Julia S. Tutwiler and Social Progress in Alabama
Anne Gary Pannell,Dorothea E. Wyatt
Julia S. Tutwiler and Social Progress in Alabama
Anne Gary Pannell,Dorothea E. Wyatt
This biography traces the life of Julia Strudwick Tutwiler (1841-1916) from her childhood in Alabama through her pioneering accomplishments as a teacher, administrator, and humanitarian. Born in Tuscaloosa in 1841, Tutwiler was encouraged by her father - an educational innovator and founder of a private academy in Greene County - to pursue academic subjects typically reserved for men. To that end, Henry Tutwiler financed his daughter’s studies at Vassar, in Germany and Paris, and under professors at Washington and Lee University in Virginia. After returning to Alabama in 1876, Tutwiler accepted an appointment as a teacher of modern language and literature at the Tuscaloosa Female College. While in this position, she began her work as one of Alabama’s earliest advocates for women’s rights and educational reform and also led a campaign with the Women’s Christian Temperance Union against alcoholism, worked for the improvement of prison conditions and rehabilitative services for prisoners, and supported the expansion of state teacher training. From Paul Pruitt’s new introduction, we learn that anyone who reads biographies of Tutwiler and [Booker T.] Washington will notice the similari
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