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{{Short description|American teacher and author}}
{{Short description|American teacher and author}}
{{in use}}
{{More citations needed|date=April 2013}}
{{use mdy dates|date=March 2024}}
{{use mdy dates|date=March 2024}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Mary Tyler Peabody Mann
| name = Mary Tyler Peabody Mann
| image = Mary Peabody Mann.png
| image = Mary_Tyler_Peabody_Mann (cropped).png
| image_size = 200px
| caption = Portrait of Mary Peabody Mann
| caption = Portrait of Mary Peabody Mann
| birth_name = Mary Tyler Peabody
| birth_name = Mary Tyler Peabody
Line 12: Line 11:
| death_date = {{death date and age|1887|2|11|1806|11|16}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1887|2|11|1806|11|16}}
| death_place = [[Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts]]
| death_place = [[Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts]]
| spouse = {{marriage|[[Horace Mann]]||1859|end=d.}}
| spouse = {{marriage|[[Horace Mann]]|1843|1859|end=d.}}
| parents = [[Nathaniel Peabody (Boston)|Nathaniel Peabody]] (father)<br />Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (mother)
| parents = [[Nathaniel Peabody (Boston)|Nathaniel Peabody]] (father)<br />Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (mother)
| relatives = {{plainlist|
| known_for = Friend and adviser in educational matters of [[Domingo Faustino Sarmiento]], whose ''[[Facundo]]'' she translated into English.
* [[Elizabeth Peabody]] (sister)
| occupation = Teacher, writer, education reformer
* [[Sophia Peabody Hawthorne]] (sister)
* [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]] (brother-in-law)
}}
}}
| known_for = Pioneer of kindergarten schools, liberal thinker and reformer, and author of ''Life and Works of Horace Mann''
| occupation = Teacher, schoolmistress, writer, and education reformer
}}

'''Mary Tyler Mann''' ({{nee}} Peabody; November 16, 1806 – February 11, 1887) was an American teacher, author, and reformer. Mary was one of three Peabody sisters who were influential women of their day in education, literature, and art.<ref name="BET obit" /><ref name="Ritchie">{{Cite web |last=Ritchie |first=Susan |date=September 16, 2001 |title=The Peabody Sisters |url=https://www.uudb.org/the-peabody-sisters/ |access-date=2024-03-29 |website=Dictionary of Unitarian & Universalist Biography |language=en-US}}</ref> Like her sister Elizabeth, she was a leader in education reform and establishment of kindergartens. Sophia was an artist and the wife of [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]]. Mary was a participant in the [[Transcendentalism|Transcendentalism Movement]]. She was an abolitionist. She supported the work of her husband [[Horace Mann]], an American education reformer and politician, as well as [[Henry David Thoreau]], [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]], and [[Sarah Winnemucca]].

Mary Peabody began teaching at eighteen, first in Maine, then as a governess in Cuba, and she was a tutor and teacher in Massachusetts. She established a school for young children in [[Salem, Massachusetts]] about 1836. After her husband died in 1859, Mary Mann and her sister Elizabeth opened the first kindergarten school in the country, where they taught gymnastics, music, French, and social skills in addition to reading, writing, and arithmetic. They published the book ''Moral Culture of Infancy and Kindergarten Guide'' to provide information about how to set up and operate a kindergarten.


Among her many publications, she contributed to [[Domingo Faustino Sarmiento]]'s ''[[Facundo]]'', which was first published in 1868.
'''Mary Tyler Mann''' ({{nee}} Peabody; November 16, 1806 – February 11, 1887) was an American teacher, author, reformer. Like her sisters, she was a leader in the development of modern education, kindergarten, and the [[Transcendentalism|Transcentalist Movement]]. She supported the work of her husband [[Horace Mann]], an American education reformer and politician, [[Henry David Thoreau]], [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]], and [[Sarah Winnemucca]].


==Personal life==
==Personal life==
===Early life===
===Early life===
Mary Tyler Peabody was born on November 16, 1806 in [[Cambridgeport, Massachusetts]], the daughter of [[Nathaniel Peabody (Boston)|Nathaniel]] and Elizabeth ({{nee|Palmer}}) Peabody.<ref name="Appletons">{{source-attribution}} {{Cite Appletons'|wstitle=Mann, Horace|year=1900|author=Isa Carrington Cabell|inline=x}}</ref><ref name="SPL sisters">{{Cite web |date=2022-05-21 |title=The Peabody Sisters |url=https://salempl.org/the-peabody-sisters/ |access-date=2024-03-28 |website=Salem Public Library (Massachusetts) |language=en-US}}</ref> The Peabodys were a two-income family. Elizabeth, a teacher, was the main wage earner. Nathaniel was a dentist and wrote about dental health and treatment.
Mary Tyler Peabody was born on November 16, 1806, in [[Cambridgeport, Massachusetts]], the daughter of [[Nathaniel Peabody (Boston)|Nathaniel]] and Elizabeth ({{nee|Palmer}}) Peabody,<ref name="Appletons">{{source-attribution}} {{Cite Appletons'|wstitle=Mann, Horace|year=1900|author=Isa Carrington Cabell|inline=x}}</ref><ref name="SPL sisters">{{Cite web |date=2022-05-21 |title=The Peabody Sisters |url=https://salempl.org/the-peabody-sisters/ |access-date=2024-03-28 |website=Salem Public Library (Massachusetts) |language=en-US}}</ref> the granddaughter of [[Joseph Palmer (American Revolutionary War general)|Joseph Palmer]], a general during the [[American Revolutionary War]].<ref name="BET obit" /> The Peabodys were a two-income family. Elizabeth advocated for preschool child education and taught school. Nathaniel was an apothecary, doctor, and dentist.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=41}} Her sisters were [[Elizabeth Palmer Peabody|Elizabeth]], reformer, educator, and pioneer in establishing kindergarten schools and [[Sophia Peabody Hawthorne|Sophia]], painter and the wife of [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]].<ref name="SPL sisters" /> She had three brothers, Nathaniel, George Francis, and Wellington Peabody.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=41}} George and Wellington died in the twenties. Nathaniel relied on his sister Elizabeth for his living expenses.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=41}}


The Peabody family lived in Salem and worshiped at the Second Church (later [[Unitarianism|Unitarian Church]]) in [[Salem, Massachusetts]]. The children received a thorough education at home.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> Elizabeth Peabody operated a school from the family home, providing a classical education for boys and girls.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=41}} Her father taught Mary Latin and encouraged her acquiring nine other languages. Nathaniel tutored the Peabody children.<ref name="Ritchie" />
Her sisters were [[Elizabeth Palmer Peabody|Elizabeth]], reformer, educator, and pioneer in establishing kindergarten, and [[Sophia Peabody Hawthorne|Sophia]], painter and wife of [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]].<ref name="SPL sisters" /> She had three brothers, Nathaniel Cranch Peabody, George Francis Peabody, and Wellington Peabody.


