Emily Montague Mulkin Bishop | |
Birth Name: | Emily Montague Mulkin |
Birth Date: | November 3, 1858 |
Birth Place: | Forestville, Chautauqua County, New York, US |
Death Date: | November 22, 1916 (aged 58) |
Death Place: | New York City |
Occupation: | Lecturer, instructor, editor, author |
Language: | English |
Alma Mater: | Forestville High School |
Genres: | --> |
Subject: | Delsarte educational movement |
Spouse: | Coleman E. Bishop |
Emily Montague Bishop (Mulkin; November 3, 1858 – November 22, 1916) was an American Delsartean lecturer and instructor in dress, expression and physical culture. She was recognized as one of the noted editors and authors on this subject in the United States,[1] commonly using the name Emily M. Bishop. She was also a pioneer suffragist. Among her publications are Americanized Delsarte Culture (1892), Self-expression and Health: Americanized Delsarte Culture (1895), Interpretive Forms of Literature (1903), Seventy Years Young, or The Unhabitual Way (1907), Daily Ways to Health (1910), and The Road to "Seventy Years Young": Or, The Unhabitual Way (1916).
Emily Montague Mulkin was born in Forestville, Chautauqua County, New York, November 3, 1858. Her parents were Asa L. Mulkins (1827-1893) and Ann E. (De Witt) Mulkins (1827-1861).[2]
She was educated in the Forestville High School.
After leaving school, Bishop taught for four years, serving as assistant principal of the union school in Silver Creek, New York. She then gave several years to the study of Delsarte work in various cities.
After marriage, she moved to Black Hills, South Dakota. Bishop was elected superintendent of public schools in Rapid City, South Dakota, being the first woman thus honored in the Dakota Territory.
In 1885, she was invited to establish a Delsarte department in the Chautauqua School of Physical Education, in the Chautauqua Assembly, New York. She has had charge of that department for four seasons, and it steadily grew in popularity. In 1891, it was the largest single department in the Assembly. From the Chautauqua work grew a large public work in lecturing and teaching. Her lectures were on literature and physical culture. She gave public readings at the Pratt Institute, Brooklyn; Drexel Institute, Philadelphia; Mechanics Institute, Rochester, New York; and in principal cities of the U.S. and Canada. She was the originator and interpreter of the policical readings known as "Dramatic Scenes from the United States Senate", through which she gained national fame.[3]
She wrote a number of articles for various magazines and published several books, including Americanized Delsarte Culture.
In 1884, she married Coleman E. Bishop, editor of the Judge, New York.
Just before her illness, Bishop became connected with the Women's Democratic League and spoke at meetings on behalf of President Wilson. She died November 22, 1916, at New York Hospital, in New York City, age 59.[4]