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Katherine Devereux Blake Collected Papers

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Held at: Swarthmore College Peace Collection [Contact Us]500 College Avenue, Swarthmore 19081-1399

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Swarthmore College Peace Collection. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.

Overview and metadata sections

Katherine Devereux Blake was born on July 10, 1858; her mother, Lillie Devereux Blake, was a pioneer suffragist, newspaper correspondence and novelist. Katherine graduated in 1876 from what later became Hunter College, and thereafter began her career as a public school teacher in New York City. In 1894, she was appointed principal of Public School 6 (later named The Lillie Devereux Blake School), which position she held until her retirement in 1927. Through the years she served on a number of committees that promoted teacher benefits, good relations between public schools and the National Education Association, improvements in classroom lighting and sanitation, reform of school books, night school for women, and the election of women to the New York Board of Education (Blake was the first woman treasurer) and to the presidency of the National Education Association. Blake was one of the 19 teachers chosen to accompany Dr. John Dewey on his official visit to Russia in 1928. Blake devoted her summers during 1911-1919 to campaigning for woman suffrage in California, New York, Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, West Virginia, New Jersey and Connecticut. In New York, she was the head of nearly 15,000 teachers working for woman suffrage. In the parade sponsored by the Woman Suffrage Association in 1915, she marched at the head of 500 teachers. Blake was also an active and outspoken advocate for peace. She was a member of the Ford Peace Expedition in 1915-1916. She served on the national board of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom and its international executive board, and was an active member for many years. She was the chief speaker for the Disarmament Caravan, which toured 9,000 miles in 1931 and carried a disarmament petition to President Herbert Hoover and to the International Disarmament Conference in Geneva (with, by then, 7 million signatures) in 1932. She went to Geneva repeatedly to attend the League of Nations Assembly as correspondent for a newspaper. In 1938 she went abroad to study refugee problems. Blake died on February 02, 1950 in St. Louis, Missouri.

The Swarthmore College Peace Collection is not the official repository for the papers of this individual.

Gift of Mrs. Williams McKim Marriott (niece of KDB), 1960.

Processed by SCPC staff; current version of the finding aid was created by Wendy E. Chmielewski, July 2012.

Publisher
Swarthmore College Peace Collection
Access Restrictions

The collection is open for research use.

Copyright may have been transferred to the Swarthmore College Peace Collection or may have been retained by the creators/authors (or their descendents), in this collection, as stipulated by United States copyright law. Please contact the SCPC Curator for further information.
Use Restrictions

None.

Collection Inventory

Biographical information.
Box 1
Correspondence, 1915-1942.
Box 1
Participation in WILPF's Disarmament Caravan, 1931.
Box 1
Scope and Contents

includes correspondence, writings and reference material

Writings and/or speeches re: International Disarmament Conference, Geneva, 1932.
Box 1
Writings and/or speeches, approximately 1911-1946.
Box 1
Writings and/or speeches, undated.
Box 1
Reference material re: Henry Ford Peace Expedition, 1915-1916.
Box 1
Reference material (general).
Box 1

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