Otelia Cromwell


Otelia Cromwell was a distinguished scholar and Professor of English Language and Literature at Miner Teachers College. She was the first African American to graduate from Smith College, receiving a B.A. in Classics. She later earned her M.A. at Columbia University in 1910 and a Ph.D. in English at Yale University in 1926, becoming the first African American woman to earn a doctorate degree there.

Early life, education and early career

Born on April 8, 1874 in Washington, D.C., Cromwell was the daughter of Lucy McGuinn and John Wesley Cromwell, and the eldest of six children. After graduating from the Miner Normal School, Cromwell taught in Washington, D.C. schools for several years before attending Howard University. In 1898 she transferred to Smith College, and graduated in 1900. At that time there were only two other black students at Smith College, Helen Maria Chesnutt and her sister Ethel, who both graduated a year later.

Career

Cromwell continued teaching for a few years before resuming her education. She earned a master's degree from Columbia University in New York City, and received her Ph.D in English from Yale University in 1926. Her dissertation, Thomas Heywood, Dramatist: A Study in Elizabethan Drama of Everyday Life, was published by Yale University Press in 1928.
Directly following her time at Yale, Cromwell became a professor of English Language and Literature at Miner Teachers College, later becoming head of the literature department. She taught there until her retirement in 1944. Upon her retirement, Otelia Cromwell began what was to be her major scholarly work, The Life of Lucretia Mott. Cromwell edited Readings from Negro Authors, an early anthology of African American literary contributions.
Otelia Cromwell had a brother John. She was the aunt of Adelaide M. Cromwell, a sociologist and historian who was the first African-American instructor at Smith College.

Honors