Catherine Beecher: Catharine Beecher, in Full Catharine Esther Beecher, (Born September 6, 1800
Catharine Beecher was an American educator in the 19th century who promoted women's education and established schools. She grew up in a prominent family but received little formal schooling. In 1821, she became a teacher and in 1823 co-founded the Hartford Female Seminary, an innovative school for women. Later she opened schools in the Midwest and advocated for expanding educational opportunities for women through organizations she helped found. Her writings helped introduce domestic science into American school curriculums and she played a pivotal role in the development of women's education.
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Catherine Beecher: Catharine Beecher, in Full Catharine Esther Beecher, (Born September 6, 1800
Catharine Beecher was an American educator in the 19th century who promoted women's education and established schools. She grew up in a prominent family but received little formal schooling. In 1821, she became a teacher and in 1823 co-founded the Hartford Female Seminary, an innovative school for women. Later she opened schools in the Midwest and advocated for expanding educational opportunities for women through organizations she helped found. Her writings helped introduce domestic science into American school curriculums and she played a pivotal role in the development of women's education.
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CATHERINE BEECHER
Catharine Beecher, in full Catharine Esther
Beecher, (born September 6, 1800, East Hampton, New York, U.S.—died May 12, 1878, Elmira, New York), American educator and author who popularized and shaped a conservative ideological movement to both elevate and entrench women’s place in the domestic sphere of American culture. Beecher was the eldest daughter in one of the most remarkable families of the 19th century. She was the daughter of Lyman Beecher as well as the sister of Edward and Henry Ward Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe and the half sister of Isabella Beecher Hooker, to name only the most prominent of her siblings. She grew up in an atmosphere of learning but, because she was female, did not receive much formal education. From 1810 she lived in Litchfield, Connecticut, where she attended schools for young ladies while independently studying Latin, philosophy, and mathematics. After the death of her mother in 1816 she had much of the care of the family. In 1821 she became a schoolteacher, and in 1823 she and her sister Mary established a girls’ school that four years later became the Hartford Female Seminary in Hartford, Connecticut, an innovative institution in which, for example, she introduced calisthenics in a course of physical education. Moving with her father to Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1832, Beecher opened the Western Female Institute; financial difficulties and her precarious health closed the school five years later. The rest of her life was devoted to the development of educational facilities in the Midwest and to the promotion of equal educational opportunities for women. She worked through the Board of National Popular Education (1847–48), a private agency headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, and in 1852 founded the American Woman’s Educational Association to recruit and train teachers to staff schools on the frontier. She inspired the founding of several women’s colleges in the Midwest, and her writings did much to introduce domestic science into the American school curriculum. NIELS BUKH
Around 1916–1917 the Danish gymnastics
pedagogue Niels Bukh (1880–1950) created, in an international sense, a revolutionary men's gymnastics, and in 1920 he established Denmark's and the world's first folk high school of physical education and sport. During the 1930s, Niels Bukh and his team of gymnasts first became a symbol for the dynamic Danish farming community, and then for the face of Denmark both at home and abroad. Bukh changed the stereotypical male expression of bodily dynamics, which in Danish rural gymnastics had been almost military. He made it legitimate for the young lads to get in close physical contact and to work in pairs in order to create beautiful masculine gymnastic choreographies. Within the aesthetic history of masculinity, it has often been male homosexual aestheticians, designers, musicians, dancers, and so on who have opened new avenues for the expression of male emotion, which was a trademark of Bukh's achievements, too.
CLARK HETHERINGTON
As a pioneer in the American play
movement, Dr. Clark W. Hetherington was a philosopher, teacher, and physical education administrator at the university, state, and national levels. Dr. Hetherington believed that “Play is the central element in the scheme of human nature that makes volition possible... Without play man is inconceivable; play makes volition and rational living possible. There is no meaning to the phrase 'mere play,' for play is the most important activity in life.”1Earning a bachelor’s degree in Education from Stanford University in 1895, Dr. Hetherington continued to assist in the university's Physical Training Department for the next year. He moved from Stanford, California to be the Director of Physical Training at the Whittier Reform School, which at that time was just outside of Los Angeles. For two years Dr. Hetherington, in the words of a contemporary Dr. George J. Fisher, “organized the play of the inmates, the first time such a thing had been dreamed of in a reformatory. His work had a profound effect both upon the boys and upon the institution.”2In 1898, Dr. Hetherington moved east to Worcester, Massachusetts to become a Fellow and Assistant Professor in Psychology at Clark University. Two years later, Dr. Hetherington moved to Columbia, Missouri, where he became a Professor of Physical Education and Director of Athletics at the University of Missouri (MU). As MU's first athletic director, he organized a centralized athletics department that included all students through intercollegiate competitions, intramural recreation, and women's activities.4 He also was one of the founders of the Missouri Valley Conference division in 1907.
Vivat Victorius Fridericus Franciscus
"Franz" Nachtegall (October 3, 1777 – 12 May 1847)[1] was an early proponent and directly responsible for introducing physical education in schools of Denmark.[2][3]He was born in Copenhagen on October 3, 1777. He took lessons of fencing and vaulting in childhood.Nachtegall was apparently stimulated to begin teaching gymnastics after reading the GutsMuths manual of gymnastics. In 1799 he was invited to teach gymnastics at the Vesterbro school.In 1804 he was appointed as the first director of a training school for the teaching of gymnastics to the army of Denmark. This school provided instructions for future NCOs in both the army and navy. In 1805 he prepared a detailed gymnastic manual for the military course.[2]In 1807 he was appointed professor of gymnastics at Copenhagen University. In 1808 he was awarded an honorarium for giving free instructions to civilians, who were interested in teaching physical education.[2]From 1821 to 1842, Nachtegall was Director of Gymnastics, with oversight of the programs of the army and navy.[