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  1. M・ケアリ・トーマスは、女性の権利(全米女性参政権協会での活動を含む)に強い関心を持ち、1912年に進歩党を支持し、平和を強く支持しました。. 彼女は、多くの女性が結婚してはならず、既婚女性はキャリアを継続すべきであると信じていました ...

  2. 3 de jun. de 2019 · Martha Carey Thomas (1857-1935) was an American educator, suffragist, linguist, and second President of Bryn Mawr College (1894–1922). Thomas maintained a strong interest in women's rights (including work for the National College Women’s Equal Suffrage League. After 1920 she advocated the policies of the National Woman’s Party and was an ...

  3. 21 de mar. de 2023 · Bryn Mawr College will remove the name of its second president, M. Carey Thomas, from its library, after a multiyear renaming process that forced the historically women’s college to reckon with the former leader’s antisemitic and racist past. The college had previously issued a moratorium on using Thomas’ name when referring to the ...

  4. M. Carey Thomas was born in Baltimore in 1857 and was educated at Cornell University. Denied the opportunity to work for a Ph.D. in the United States, she studied in Germany and Switzerland from 1879 through 1883, when she received her Ph.D. from the University of Zurich. She was appointed professor of English literature and dean of Bryn Mawr ...

  5. 9 de ago. de 2018 · On Wednesday, Bryn Mawr College announced how it would deal with the legacy of M. Carey Thomas, who was its president from 1894 to 1922. The college is removing Thomas's name from several awards and also will stop referring to a central building on campus as Thomas Hall, and to the main room within the building as Thomas Great Hall.

  6. Finch, Edith, Carey Thomas of Bryn Mawr (New York, 1947) is the standard biography; Laurence R. Veysey's biography in Notable American Women is brief but insightful. Thomas' views as an educator are presented in Frankfort, Roberta, Collegiate Women: Domesticity and Career in Turn-of-the Century America (New York, 1977) and Cross, Barbara, ed ...

  7. M. Carey Thomas (1857-1935) became the first Dean and head of the English Department when Bryn Mawr College opened in 1884. Following the death of the college's first president, James Rhoads, in 1894, she was elected to succeed him in the position. She used her position to both expand the College, ensuring several new buildings were constructed ...