Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Sarah Dix Hamlin (November 27, 1844 – August 25, 1923) was a 19th-century American educator, principal, founder and owner of the Hamlin School for girls in San Francisco.

  2. In April 1896 Sarah Dix Hamlin purchased the Van Ness Seminary School at 1849 Jackson Street, San Francisco. [1] In 1898, the school was renamed Miss Hamlin's School for Girls. [2] In 1907, the school moved to a mansion at 2230 Pacific Avenue in San Francisco. [3]

  3. Mar 14, 2018 · Sarah Dix Hamlin was about 10 years old at the time, and she had heard that there was a man in Westford, MA who was abusing his wife in drunken rages. Sarah’s young mind had made the connection between alcohol consumption and domestic violence, and she saw herself as an active part of the Temperance Movement.

  4. Sarah Dix Hamlin (November 27, 1844 – August 25, 1923) was a 19th-century American educator, principal, founder and owner of the Hamlin School for girls in San Francisco.

  5. The founder of our school, Sarah Dix Hamlin, was a feisty, passionate young girl from Westford, Massachusetts who believed that girls and women had a right to be seen and heard, to be educated, and to be safe in a world dominated by men.

  6. Sarah Dix Hamlins pioneering spirit continues to infuse the school today as our girls are taught to voice their ideas, questions, and opinions and to use their critical and creative thinking skills to transform their communities.

  7. From suffragette Sarah Dix Hamlin's activism in the mid-late 1800s to learning about the election process in a 1963 civics class to seeing faculty and staff proudly wearing their "I Voted" stickers...

  1. People also search for