In 1820, the Peabodys moved to a farm in [[Lancaster, Massachusetts]], and daughter Elizabeth taught and ran the school beginning at age 16, based upon what she learned from her mother's [[wikt:tutelage|tutelage]]. Young Elizabeth taught from an enlightened perspective, helping her students build character, grow spiritually, and engage in discussions about school work.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=42}} In 1822, the Peabodys left the farm life of Lancaster for the social city life of Salem, where Nathaniel worked as a dentist.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=42}}
The Peabody family lived in Salem and worshiped at the Second Church (later [[Unitarianism|Unitarian Church]]) in [[Salem, Massachusetts]]. The children received a thorough education at home by their parents.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> Nathaniel and Elizabeth Peabody had been schoolteachers when they married; after the nuptials, the couple set aside a parlor in their house as a schoolroom.


===Marriage and children===
===The Peabody sisters===
After knowing each other for a decade, Mary Peabody married Horace Mann, becoming Mary Peabody Mann on May 1, 1843. They were married at the Peabody home in Boston and set sail on the ''Hibernia'' for Europe. Newlyweds Samuel Gridley Howe and Julia Ward joined the Manns on their extended honeymoon, which featured visits to prisons, reform schools, insane asylums, and institutions for the blind and the deaf.


[[File:ElizabethPeabody portrait2.png|thumb|200px|[[Elizabeth Peabody]]]]
The Manns had three children: [[Horace Mann Jr.]], born February 25, 1844; George Combe Mann born December 27, 1845; Benjamin Pickman Mann born April 30, 1848.
[[File:Sophia Peabody Hawthorne 2.png|thumb|200px|[[Sophia Peabody Hawthorne]]]]
The Peabody sisters, intelligent and capable on their own, were stronger together. Sophia was an artist. Elizabeth and Mary were educators who played significant roles in the creation of [[Kindergarten#Creation of the kindergarten|kindergarten programs]] and improvements to traditional education.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> In 1825, Elizabeth and Mary lived in boarding house on [[Beacon Hill, Boston|Beacon Hill]],{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=44}} where they met a fellow boarder [[Horace Mann]] in 1832<ref name="SPL sisters" /> or 1833.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=164}} Rebecca Clarke, the mother of [[James Freeman Clarke]], operated the boarding house, Ashburton Place.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=164}} Living there at the time were [[George Stillman Hillard]], [[Edward Kennard Rand]], and [[Jared Sparks]].{{sfn|Roberts|1945|pp=164–165}} The sisters were Unitarians who embraced the [[Transcendentalism|Transcendentalism movement]] and supported fellow Transcendentalists [[Henry David Thoreau]], [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]], who married Sophia.<ref name="Ritchie" /><ref name="SPL sisters" /> The three women, and Mary in particular, supported Horace Mann's career.<ref name="SPL sisters" />


Mann, a widow, came to Boston to recuperate from his loss.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|pp=164–165}} Elizabeth and Mary frequent talked about their lives and viewpoints. Sometimes, they read to one another. The young women helped Mann manage what Josephine E. Roberts called his "hopeless sorrow".{{sfn|Roberts|1945|pp=165–166}} She shared an interest in education with Horace Mann, who was widowed. Although working in the fields of politics and the law, Mann had developed his educational theories.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> In ''Estimate of Horace Mann'', Mary wrote "I learned from him what night of the soul he had been nurtured and realized for the first time what a misfortune to mankind has been that creed which dishonors God and disenchants man."{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=165}}
During her husband's life she shared in all his benevolent and educational work, and her familiarity with modern languages enabled her to assist him greatly in his studies of foreign reforms.<ref name="Appletons" /> Mary Peabody Mann filled the role of president's wife and confidant after Horace accepted the presidency of [[Antioch College]] in Yellow Springs, Ohio, a new institution committed to coeducation, non-sectarianism, and equal opportunity for African Americans.


In 1833, Mary went to Cuba, where she worked as a governess and looked after her sister Sophia, who went to the country to recuperate from some medical conditions. Mary and Sophia lived there until 1835, when they returned to Salem, where Mary taught until 1840.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> During that time, Mary and Mann stayed in contact via letters. Mann visited and wrote to Elizabeth periodically to learn what she know of Mary. He said that Mary's letters, written to him or Elizabeth, "affect me like music and more." Mary questioned Elizabeth about the affection and "brotherly tenderness" she shared with Mann during his visits.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|pp=168–175, 177–178}} After Mary returned from Cuba, Mann visited and wrote Mary regularly in Salem in friendship and confidence, to the exclusion of her sister Elizabeth. It was not, though, like Sophia's courtship with Nathaniel Hawthorne.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|pp=178–179}} In 1840, Mary lived above the West Street Bookshop near Beacon Hill and Boston Common in Boston with her sisters and parents. Sophia and Mary lived there until they were married.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|pp=48, 53}} Elizabeth purchased foreign journals and books for her business, which was part bookstore, a lending library, and a place for scholars, liberal thinkers, and transcendentalists to meet.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|pp=48–49}}
Following her husband's death in 1859, Mary and the family returned to Massachusetts. Less than ten years after she buried her husband, Mary's oldest son, [[Horace Mann Jr.]] died at the age of 24 in 1868.


