B.A.
R.D

Mary Jane Patterson (1840-1894)

ducator Mary Jane Patterson is considered to be the first African American woman to receive a B.A. when she graduated from Oberlin College in 1862.
Overview

Mary Jane Patterson in 1840 was a black educator who we celebrate today. She was born in Raleigh, NC, 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 college. Her father worked as a master mason, and the family boarded many black students in their home for many years. lthough Patterson’s early years are unclear, it is believed that she was born into slavery in Raleigh, North Carolina, in 1840. As a young girl, she arrived in Oberlin, Ohio, with her family during the mid-1850s. In 1857, she completed a year of preparatory coursework at Oberlin College. Rather than transitioning into Oberlin’s two-year program for women, she enrolled in the school’s “gentlemen’s course,” a four-year program of classical studies that led to a Bachelor of Arts with high honors in 1862. Patterson spent the next year as a teacher in the southern Ohio town of Chillicothe. At the age of 22, she left Ohio for Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where she taught at the Institute for Colored Youth for the next five years. In 1869, Patterson moved to Washington, D.C., to teach at the newly founded Preparatory High School for Colored Youth (later M Street High School and now Paul Laurence Dunbar High School), which was the first U.S. public high school for African Americans and the first public high school in Washington, D.C. Two years later, in 1871, Patterson became principal of the school, serving for one year before being appointed assistant principal when Richard T. Greener, the first Black graduate of Harvard University in Massachusetts, came on as principal. Greener left after one year, and Patterson resumed her position as principal, staying there until her resignation in 1884. During her tenure, the school thrived and became well-known as a prestigious institution for secondary education. It is believed that Patterson remained at the school as a teacher following her tenure as principal. Aside from her career as an educator, Patterson was involved in women’s rights, helping to found the Colored Women’s League of Washington, D.C. She died at the age of 54 on September 24, 1894. Her home at 1532 15th Street, NW, is part of Washington, D.C.’s historic walking tour.

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