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RandySF

(58,973 posts)
Mon Feb 3, 2014, 04:39 AM Feb 2014

Btw, the woman who wrote American the Beautiful was a lesbian.

Probably best known as the author of the words to "America the Beautiful," Katharine Lee Bates was a prolific poet and a professor of English and head of the English department at Wellesley, where she had been a student in its earliest years.

Her father, a Congregational minister, died when Katharine was less than a month old. Her brothers had to go to work to help support the family, but Katharine was given an education. She received her B.A. from Wellesley College in 1880. She wrote to supplement her income. "Sleep" was published by The Atlantic Monthly during her undergraduate years at Wellesley.

Bates' teaching career was the central interest of her adult life. She believed that through literature, human values could be revealed and developed.

A trip to Colorado in 1893 and the view from Pikes Peak inspired Katharine Lee Bates to write the poem, "America the Beautiful," which was published in The Congregationalist two years after she wrote it. The Boston Evening Transcript published a revised version in 1904, and the public adopted the idealistic poem quickly.

Katharine Lee Bates helped found the New England Poetry Club in 1915 and served for a time as its president, and she was involved in a few social reform activities, working for labor reform and planning the College Settlements Association with Vida Scudder. She was raised in the Congregational faith of her ancestors; as an adult, she was deeply religious but could not find a church in whose faith she could be certain.

Katharine Lee Bates lived for twenty-five years with Katharine Coman in a committed partnership that has sometimes been described as a "romantic friendship." Bates wrote, after Coman died, "So much of me died with Katharine Coman that I'm sometimes not quite sure whether I'm alive or not."

http://womenshistory.about.com/od/writers19th/p/katharine_bates.htm

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Btw, the woman who wrote American the Beautiful was a lesbian. (Original Post) RandySF Feb 2014 OP
And the Pledge of Allegiance was written by a socialist.... ProudToBeBlueInRhody Feb 2014 #1
Thanks for the history of Cha Feb 2014 #2
Thanks. I never knew any of this. n/t truth2power Feb 2014 #3
Very forward looking brothers, to make sure a woman got an education back then. merrily Feb 2014 #4
The Congregationalist have always been very liberal. intheflow Feb 2014 #6
Interesting. Thanks. merrily Feb 2014 #7
Thanks for posting this theHandpuppet Feb 2014 #5

ProudToBeBlueInRhody

(16,399 posts)
1. And the Pledge of Allegiance was written by a socialist....
Mon Feb 3, 2014, 04:43 AM
Feb 2014

....who despite being a minister, never put the words "Under God" in there.

More things the right won't talk about.

merrily

(45,251 posts)
4. Very forward looking brothers, to make sure a woman got an education back then.
Mon Feb 3, 2014, 07:19 AM
Feb 2014

She must have been exceptional, too.
'
Good on her and them.

intheflow

(28,481 posts)
6. The Congregationalist have always been very liberal.
Mon Feb 3, 2014, 11:28 AM
Feb 2014

They also raised up the first woman doctor in the US (Elizabeth Blackwell) and the first ordained woman minister (Antoinette Brown Blackwell).

theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
5. Thanks for posting this
Mon Feb 3, 2014, 08:57 AM
Feb 2014

I almost wrote, "Thanks for posting part of our lost history". Then I realized how false that statement would be. The contributions of LGBTs to the arts, to the sciences, to history was never "lost", it was deliberately and systematically obscured or erased.

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