===Death===
===Marriage and children===
[[File:Horace Mann by Francis D'Avignon, 1859, lithograph with tintstone on paper, from the National Portrait Gallery - NPG-NPG 77 224Mann-000002.jpg|thumb|Francis D'Avignon, ''Horace Mann'', lithograph, 1859, [[National Portrait Gallery (United States)|National Portrait Gallery]], Washington, D.C.]]
Mary Tyler Peabody Mann died February 11, 1887, in [[Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts]].<ref name="Appletons" />
{{External media|image1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20100823110143/http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/UIA%20Online/33mannm.html Portrait of Mary and Benjamin]}}
After knowing each other for a decade, Mary Peabody was engaged to Horace Mann in April 1843 and married him on May 1, 1843, becoming Mary Peabody Mann.<ref name="SPL sisters" />{{sfn|Roberts|1945|pp=179–180}} She was his second wife.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|pp=164, 179–180}} They were married at the Peabody home above Elizabeth Peabody's West Street Bookstore in Boston and set sail the same day on the ''Britannia'' for Europe.{{sfn|Tharp|1953|p=189}}{{efn|Roberts states that they sailed on the ''Hibernia'',{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=180}} but that ship sailed from Boston on May 16. As Tharp states, they sailed on the ''Britannia'', which sailed on May 1.{{sfn|Tharp|1953|p=189}}<ref>{{Cite news |date=1843-03-25 |title=British and North American Royal Mail Steam Ships |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/boston-post-british-and-north-american-r/144343190/ |access-date=2024-03-29 |work=Boston Post |pages=4}}</ref>}} Newlyweds [[Samuel Gridley Howe]] and [[Julia Ward]] joined the Manns on their extended honeymoon.{{sfn|Tharp|1953|p=189}} Horace had taken an extended leave of absence to study schools and other institutions—like prisons, asylums, and orphanages—while in Halifax and Europe. His notes of the visits were the source material for his "Seventh Annual Report", and the recognition of what would be useful ideas to implement and what should be avoided.{{sfn|Tharp|1953|p=191}} The couples returned on the ''Britannia'' on November 6, 1853.<ref name="Arrival">{{citation|title=Horace Mann, ''Britannia'', Liverpool to Boston, arriving November 6, 1843 |publisher=The National Archives | location=Washington, DC| work= Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving At Boston, Massachusetts, 1820-1891; Record Group Title: Records of the U.s. Customs Service; Record Group Number: 36; Series Number: M277; NARA Roll Number: 017 | via=ancestry.com}}</ref>


The Manns had three children: [[Horace Mann Jr.]], George Mann, and Benjamin Mann.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=180}} After her children were born, she homeschooled the boys.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> [[Horace Mann Jr.]] died at the age of 24 on November 11, 1868.<ref>{{Cite news |date=1868-11-19 |title=Horace Mann, Jr. dead |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-berkshire-county-eagle-horace-mann/144340523/ |access-date=2024-03-29 |work=The Berkshire County Eagle |pages=2}}</ref> At the time of her death, George was a principal of Jamaica Plain High School, and Benjamin was a professor of the [[Smithsonian Institution]] in Washington, D.C.<ref name="BET obit" />
==Career==
===The Peabody sisters===
The Peabody sisters, intelligent and capable on their own, were stronger together. They played key roles in the creation of [[Kindergarten#Creation of the kindergarten|creation of kindergarten programs]] and influenced modern education. They also contributed to the [[Transcendentalism|Transcendentalism movement]] and supported fellow Transcendentalists [[Henry David Thoreau]], [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]].<ref name="SPL sisters" /> The sisters, and Mary in particular, supported Horace Mann's career.<ref name="SPL sisters" />


Following her husband's death in 1859, Mary purchased a house in [[Concord, Massachusetts]], and Elizabeth lived with her and her children.<ref name="SPL sisters" />{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=50}} Mary Tyler Peabody Mann died in [[Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts]], by February 11, 1887,<ref name="Appletons" /><ref name="SPL sisters" /> and she was buried at the [[North Burial Ground]] in [[Providence, Rhode Island]].<ref name="SPL sisters" />

==Career==
===Educator===
===Educator===
Mary Peabody left home at eighteen to teach school in Maine. She moved to Boston to assist her sister Elizabeth in the operation of a school for young children; in their mid-twenties, Elizabeth and Mary moved into a boardinghouse. The home of Rebecca Clarke, the mother of [[James Freeman Clarke]], also became Horace Mann's residence in 1833. Later that year, Mary accompanied her sickly younger sister Sophia to Cuba; Elizabeth Peabody and Horace Mann shared a sibling-like closeness and intellectual compatibility that flourished in Mary's absence. While in Cuba, Mary worked as a governess to a Cuban family. The letters she exchanged with Elizabeth contained numerous references to Horace Mann.
Mary Peabody left home at eighteen to teach school in [[Hallowell, Maine]], where her sister Elizabeth had taught.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> In 1825, she moved to Boston to assist Elizabeth in the operation of a school.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> Mary and Elizabeth developed an "active interest" in the work of [[Samuel Gridley Howe]] and his school, [[Perkins School for the Blind]], after they visited the school with Mann, who sat on the board of trustees.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|pp=175–176}} Returning to Boston from Cuba, Mary moved in with her brother George in March 1835, and found employment tutoring an Italian student.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=177}} At that time Elizabeth taught at [[Amos Bronson Alcott]]'s experimental [[Temple School]], and Mary substituted for her briefly.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=177}} Alcott had two revolutionary approaches to education, he did not think that punishment and memorization were necessary for a good education.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=44}} Mary established a school for young children and lived in Salem.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=177}}


Returning to Boston in spring 1835, Mary moved in with her brother George and found employment tutoring students in Italian. After a short interlude of substituting for Elizabeth at [[Amos Bronson Alcott]]’s experimental [[Temple School]], Mary returned to Salem, where she established a successful school for little children in her home and began to write educational works for children and parents. Meanwhile, in 1837 Mann was appointed secretary to the Massachusetts board of education and Mary devoted a great deal of time acting as the underpaid statesman's secretary and assistant. Although the board of education's powers were limited, Mann, with Mary's assistance, shaped public opinion regarding school problems and created public support for increasing the pay of teachers and improving their training through the founding of state [[normal school|normal]], or teacher-training, schools.
Meanwhile, in 1837, Mann was appointed secretary to the [[Massachusetts Board of Education]], founded that year.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=178}} Mary devoted a great deal of time acting as the underpaid statesman's secretary and assistant. Although the board of education's powers were limited, Mann, with Mary's assistance, shaped public opinion regarding school problems and created public support for increasing the pay of teachers and improving their training through the founding of state [[normal school|normal]], or teacher-training, schools.{{cn|date=March 2024}}

When married, Mary homeschooled her boys at home, and during that time, she did not have teaching positions.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> In 1859{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=39}} or 1860, she opened the first public kindergarten in the country on Beacon Hill in Boston with her sister Elizabeth. They influenced the creation of public kindergarten schools.<ref name="SPL sisters" />{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=39}} The school taught reading, writing, arithmetic, gymnastics, singing, and French. They encouraged moral and positive social engagement among the children.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=51}} They wrote the ''Moral Culture of Infancy and Kindergarten Guide'' in 1863 to provide information about how to set up and operate a kindergarten.{{sfn|Seavey|2004|p=51}}

