Elizabeth Phillips HughesMBE (12 July 1851 – 19 December 1925) was a Welsh scholar, teacher, and promoter of women's education, first principal of the Cambridge Training College for Women.
Early life
Hughes was born in Carmarthen, Carmarthenshire,[1] the daughter of John Hughes and Anne Phillips Hughes.[2] Her father was the first medical officer in the Carmarthen.[3] She was the sister of Methodist reformer Hugh Price Hughes.[4] She had little education as a child, but later attended a private school in Cheltenham,[5] eventually becoming a teacher at Cheltenham Ladies' College, under the mentorship of Dorothea Beale.[2] She also attended Newnham College, Cambridge, beginning at age 30, and becoming the first woman in the university to take first-class honours in Moral Sciences.[3]
Career
At Cambridge
In 1884, Hughes was appointed first principal of the Cambridge Training College for Women, later Hughes Hall, which was renamed in her honour.[6][7] Under her leadership, the college expanded, became incorporated, and added faculty and facilities, including a library, a museum, and a gymnasium.[2] In 1887 she was asked to join an Education Department committee looking at the "Pupil-teacher" system chaired by the chief inspector of schools, Thomas Wetherherd Sharpe. Only three women were asked: Hughes, Lydia Manley of Stockwell training college and school inspector Sarah Bannister. The committee's report resulted in a policy that caused the closure of the Pupil-teacher centres that had been established by the end of the century.[8]
Hughes had a lifelong interest in education in Wales, especially for girls. In 1884, she took a prize at the Liverpool National Eisteddfod for her essay, "The Higher Education of Girls in Wales".[16] She published a pamphlet, The Educational Future of Wales (1894). In 1898 she became secretary of the Association for Promoting the Education of Girls in Wales. She helped to found a teachers' college in Barry in 1914.[2] She was the only woman on the committee which drafted the charter of the University of Wales, and in 1920, she received an honorary degree from that university.[1]
Personal life
Hughes was an avid mountain climber; she climbed the Matterhorn at age 48.[3] She died in 1925, aged 74 years, in Barry.[17] In 2018, her birthplace in Carmarthen was marked with a blue plaque. She was recently[when?] featured in advertisements for a Cambridge fundraising campaign.[18]
^"Women Should Help to Rule". The San Francisco Call. 2 August 1901. p. 9. Retrieved 8 March 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
^"English Teacher's Views". The Morning Journal-Courier. 21 September 1901. p. 3. Retrieved 8 March 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Famous Educator". The Honolulu Advertiser. 20 August 1901. p. 9. Retrieved 8 March 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
^Ikeda, Keiko (13 October 2014). "British Cultural Influence and Japan: Elizabeth Phillips Hughes's Visit for Educational Research in 1901–1902". The International Journal of the History of Sport. 31 (15): 1925–1938. doi:10.1080/09523367.2014.936393. ISSN0952-3367. S2CID145548800.
^International congress of women (1899 : London); International council of women; Aberdeen and Temair, Ishbel Gordon (1900). The International congress of women of 1899;. Harvard University. London, T. F. Unwin.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)