Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Annie Nathan Meyer

 
Dictionary: Mey·er   ('ər) pronunciation
, Annie Florance Nathan 1867-1951.

American writer and a founder of Barnard College at Columbia University (1889). Her plays include The Dominant Sex (1911) and Black Souls (1932).


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Annie Nathan Meyer
Top

Annie Nathan Meyer (February 19, 1867 – September 23, 1951) was an American author and promoter of the higher education of women.

Born in New York City,the daughter of Annie August and Robert Weeks Nathan, the Nathans are of America's colonial era Sephardic families. She married Alfred Meyer, a prominent physician and a cousin.

Within weeks of her wedding, Meyer began organizing a committee to found a women's college at Columbia and provide for young women the opportunity for an education that she herself had not enjoyed. Meyer understood that the idea was nothing without funding, and created a committee of fifty prominent New Yorkers willing to support the projected college. She overcame the opposition of the Columbia trustees with a brilliant maneuver: she named the college after F.A.P. Barnard, Columbia's recently deceased president. The college Meyer founded, Barnard College, is (one of the Seven Sisters) and ranks today as one of America's most elite colleges.

She became known as an opponent of woman suffrage (in direct conflict to her sister Maud Nathan). At one time, Annie Nathan Meyer was associate editor of the Broadway Magazine. She edited Woman's Work in America (1891) and contributed a series of articles to the New York Evening Post.

Her sister was the activist Maud Nathan and her nephew the author and poet Robert Nathan.

Contents

Books

  • Barnard Beginnings (1935)
  • Helen Brent, M. D. (1892)
  • My Park Book (1898)
  • Robert Annys: A Poor Priest (1901)
  • The Dominant Sex (1911)
  • The Dreamer; a Play in Three Acts (1912)
  • Women's Work in America (1891)
  • It's Been Fun: An Autobiography (1951)

Biography

  • Three Outstanding Women: Mary Fels, Rebekah Kohut [and] Annie Nathan Meyer, by Dora Askowith (1941)
  • Annie Nathan Meyer: Barnard Godmother and Gotham Gadfly, by Myrna Gallant Goldenberg (1987)

External links

References



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Annie Nathan Meyer" Read more