===Shared efforts with her husband===

[[File:Antioch Hall, Antioch College.jpg|thumb|Antioch Hall, [[Antioch College]]]]
During her husband's life she shared in all his benevolent and educational work. Her familiarity with modern languages enabled her to assist him greatly in his studies of foreign reforms.<ref name="Appletons" /> She was Horace Mann's private secretary for many years.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=164}} She contributed to ''Common School Journal'' that he published.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> Mary Peabody Mann filled the role of president's wife and unofficial dean of women after Horace accepted the presidency of [[Antioch College]], coeducational school. For the first time in the United States, the college provided men and women the same educational opportunities and programs.<ref name="SPL sisters" />


===Reformer===
===Reformer===
Mary, like her husband, was a reformer. For instance, they both were very interested in education reform.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> During the [[Antebellum period]], she wrote and spoke against slavery.<ref name="BET obit">{{Cite news |date=1887-02-12 |title=Recent Deaths: Mrs. Horace Mann |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/boston-evening-transcript-obituary-for/144339358/ |access-date=2024-03-29 |work=Boston Evening Transcript |page=8}}</ref> In her book ''Christianity in the Kitchen: A Physiological Cookbook'', Mary expresses that certain foods, like alcohol and oysters, are not healthy and other foods are good for one's health. She asserts that a person who is careful about choosing healthy foods is an example of true Christianity.{{sfn|Tharp|1953|p=290}}
Mary, like her husband, was a reformer. Overeating was one of the vices that Mary campaigned to change; her ''Christianity in the Kitchen: A Physiological Cookbook'' purported to serve as a moral guide to good eating. It was the housewife's duty, Mary believed, to educate herself in the latest scientific knowledge in order to keep her family healthy. Citing the research of scientists, she warned her readers against rich and fatty foods and advised moderation in spices and abstinence from alcohol.


===Author===
===Author===
In addition to teaching and helping Horace Mann, Mary found time to write. Her children's book, ''The Flower People: Being an Account of the Flowers by Themselves; Illustrated with Plates'', was published in 1838. The horticultural guide, a collection of tales about a little girl named Mary who makes the acquaintance, one by one, of common garden plants. These imaginary conversations with crocuses, violets, anemones, and geraniums, proved popular with both children and their parents.
Mary wrote about women's rights, child care, kindergarten, and free education for underprivileged children. Her work was published as essays, in magazines, and books.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> Her children's book, ''The Flower People: Being an Account of the Flowers by Themselves; Illustrated with Plates'', was published in 1838.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=179}}


[[File:Life of Horace Mann (IA 55911110R.nlm.nih.gov).pdf|upright|thumb|''Life and Works of Horace Mann'' by Mary Tyler Peabody Mann (620 pages)]]
Writing her husband's biography and editing his works helped Mary through her grief after Horace died. ''Life and Works of Horace Mann'' contains only one reference to Mary: "On 1 May 1843, Mr. Mann was again married, and sailed for Europe to visit European schools, especially in Germany, where he expected to derive most benefit."


Mary wrote the ''Life and Works of Horace Mann'', in which there was a veiled identification of her as his interpreter or friend.{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=180}} It was published in three volumes.<ref name="SPL sisters" /> There is only one reference to Mary: "On 1 May 1843, Mr. Mann was again married, and sailed for Europe to visit European schools, especially in Germany, where he expected to derive most benefit."{{sfn|Roberts|1945|p=164}}
As a widow, Mary wrote for a variety of periodicals on topics related to education (no matter how obliquely), translated works from the Spanish, supervised the education of her sons, participated actively in philanthropic work, and aided her sister Elizabeth in her [[kindergarten]] in Boston.


Her writings, especially those on the kindergarten system, with her sister, Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, are distinguished for vigor of thought and felicity of expression. She published “Flower People” (1838); “Christianity in the Kitchen, a Physiological Cook-Book” (Boston, 1857); “Culture in Infancy, with Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (1863); “Life of Horace Mann” (1865); and “Juanita, a Romance of Real Life in Cuba, published after her death (1887).<ref name="Appletons" />
Her writings, especially those on the kindergarten system, with her sister, Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, are distinguished for vigor of thought and felicity of expression. She published ''Flower People'' (1838); ''Christianity in the Kitchen, a Physiological Cook-Book'' (Boston, 1857); ''Culture in Infancy,'' with Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (1863); ''Life of Horace Mann'' (1865); and ''Juanita, a Romance of Real Life in Cuba,'' published after her death (1887).<ref name="Appletons" /> The collaboration of Mary and Elizabeth included promoting the speaking career of [[Sarah Winnemucca|Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins]], the first Native American woman known to secure a [[copyright registration|copyright]] and to publish in the English language.<ref name="MN">[http://voices.cla.umn.edu/artistpages/hopkinsSarah.php ''Voices from the Gaps'': "Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins"], [[University of Minnesota Twin Cities|University of Minnesota]] website, accessed 11 February 2004</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Maloney |first1=Wendi |title=Native American Heritage Month: Celebrating Sarah Winnemucca |url=https://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2017/11/native-american-heritage-month-celebrating-sarah-winnemucca |website=Library of Congress Blog |access-date=December 20, 2017 |date=November 2, 2017}}</ref> In addition, Mary helped Hopkins with her book, ''Life among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims'' (1883). Mary used her portion of the earnings on opening schools.<ref name="SPL sisters" />


In her eightieth year, Mary began to write her first novel; ''Juanita: A Romance of Real Life in Cuba Fifty Years Ago'' (1887) appeared posthumously. Elizabeth Peabody commented, "The story is fiction; but the principal characters and the most important incidents are real—it was this that made the author keep back the book from publication till all were dead… It was the merest accident that the work was not published before my sister's death, as she so earnestly desired it should be."<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KF1DAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA146 |title=The Critic |date=1887 |page=146 |language=en}}</ref>
The collaboration of Mary and Elizabeth included promoting the speaking career of [[Sarah Winnemucca|Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins]], the first Native American woman known to secure a copyright and to publish in the English language. In addition, Mary helped Hopkins with her book, ''Life among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims'' (1883).

