In the dusk a new moon shone on the snowclad foothills. The train
stopped and a young woman stepped down. Dr. Joseph Sewall, first president of
the University of Colorado, was meeting her. He asked, "How does it look to
you?" Looking West to the mountains which reminded her of the Alps, she replied
"Glorious!"
Miss Mary Rippon was born on May 25, 1850 in Lisbon, Illinois.
She graduated from Illinois Normal School where Dr. Joseph Sewall, MD. was one
of her professors. After teaching in a one room rural school, Mary went in
search of a college degree. She traveled to Europe and studied languages and
history throughout the continent until 1877. Upon her return Dr. Sewall
persuaded her to come to Colorado's new university.
Mary Rippon, third faculty member at the university, arrived soon after.
It was January, 1878. Old Main was set on a barren, sometimes muddy hill. A
black bull lived in a nearby pasture. Beyond the fence were a pigsty, a chicken
coop and a stable. Miss Rippon and Dr. Sewall's wife diligently planted
flowers, shrubs, and grass, hoping to beautify the landscape of the university
campus.
Historians believe that Mary Rippon was the first woman to teach at a
state university. Within three years of her arrival, Miss Rippon became a full
professor and departmental head of Germanic languages, a position she held
until her 1909 retirement. She lived in Boulder at 2463 N. Broadway (still
standing) as a proper Victorian lady. A popular teacher, Miss Rippon shared
savings from her $1200 annual salary with needy students. She often stayed on
campus to counsel and befriend women boarders as the unofficial women's dean. A
faculty daughter wrote, "Beautiful Mary Rippon was like a piece of Dresden, but
she must have had a stern jaw somewhere to be dean of women in those early
days..."
Professor Rippon was described as quiet, low-voiced, attractive, full
of energy and wholly devoted to her work. She raised funds for the CU and
Boulder libraries, founded the Fortnightly Club for townswomen, established the
Women's League (later the YWCA) to foster development in the social graces and
developed booklists and study guides aimed to teach culturally isolated women
on ranches and in mining camps. She fought for women's equality through
education and the right of women to vote. When speaking to clubs, Miss Rippon
brought to light the sights of Europe which she toured often to renew her
knowledge of language, literature, and the arts. Helped by a fellow faculty
member, J.R. Brackett, she used the new medium of lantern slides. "How
difficult it was to illuminate slides", she wrote. "The lantern was run with
the aid of gas composed of oxygen and ether... (it) had the most uncomfortable
way of exploding prematurely during its manufacture if not treated exactly as
it thought proper - but of this difficulty the audience was all
unconscious."
From age 37 Professor Rippon wore a wedding band. An unpublished
manuscript in Norlin Library at CU written by her grandson, Wilfred Rieder of
Glen Head, NY, reveals a story Mary wanted told "when it would seem
appropriate".
Mary Rippon and Will Hausel met when Will was a student of Mary's,
first in college preparatory classes, and later in German classes. They were
married in 1888 in St. Louis and parted soon after. He continued his studies;
she traveled to Germany where her daughter Miriam was born. The marriage fell
apart because of long separations imposed by Mary. She felt compelled to
continue her teaching career alone and leave the responsibility for raising
their daughter to her husband. At that time a female teacher was not allowed to
be married, much less to have children. If the truth had been known, Mary most
likely would have lost her job. Will raised "Mimi", eventually moving to Ann
Arbor, Michigan where she attended college. When visiting Boulder, Miriam
referred to her mother as 'Aunt Mary'.
Later, after Miriam Hausel's own marriage had ended, she moved to
Boulder with her son Wilfred. Like her mother, Miriam taught Romance languages
at CU for 36 years. Except for extensive travels, both Miriam and Mary remained
in Boulder for the rest of their lives. In the 1935 obituary of Mary Rippon,
her daughter was referred to only as "Miss Rippon's friend and
protégé.
Mary seems to have enjoyed her life, once writing, "If experiencing
widely contrasting lifestyles is living, I am living to the hilt in this
world". She is buried in Columbia Cemetery (9th and Pleasant). The outdoor
theater at the University of Colorado is named for her. In Mary Rippon's
thirty-one years at the university, she saw it grow from 15 students to more
than 3,000 while faculty increased from 3 to over 300. Mary Rippon profoundly
influenced generations of students while leading a life of great personal
sacrifice.
For more information on Mary Rippon please visit the Western History
Collections at Norlin Library. Personal diaries and letters of Mary's as well
as poems she copied in her beautiful handwriting are housed there.
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