Kate Cameron Simmons (1880 — April 9, 1978), later known as Kate C. S. Cornell, was an American artist and arts educator. She was the first teacher hired by the Pacific Northwest College of Art when it was organized in 1909.
Early life
editKate Cameron Simmons was born in Saint Thomas, Danish West Indies[1] and raised in Brooklyn, New York, the daughter of diplomat Waldemar Moe Simmons and Mary E. Langthorne Simmons.[2] Her father was also born on Saint Thomas.[3] She graduated from Miss Whitcomb's Seminary for Young Ladies, in Brooklyn.[4] She earned degrees from Columbia University in 1912 and 1915,[5] and from Pratt Institute, with training as both a teacher and an artist.
Career
editIn 1909, Simmons was chosen by the Portland Art Association to help curator Anna Belle Crocker organize the Art School of Portland (now Pacific Northwest College of Art).[6] Simmons was the school's first teacher.[7] Her salary was underwritten by arts patron Julia Christiansen Hoffman.[8]
Simmons spoke at the 1914 meeting of the Women's Federation of the Photographers Association of America, in Atlanta, Georgia, on the topic of "the art principles that underlie portrait composition".[9] Simmons traveled in Europe with her sister later in 1914.[10] She returned to New York to teach art at Girls' High School until her marriage in 1920. In the 1930s and 1940s she taught high school art and English, in Newton, Massachusetts, where she was also adviser to the Puppeteers Club.[11] She was president of the Newton Women's Club, and was elected to the town's School Committee as a "sticker candidate" in 1930.[12][13][14] She resigned from the board in 1934, soon after her husband died.[15]
Personal life
editKate Cameron Simmons married Ward Ireland Cornell in 1920.[16] They lived in Massachusetts[17] and had a son, Ten Broeck Cornell (1924-2008)[18] and a daughter, Mary Langthorne Cornell, who died in infancy in 1922. Kate Cornell was widowed when her husband died in 1934.[19] As Kate C. S. Cornell she donated a rowboat named "Uncas" to the Adirondack Museum.[20] In 1947, she was the victim of an armed home invasion robbery in her home in Newton, Massachusetts.[21][22]
Kate Cameron Simmons Cornell died in 1978, aged 98, at a nursing home in York, Maine.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b "Kate Cornell, 98, Retired Newton Teacher" Boston Globe (April 10, 1978): 33. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "W. M. Simmons Dies; Former Vice Consul" Brooklyn Daily Eagle (September 29, 1915): 20. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Simmons" Brooklyn Daily Eagle (September 29, 1915): 20. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Miss Whitcomb's Seminary" Brooklyn Daily Eagle (June 4, 1898): 7. via Newspapers.com
- ^ Columbia University, Annual Commencement (1912, 1915) 21, 47.
- ^ "Art Association to Have School" The Oregon Daily Journal (July 3, 1909): 12. via Newspapers.com
- ^ Sarah Munro, "Portland Art Association" The Oregon Encyclopedia.
- ^ "A History of the Pacific Northwest College of Art" (August 2005): 1.
- ^ Pearl Grace Loehr, "The Women's Federation of the P. A. of A." Bulletin of Photography (April 29, 1914): 526.
- ^ "Experiences of Americans Abroad as Noted in Recent Letters" Brooklyn Life (October 3, 1913): 15. via Newspapers.com
- ^ Newton North High School, Newtonian (1943): 12, 68.
- ^ "Newton" Boston Globe (December 8, 1930): 11. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Recount in Newton for School Board" Boston Globe (December 10, 1930): 15. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Little Change Due in Newton Tax Rate" Boston Globe (January 2, 1931): 18. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Report Card Hearing Planned in Newton" Boston Globe (June 18, 1934): 24. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Weddings from Apr. 1920 to Mar. 1921" Brooklyn Blue Book (1921): xvii.
- ^ Untitled social item, New-York Tribune (July 15, 1920): 11. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Tenbroeck Cornell" Boston Globe (May 28, 2008): 35. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Death in Newton of Ward I. Cornell" Boston Globe (February 7, 1934): 13. via Newspapers.com
- ^ Hallie E. Bond, Boats and Boating in the Adirondacks (Syracuse University Press 1998): 284. ISBN 9780815603740
- ^ "2 Held in $50,000 for Robbery of Newton Woman" Boston Globe (March 17, 1947): 7. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Newton Woman Attacked in Home" Boston Globe (March 16, 1947): 1. via Newspapers.com
External links
edit- An ex libris bookplate for Kate Cameron Simmons, by Frances W. Delehanty, in the Maria Gerard Messenger Collection of Women's Bookplates, at The Grolier Club.
- Patrick A. Forster, "'Art Feeling Grows' in Oregon: The Portland Art Association, 1892-1932" (M. A. thesis, Portland State University 2011).
- Kate Cameron Simmons at Find a Grave