Barbara Miller Solomon

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Born
Barbara Leah Miller

(1919-02-12)February 12, 1919
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedAugust 20, 1992(1992-08-20) (aged 73)
OccupationHistorian
Barbara Miller Solomon
Born
Barbara Leah Miller

(1919-02-12)February 12, 1919
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedAugust 20, 1992(1992-08-20) (aged 73)
Alma materRadcliffe College
OccupationHistorian
Years active1957–1985
EmployerHarvard University
Known forWomen's history
Children3

Barbara Leah Miller Solomon (February 12, 1919 – August 20, 1992) was an American historian. She studied US immigration and women's history and taught the first course at Harvard University on the history of US women.

Born in Boston on February 12, 1919, Barbara Leah Miller was the only child of Bessie (Pinsky) and Benjamin Allen Miller, Jewish immigrants from Russia.[1] She attended Girls' Latin School,[1] then Radcliffe College, where she graduated magna cum laude in American History and Literature in 1940.[2] She next earned a doctorate in American Civilization at Harvard in 1953.[3][1] She studied with Oscar Handlin and Arthur M. Schlesinger Sr.[2]

Career

She began teaching in 1957, first at Wheelock College in Boston.[3] She taught at Harvard from 1959 until her retirement in 1985.[3] She taught the first course at Harvard University on the history of US women.[3] She also led the Radcliffe women’s archive, which became the Schlesinger Library, from 1959 to 1963.[2] In 1970, Ernest R. May, then Dean of Harvard College, appointed Solomon assistant dean, the first woman to hold a deanship at Harvard.[2]

Her 1985 book In the Company of Educated Women: A History of Women and Higher Education in America won the Frederic W. Ness Award of the Association of American Colleges.[2]

Personal life

Bibliography

References

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