In her eightieth year, Mary began to write her first novel; ''Juanita: A Romance of Real Life in Cuba Fifty Years Ago'' (1887) appeared posthumously. Elizabeth Peabody commented, "The story is fiction; but the principal characters and the most important incidents are real—it was this that made the author keep back the book from publication till all were dead….It was the merest accident that the work was not published before my sister's death, as she so earnestly desired it should be."


===Publications===
===Publications===
Works Mary Tyler Peabody Man wrote or contributed to, in order by the original published date:
* {{Cite book |last=Mann |first=Mary Tyler Peabody |title=The Flower People: Being an Account of the Flowers by Themselves; Illustrated with Plates |location=Boston |publisher= Lee and Shepard |year= 1888|orig-year=1838 }}
* {{Cite book |last=Mann |first=Mary Tyler Peabody |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/1043555425 |title=A primer of reading, spelling, and drawing |date=1851 | orig-year=1841 |publisher=William P. Hazard |location=Philadelphia |language=en}}
* {{Cite book |last=Mann |first=Mary Tyler Peabody | url=https://archive.org/details/christianityinki00mann |title=Christianity in the Kitchen, a Physiological Cook-Book | location=Boston |publisher= Ticknor and Fields|year= 1857}}
* {{Cite book |last2=Mann |first2=Mary Tyler Peabody | first1=Elizabeth Palmer |last1=Peabody |title=Moral Culture of Infancy, and Kindergarten Guide: With Music for the Plays |location=Boston |publisher=T.O.H.P. Burnham |year=1863}}
* {{cite book | title=Facundo: Ó, Civilización I Barbarie En Las Pampas Arjentinas |language=fr | year=2022 | orig-year=1868 | first1=Domingo Faustino |last1=Sarmiento | first2=Mary Tyler Peabody |last2=Mann | publisher= Legare Street Press |isbn=978-1-01-843585-5}}
* {{Cite magazine |last=Mann |first=Mary Tyler Peabody | title=New Methods for Improving Domestics |magazine=Herald of Health |year=1869}}
* {{Cite magazine |last=Mann |first=Mary Tyler Peabody | title=A Woman's View of Intemperance|magazine=[[Arthur's Lady's Home Magazine]] |year=1872}}
*{{Cite book |last=Winnemucca |first=Sarah |editor1= Mary Tyler Peabody Mann |title=[[wikisource:en:Life Among the Piutes|Life Among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims]] |date=2019 | orig-year=1883 |publisher=Franklin Classics |isbn=978-0-341-69556-1}}
* {{Cite book |last=Mann |first=Mary Tyler Peabody |url=http://www.upress.virginia.edu/books/mann.html| title=Juanita: A Romance of Real Life in Cuba Fifty Years Ago|publisher=D. Lothrop Company|year= 1887|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110530070838/http://www.upress.virginia.edu/books/mann.html |archive-date=May 30, 2011 }}
* {{Cite book |last=Mann |first=Mary Tyler Peabody | title=Life and Works of Horace Mann (three volumes) | editor=G. C. Mann |year= 1891}} Extended edition in five volumes.


==Notes==
* ''The Flower People: Being an Account of the Flowers by Themselves; Illustrated with Plates'' (Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1888, o.p.&nbsp;1838).
{{notelist}}
**[https://books.google.com/books?id=L8cXAAAAYAAJ 1875 ed.], illustrated by Mrs. G.P. Lathrop
* [https://archive.org/details/christianityinki00mann ''Christianity in the Kitchen, a Physiological Cook-Book''] (Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1857).
* with Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, ''Moral Culture of Infancy, and Kindergarten Guide: With Music for the Plays'' (Boston: T.O.H.P. Burnham, 1863).
*{{cite book|title=[[wikisource:en:Life Among the Piutes|Life Among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims]]|year=1883|publisher=Cupples, Upham & Company, G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, and by the author}}
* ''Life and Works of Horace Mann'' (3 vols. 1865–68; extended edition in 5 vols., ed. by G. C. Mann, 1891).
* "New Methods for Improving Domestics." ''Herald of Health'' (1869).
* "A Woman's View of Intemperance." ''[[Arthur's Lady's Home Magazine]]'' (1872).
* ''Juanita: A Romance of Real Life in Cuba Fifty Years Ago'' (D. Lothrop Co., 1887).
* ''A Primer of Reading, Spelling, and Drawing'' (2.Ed., 1851).


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}

==Bibliography==
* {{Cite journal |last=Roberts |first=Josephine E. |date=1945 |title=Horace Mann and the Peabody Sisters |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/361283 |journal=The New England Quarterly |volume=18 |issue=2 |pages=164–180 |doi=10.2307/361283 |jstor=361283 |issn=0028-4866}}
* {{cite book|first1=Lura Rogers |last1=Seavey |title=More Than Petticoats: Remarkable Massachusetts Women |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/morethanpetticoa0000roge/page/39/mode/1up?q=Mann|chapter=Elizabeth Palmer Peabody| publisher=Twodot |year= 2004 |isbn=978-0-7627-2599-1 }}
* {{Cite book |last=Tharp |first=Louise Hall |author-link1=Louise Hall Tharp |url=http://archive.org/details/untilvictoryhora0000unse |title=Until victory : Horace Mann and Mary Peabody |date=1953 |publisher=Little, Brown |location=Boston }}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* {{cite book|editor1=Elbert, Monika M |editor2= Julie E Hall|editor3= Katharine Rodier |title= Reinventing the Peabody Sisters|publisher=University of Iowa Press|year= 2006|isbn=978-1-58729-504-1 }}
* {{cite book|editor1=Elbert, Monika M |editor2= Julie E Hall|editor3= Katharine Rodier |title= Reinventing the Peabody Sisters|publisher=University of Iowa Press|year= 2006|isbn=978-1-58729-504-1 }}
* {{cite book|first1=Louise Hall|last1=Hall|author-link1=Louise Hall Tharp |title=Until Victory: Horace Mann and Mary Peabody |location=Westport, Connecticut | publisher=Greenwood Press |orig-year= 1953 | year=1977 |isbn=978-0-8371-9653-4 }}
* {{cite book|first1=Louise Hall|last1=Hall|author-link1=Louise Hall Tharp |title= The Peabody Sisters of Salem | publisher=Little, Brown and Company | location= Boston |orig-year=1948 |year=1988 |isbn=978-0-316-83920-4}}
* {{cite book|first1=Louise Hall|last1=Hall|author-link1=Louise Hall Tharp |title= The Peabody Sisters of Salem | publisher=Little, Brown and Company | location= Boston |orig-year=1948 |year=1988 |isbn=978-0-316-83920-4}}
* {{cite book|first1=Megan| last1=Marshall|author-link1=Megan Marshall |title=The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism |publisher=Mariner Books|year= 2006|isbn=978-0-618-71169-7 }}
* {{cite book|first1=Megan| last1=Marshall|author-link1=Megan Marshall |title=The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism |publisher=Mariner Books|year= 2006|isbn=978-0-618-71169-7 }}
* {{cite book|first1=Lura Rogers |last1=Seavey |title=More Than Petticoats: Remarkable Massachusetts Women | publisher=Twodot |year= 2004 |isbn=978-0-7627-2599-1 }}
* {{cite journal|first1=Robert L. |last1=Straker|title=Thoreau's Journey to Minnesota |journal=The New England Quarterly|volume= 14 |date=September 1941|pages= 549–555 }}
* {{cite journal|first1=Robert L. |last1=Straker|title=Thoreau's Journey to Minnesota |journal=The New England Quarterly|volume= 14 |date=September 1941|pages= 549–555 }}


