Oberlin's Women: A Legacy of Leadership & Activism

Harriet Keeler


Harriet Louise Keeler
(1846-1921, OC 1870) was an educator and naturalist. She graduated from Oberlin College in 1870 with a B.A. from the college department. That same year Keeler began teaching English in the Cleveland Public Schools. She was later appointed the principal of Central High School. Keeler retired from the Cleveland Public Schools in 1908 after working as a teacher and administrator for forty years. In 1912 she began working for the Cleveland Public Schools again as the first female superintendent, a position she held from January until September. Keeler firmly believed in women’s suffrage and served as the president of the Cuyahoga County Suffrage Association. She was also a keen naturalist who conducted nature studies across the United States and abroad. During her lifetime Keeler wrote eleven books on plant life, English grammar, and writing techniques, including a series of seven nature guides. Her first book, The Wildflowers of Early Spring, was published in 1894. Many of her nature guides are still printed today. A section of land in the Brecksville Reservation, part of the Cleveland Metroparks, is named in her honor. She was a trustee of Oberlin College. 


Sources:
“Harriet Keeler: Author and Teacher.” Cleveland Historical. Accessed April 7, 2020. https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/669.

Student File (Harriet Louise Keeler), Alumni & Development Records, O.C.A.

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