New York State College of Home Economics Project oral histories, 1963-64.

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New York State College of Home Economics Project oral histories, 1963-64.

Transcripts of interviews concerning education in home economics and related fields, 1920-1960. Included are interviews with Beulah Blackmore, a College teacher, concerning the development of curriculum in textiles and design at Cornell; with Sarah Gibson Blanding, dean of the College, relating to college administration; with Alice M. Burgoin, a professor of institutional management, concerning food service teaching and research at Cornell; with Orilla Butts, a College extension leader, pertaining to urban extension work in home economics; with Ruth N. Day, a volunteer extension leader, concerning Home Bureau work and the coordination of extension services at the county level in New York State; with Ellen Ann Dunham, a businesswoman, about her career at General Foods and opportunities for the home economist in business; with Jean Failing, a College administrator, concerning counseling students, coordinating instruction, and other aspaects of home economics education at Cornell; with Mary Ford, a psychologist, concerning the placement of a department of child development and family relationships in a college of home economics; with Clara Browning Goodman, a housewife, relating to her student and faculty experiences in home economics at Cornell; with Harry Griffin, a chauffeur, concerning travel by Cornell teachers and administrators; and with Mary Henry, a college administrator, about working with Deans Flora Rose and Sarah Blanding. Also included are interviews with Helen P. Hoefer, a college administrator, concerning extension activities in home economics; with Anna E. Hunn, a cafeteria manager, concerning early classes in home economics at Cornell; with Frances C. Ladd, a volunteer extension leader, concerning the New York State Home Bureau Federation; with Anna E. Lane, a secretary, concerning administrators of the College of Home Economics; with Howard B. Meek, the first dean of the School of Hotel Administration, concerning the origins of that school; with Catherine J. Personius, a professor of nutrition and director of research in home economics, concerning the selection of faculty members and research in nutrition and food preparation; with Mabel Rollins, an economist, pertaining to the program in home management at Cornell; with Catherine Sharp, a housewife, about her experiences in the first class of home economics at Cornell; with Esther H. Stocks, a college administrator, concerning the content of education in home economics; with Flora M. Thurston, an extension agent and professor of education, concerning the content of education in family living and its place in a university setting; with Virginia True, an artist, concerning teaching and research in housing and home decoration at Cornell; and with Helen B. Vandervort, an alumnus and extension agent, concerning experiences as a student and alumni leader. Also, interviews with Elizabeth Lee Vincent, a professor and dean, concerning research and child development at the Merrill Palmer School and at Cornell, and experiences as dean at Cornell; with Ethel B. Waring, a child psychologist, concerning research in child development at Cornell and elsewhere; and with Jean Warren, professor of consumer economics, concerning teaching and research in the economics of the household at Cornell.

26 transcripts.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7910715

Cornell University Library

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New York State College of Home Economics

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Home Economics began as part of the Extension Service in 1900 with the arrival of Martha Van Rensselaer and the establishment of the Farmers' Wives Reading Course. In 1903-1904 Martha Van Rensselaer and Anna Botsford Comstock taught three courses within the College of Agriculture at Cornell University, relating to home and family life. In 1907 the Department of Home Economics was established at Cornell, with Martha Van Rensselaer and Flora Rose as its first instructors. In 1911 the two women bec...

New York State College of Home Economics Project.

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