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Susan Blow

 
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Susan Elizabeth Blow
Blow, Susan Elizabeth, 1843-1916, American educator, b. St. Louis. After study in New York City under a disciple of Froebel, she opened in Carondelet (now in St. Louis) the first successful public kindergarten (1873) and a training school for kindergarten teachers (1874). Among her books are Symbolic Education (1894), Educational Issues in the Kindergarten (1908), and a translation of Froebel's Mutter- und Kose-Lieder (called Mother Play) in two volumes (1895).
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Education Encyclopedia: Susan Blow
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(1843–1916)

A defender of Friedrich Froebel's original German methods, Susan Blow was an influential educator who helped start public kindergartens in St. Louis and trained many younger kindergarten directors. She was the daughter of a wealthy St. Louis businessman and Republican politician, Henry Taylor Blow, who served two terms as a U.S. Congressman and as minister to Brazil. Her mother, Minerva Grimsley, from an affluent St. Louis family, was a devout Presbyterian, as was Blow's father. Educated at home by private tutors until she was sixteen, Blow then attended Henrietta Haines's private girls' school in New York City. Blow led the faction of the American kindergarten movement that interpreted Froebel's pedagogy symbolically and resisted Progressives' attempts to make kindergarten practice more child-centered and psychologically based.

Blow was particularly attracted to philosophical and spiritual aspects of Froebel's ideas, which she encountered while traveling in Europe with her family in 1870. When she returned to St. Louis in 1871, she met with William Torrey Harris, the superintendent of the St. Louis schools, who was a Hegelian and already a kindergarten supporter. While substitute teaching in St. Louis, Blow began experimenting with Froebel's methods. With Harris's encouragement, she went to New York City in 1872 to study under Maria Kraus Boelte, one of the German kindergarten experts who had brought the movement to the United States. Blow immersed herself in the specificities of Froebel's carefully prescribed "gifts" and "occupations," the series of blocks and other educational materials and handwork activities, which formed the core of his pedagogy. When she returned, she convinced Harris to pay for a teacher and provide space for a kindergarten class, which opened in the Des Peres School in 1873. Other than a short-lived experiment in Boston in 1870, this was the first public kindergarten in the United States.

In 1874, Blow started a kindergarten training school, which soon became a center for the diffusion of Froebelian methods. Numerous kindergarten directors and leaders, including Elizabeth Harrison and Laura Fisher, trained under Blow, who visited Germany again in 1876 to learn more from German kindergarten educators. A charismatic public speaker, Blow began a series of popular lectures for mothers and others interested in kindergartens. Her fame spread. By 1877, her classes, which she expanded to include other educational and philosophical topics, attracted more than 200 participants.

Under the influence of William Torrey Harris, with whom she collaborated closely for many years, Blow became deeply interested in Hegelian philosophy and its application to education. Like Harris, Blow was committed to the kindergarten more for its intellectual and academic benefits than for its potential as a means of Progressive educational and social reform. This tension within American education generally, between promoting school achievement and promoting schools as agents of social change, fractured the kindergarten movement. Blow and Harris saw the kindergarten as a mentally stimulating rather than emotionally nurturing environment. Younger kindergarten teachers began challenging Blow, especially Alice Putnam in Chicago, and Anna Bryan in Louisville, who adapted symbolic kindergarten activities to the realities of urban children's daily lives, and encouraged open-ended free play over teacher-directed replication of Froebel's stylized forms.

In the later part of her career, Blow became an increasingly dogmatic adherent to Froebelianism. Because of mental and physical health problems, she withdrew from direct kindergarten work in 1884, and in 1889, moved to Cazenovia, New York. She entered into a long period of treatment with the Boston neurologist James Jackson Putnam, with whom she corresponded extensively. In 1894, she began writing five volumes on the kindergarten, published under the auspices of her mentor, William Torrey Harris. These books, which included a translation of Froebel's Mother Play, a book of songs and games for use by parents and kindergarten teachers, propounded Blow's abstract interpretation of Froebel's work. She was a lecturer at Columbia University's Teachers College from 1905 to 1909, where she taught a kindergarten course. Obstinately orthodox and rather abstruse, her lectures were not a success, and Blow was eventually replaced by Patty Smith Hill, the leader of the Progressive wing of the kindergarten movement.

In the twentieth century, the merging of Progressive education and the new science of child psychology widened the division between didactic, teacher-directed kindergarten pedagogy and more developmental, child-centered approaches. Blow was a member of the International Kindergarten Union's Committee of Nineteen, which attempted to mediate these differences that had become highly contentious. The divide proved irreconcilable. Blow authored the conservative report, which, along with a moderate and progressive report, was published in 1913 in The Kindergarten. Although Blow's personal dynamism and determination delayed the decline of traditionalist orthodoxy in the face of changing educational views, she was unable to sustain Froebelianism. The loss of Froebel's aesthetically sophisticated symbol system, which some are trying to revive in the early twenty-first century, should be balanced against the increased attention to socioemotional well-being and individual creativity, which are the hallmarks of modern early childhood education. Susan Blow was a firm advocate for the more formalistic vision of preschool education. Her force of character and intellect helped bring kindergarten philosophy into the mainstream of educational thought, and into the consciousness of the American public.

Bibliography

Blow, Susan E. 1894. Symbolic Education. New York: D. Appleton and Company.

Blow, Susan E. 1895. The Mottoes and Commentaries of Friedrich Froebel's Mother Play. New York: D. Appleton and Company.

