Blackmore taught in the home economics department at Cornell University beginning in 1915,[6][7] including such courses as "Elements of Design", "Clothing and Handwork", and "Elementary Millinery". She became a full professor in 1923, and served as head of the textiles and clothing program from 1925 until her retirement in 1951.[8] She oversaw the creation of the school's costume shop, home economics courses for male students, a collection of historical textiles and international garments,[9][10] and a diverse research program on clothing and fabric. She also donated her own collection of rare objects and books on these subjects to the college.[11]
Blackmore taught community classes,[12][13] and gave interviews and lectures on consumer advice.[14][15][16]
Publications
Blackmore wrote textbook chapters and technical reports;[17][18] she also wrote articles on home economics topics for The Delineator magazine in the 1920s.[19][20][21][22]
"The Making of Clothing" and "Millinery" (1919, textbook chapters)[18]
"Watch Your Step in the Dining-Room" (1922, with Flora Rose)[19]
"Clothing purchased by farm families in Tompkins County, New York, 1927–28" (1934)[17]
Personal life
Blackmore lived with fellow home economist Helen Canon in Ithaca, New York for more than thirty years.[26][27] Canon died in 1954.[28][29] Blackmore died at home in 1967, at the age of 81.[30]
References
^"Untitled society item". The Tacoma Daily Ledger. August 21, 1910. p. 16. Retrieved June 26, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
^"In Music Circles". The News Tribune. September 22, 1906. p. 18. Retrieved June 26, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
^ abBlackmore, Beulah. "Clothing purchased by farm families in Tompkins County, New York, 1927–1928." (1934).
^ abBlackmore, Beulah (1919). "The Making of Clothing". In Van Rensselaer, Martha (ed.). A Manual of Home-making. and "Millinery". Macmillan. pp. 330–392 (The Making of Clothing), 393–406 (Millinery).
^ abRose, Flora; Blackmore, Beatrice (June 1922). "Watch Your Step in the Dining-Room". The Delineator: 46.
^ abBlackmore, Beulah (September–October 1924). "Know Your Boxspring". The Delineator. "Know Your Mattress" and: 46 (Mattress) and 50 (Boxspring) – via Internet Archive.
^The two women lived together by 1920; Blackmore was listed as Canon's "partner" in the 1930 federal census, and Canon was listed as Blackmore's "partner" in the 1940 and 1950 federal censuses; United States Federal Census returns for 1930, 1940 and 1950, via Ancestry.
Ringo, Fredonia Jane. Draperies (A. W. Shaw Company 1925); the linked volume at Google Books has Beulah Blackmore's name on the inside cover, as it was donated to Cornell from her personal library