- Ella Flagg Young
Ella Flagg Young (15 January, 1845 - 1918) was an American educator.
She was born in
Buffalo, New York to Theodore and Jane (Reed) Flagg. She didn't attend school until the age of ten, after teaching herself how to read and write. She graduated in 1862 from the Chicago Normal School. She studied at theUniversity of Chicago underJohn Dewey and received her Ph.D. in 1900.She was married to William Young in 1868.They had no children together, and William died when she was 27 years old. Her teaching career spanned 53 years (1862-1915). She became superintendent of schools in Chicago in 1887;
professor of education in the University of Chicago in 1899; principal of the Chicago Normal School in 1905; and was superintendent of schools of Chicago from 1909 until her resignation in 1915. She served on the Board of Education for the State of Illinois from 1888 to 1913. She was the first woman in America to head a large city school system.In 1910-1911 she was appointed the first woman president of the
National Education Association . Mrs. Young also identified herself strongly with the woman's suffrage movement. She died in the1918 flu pandemic , on October 26, 1918, at age 72 . [Blount, Jackie M. (2004) "Fit to Teach", SUNY Press. p. 56. ISBN 0-7914-6267-6.]The University of Illinois conferred on her the degree of LL.D. She published many educational works, including:
* "Isolation in the School" (1901)
* "Ethics in the School" (1902)
* "Some Types of Modern Educational Theory" (1902)She also founded and edited "The Educational Bi-Monthly", a free journal for teachers.Publications
* John T. McManis, "biography" (Chicago, 1916)
chool Named for Ella Flagg Young
The Chicago Public School system named an elementary school (K-8) in honor of Dr. Young in 1924. The school is located in the north Austin neighborhood and continues to be used as an elementary school.
The school is traditional masonry construction, with a central boiler heating system. In 1998, an addition was built to the school almost doubling the usable floorspace, and the masonry was renovated and the windows were glazed.
You can view other photos of the school as it currently exists on the [http://www.umsl.edu/~sauter/EFY/outside.html reunion website] of the 1968 class.
References
Biographical Dictionary of American Educators.
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