Caroline F. Ware

Caroline Farrar Ware ( born August 14, 1899 in Brookline, Massachusetts, † 1990) was an American Geschichtsprofesorin, social scientist and an advocate of the New Deal in the reign of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

Life

Goods received the bachelor's degree from Vassar College in Poughkeepsie in 1920. Radcliffe On College in Yonkers, New York, the college for women, which is associated with Harvard University, she received her master. Your promotion to the Ph.D. Radcliffe College was 1925.

1925 went back to the goods Vassar College as an associate professor and taught there until 1934. 1927 she married her colleagues Gardiner Means in the years 1925 to 1930 and 1932. In subsequent years, she was a consultant of the Roosevelt administration on economic issues in the time of the New Deal, but was still active in teaching. Stations were a teaching of Social Sciences during the years 1935-1940 at Sarah Lawrence College, followed by a long position at the American University in Washington, DC 1936 to 1954, most recently at the Department of Social Sciences. In the years 1954-1961 she was a professor at the School of Social Work at Howard University in Washington DC.

Since the early 1940s merchandise he established a lifelong collaboration with the colored civil rights activist Pauli Murray.

Publications (selection)

  • The Early New England Cotton Manufacture. A Study in Industrial Beginnings. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, Massachusetts, 1931, reprinted by Johnson, New York City, 1966
  • Together with Gardiner Means: The Modern Economy in Action, Harcourt, Brace and Company, New York 1936
  • Together with Alfred Vagts, as Issuer: The Cultural Approach to History, edited for the American Historical Association, Columbia University Press, New York 1940
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