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20100823110143/http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/UIA%20Online/33mannm.html Portrait of Mary and Benjy]
* [https://archive.today/20130201182124/http://www.salemwomenshistory.com/images/marymann_ivie.jpg Portrait of Mary]
* [http://www.uudb.org/articles/peabodysisters.html The Peabody Sisters] ''Dictionary of Unitarian & Universalist Biography''
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090627153752/http://salemwomenshistory.com/Mary_Peabody_Mann.html Mary Peabody Mann]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110605070001/http://www.nwhm.org/online-exhibits/education/Biographies_Peabody.htm Peabody Sisters] National Women's history Museum
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110530070838/http://www.upress.virginia.edu/books/mann.html Juanita:A Romance of Real Life in Cuba Fifty Years Ago]
* {{Gutenberg author | id=40078| name=Mary Tyler Peabody Mann}}
* {{Gutenberg author | id=40078| name=Mary Tyler Peabody Mann}}
* {{Internet Archive author |sname=Mary Tyler Peabody Mann}}
* {{Internet Archive author |sname=Mary Tyler Peabody Mann}}
* {{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20090627153752/http://salemwomenshistory.com/Mary_Peabody_Mann.html Mary Peabody Mann]}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110605070001/http://www.nwhm.org/online-exhibits/education/Biographies_Peabody.htm Peabody Sisters] National Women's history Museum


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}

Latest revision as of 04:06, 21 December 2024

Mary Tyler Peabody Mann
Portrait of Mary Peabody Mann
Born
Mary Tyler Peabody

(1806-11-16)November 16, 1806
DiedFebruary 11, 1887(1887-02-11) (aged 80)
Occupation(s)Teacher, schoolmistress, writer, and education reformer
Known forPioneer of kindergarten schools, liberal thinker and reformer, and author of Life and Works of Horace Mann
Spouse
(m. 1843; died 1859)
Parent(s)Nathaniel Peabody (father)
Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (mother)
Relatives

Mary Tyler Mann (née Peabody; November 16, 1806 – February 11, 1887) was an American teacher, author, and reformer. Mary was one of three Peabody sisters who were influential women of their day in education, literature, and art.[1][2] Like her sister Elizabeth, she was a leader in education reform and establishment of kindergartens. Sophia was an artist and the wife of Nathaniel Hawthorne. Mary was a participant in the Transcendentalism Movement. She was an abolitionist. She supported the work of her husband Horace Mann, an American education reformer and politician, as well as Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Sarah Winnemucca.

Mary Peabody began teaching at eighteen, first in Maine, then as a governess in Cuba, and she was a tutor and teacher in Massachusetts. She established a school for young children in Salem, Massachusetts about 1836. After her husband died in 1859, Mary Mann and her sister Elizabeth opened the first kindergarten school in the country, where they taught gymnastics, music, French, and social skills in addition to reading, writing, and arithmetic. They published the book Moral Culture of Infancy and Kindergarten Guide to provide information about how to set up and operate a kindergarten.

Among her many publications, she contributed to Domingo Faustino Sarmiento's Facundo, which was first published in 1868.

Personal life

[edit]

Early life

[edit]

Mary Tyler Peabody was born on November 16, 1806, in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, the daughter of Nathaniel and Elizabeth (née Palmer) Peabody,[3][4] the granddaughter of Joseph Palmer, a general during the American Revolutionary War.[1] The Peabodys were a two-income family. Elizabeth advocated for preschool child education and taught school. Nathaniel was an apothecary, doctor, and dentist.[5] Her sisters were Elizabeth, reformer, educator, and pioneer in establishing kindergarten schools and Sophia, painter and the wife of Nathaniel Hawthorne.[4] She had three brothers, Nathaniel, George Francis, and Wellington Peabody.[5] George and Wellington died in the twenties. Nathaniel relied on his sister Elizabeth for his living expenses.[5]

The Peabody family lived in Salem and worshiped at the Second Church (later Unitarian Church) in Salem, Massachusetts. The children received a thorough education at home.[4] Elizabeth Peabody operated a school from the family home, providing a classical education for boys and girls.[5] Her father taught Mary Latin and encouraged her acquiring nine other languages. Nathaniel tutored the Peabody children.[2]

In 1820, the Peabodys moved to a farm in Lancaster, Massachusetts, and daughter Elizabeth taught and ran the school beginning at age 16, based upon what she learned from her mother's tutelage. Young Elizabeth taught from an enlightened perspective, helping her students build character, grow spiritually, and engage in discussions about school work.[6] In 1822, the Peabodys left the farm life of Lancaster for the social city life of Salem, where Nathaniel worked as a dentist.[6]

The Peabody sisters

[edit]
Elizabeth Peabody
Sophia Peabody Hawthorne

The Peabody sisters, intelligent and capable on their own, were stronger together. Sophia was an artist. Elizabeth and Mary were educators who played significant roles in the creation of kindergarten programs and improvements to traditional education.[4] In 1825, Elizabeth and Mary lived in boarding house on Beacon Hill,[7] where they met a fellow boarder Horace Mann in 1832[4] or 1833.[8] Rebecca Clarke, the mother of James Freeman Clarke, operated the boarding house, Ashburton Place.[8] Living there at the time were George Stillman Hillard, Edward Kennard Rand, and Jared Sparks.[9] The sisters were Unitarians who embraced the Transcendentalism movement and supported fellow Transcendentalists Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, who married Sophia.[2][4] The three women, and Mary in particular, supported Horace Mann's career.[4]

