Katharine Gibbs (also Catharine Ryan and Katherine Ryan) (1863–1934) was the founder of Gibbs College, which became a for-profit institution of higher education.

Catharine Ryan was born in Galena, Illinois on January 10, 1863, and was the granddaughter of Irish Catholic immigrants.[1] Her father was a successful meat packing merchant who sent her to be educated by two spinsters from New England who provided her with a cultural education. She then graduated from the Manhattanville Convent of the Sacred Heart in New York City.

In 1896 Katharine visited her brothers in Helena, Montana, where she met and married William Gibbs, a Protestant watchmaker originally from Medford, Massachusetts. The couple eventually settled in Providence, Rhode Island[2] and had two sons before her husband died in 1909 in a boating accident at the Edgewood Yacht Club in Cranston, Rhode Island near their home.

In 1910 Gibbs' sister, Mary Ryan, enrolled in the Providence School for Secretaries in Providence, Rhode Island and became an assistant teacher at the school. The school's owner asked Mary if she would like to purchase the school, and Mary and Katharine decided to purchase it together for $1,000 with Mary teaching and Katharine serving as an administrator. They changed the curriculum to focus on secretarial training rather than stenography and experienced great expansion at the time of World War I when many men left jobs to fight in the War. Gibbs expanded the schools to create a branch near every major Ivy League university, expanding to Boston by 1917 and to New York by 1918. After her death in 1934, Katharine's youngest son, Gordon Gibbs, served as President and expanded the school to other cities.[3]

Gibbs was inducted into the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame in 1983.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Doherty, Rose A. (Winter 2015). "Katharine Gibbs & Her School: Beyond White Gloves" (PDF). American Ancestors. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 9, 2016.
  2. ^ "Katharine Gibbs Invents the Modern Professional Secretary". New England Historical Society. citing: Rose A. Doherty's, "Katharine Gibbs: Beyond White Gloves"
  3. ^ "How Katie Gibbs became office word". The Hour. May 29, 1986.
  4. ^ "Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame: Katharine Gibbs, Inducted 1983". Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on February 3, 2020. Retrieved February 3, 2020.

Further reading

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