Cornelia Foster Bradford
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Cornelia Foster Bradford | |
|---|---|
![]() Cornelia Foster Bradford, from a 1914 publication | |
| Born | December 4, 1847 Granby, New York |
| Died | January 15, 1935 (aged 87) Montclair, New Jersey |
| Occupation | Social reformer |
| Known for | Whittier House, a settlement house in Jersey City, New Jersey |
Cornelia Foster Bradford (December 4, 1847 – January 15, 1935) was an American philanthropist and social reformer. She established a settlement house in Jersey City, New Jersey, in 1894.
Cornelia Foster Bradford was born in Granby, New York, the daughter of Rev. Benjamin Franklin Bradford and Mary Amory Howe Bradford. She was descended from William Bradford of Plymouth. Her father was a Congregational minister and an abolitionist who assisted people escaping slavery on their way to Canada. Cornelia F. Bradford graduated from Houghton Seminary in Clinton, New York.[1][2]
Career
Bradford visited London as a young woman, and became interested in the settlement movement after a visit to Toynbee Hall and a stay at Mansfield House in East London. On her return to the United States, she worked at Hull House in Chicago. In 1893 she moved to New Jersey, and the following year opened Whittier House, a settlement house in the Paulus Hook neighborhood of Jersey City.[3] Through Whittier House and the New Jersey Association of Neighborhood Workers, she established the city's first women's club, neighborhood watch, legal aid society, free kindergarten, and playground; the settlement house also offered a library, a medical dispensary, a kitchen, a gymnasium, classes, sports, performance space, and a summer camp.[4] Her programs were open to city residents of all races and ethnicities.[5] She helped Juliet Clannon Cushing to organize the New Jersey Consumers League and the Child Protective League.[6] She was president of the New Jersey Conference for Social Welfare;[7] she also served a term as vice president of the National Federation of Settlements.[8]
In 1912, she became the first woman appointed to the Jersey City Board of Education. She worked for the establishment of a school in Paulus Hook, culminating in the opening of Public School 16 (PS 16) in 1916.[9] In 1923 she was honored with an honorary master's degree from the New Jersey College of Women.[1][2][10]
