Separate Lives

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19th century history
19th century women
A01=Silvia Pettem
Amos Bixby
Anna von Brandis
Author_Silvia Pettem
Boulder Fortnightly Club
Boulder history
Category=DNB
Category=JBSF1
Category=JN
Category=NHK
Category=NHTB
Colorado archives
Colorado history
Dora Mae Housel
Dorothy Housel
Dr. J. Brackett
Dr. James Bell
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Eric Rieder
Europe trips
family affairs
family tree mysteries
female educators
female friendships
female professors
foreign language study
foreign language teachers
gender roles
genealogical research
genealogy
Goethe's Faust
hidden relationships
honorary degrees
Jane Barstow
Jane Rippon

Product details

  • ISBN 9781493079353
  • Weight: 494g
  • Dimensions: 160 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Aug 2024
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Mary Rippon was a pioneer woman educator in the male-dominated world of nineteenth-century academia. As the first female professor at the University of Colorado, she is believed to have been the first woman in the U.S. to teach at a state university. Mary received wide acclaim for her teaching, but Victorian society forced her to lead two very separate lives. "Miss Rippon," as she was always called, was both a professional woman and a mother in an era when these two roles could not be combined. In order to keep her job, she hid her husband and child behind a Victorian veil of secrecy that spanned two continents. Now, for the first time, the full story of the conflicts between this extraordinary woman’s public and private lives is revealed.

Readers will follow Mary from her small midwestern hometown to the great centers of culture in Europe. In January 1878, after several years of education in Germany, France, and Switzerland, the soft-spoken twenty-seven-year-old was welcomed at the newly opened University of Colorado in the then-small frontier town of Boulder. The growth of her lengthy career paralleled the early growth of the university, where she worked her way up from first female faculty member to the university's first female professor, eventually chairing the Department of German Language and Literature.

The truth of Mary’s separate lives was not revealed until nearly a century later, in 1976, when her elderly grandson revealed to a university librarian that he was Mary’s descendant. In 2006, Mary received a posthumous honorary degree from the University of Colorado, and a scholarship was recently endowed in her name. Silvia Pettem’s carefully researched biography weaves together the story of Mary’s private life with her professional career: not to tarnish Mary's well-deserved reputation, but rather to uncover the human side of a woman whose circumstances clashed with the mores of her times.

Silvia Pettem is a Colorado-based historical researcher, writer, and author of more than twenty books on history, biography, missing and unidentified persons, and true crime. She also has a knack for pulling intriguing women out of the past.

Separate Lives: Uncovering the Hidden Family of Victorian Professor Mary Rippon is set in the late nineteenth century. Pettem's other nonfiction narratives on women focus on later time periods. In Search of the Blonde Tigress: The Untold Story of Eleanor Jarman (2023) exposes and expands upon a true crime story from the 1930s, while Someone's Daughter: In Search of Justice for Jane Doe, Updated Edition (2023) follows a murder investigation (and identification of the victim) from the 1950s.

Pettem lives with her husband and two cats in the mountains west of Boulder, where she continues her research and writing. She can be reached through her website, silviapettem.com.

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