Information: The first column shows data points from Eastman, Sarah Porter. 1839-1930 in red. The third column shows data points from Eastman, Sarah, -1830 in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Julia Eastman was born on July 17, 1837 and Sarah Eastman on June 19, 1839, in Fulton, NY. The sisters grew up in poverty and hardship. Their father was a minister and their mother died when Julia was only six and Sarah four. In order to take care of the house, the sisters had to take turns going to school. Sarah graduated from Mount Holyoke College in 1861 and Julia attended academies in Amherst, Monson, and Ipswich. Sarah taught at Western College in Oxford, OH, and Julia at Oswego Academy. In the 1860s and ’70s, Julia wrote books for boys and girls. Her best-known novel was Striking for the Right, published in 1873, and her publisher said that it was the best book for Sunday school libraries that he had ever seen. (Copies of Julia’s books are in the Dana Hall Archives.) Sarah was asked by Henry Fowle Durant to help with the organization of his new school, Wellesley College. When the school opened she was a professor in the history department and Julia taught a special course in essay writing.
In 1880, Mr. Durant asked the sisters to begin a preparatory school for Wellesley College in order to train women who were not academically ready for college-level work. They were initially reluctant and modestly thought they were not capable of heading a new school. Mr. Durant prevailed and they were an excellent choice to head the new school due to their impeccable gentility, high integrity and strong religious convictions. In 1881, the sisters rented the building at 66 Grove St. from Mr. Durant. The school was named Dana Hall in honor of the man whose property the school stood on, Charles Dana. It was “a school to combine thorough scholarship with symmetrical womanly culture.”
On June 1899, the sisters relinquished their responsibilities as principals of Dana Hall and retired to live at 14 Denton Road. Their house was named the Orchard House after the apple orchard that was on their property. The house still stands today. They continued their interests in the Foreign Missions, the International Girls’ Institute in Madrid and the Peabody Home for Crippled Children in Newton, MA. They were members of the Board of Trustees of the school and spent several winters in Italy. After Miss Julia’s death on January 1, 1911, Miss Sarah continued to live in Orchard House surrounded by the lovely gardens and the apple orchard. Miss Sarah died on June 4, 1930. At the time of Miss Julia’s death, the sisters’ closest friend, Katherine Lee Bates, summed up the far-reaching influence of Miss Julia and Miss Sarah, “All their convictions and aspirations, too, they unconsciously transferred into the very being of the school through the medium of their own spirits — how finely fashioned,…how daintily and richly fulfilled in woman’s graces was known to the multitude who loved them.”
"Julia Arabella (1837-1911) and Sarah Porter (1839-1930) Eastman," Dana Hall School, viewed 7/1/21
Julia Eastman was born on July 17, 1837 and Sarah Eastman on June 19, 1839, in Fulton, NY. The sisters grew up in poverty and hardship. Their father was a minister and their mother died when Julia was only six and Sarah four. In order to take care of the house, the sisters had to take turns going to school. Sarah graduated from Mount Holyoke College in 1861 and Julia attended academies in Amherst, Monson, and Ipswich. Sarah taught at Western College in Oxford, OH, and Julia at Oswego Academy. In the 1860s and ’70s, Julia wrote books for boys and girls. Her best-known novel was Striking for the Right, published in 1873, and her publisher said that it was the best book for Sunday school libraries that he had ever seen. (Copies of Julia’s books are in the Dana Hall Archives.) Sarah was asked by Henry Fowle Durant to help with the organization of his new school, Wellesley College. When the school opened she was a professor in the history department and Julia taught a special course in essay writing.
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In 1880, Mr. Durant asked the sisters to begin a preparatory school for Wellesley College in order to train women who were not academically ready for college-level work. They were initially reluctant and modestly thought they were not capable of heading a new school. Mr. Durant prevailed and they were an excellent choice to head the new school due to their impeccable gentility, high integrity and strong religious convictions. In 1881, the sisters rented the building at 66 Grove St. from Mr. Durant. The school was named Dana Hall in honor of the man whose property the school stood on, Charles Dana. It was “a school to combine thorough scholarship with symmetrical womanly culture.”
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On June 1899, the sisters relinquished their responsibilities as principals of Dana Hall and retired to live at 14 Denton Road. Their house was named the Orchard House after the apple orchard that was on their property. The house still stands today. They continued their interests in the Foreign Missions, the International Girls’ Institute in Madrid and the Peabody Home for Crippled Children in Newton, MA. They were members of the Board of Trustees of the school and spent several winters in Italy. After Miss Julia’s death on January 1, 1911, Miss Sarah continued to live in Orchard House surrounded by the lovely gardens and the apple orchard. Miss Sarah died on June 4, 1930. At the time of Miss Julia’s death, the sisters’ closest friend, Katherine Lee Bates, summed up the far-reaching influence of Miss Julia and Miss Sarah, “All their convictions and aspirations, too, they unconsciously transferred into the very being of the school through the medium of their own spirits — how finely fashioned,…how daintily and richly fulfilled in woman’s graces was known to the multitude who loved them.”
Martha Dickinson Bianchi correspondence concerning publication of the poetry of the American poet, Emily Dickinson: 1881-1943 (inclusive), 1925-1937 (bulk).
Martha Dickinson Bianchi correspondence concerning publication of the poetry of the American poet, Emily Dickinson:, 1881-1943 (inclusive), 1925-1937 (bulk).
Title:
Martha Dickinson Bianchi correspondence concerning publication of the poetry of the American poet, Emily Dickinson: 1881-1943 (inclusive), 1925-1937 (bulk).
Correspondence regarding publication of the poetry of the American poet, Emily Dickinson, by her niece, Martha Dickinson Bianchi.
Martha Dickinson Bianchi correspondence concerning publication of the poetry of the American poet, Emily Dickinson:, 1881-1943 (inclusive), 1925-1937 (bulk).
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Eastman, Sarah Porter. 1839-1930
referencedIn
Papers, 1858-1951
Papers, 1858-1951
Title:
Papers, 1858-1951
Wellesley College records, English themes, notebook, etc., of Helen Temple Cooke, educator and principal of Dana Hall School in Wellesley, Mass.
Cooke, Helen Temple, 1865-1955. Papers, 1858-1951 (inclusive).
Title:
Papers, 1858-1951 (inclusive).
Bulk of her papers are Wellesley College records and English themes, and a note book Cooke kept from 1882 to 1892 when she was conducting a private school in Rutland, Vermont, but correspondence and poems, 1933-1951, from Laura Spencer Porter Pope are included. Collection also contains diaries, 1858-1866, in which Cooke's grandmother, Mrs. Bardwell describes daily life in Walpole, NH, her travels to Decorah, Iowa in 1862 and 1866 to visit her daughter Sarah, the work of the Soldiers' Aid Society, and the Civil War. Also included is material about the Eastman School and Dana Hall School.
Cooke, Helen Temple, 1865-1955. Papers, 1858-1951 (inclusive).
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Eastman, Sarah, -1830
creatorOf
Letter to Mrs. Sarah Eastman, 1834 Jan 1.
Eastman, William, fl. 1834. Letter to Mrs. Sarah Eastman, 1834 Jan 1.
Title:
Letter to Mrs. Sarah Eastman, 1834 Jan 1.
Letter written by William Eastman of Ovid, NY to his mother Mrs. Sarah Eastman of South Hadley Canal, MA. Describes his relocation to Ovid and his new teaching job at the Academy there.
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