|
Dr. JUNE ROSE COLBY
June Rose suffered some sort of illness or
accident in her youth that her family feared she would not live. Her mother confined her for months and nursed
her back to health. June Rose recovered,
but never achieved full physical vigor.
Descriptions of her over the years, from many sources,
refer to her
slight stature. What she lacked in physical traits seems to have more
than been
made up for by her intellectual achievements.
In a period in which teachers often received jobs based on
a tenth grade
education, and lawyers and doctors attended far less formal schooling
than we
would now expect, Rose had an educational background that would place
her at
the very pinnacle of educated people, men or women, of her time.
She graduated from
In 1892 Dr. Colby was appointed professor
of literature at ISNU. This was the
thirty-fifth year of the school’s existence and she was only the third
female
professor in that time. She also spent
much of her time at the school as preceptress, or as it would be called
in more
recent times, Dean of Women.
Many of the courses Colby taught were in
grammar and composition, often considered the poor relatives of
literature at
that time. Much like modern teachers,
she commented that many of her students struggled with the use of the
paragraph
and even with the sentence. She felt
many were deficient in spelling.
Her work load was large with over a
hundred students at times. Each student
wrote twenty-seven exercises a semester and it wasn’t unusual for Colby
to have
to read 14,000 words of student work a night, five nights a week. She was also ahead of her time in advocating
an interdisciplinary approach where teachers of other subjects would
stress the
use of proper English.
June Rose Colby inherited from her mother
a strong sense of expanding women’s rights and their ability to compete
with
men. Upon achieving her position at ISNU,
she became very involved with the Sapphonian Society, a society that
provided
social and intellectual opportunities much as the men enjoyed in their
debate
societies. She was appointed its sponsor
and remained so for twenty years.
Dr. Colby’s interest in the suffrage
movement also came from her mother and developed over the years. In an article written ten years before she
came to ISNU she stated that the demands of teaching and the
uncertainty of her
own health prevented her from taking a larger role in the
suffrage/women’s
rights movement. She felt that having an
impact on her female students was what she could best accomplish. She talked of her small triumphs like getting
one girl to give up “trashy reading”. She
also made sure the girls did not go out in cold weather without being
properly
dressed; something she said parents appreciated. Colby
wrote that she was on friendly terms
with her male students but took an extra interest in widening the
horizons and
expectations of her female students.
From this modest beginning, she became a
long time supporter of the suffrage movement and was an active member
in the Normal
Equal Suffrage Association, which was organized in 1911. This group was
“made
up of women of the Faculty and women of the city of
June Rose Colby’s long tenure on campus
saw her in the role of the leader in teaching classical literature and
one of
the leading advocates of the expanding role of women.
She was active not only in the Sappho society
and the Suffragist movement, but she was also a member of Phi Beta
Kappa, the
National Educational Association, the American Association of
University Women,
and an honorary member of the Delta Kappa Gamma Educational Society for
women. Upon
her retirement, in July of 1931, after more than thirty-nine years of
service
at ISNU, she was made Emerita Professor of Literature.
June Rose never married, like many well
known women of her day. Typically, when
a woman got married, she had to give up her career, what ever that
career may
have been, especially women who taught.
For June Rose, who devoted her life to teaching, this was
not an
issue. In a way, her students at ISNU
were like her children, whom she cared for a great deal.
On May 11, 1941, June Rose died at her home
at
Because she was so highly regarded and so
profound was her influence at ISNU and the surrounding community, that
the
Pantagraph “devoted a two-column story and picture as well as an
editorial
celebrating her life and accomplishments.”
In the 1960s, twenty years after her death, ISNU built a
new residence
hall and named it after her; Colby Hall, which still stands today. |
|
|