Caroline A. Black was born in Syracuse, New York, on January 28, 1887, to Robert Watts Black and Kate Eleanor Knott. Her older siblings Kathleen and Robert were born in Canada. Caroline and her younger sister Eleanor were born in the United States. She was a graduate of Walnut Hills High School in Cincinnati, Ohio. She received her B.A. in 1908, M.A. in 1909 and Ph.D in 1912 at Indiana University. Black taught Elementary Botany: A Study of the Fern and Pine, during the 1910 summer term at Indiana University.
Career
Caroline Black joined the University of New Hampshire as an assistant professor of botany in 1911. She was the first female professor at UNH and the first woman on the staff of the Caroline Black accepted the position of assistant professor of botany in the biology department at Connecticut College in New London in 1917. However, she was not entirely satisfied with the proposal and suggested that the college split biology into separate departments of botany and zoology. In 1928 a botanical garden was started on the east side of Mohegan Avenue. In keeping with Professor Black's stance that the campus grounds be an extension of the botany department, the botanical garden served as an outdoor classroom for botany students. Caroline Black collected examples of Connecticut plants for the garden.
Works
Death
While traveling after presenting a paper in Des Moines, Caroline Black contracted spinal meningitis. Two weeks later she died at her brother's home in Cincinnati. On February 6, 1930, the Connecticut College Board of Trustees voted to name the botanical garden in her memory, the Caroline Black Garden.
Legacy
In the 1930s, the New London Garden Club and the New London Horticultural Society raised $500 for a memorial pool and additional plantings, as well as the bronze plaque on a boulder near the pool. In 1999, the Smithsonian Institution included the Caroline Black Garden in its national Archives of American Gardens. In 2001, it was accepted as part of the Gardens for Peace Network, recognizing the unique "sense of place" that characterizes the Caroline Black Garden.