Jeannette Augustus Marks as a young woman, circa 1895-1905
Jeannette Augustus Marks (August 16, 1875 – March 15, 1964) was an American professor at Mount Holyoke College.[1] She is the namesake of the Jeannette Marks Cultural Center (formerly known as the Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Community Center), which provides support and programming for LGBT students and allies.
Biography
Born on August 16, 1875, in Chattanooga, Tennessee, her parents were Jeannette Holmes (née Colwell) and William Dennis Marks,[1] who was the president of the Philadelphia Edison Company, after working at University of Pennsylvania, where he taught engineering.[2] As her parents were estranged, Marks grew up mainly in the company of her mother and younger sister, Mabel, alternating homes between the parental properties in Philadelphia and Westport, New York.[3]
Marks attended boarding schools in Europe the United States.[4] She then attended Dana Hall School and Wellesley College. In 1899 she met Mary Emma Woolley, a Wellesley professor, with whom she entered into a relationship that lasted 48 years.[2][5] In 1900, she earned a Bachelor's degree and three years later she received her Masters'.[1]
Mary Emma Woolley and Jeannette Augustus Marks
From 1901 to 1939, Marks was at Mount Holyoke College, where she was a professor of English Literature.[1] She founded a lecture series to discuss modern literature at the college named the Play and Poetry Shop Talks, which featured established poets and authors.[4] She also founded the Laboratory Theatre in 1928, where she was its director until 1941.[1]
She lived in Westport, New York with Woolley.[1] After Marks retired in 1941, the women spent the summers at the home of the Marks family, Fleur De Lys, on Lake Champlain. They lived there full-time from 1944, after Woolley suffered a stroke. Woolley died in 1947.[6] Marks died in Westport, New York, on March 15, 1964, and is buried there at Hillside Cemetery.[1]
Works
Jeannette Augustus Marks with her collie at Fleur de Lys
A Brief Historical Outline of English literature; From the Origins to the Close of the Eighteenth Century. Pawtucket, Rhode Island: J.W. Little & Co. 1902.
The Cheerful Cricket and Others. Boston: Small, Maynard and Co. 1907. Illustrations by Edith Brown.
B. Roland Lewis (ed.). Contemporary One-Act Plays. Project Gutenberg. Other authors include Jeannette Augustus Marks, Arthur Hopkins, Oscar Monroe Wolff, Eugene Pillot, David Pinski, Hermann Sudermann, Beulah Bornstead, August Strindberg, Lady Gregory, Anton Pavlovich Chekhov, Percy MacKaye, Alfred Kreymborg, J. M. Barrie, Paul Hervieu, Bosworth Crocker, George Middleton, Althea Thurston, and Paul Green.