the greatest influence upon Peabody was William Ellery Channing. Peabody first came into contact with the great Unitarian leader when she moved to Brookline in 1825 and opened a girls school there. A year later she convinced Channing to allow her to publish a collection of his sermons and eased into a role as his unpaid personal secretary. Interestingly, given her later devotion to childrens education, one of the many things that impressed Peabody about Channing was his manner with children. He treats children with the greatest consideration, she wrote in 1825, and evidently enjoys their conversation, and studies it to see what it indicates of the yet Unfallen nature. He will never tire, I see, of the observation of children of which I am so fond. A half-century later, when she introduced Friedrich Froebels kindergarten idea to New England mothers, she recalled that this is nothing new; more than fifty years ago Dr. Channing taught us to live with our children and to look upon them as capable of the life of Christ. In 1834 Peabody became an assistant to educator Amos Bronson Alcott at the private Temple School in Boston, an experience that left its mark on Peabodys developing ideas about childhood education. Peabody quickly became disillusioned with Alcotts introspective classroom methods, objecting to his insistence that young children keep detailed journals and bemoaning the lack of physical stimulation.

Importing the Kindergarten. Her lifelong association with schooling and close acquaintance with some of the foremost educational reformers (including Horace Mann, with whom she was romantically involved before he married her sister Mary) made Peabody receptive to the early childhood education concepts being imported by German immigrants after midcentury. In 1859 Peabody met Carl and Margarethe Schurz and was impressed with their young daughter Agathe, who had attended the kindergarten opened several years earlier by her mother in Watertown, Wisconsin. That little girl of yours is a miracle, so childlike and unconscious, and yet so wise and able, attracting and ruling the children, who seem nothing short of entranced, she reportedly told Margarethe Schurz. No miracle, but only brought up in a kindergarten, Schurz replied, a garden whose plants are human. After acquainting herself with the ideas of Froebel, founder of the kindergarten movement, Peabody opened her own kindergartenthe first English-speaking one in the countryin Boston in 1860. She directed the school until 1867, when she traveled to Germany in order to study Froebels work firsthand, and, after her return fifteen months later, devoted the next twenty-five years of her life to this revolutionary approach to childhood education. Between 1873 and 1875 she published the magazine Kindergarten Messenger.

Boston Reform. In addition to her tireless work on behalf of the kindergarten movement, Peabody was associated in the post-Civil War period with the causes of freedmens education and Indian rights, and she continued her involvement with Bostons intellectual reform milieu. By the end of the 1870s she had earned a reputation as the grandmother of Boston reform, and in The Bostonians (1886), novelist Henry James reportedly based his character Miss Birdseye on a rather unflattering portrait of Peabody. She lived long enough not only to see the kindergarten grow from being a marginal experiment among immigrants and the well-to-do to a permanent feature in Americas urban public schools, but even to hear many of her ideas attacked by a new generation of educators as oldfashioned and outdated. Peabody died in 1894 in Jamaica Plains, Long Island, New York.

Sources

Bruce A. Ronda, ed., Letters of Elizabeth Peabody, American Renaissance Woman (Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1984);

Louis H. Tharp, The Peabody Sisters of Salem (Boston: Little, Brown, 1950).

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