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MARY J. HARTMANN
In 1870, Mary taught high school at
During her years of teaching mathematics
at ISNU, Miss Hartmann became well known by students and faculty alike
for her
exacting standards of learning and her requirement for clear and
logical
thinking in her classroom. Her students
came to understand what she demanded from them, and those who succeeded
came to
her classes with their homework done. At
the same time, she was highly respected and considered to be
fair-minded and
had a droll sense of humor. As one
former student put it, she took raw material from the prairie country
schools
and patiently turned those students into functioning teachers who could
think
in terms of reality and express their thoughts clearly.
In 1874, the ISNU Board had ruled that
since the majority of students were women, and since women had shown
their
ability to compete with men teachers, at least one-third of the regular
professorships should be given to women.
However, this never happened and years later, only one
woman had reached
the level of professor. Mary Hartmann
never did. Nevertheless, another former
student recalled that Miss Hartmann enjoyed a rivalry with “new”
Professor
Felmley by trying to stump him and his students with difficult
mathematical
problems. The former student recalled
that Prof. Felmley admitted to him that “She can work harder problems
than I
can,” which the student felt was quite some admission from such an
“ultra-virile mind as Mr. Felmley’s.”
Still another former student recalled that Miss Hartman
was known for
her keen business sense and that a banker had once said that she was
the “best
business man on the faculty at
Aside from mathematics, Miss Hartmann was
also an active member of the Sapphonian Literary Society.
From an ISNU history: “In
1879, a group of hopeful young men,
enamored of Roman History and political thought, organized a club which
they
called the Ciceronian. Its meetings were
given over to debate, oratory, parliamentary procedures, and a study of
issues,
local, state, and national. A model
Roman senate took the place of the regular program every fourth meeting
night. In October 1887, a number of
girls decided to crash the Ciceronian Society, and learn about it for
themselves. The men were expecting
the
impending visit and made no effort to oust their visitors.
Although the girls thought it a joke and
brought along crochet to ease the expected boredom, they instead became
so
interested they decided to start their own society.
The new group was known as the Sapphonian,
after the Tenth Muse, Sappho, the Greek lyric poetess.
The Sapphonians undertook a study of art,
literature, travel, and music. They
initiated an exchange of programs with the Ciceronians, which within
four years,
had developed into a clash of talents and wits known as the Greek Muses
versus
the Roman Senators.” Here at last was an
arena in which the young women were competing with young men on a level
playing
field.
She was also one of the directors of the
Men’s Glee Club, which was organized at ISNU in January of 1899. A group of men decided that their school
should have a glee club after the
After her retirement from teaching in
1909, Miss Hartmann remained an active member of the community through
her
involvement in various organizations: the
As with many highly educated women of her
day, Mary never married. Thus she was
able to devote her life to her career, her activities, and her many
friends.
After being struck by an automobile in 1928,
Mary’s health started to fail and she died on December 16, 1932. She was cremated by a firm in |
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