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Mary Bernard Aguirre

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Full Name
  
Mary Bernard

Nationality
  
American


Occupation
  
Educator

Name
  
Mary Aguirre

Mary Bernard Aguirre

Born
  
June 23, 1844 (
1844-06-23
)
St. Louis, Missouri, United States

Died
  
May 24, 1906, San Jose, California, United States

Mary Bernard Aguirre (June 23, 1844 – May 24, 1906) was a public schoolteacher and instructor at the University of Arizona. Born in St. Louis, Missouri, she spent her career as an educator in Arizona.

Contents

Early life

Bernard Aguirre was the daughter of Joab Bernard, a wealthy merchant. For the first twelve years of her life the family resided in Baltimore, Maryland, the birthplace of Mary's mother. In 1856 the Bernard family moved to Westport, Missouri, where Mary's father owned a large store.

Bernard Aguirre went to college at the age of seventeen; this would prove to be a critical period of her life, as she lived through many moments that eventually changed her views towards people of other races. She heard the rifle shot that killed abolitionist John Brown in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.

When Mary Bernard returned home from Baltimore, Maryland later that same year, the American Civil War broke out, and she became a supporter of the Southern cause.

Personal life

Mary Bernard married a Mexican freighting contractor, Epifanio Aguirre, on August 21, 1862 in Westport. The Aguirres had three sons: Pedro, Epifanio Jr. and Stephen.

Bernard Aguirre's family moved to the Southwest in 1863. They traveled from Missouri to Las Cruces, New Mexico, with a stop in Santa Fe. Mary kept a journal of her family's travels across the Great Plains.

In Santa Fe, the Aguirres met John Noble, who would later on take them to Arizona.

In August 1869, the Aguirres set foot in Tucson. Soon after, Epifanio Sr. was killed during an Apache raid of a stagecoach. In economic straits, Bernard Aguirre saw herself forced to return home to Missouri and live with her parents.

Career

In 1874, Mary Bernard Aguirre returned to Tucson, having accepted a job as a teacher in Tres Alamos. She taught in Tucson-area public schools, including the Tucson Public School for Girls, for four years. During this time, Bernard Aguirre advocated for public education against the prevailing inclination among Catholics towards homeschooling.

In 1878, she became the first teacher in Arivaca, sixty miles south of Tucson; during her tenure she was recruited to teach at the fledgling University of Arizona.

She became chair of the Spanish language and English history departments at the University of Arizona in 1885. She was the university's first female professor, and resigned from the post in 1901.

Death and legacy

In 1906, Mary Bernard Aguirre was injured in a Pullman train crash in California. On May 24, 1906, two weeks after the accident, she died of internal injuries.

To honor her work during the early years of the school, the University of Arizona currently awards a Women's and Gender Studies professorship in Aguirre's name.

References

Mary Bernard Aguirre Wikipedia