Alice Mabel Bacon

Alice Mabel Bacon (February 26, 1858 May 1, 1918) was an American writer, women's educator and a foreign advisor to the Japanese government in Meiji period Japan.

Alice Mabel Bacon
Born(1858-02-26)February 26, 1858
New Haven, Connecticut, United States
DiedMay 1, 1918(1918-05-01) (aged 60)
New Haven, Connecticut, United States
Occupationeducator
Childrentwo (adopted)
Parent(s)Leonard Bacon (father)
Catherine Elizabeth Terry (mother)
Academic background
EducationBachelor of Arts
Alma materHarvard University
Academic work
EraMeiji period
InstitutionsHampton Institute
Gakushuin
Joshi Eigaku Juku
Miss Capen's School for Girls
Notable works
  • The Work of the Tuskegee Normal School (1887)
  • Japanese Girls and Women (1891)
  • A Japanese Interior (1893)
  • The Negro and the Atlantic exposition. (1896)
  • In the Land of the Gods Some Stories of Japan (1905)

Early life

Alice Mabel Bacon was the youngest of the three daughters and two sons of Reverend Leonard Bacon, pastor of the Center Church in New Haven, Connecticut, and professor in the Yale Divinity School, and his second wife, Catherine Elizabeth Terry. In 1872, when Alice was fourteen, Japanese envoy Mori Arinori selected her father's home as a residence for Japanese women being sent overseas for education by the Meiji government, as part of the Iwakura Mission.[1] Alice received twelve-year-old Yamakawa Sutematsu as her house-guest. The two girls were of similar age, and soon formed a close bond. For ten years the two girls were like sisters and enhanced each other's interests in their different cultures.[1][2]

Education and career

Alice subsequently graduated from high school, but was forced to give up hopes of attending university due to economic circumstances. Nevertheless, she was able to pass examinations for a Bachelor of Arts from Harvard University in 1881, and received a post in 1883 as a teacher at the Hampton Institute.

In 1888, Alice received an invitation to come to Japan from Yamakawa Sutematsu and Tsuda Ume to serve as a teacher of the English language at the Gakushuin Women's School (Peeresses' School) for Japanese girls from aristocratic families. She returned to Hampton Normal School after a year. Hearing that one of her students wanted to become a nurse but was refused entrance into training schools because of her race Ms. Bacon sought to establish a hospital at the Institute. With the help of General Samuel C. Armstrong, Hampton's principal, enough funds were raised to construct the Dixie Hospital. The hospital which opened in May 1891 provided nursing education as well as medical care for the surrounding community.

Friends meet again: Tsuda Umeko, Alice Mabel Bacon, Uryū Shigeko, Ōyama Sutematsu (from left to right)

In April 1900, she was invited back to Japan to help establish the Joshi Eigaku Juku (Women's English Preparatory School), which was the forerunner of Tsuda College, staying until April 1902. During most of this period, she assisted Tsuda Umeko on a voluntary basis, refusing monetary compensation except for her housing.

Alice remained single all of her life, although she did adopt two Japanese girls as her daughters, Umeko's niece Watanabe Mitsu, and Hitotsuyanagi Makiko, with the latter subsequently married William Merrell Vories in 1919.

Based on her experiences in Japan, Bacon published three books and many essays, and eventually came to be known as a specialist of Japanese culture and women. Her last teaching was at Miss Capen's School for Girls at Northampton, Massachusetts from 1908 and ended in 1910.

Death

Alice died in her hometown at New Haven, Connecticut in 1 May 1918 at the age of 60. She was buried at the Grove Street Cemetery.

Works

  • The Work of the Tuskegee Normal School 1887
  • Japanese Girls and Women (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1891) download on Project Gutenberg
  • A Japanese Interior (Boston, Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1893)
  • The Negro and the Atlantic exposition. 1896
  • In the Land of the Gods Some Stories of Japan. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company. 1905.

Notes

  1. Methodist Episcopal Church, 286-87
  2. Takagi, p. 78

Footnote

1.^ Originally there were five girls sent but two became ill and returned to Japan the other three Yamakawa Sutematsu, Tsuda Ume, and Nagai Shigeko. Ms. Tsuda was placed with the Charles Lanman family and Ms. Nagai was placed in the John Stevens Cabot Abbott household. "Three Japanese Girls." The Heathen Woman's Friend. pp. 286-87.
gollark: Merry New Year!
gollark: ^ why I never want to have alcohol.
gollark: "I can only be social if I take mind-altering drugs"
gollark: It's `Amazing`.
gollark: Good-quality editing there.

References

  • Furuki, Yoshiko; et al., eds. (1991). The Attic Letters: Ume Tsuda's Correspondence to Her American Mother. Tokyo: Weatherhill.
  • Kasten, Marie A. (1928). "Bacon, Alice Mabel". Dictionary of American Biography. 1. Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • "Three Japanese Girls". The Heathen Woman's Friend. XXVII (1). Boston: Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church. July 1895.
  • Rose, Barbara (1991). Tsuda Umeko and Women's Education in Japan. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
  • Takagi, Yasaka (1975). "Bacon, Alice Mabel". Notable American Women. 1 (4th ed.). The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.