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Katharine Lee Bates
Week of May 22, 2000
As
we salute Old Glory during commencement, let's hearken to an era
gone by, and remember Katharine Lee Bates (August 12, 1859 - March
28, 1929), Wellesley Person of the Week. A celebrated poet, Bates
authored the vividly descriptive "America the Beautiful", whose
words and melody grace public gatherings throughout the land to
this day.
Bates was born in Falmouth,
MA. Sadly, her father, Congregational minister William Bates,
passed away a mere month following her birth. Katharine's brothers
entered the world of work at an early age to help their mother,
Cornelia Frances (Lee) Bates, support the family in William's absence,
and to ensure that their sister "Katie" would receive the finest
education available. Her intellect and academic potential were evident
even in her earliest years.
The Bates family moved from Falmouth to Wellesley,
MA, when Katharine was 12 years old. Bates graduated from Newton
High School and Wellesley High School. She then enrolled at the
recently founded Wellesley College, where she earned a B.A degree
in 1880, and was president of the college's second graduating class.
She
found her calling as a teacher, upon graduating from Wellesley College.
Bates taught at Natick High School and at Dana Hall, a preparatory
school in Wellesley. In 1885, she became an instructor of English
literature at Wellesley College. Following a year of studies at
Oxford, Wellesley Collegegranted Bates an M.A. degree, and she became
a full professor and was named head of Wellesley College's English
Literature Department in 1891, a post she would hold until 1920.
She retired in 1925.
Her teaching demeanor was described by many
students and colleagues as serene. Nevertheless, she demanded the
highest standards of accuracy and integrity of her students. When
intellectually provoked, she could be lured into debate. Her keen
mental power, knowledge of the facts, and mastery of the art of
badinage tested the limits of anyone foolish enough to try to defeat
her in argument. Her intellectual agility stood in clear contrast
to her physical nature, which was ungainly, and characterized by
very slow movements.
Bates
was a lecturer at Colorado College, in Colorado Springs, CO, in
the summer of 1893. That year, she wrote the poem "America the Beautiful",
which was the fruit of her inspiration, after experiencing the breathtaking
view of the countryside from atop nearby Pike's Peak. She rewrote
the poem in 1904, and wrote her 3rd
and final version in 1913.
Bates is widely recognized as a writer of
poetry, verse, travel books and literary texts. She was also an
accomplished Spanish/English translator of texts. Bates dedicated
her book Yellow Clover: A Book of Remembrance, to Katharine Coman.
Much of the poetry contained therein, refers to her relationship
with Coman. Bates shared many years with her companion, Coman, who
was a professor, department chair and dean at Wellesley College.
Coman died of cancer in 1915.
Bates
was an active member of numerous and wide ranging humanitarian,
academic, and political organizations, including the American
Association for Labor Legislation, the Antivivisection Society,
the League
of Nations and the American Poetry Society, to name but a few.
Katharine Lee Bates died at her Wellesley
home on March 28, 1929 at the age of 70.
For more information see Dorothy Burgess,
Dream and Deed: The Story of Katharine Lee Bates (Norman, Oklahoma:
University of Oklahoma Press, 1952) and the entry on Katharine Lee
Bates in Notable American Women : the modern period : a biographical
dictionary, edited by Barbara Sicherman, Carol Hurd Green with Ilene
Kantrov, Harriette Walker [Cambridge, Mass. : Belknap Press of Harvard
University Press, 1980]

Written by Mur Wolf
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