Laura H. Carnell

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Laura Horner Carnell (September 7, 1867 - March 30, 1929) was an American educator and the first dean of Temple University.[1][2][3]

Carnell was born in 1867 in Philadelphia and graduated in 1886 from the Philadelphia Normal School. In 1895, Temple founder Russell Conwell asked Carnell to join Temple's faculty. She helped found the Women's Department, and was named acting dean in 1897. In 1905 she was named dean, and served in that post until 1925, and then became associate president.[1] She was also named to the Philadelphia Board of Public Education in 1923.[1]

Temple awards Laura Carnell professorships to "recognize faculty who have distinguished themselves in research, scholarship, the creative arts and teaching."[4]

Laura H. Carnell School in Philadelphia is also named for her.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 (@1 March 1929). DR. LAURA H. CARNELL, EDUCATOR, IS DEAD; Associated President of Temple University Joined Its Faculty 34 Years Ago, The New York Times
  2. Who was Laura H. Carnell, School District of Philadelphia, Retrieved 20 July 2015
  3. (9 April 1908). People Talked About, Leslie's Weekly, p. 339 ("the only woman in the world who is a dean of a university")
  4. Laura Carnell Professorship, temple.edu, Retrieved 20 July 2015