Dexter, Elisabeth Anthony, 1887-

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A.B., Bates College (1908); A.M., Columbia University (1911); Ph.D., Clark (1923). Author of Colonial Women of Affairs; and of Career Women of America.

From the description of Robert Cloutman and Elisabeth Anthony Dexter papers, 1797-1971 (bulk 1935-1968) [1797-1971] (Brown University). WorldCat record id: 122598989

Author; Professor, history.

From the description of Papers 1837-1950. (Smith College). WorldCat record id: 46726144

Elisabeth Anthony Dexter (1887-1971) earned an A.B. from Bates College, A.M. from Columbia University, and in 1923, a PhD in history from Clark University. She also studied at Brown, Oxford, and Radcliffe. Her areas of interest included international relations, pre- Revolutionary American professional and business women, and British history. From 1923-27, she taught British and American history and was head of Skidmore College's history department. Dexter represented the Church Peace Union in New York City, London, then Geneva, in 1945-48. She travelled throughout Europe. With her husband, Robert C. Dexter, the director of Rhode Island's World Affairs Council, she provided aid to refugees in Lisbon, 1940-44. She was the European director for the Unitarian Service Committee. She was active in the League of Women Voters and the American Association of University Women. She wrote Colonial Women of Affairs (1924) and Career Women of America, 1776-1840 (1950).

From the guide to the Elisabeth Anthony Dexter Papers MS 47., 1837-1950, (Sophia Smith Collection)

Robert Cloutman Dexter

Robert Cloutman Dexter was born in 1887 in Shelburne, Nova Scotia, to William and Willamina (Snow) Dexter. He earned both his A.B. (1912) and A.M. (1917) from Brown University before being awarded the Ph.D. in Sociology in 1923 from Clark University (Worcester, Mass.), where he wrote his dissertation on French Canadian emigration to New England. In 1914 he married Elisabeth Anthony, and they had two children, Lewis and Harriet.

Dr. Dexter taught sociology and political science at Skidmore College before he was appointed Social and Foreign Relations Secretary for the American Unitarian Association in 1927. He became Executive Director of the Unitarian Service Committee upon its formation in 1940 and worked with his wife in the Lisbon office assisting European war refugees until the end of 1944. He also served as attaché to the American Embassy in Lisbon in 1944.

In 1945 Dr. Dexter became a European representative of the Church Peace Union (now the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs), a position requiring extensive world travel. Andrew Carnegie had organized the CPU in 1914 to promote “moral leadership and … alternatives to armed conflict” ( Carnegie Council web site ) through the cooperation of world churches and spiritual organizations. Following this appointment, Dr. Dexter worked for various religious/humanitarian organizations, including the World Alliance for Friendship through the Churches and World Affairs Council of Rhode Island.

Among his publications are Social Adjustment (Knopf, 1927) and The Minister and Family Troubles: a Case Study of the Minister and the Church to Sex and Family Problems (R.R. Smith, 1931), written jointly with his wife Elisabeth.

Robert Dexter died in 1955 at age 68.

Elisabeth Anthony Dexter

Elisabeth Anthony Dexter was born in 1887 to Alfred W. and Harriet (Angell) Anthony in Bangor, Maine. In 1908 she graduated from Bates College with a Bachelor’s degree in Literature. After receiving her A.M. from Columbia, she earned a Ph.D. in American History from Clark University (Worcester, Mass.) in 1923.

Like her husband Robert, Elisabeth taught at Skidmore before devoting herself to humanitarian work with the Unitarian Service Committee from 1941 to 1944 in their Lisbon office. While in Lisbon she performed intelligence work for the Office of Strategic Services. From 1945 until 1948 she joined her husband in representing the Church Peace Union in Europe.

In addition to her humanitarian work, Dr. Dexter remained an active scholar and educator. She published two noteworthy historical studies of colonial and early American women’s professions: Colonial Women of Affairs (1924) and Career Women of America, 1776-1840 (1951), both of which were reprinted in 1971. She spent nearly twenty years researching and writing an ultimately unpublished biography of Sir Walter Scott’s wife Charlotte, variously titled The Happy Marriage and the Mystery and Sir Walter Scott and his Wife. In 1945 she was awarded the honorary LL.D. from her alma mater, Bates College.

