Susan Myra Kingsbury | |
Birth Date: | 18 October 1870 |
Birth Place: | San Pablo, California |
Nationality: | American |
Education: | A.B., A.M., Ph.D. |
Alma Mater: | College of the Pacific Stanford University Columbia University |
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Parents: | William Belmont Kingsbury, M.D. Helen Shuler DeLamater |
Susan Myra Kingsbury (October 18, 1870 – November 28, 1949) was an American professor of economics and a pioneer of social research.
Susan was born in San Pablo, California, in 1870, the daughter of Willard Belmont Kingsbury, M.D., and Helen Shuler née DeLamater, M.S.A. and was raised in Stockton, California. Her father died when she was six, leaving Helen to raise Susan and her older brother, Willard D. Helen was Preceptress (Dean of Women) and Professor of Modern Language and Teacher of Drawing and Painting at the College of the Pacific, where Susan would matriculate then graduate with honors in 1890. In one yearbook, it is noted that her hobby was Woman's Rights. From 1892 to 1900 she was a history teacher (and first female teacher) at Lowell High School in San Francisco, while tending to her ailing mother. She graduated with an A.M. in Sociology from Stanford University in 1899, Phi Beta Kappa.
Following the death of her mother, she moved to New York to study colonial economic history at Columbia University. In 1904, she taught history for a year at Vassar College. She graduated from Columbia with a Ph.D. in history in 1905, with a dissertation titled An Introduction to the Records of the Virginian Company of London. During her stay in London (1903–04), her readings inspired a personal interest in social reform. In 1906 she published the first of what would become a four volume set titled Records of the Virginian Company of London, with the final volume being completed in 1933.
Kingsbury became director of investigation for the Massachusetts Commission on Industrial and Technical Education for a year beginning in 1905. The next year she accepted a position as instructor in history and economics at Simmons University, becoming head of the department. She gained the rank of associate professor in 1907. The same year she was also named director of research for the Women's Educational and Industrial Union in Boston. She served as president of the New England History Teachers Association in 1911. From 1911 to 1913, she directed a national study of the opportunities for women in social service.
Her various publications, including Labor Laws and Their Enforcement (1911) and Economic Efficiency of College Women (1911) caught the attention of Martha Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr College. After listening to an address by Dr. Kingsbury in 1912, Thomas invited her to come to work at the college. In 1915 Dr. Kingsbury became director of the Carola Woerishoffer Graduate Department of Social Economy and Social Research at the college. This was the first graduate department in the country to train students for careers in social service.
In 1919, she helped found the American Association of Schools of Social Work in 1919, and served as vice president of the American Economic Association and the American Sociological Society. She and Thomas founded the Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers in 1921. Susan was chairman of Pennsylvania's first minimum wage board and for nearly a decade served as chairman for the American Association of University Women Committee on Economic and Legislative Status on Women. During 1921–22 she toured China and India, then the Soviet Union in 1929–30, 1932, and 1936 to research conditions for women and children. She published her results of the Russia visits as co-author in 1935. She retired as professor emeritus of social economy at Bryn Mawr College in 1936.
Her published works include: