Julia Shepard Perkins was born Anna Shepard[3] in Athens, Pennsylvania[4] on November 11, 1799.[5] Her father was John Perkins, the founder of the Pennsylvania Academy in Athens, where she was educated as a child.[1] When Perkins was five years old, her mother died, leaving John Perkins to care for Anna and her six siblings.[3] John Perkins remarried six years later.[3]
After a visit to the family by Julia Prentice, the name 'Julia' was added to Perkins' name. She was henceforth known as Julia Anna.[3]
In 1818, Perkins moved to Litchfield, Connecticut, to continue her education at Litchfield Female Academy under Sarah Pierce.[1] In an 1818 letter to her father and stepmother, Perkins described her life at Litchfield, writing, "I am now in my dear little chamber, where I spend the most of my time studying and knitting. It is indeed a pleasant place, a little out of the bustle of the village, where we have a beautiful prospect, and a fine society of little girls."[3]
Perkins became an assistant teacher at the academy in 1819 and relocated to Ithaca, New York, later that year, where she also worked as a teacher.[1] In Ithaca, she met George Apollos Perkins (1798-1884), a pharmacist and fellow Athens native.[6][2] The couple married on May 1, 1823, and had five children together.[1] She was reportedly a devoted Christian throughout her life, and was involved in missionary efforts to convert Native Americans to Christianity.[2]
Perkins died on November 11, 1799.[1]