Elisabeth Dexter died on March 26, 1971, in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

The Dexters and the Unitarian Service Committee

The Unitarian Service Committee (USC) was formalized in 1940 as the humanitarian arm of the American Unitarian Association (AUA). Several years earlier, Robert C. Dexter, director of the AUA’s Department of Social Relations, had called for action in response to Hitler’s annexation of the Sudetenland, a region of western Czechoslovakia inhabited by ethnic Germans. In 1939 Rev. Waitstill and Martha Sharp traveled to Prague to assess the resulting refugee problem. Weeks later the Nazis occupied the entire country and the Sharps began the USC rescue and relief effort that would eventually be based in Marseilles and Lisbon.

In 1940 Robert Dexter became Executive Director of the Unitarian Service Committee and traveled with Elisabeth to Europe early in 1940 to evaluate the refugee problem and recommend relief measures. The following year they established the Lisbon office to assist refugees and worked out of it until the end of 1944. According to the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee (the Unitarian and Universalist service committees formally merged in 1963 after years of collaboration) the USC effort resulted in the rescue of between 1000 and 3000 individuals by the end of World War II.

Alfred Williams Anthony

Elisabeth Dexter’s father, Alfred Williams Anthony, was born on January 13, 1860, in Providence, Rhode Island, to Lewis Williams and Britannia (Waterman) Anthony. He graduated from Brown University in 1883; after graduating from Cobb Divinity School (Lewiston, Maine) he entered the Free Baptist ministry. He married Harriet Angell in 1885 and settled in Maine, where he pursued his work as a minister, author and academic. He and Harriet had four children, only two of whom reached adulthood: Elisabeth (1887) and Alfred (1894). Harriet died in 1899, and Anthony married Gertrude Libbey of Lewiston, Maine, in 1903, after which were born two more children: Richard (1903) and Warren (1905).

Dr. Anthony received his Doctorate in Divinity from Cobb in 1902 and taught for many years at Bates College School of Divinity. In addition, he worked for the American Baptist Home Mission Society and, after retirement, the Federal Council of Churches. Throughout his career, he wrote extensively on the Baptist ministry, interdenominational relations and financial planning for nonprofit organizations.

Alfred Williams Anthony died in 1939.

From the guide to the Robert Cloutman and Elisabeth Anthony Dexter papers, Dexter (Robert Cloutman and Elisabeth Anthony) papers, 1797-1971, (bulk 1935-1968), (Brown University Library Special Collections)

Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith American Baptist Home Mission Society. corporateBody
associatedWith American Unitarian Association. Unitarian Service Committee. corporateBody
associatedWith American Unitarian Association. Unitarian Service Committee--History. corporateBody
associatedWith Anthony, Alfred Williams, 1860-1939. person
associatedWith Anthony family|zRhode Island family
associatedWith Bates College (Lewiston, Me.)--Faculty. corporateBody
associatedWith Brown University--Alumni and alumnae. corporateBody
associatedWith Corson, James Clarkson person
associatedWith Dexter, Robert Cloutman, 1887-1955. person
associatedWith England, Sylvia person
associatedWith Free Will Baptists (1780?-1911) corporateBody
associatedWith Gano, Seth Thomas, 1879-1955 person
associatedWith Joy, Charles Rhind, 1885- person
correspondedWith Nation (New York, N.Y. : 1865). corporateBody
associatedWith Quynn, Dorothy MacKay, 1899- person
associatedWith Scott, Charlotte Charpentier--Biography. person
associatedWith Scott, Walter, Sir, 1771-1832 person
associatedWith Sharp, Martha Alice Ingham Dickie person
associatedWith Sharp, Waitstill person
Place Name Admin Code Country
United States
Europe
Portugal
Subject
Church work with refugees
Women
Women
Women
Women
Women
Women
World War, 1939-1945
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1887

Death 1972

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