Professor of Greek and Latin, Swarthmore College (1916–1947)
Ethel H. Brewster (July 3, 1886 – August 18, 1947) was an American college professor and
philologist. She was
Dean of Women (effective 1932) and taught Greek and Latin at
Swarthmore College, where she was a member of the faculty from 1916 to 1947.
Early life and education
Ethel Hampson Brewster was born in
Chester, Pennsylvania, the daughter of Joseph Fergus Brewster and Jane (Hampson) Brewster. She graduated from
Chester High School in 1903.[1] She earned a bachelor's degree from Swarthmore College in 1907, and a master's degree from the
University of Pennsylvania in 1911.[2] She held the Bennett Fellowship in Classics from 1912 to 1914, and completed doctoral studies at Penn in 1915, with a dissertation titled "Roman Craftsmen and Tradesmen of the Early Empire".[3][4][5]
Career
Brewster taught Latin, French and English at Chester High School after she graduated from Swarthmore in 1907. She taught Latin at
Vassar College from 1914 to 1916, and became associate professor of Greek and Latin at Swarthmore College in 1916. She taught at Swarthmore for over thirty years, and was department chair, Dean of Women[6] and acting Dean of the college[7] during her Swarthmore years.[2]
In 1919, she addressed an audience at the
Philadelphia High School for Girls, saying "It is as stupid to oust ancient history from the schools in favor of American and modern European history as it would be to knock out the first two stories of a skyscraper and expect the structure to stand."[8]
"Poster Politics in Ancient Rome and in Later Italy" (1944)[14]
"The Place of Latin in the Post-War Curriculum" (1946)[12]
Personal life
Brewster died, unmarried, at her niece's home in 1947, at the age of 61, in
Great Neck, New York.[21] Her body was found in a closet, with a bottle of sleeping pills, after she had reportedly expressed concern over her declining health.[22][23]
^Brewster, Ethel Hampson (1924).
"Social Life as an Academic Problem". Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the National Association of Women Deans and Counselors. 11: 67–73.