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Mary Jane Patterson
(1840-1894)

from Darlene Clark Hine, Elsa Barkley Brown, Rosalyn Terborg-Penn, Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, Vol II M - Z [Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1993] pp. 911-912

      The 1860 census lists Mary Jane Patterson as one of fourteen residents in her parents' household in Oberlin, Ohio. Two years later she graduated from Oberlin College, becoming the first Black woman to receive a B. A. degree from an established American college. Patterson devoted the rest of her life to the education of Black children.

      Born in Raleigh, North Carolina, in 1840, Patterson was the oldest of Henry and Emeline Patterson's seven children. In 1856, she and her family moved to Oberlin, Ohio, where they joined a growing community of free Black families who worked to send their children to the college. Henry Patterson worked as a master mason, and for many years the family boarded large numbers of Black students in their home. Eventually, four Patterson children graduated from Oberlin College. all became teachers.

      Mary Jane Patterson's first known teaching appointment was in 1865, when she became an assistant to Fanny Jackson in the Female Department of the Institute for Colored Youth in Philadelphia. In 1869, when Jackson was promoted to principal, Patterson accepted a teaching position in Washington, D. C., at the newly organized Preparatory High School for Colored Youth -- later known as Dunbar High School. She served as the school's first Black principal, from 1871-72, and was reappointed from 1873-74. During her administration, the name "Preparatory High School" was dropped, high school commencements were initiated, and a teacher-training department was added to the school. Patterson's commitment to thoroughness as well as her "forceful" and "vivacious" personality helped her establish the school's strong intellectual standards (Terrell 1917).

      Patterson also devoted time and money to other Black institutions in Washington, D. C., especially to industrial schools for young Black women, as well as to the Home for Aged and Infirm Colored People. She never married, nor did her two Oberlin-educated sisters (Chanie and Emeline), who later joined her and taught in district schools.

      Mary Jane Patterson died in Washington, D. C., September 24, 1894, at the age of fifty-four. Her pioneering educational attainments and her achievements as a leading Black educator influenced generations of Black students.

Bibliography
      Bigglestone, William. They Stopped in Oberlin: Black Residents and Visitors of the Nineteenth Century (1981); Oberlin College Archives. Alumni Records. "Mary Jane Patterson" file (1981), and Lawson-Merrill papers, "Mary Jane Patterson" file, and "Patterson Family" file; Perkins, Linda. "Fanny Jackson Coppin and the Institute of Colored Youth," Ph. D. diss. (1978); Terrell, Mary Church, "History of the High School for Negroes in Washington," Journal of Negro History (July 1917).

MARLENE DEAHL MERRILL

For More Information

      Oberlin College

      North Carolina Museum of History

     

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