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Born: 1866
Died: 1942
Occupation: Founder of Berry College
Accomplishments: Martha Berry, a native of Rome, Georgia,
founded the Berry Schools, now Berry
College, in 1902. She used her 80-acre
dowry to charter the Boys Industrial
School. The boarding school taught
mountain boys practical farming and
educational skills. Berry’s approach to
educating the boys and girls of
Appalachia combined practical
agriculture and domestic and mechanical
application with moral training. The
Berry Schools’ seal revealed Martha
Berry’s fourfold educational philosophy: “ the
Bible for prayer, the lamp for learning, the plow for labor,
and the
cabin for simplicity.”
Berry’s model led to a meeting of
Georgia school superintendents in 1906.
There, Berry explained her educational
paradigm, and Georgia based its newly
formed agricultural and mechanical
colleges on it.
Berry’s vision of education transformed
a one-room schoolhouse into a
28,000-acre campus bearing her name.
With supporters like Henry Ford, she was
able to fund new programs and encourage
technology, efficiency, and other
advanced concepts. Her school has now
been transformed into a liberal arts
college, but an active animal and
horticultural science department
remains.
Martha Berry was named a “Distinguished
Citizen of Georgia” by the Georgia
legislature in 1924 and was presented
the Roosevelt medal by President
Calvin Coolidge. She was the first woman member
of the Georgia Board of Regents and was
also presented with eight honorary
doctoral degrees.
Martha Berry’s interest in better
educating Appalachian farm children
lasted until her death in 1942.
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