Mann, a widow, came to Boston to recuperate from his loss.[9] Elizabeth and Mary frequent talked about their lives and viewpoints. Sometimes, they read to one another. The young women helped Mann manage what Josephine E. Roberts called his "hopeless sorrow".[10] She shared an interest in education with Horace Mann, who was widowed. Although working in the fields of politics and the law, Mann had developed his educational theories.[4] In Estimate of Horace Mann, Mary wrote "I learned from him what night of the soul he had been nurtured and realized for the first time what a misfortune to mankind has been that creed which dishonors God and disenchants man."[11]

In 1833, Mary went to Cuba, where she worked as a governess and looked after her sister Sophia, who went to the country to recuperate from some medical conditions. Mary and Sophia lived there until 1835, when they returned to Salem, where Mary taught until 1840.[4] During that time, Mary and Mann stayed in contact via letters. Mann visited and wrote to Elizabeth periodically to learn what she know of Mary. He said that Mary's letters, written to him or Elizabeth, "affect me like music and more." Mary questioned Elizabeth about the affection and "brotherly tenderness" she shared with Mann during his visits.[12] After Mary returned from Cuba, Mann visited and wrote Mary regularly in Salem in friendship and confidence, to the exclusion of her sister Elizabeth. It was not, though, like Sophia's courtship with Nathaniel Hawthorne.[13] In 1840, Mary lived above the West Street Bookshop near Beacon Hill and Boston Common in Boston with her sisters and parents. Sophia and Mary lived there until they were married.[14] Elizabeth purchased foreign journals and books for her business, which was part bookstore, a lending library, and a place for scholars, liberal thinkers, and transcendentalists to meet.[15]

Marriage and children

[edit]
Francis D'Avignon, Horace Mann, lithograph, 1859, National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.
External image
image icon Portrait of Mary and Benjamin

After knowing each other for a decade, Mary Peabody was engaged to Horace Mann in April 1843 and married him on May 1, 1843, becoming Mary Peabody Mann.[4][16] She was his second wife.[17] They were married at the Peabody home above Elizabeth Peabody's West Street Bookstore in Boston and set sail the same day on the Britannia for Europe.[18][a] Newlyweds Samuel Gridley Howe and Julia Ward joined the Manns on their extended honeymoon.[18] Horace had taken an extended leave of absence to study schools and other institutions—like prisons, asylums, and orphanages—while in Halifax and Europe. His notes of the visits were the source material for his "Seventh Annual Report", and the recognition of what would be useful ideas to implement and what should be avoided.[21] The couples returned on the Britannia on November 6, 1853.[22]

The Manns had three children: Horace Mann Jr., George Mann, and Benjamin Mann.[19] After her children were born, she homeschooled the boys.[4] Horace Mann Jr. died at the age of 24 on November 11, 1868.[23] At the time of her death, George was a principal of Jamaica Plain High School, and Benjamin was a professor of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.[1]

Following her husband's death in 1859, Mary purchased a house in Concord, Massachusetts, and Elizabeth lived with her and her children.[4][24] Mary Tyler Peabody Mann died in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, by February 11, 1887,[3][4] and she was buried at the North Burial Ground in Providence, Rhode Island.[4]

Career

[edit]

Educator

[edit]

Mary Peabody left home at eighteen to teach school in Hallowell, Maine, where her sister Elizabeth had taught.[4] In 1825, she moved to Boston to assist Elizabeth in the operation of a school.[4] Mary and Elizabeth developed an "active interest" in the work of Samuel Gridley Howe and his school, Perkins School for the Blind, after they visited the school with Mann, who sat on the board of trustees.[25] Returning to Boston from Cuba, Mary moved in with her brother George in March 1835, and found employment tutoring an Italian student.[26] At that time Elizabeth taught at Amos Bronson Alcott's experimental Temple School, and Mary substituted for her briefly.[26] Alcott had two revolutionary approaches to education, he did not think that punishment and memorization were necessary for a good education.[7] Mary established a school for young children and lived in Salem.[26]

Meanwhile, in 1837, Mann was appointed secretary to the Massachusetts Board of Education, founded that year.[27] Mary devoted a great deal of time acting as the underpaid statesman's secretary and assistant. Although the board of education's powers were limited, Mann, with Mary's assistance, shaped public opinion regarding school problems and created public support for increasing the pay of teachers and improving their training through the founding of state normal, or teacher-training, schools.[citation needed]

When married, Mary homeschooled her boys at home, and during that time, she did not have teaching positions.[4] In 1859[28] or 1860, she opened the first public kindergarten in the country on Beacon Hill in Boston with her sister Elizabeth. They influenced the creation of public kindergarten schools.[4][28] The school taught reading, writing, arithmetic, gymnastics, singing, and French. They encouraged moral and positive social engagement among the children.[29] They wrote the Moral Culture of Infancy and Kindergarten Guide in 1863 to provide information about how to set up and operate a kindergarten.[29]

Shared efforts with her husband

[edit]
Antioch Hall, Antioch College

During her husband's life she shared in all his benevolent and educational work. Her familiarity with modern languages enabled her to assist him greatly in his studies of foreign reforms.[3] She was Horace Mann's private secretary for many years.[8] She contributed to Common School Journal that he published.[4] Mary Peabody Mann filled the role of president's wife and unofficial dean of women after Horace accepted the presidency of Antioch College, coeducational school. For the first time in the United States, the college provided men and women the same educational opportunities and programs.[4]

Reformer

[edit]

Mary, like her husband, was a reformer. For instance, they both were very interested in education reform.[4] During the Antebellum period, she wrote and spoke against slavery.[1] In her book Christianity in the Kitchen: A Physiological Cookbook, Mary expresses that certain foods, like alcohol and oysters, are not healthy and other foods are good for one's health. She asserts that a person who is careful about choosing healthy foods is an example of true Christianity.[30]

Author

[edit]

Mary wrote about women's rights, child care, kindergarten, and free education for underprivileged children. Her work was published as essays, in magazines, and books.[4] Her children's book, The Flower People: Being an Account of the Flowers by Themselves; Illustrated with Plates, was published in 1838.[31]

Life and Works of Horace Mann by Mary Tyler Peabody Mann (620 pages)

