A Bluestocking in Charleston: The Life and Career of Laura Bragg

Front Cover
Univ of South Carolina Press, 2001 - Art - 303 pages

Elucidates the life and achievements of a nineteenth-century innovator

In early twentieth-century Charleston, Laura Bragg was called a woman ahead of her time, a fresh drink of water in a cultural desert--but never a proper Southern lady. Bragg was a Massachusetts-born bluestocking, a New Woman of the Progressive Era who changed not only the cultural face of Charleston but also the nation's approach to museum education. In this biography of a most remarkable visionary, Louise Anderson Allen reveals how Bragg also achieved the objective of early feminists: full political, social, and economic equality on her own terms.

Highlighting Bragg's work with museums from 1909 to 1939, Allen examines the life and career of the first woman in the United States to lead a publicly supported museum--and the oldest such institution in the country--the Charleston Museum. Bragg used the facility to provide educational services to both black and white South Carolinians and broke new ground with her educational programs, including her revolutionary traveling exhibits, known as Bragg boxes. Earning national recognition for such efforts, Bragg made lasting contributions locally.

Allen recounts how these achievements led Bragg back to her home state and specifically to Charleston in 1939, where she lived in relative isolation from the museum and art worlds she had so influenced for nearly forty years but remained influential in the city's intellectual life. Summing up a noteworthy career, Allen describes Bragg's efforts to mentor two generations of Charleston's literati and assesses her vitalization of the city's culture for close to seventy-five years.

From inside the book

Contents

Prologue
1
Creating a Museum
28
Recognition for the Charleston Museum and Laura Bragg
72
Making Connections in
104
The Berkshire Museum As a Progressive Institution
163
Always a Teacher Always a Learner
198
In Retrospect
214
Notes
223
Bibliography
269
Index
283
Copyright

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2001)

Louise Anderson Allen, a tenth-generation South Carolinian, holds an Ed.D. from the University of South Carolina and received a post-doctoral fellowship from the Avery African American Research Center of the College of Charleston. A former teacher and school administrator in Charleston and a staff developer for schools across the Southeast, Allen is now an assistant professor of education at University of North Carolina-Charlotte. Her primary residence is in Charleston.

Bibliographic information