Blow, Susan E. 1899. Letters to a Mother on the Philosophy of Froebel. New York: D. Appleton and Company.

Blow, Susan E. 1908. Educational Issues in the Kindergarten. New York: D. Appleton and Company.

Beatty, Barbara. 1995. Preschool Education in America: The Culture of Young Children from theColonial Era to the Present. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

Brosterman, Norman. 1997. Inventing Kindergarten. New York: Abrams.

Shapiro, Michael Steven. 1983. Child's Garden: The Kindergarten Movement from Froebel to Dewey. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press.

Troen, Selwyn K. 1975. The Public and the Schools: Shaping the St. Louis School System, 1838 - 1920. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.

Weber, Evelyn. 1969. The Kindergarten: Its Encounter with Educational Thought in America. New York: Teachers College Press, Columbia University.

— BARBARA BEATTY

Quotes By: Susan Blow
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Wikipedia: Susan Blow
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Known as the "Mother of Kindergarten" Susan Elizabeth Blow (June 7, 1843 in (Carondelet,) St. Louis, Missouri – March 27, 1916 in New York City, New York) was a United States educator who opened the first successful public Kindergarten in the United States.

Contents

Early life

The eldest of six children, Susan Blow was the daughter of Henry Taylor Blow and Minerva Grimsley. Henry owned various lead-mining operations, was president of the Iron Mountain Railroad, was a state senator, and was a minister to Brazil and Venezuela. Minerva was the daughter of a prominent manufacturer and local politician. The Blow children grew up in a deeply religious family surrounded by comfort, wealth, and high German culture. Her grandfather was Captain Peter Blow, the owner of the slaveDred Scott, who later challenged the slavery issue in court.

Due to her family's social status, Blow received her education from her parents, various governesses, private tutors, and schools. At age eight, she was enrolled at the William McCauley School in New Orleans, Louisiana; she attended classes there for the next two years. At age sixteen Blow and her sister Nellie enrolled in the New York school of Henrietta Haines but were forced to return home due to the outbreak of the Civil War. During this time Blow tutored her younger brothers and sister and taught Sunday school at Carondelet Presbyterian Church.

At age twenty, Blow met and fell in love with a soldier named Colonel William Coyle, but her parents found him to be unsuitable. When Coyle was discharged for medical reasons, her father took her to Washington D.C. and introduced her to another military man who was more to his liking. However, Blow chose not to marry.

President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Henry Blow minister to Brazil in 1869, and Susan went with him as his secretary. During the next fifteen months, she quickly learned Portuguese. Her bilingual ability helped to ease trade communications between Brazil and the United States.

In 1870, along with her mother and siblings, Blow went abroad to Europe. She first began studying the philosophies of Hegel and the American Transcendentalists. However, while abroad she came across the kindergarten teaching methods of German idealist and philosopher Friedrich Fröbel. Fröbel believed in "learning-through-play" and cognitive development.

Career

In 1871 Blow traveled to New York, where she spent a year being trained at the New York Normal Training Kindergarten, operated by Fröbel devotee Maria Kraus-Boelté. Blow returned to St. Louis in 1873 and opened the nation’s first public kindergarten in Des Peres School in (Carondelet,) St. Louis, Missouri. With the help of her two assistants, Mary Timberlake and Cynthia Dozier, Blow directed and taught a kindergarten class consisting of forty-two students. Not only did she pay all expenses to keep the kindergarten running that first year, she was not compensated for her hard work and dedication. The experimental class was a success and quickly grew. Within three years, her kindergarten system had fifty teachers and over one thousand students, and by 1883 every public school in St. Louis had a kindergarten.

Blow was able to open her school, in part, thanks to the support she received from William Torrey Harris, the superintendent of schools in St. Louis. Harris believed the greatest educational concern of the time was the amount of young children who dropped out of school. Blow believed a kindergarten system would improve the dropout rate, for children would be starting school at an earlier age. Although he originally resisted the idea of a public program, he was persuaded by the school board’s support of Blow, her background, and her proposal to direct the program herself.

In 1874 Blow opened a training school to accommodate the in-demand kindergarten teachers. Those in training spent mornings volunteering in the kindergarten classes and afternoons and weekends studying Fröbel’s ideas. Through her work, Blow played a significant role in the history and development of early childhood education.

Later life

Only ten years after opening her training school Blow withdrew from teaching due to Graves' disease, which is a form of hyperthyroidism. She retired in 1886 until 1895, at which time she began to lecture again in Boston, Massachusetts. She also conducted classes about the Bible, Shakespeare, Dante, Homer, and Goethe.

Blow worked with the Kindergarten Association, along with teaching at the Teacher’s College of Columbia University from 1905-1909. She developed the course known as "History of Philosophy and Education." The years leading up to her death were spent near her sister, Nellie, in New York City. She died in March 1916 in New York City. Most references state she died on March 26, but her tombstone (at Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri) declares she died on March 27. At the time of her death, the “St. Louis Globe-Democrat” wrote, “A great commander is gone, but the soldiers will go marching on.”

Written Works

Blow served on the advisory committee for the International Kindergarten Union and Committee of Nineteen and translated two volumes of Fröbel’s ‘’Mother Play’’ in 1895. She also wrote articles in the ‘’Kindergarten Magazine’’. Below is a list of Blow’s published works:

Symbolic Education (1894) Letters to a Mother on the Philosophy of Froebel (1899) Kindergarten Education (1900) Educational Issues in the Kindergarten (1908)

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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