Mary wrote the Life and Works of Horace Mann, in which there was a veiled identification of her as his interpreter or friend.[19] It was published in three volumes.[4] There is only one reference to Mary: "On 1 May 1843, Mr. Mann was again married, and sailed for Europe to visit European schools, especially in Germany, where he expected to derive most benefit."[8]

Her writings, especially those on the kindergarten system, with her sister, Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, are distinguished for vigor of thought and felicity of expression. She published Flower People (1838); Christianity in the Kitchen, a Physiological Cook-Book (Boston, 1857); Culture in Infancy, with Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (1863); Life of Horace Mann (1865); and Juanita, a Romance of Real Life in Cuba, published after her death (1887).[3] The collaboration of Mary and Elizabeth included promoting the speaking career of Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins, the first Native American woman known to secure a copyright and to publish in the English language.[32][33] In addition, Mary helped Hopkins with her book, Life among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims (1883). Mary used her portion of the earnings on opening schools.[4]

In her eightieth year, Mary began to write her first novel; Juanita: A Romance of Real Life in Cuba Fifty Years Ago (1887) appeared posthumously. Elizabeth Peabody commented, "The story is fiction; but the principal characters and the most important incidents are real—it was this that made the author keep back the book from publication till all were dead… It was the merest accident that the work was not published before my sister's death, as she so earnestly desired it should be."[34]

Publications

[edit]

Works Mary Tyler Peabody Man wrote or contributed to, in order by the original published date:

  • Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody (1888) [1838]. The Flower People: Being an Account of the Flowers by Themselves; Illustrated with Plates. Boston: Lee and Shepard.
  • Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody (1851) [1841]. A primer of reading, spelling, and drawing. Philadelphia: William P. Hazard.
  • Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody (1857). Christianity in the Kitchen, a Physiological Cook-Book. Boston: Ticknor and Fields.
  • Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer; Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody (1863). Moral Culture of Infancy, and Kindergarten Guide: With Music for the Plays. Boston: T.O.H.P. Burnham.
  • Sarmiento, Domingo Faustino; Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody (2022) [1868]. Facundo: Ó, Civilización I Barbarie En Las Pampas Arjentinas (in French). Legare Street Press. ISBN 978-1-01-843585-5.
  • Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody (1869). "New Methods for Improving Domestics". Herald of Health.
  • Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody (1872). "A Woman's View of Intemperance". Arthur's Lady's Home Magazine.
  • Winnemucca, Sarah (2019) [1883]. Mary Tyler Peabody Mann (ed.). Life Among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims . Franklin Classics. ISBN 978-0-341-69556-1.
  • Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody (1887). Juanita: A Romance of Real Life in Cuba Fifty Years Ago. D. Lothrop Company. Archived from the original on May 30, 2011.
  • Mann, Mary Tyler Peabody (1891). G. C. Mann (ed.). Life and Works of Horace Mann (three volumes). Extended edition in five volumes.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Roberts states that they sailed on the Hibernia,[19] but that ship sailed from Boston on May 16. As Tharp states, they sailed on the Britannia, which sailed on May 1.[18][20]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d "Recent Deaths: Mrs. Horace Mann". Boston Evening Transcript. February 12, 1887. p. 8. Retrieved March 29, 2024.
  2. ^ a b c Ritchie, Susan (September 16, 2001). "The Peabody Sisters". Dictionary of Unitarian & Universalist Biography. Retrieved March 29, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Isa Carrington Cabell (1900). "Mann, Horace" . In Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J. (eds.). Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x "The Peabody Sisters". Salem Public Library (Massachusetts). May 21, 2022. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d Seavey 2004, p. 41.
  6. ^ a b Seavey 2004, p. 42.
  7. ^ a b Seavey 2004, p. 44.
  8. ^ a b c d Roberts 1945, p. 164.
  9. ^ a b Roberts 1945, pp. 164–165.
  10. ^ Roberts 1945, pp. 165–166.
  11. ^ Roberts 1945, p. 165.
  12. ^ Roberts 1945, pp. 168–175, 177–178.
  13. ^ Roberts 1945, pp. 178–179.
  14. ^ Seavey 2004, pp. 48, 53.
  15. ^ Seavey 2004, pp. 48–49.
  16. ^ Roberts 1945, pp. 179–180.
  17. ^ Roberts 1945, pp. 164, 179–180.
  18. ^ a b c Tharp 1953, p. 189.
  19. ^ a b c Roberts 1945, p. 180.
  20. ^ "British and North American Royal Mail Steam Ships". Boston Post. March 25, 1843. p. 4. Retrieved March 29, 2024.
  21. ^ Tharp 1953, p. 191.
  22. ^ "Horace Mann, Britannia, Liverpool to Boston, arriving November 6, 1843", Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving At Boston, Massachusetts, 1820-1891; Record Group Title: Records of the U.s. Customs Service; Record Group Number: 36; Series Number: M277; NARA Roll Number: 017, Washington, DC: The National Archives – via ancestry.com
  23. ^ "Horace Mann, Jr. dead". The Berkshire County Eagle. November 19, 1868. p. 2. Retrieved March 29, 2024.
  24. ^ Seavey 2004, p. 50.
  25. ^ Roberts 1945, pp. 175–176.
  26. ^ a b c Roberts 1945, p. 177.
  27. ^ Roberts 1945, p. 178.
  28. ^ a b Seavey 2004, p. 39.
  29. ^ a b Seavey 2004, p. 51.
  30. ^ Tharp 1953, p. 290.
  31. ^ Roberts 1945, p. 179.
  32. ^ Voices from the Gaps: "Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins", University of Minnesota website, accessed 11 February 2004
  33. ^ Maloney, Wendi (November 2, 2017). "Native American Heritage Month: Celebrating Sarah Winnemucca". Library of Congress Blog. Retrieved December 20, 2017.
  34. ^ The Critic. 1887. p. 146.

Bibliography

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Elbert, Monika M; Julie E Hall; Katharine Rodier, eds. (2006). Reinventing the Peabody Sisters. University of Iowa Press. ISBN 978-1-58729-504-1.
  • Hall, Louise Hall (1988) [1948]. The Peabody Sisters of Salem. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 978-0-316-83920-4.
  • Marshall, Megan (2006). The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism. Mariner Books. ISBN 978-0-618-71169-7.
  • Straker, Robert L. (September 1941). "Thoreau's Journey to Minnesota". The New England Quarterly. 14: 549–555.
[edit]