Laura Freele Osborn

Laura Freele Osborn
Portrait of Osborn by Leon Makielski
Born1866 (1866)
Huntington, Indiana
Died1955 (aged 88–89)
OccupationsEducator, social reformer
Spouse
(m. 1891)

Laura Freele Osborn (1866–1955) was an American suffragist, campaigner for school reform, and long-serving member of the School Board for Detroit Public Schools in Detroit, Michigan. Active during the first half of the 20th century, she was the first woman elected to citywide office in Detroit and served on the school board for 38 years.

Early life

Osborn was born and raised in Huntington, Indiana, where she worked as a schoolteacher until her marriage in 1891 to Francis C. Osborn, a Detroit businessman and inventor.

Career

Osborn was a prominent advocate of non-partisan school boards in Michigan. She contributed to legislation passed in 1913 to that effect and later lobbied then-Governor Woodbridge N. Ferris to support further reform.[1]

She was first elected to the Detroit School Board in 1917, campaigning on a platform of reform, and became the first woman elected to citywide office in Detroit. She served on the board for 38 years until her death in 1955, during which time she was elected board president on seven occasions. Osborn also contributed to the development of Wayne State University in the mid-1930s.[2][3]

She is also credited with mobilising women into the causes of school reform and temperance, and with having "broken the prejudice against women officeholders in Detroit".[4] She ran unsuccessfully for Detroit City Council on two occasions.[5]

Legacy

References

  1. ^ Detroit Historical Society, "Person Record: Osborn, Laura Freele" (accessed 20 October 2020).
  2. ^ "Laura Freele Osborn" (PDF). Michigan Women's Historical Center & Hall of Fame. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 January 2018. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
  3. ^ Beckwith, Jamie, "Pewabic tile fountains display beauty, historical significance," The South End, April 21, 2005 (archived).
  4. ^ Detroit News, "Michigan Women's Hall of Fame," 1928.
  5. ^ "Hull's Seat Vacant; Voters to Pick Successor". No. 1 pg. 16. Detroit Sunday Times. 6 April 1941.