.
By Mary A. Sego
Collection Overview
Scope and Contents of the Materials
One folder containing publication information by Emma Pike Ewing.
Biographical Note
Emma Ewing was born in Broome County, New York in 1838. Emma married W.P. Ewing in 1863. After the Civil War, Emma gained national recognition as a cooking instructor and became known as “the woman who would have taught America to make good bread if America could have been taught.” Emma authored several books, including titles such as Cooking and Castle-building (1880), Soup and Soup-making (1882), and A Text-book of Cookery, for Use in Schools (1899), among others. In 1882, she established the Chicago School of Cookery. Emma went to Iowa State University in 1884 as the leader of the Domestic Economy Department. She left in 1887 to teach at Purdue University. By 1891, Emma had left Purdue and was involved as both the dean of the Chautauqua Assembly in New York and as a traveling lecturer. In 1892, she formed the Housekeepers’ National League to improve training in the domestic sciences. In addition, she also founded the Model Home School of Household Economics in 1898, which was affiliated with Marietta College in Ohio.
Subject/Index Terms
Administrative Information
Repository:
Purdue University Libraries, Archives and Special Collections
Alternate Extent Statement:
1 folder
Access Restrictions:
Collection is open for research.
Preferred Citation:
MSF 127, Emma P. Ewing papers, Archives and Special Collections, Purdue University Libraries
Box and Folder Listing
Browse by Folder:
[
Folder 1: Publications, 1888-1892],
[All]