Cora May Trawick Court, 1875-1970

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Cora May Trawick was born February 13, 1875 in Nashville, Tennessee. One of nine children, she was the daughter of Dr. Andrew Marcus Trawick and Martha Beneta McSwain Trawick, both of Tennessee. In 1896 she received the B.S. degree from Nashville College for Young Ladies, and in 1899 taught elementary school in Mexico at the Collegio Palmore. On April 18, 1901 she married Reverend William Court of St. Louis, and soon thereafter they moved to Kobe, Japan under the auspices of the General Board of Missions, Methodist Episcopal Church (MEC), South. Both Courts taught at Palmore Gakuin while in Japan, and Rev. Court was the minister of the Kobe Union Church. In 1905, after the birth of their first child, Andrew Trawick Court, they returned to Nashville, but later moved to St. Louis. Two more children were born in the next six years: Mary Lula Court in 1907 and William Court III in 1911. For the next nine years, CTC was primarily a homemaker.

After Rev. Court died in the flu epidemic of 1920, St. Paul's Church asked CTC to carry on his work in the religious education of children and young people. To prepare for this new career, CTC studied religious education, psychology, and the "training of children" with the Home Study Department of the University of Chicago's Extension School, and at UC's summer school. After three and one-half years at St. Paul's, CTC was asked by the General Secretary of the General Sunday School Board of the MEC, South, to join his staff in Nashville and undertake a study of child development and the family as a factor in religious education. For the next seven years (1923-1930) she worked with the Board conducting research, teaching parent education classes, and writing articles. She also took additional religion courses at Scarritt College in Nashville.

In 1930 CTC moved to New York, where she studied parent education for two years at Teachers College, Columbia University, receiving the B.S. and M.A. degrees and a professional diploma as a "Leader of Parent Education." In 1932 she returned to Nashville and helped plan and conduct a comparative study of white and black mothers, also continuing to write book reviews and articles on parent and religious education. Later she moved back to New York and then to Detroit, finally settling in Massachusetts, where she taught courses in parent education and in Japanese culture at Lesley College (Cambridge) from 1945 till she retired in 1952. Lesley awarded her an Honorary Doctorate in 1956. While in Massachusetts she was active in the Copley Methodist Church (Boston) and in community work. In the late 1950's and early 1960's she was associated with the Age Center of New England (Boston). Her concern with race relations, family life, religious training, and child development is reflected in her papers. Cora Court died in May 1970.

From the guide to the Papers, 1875-1970, (Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Papers, 1875-1970 Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America‏
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Age Center of New England corporateBody
associatedWith Cambridge (Mass.) Civic Unity Committee corporateBody
associatedWith Court family family
associatedWith Court, William, 1869-1920 person
associatedWith Culbreth, Ada Trawick, 1871-1958 person
associatedWith Jones, Laurence Clifton, 1884- person
associatedWith Lesley College corporateBody
associatedWith McSwain family family
associatedWith Methodist Episcopal Church, South corporateBody
associatedWith Parent and child corporateBody
associatedWith Piney Woods Country Life School, Piney Woods, Miss. corporateBody
associatedWith Trawick family family
Place Name Admin Code Country
Nashville, Tennessee, Family life education in
Japan
Subject
Families, Black
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1875

Death 1970

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