Ellen Murray (abolitionist)

Ellen Murray was an abolitionist, educator, and founder of the Penn School on St. Helena Island, South Carolina.[1] Murray is remembered for dedicating her time to helping newly freed slaves gain an education and practice self-sufficiency.

Early life

Ellen Murray was born in St. John's, New Brunswick, located in Canada. She was born on January 13, 1834.[1] Her father, John Thomas Murray, passed away in 1834, the same year Ellen was born. He was a well-known lawyer and clerk in Saint John.[1][2] After his passing, John left behind his fortune to his three daughters, including Ellen and her sisters Frances Elizabeth and Harriet.[1] Ellen and her sisters were able to obtain an education in Europe, where she became fluent in English, French, and German.[1] She utilized her skills and became a teacher in Newport, Rhode Island, where her family had purchased a home.[1] Newport, Rhode Island, is where Murray's mother officially died in 1867.[2]

Occupation

Ellen Murray first began her job as a teacher in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1862.[3] She began her first teaching job at the Oaks Plantation.[1] Following this, she began her job at the Brick Church on St. Helena Island, where she would teach the youngest children and the oldest children. This was where she met her lifelong friend and co-founder of Penn School, Laura M. Towne of Philadelphia.[1] The two first met when Towne arrived at the Rhode Island Quakers about abolitionists. Towne believed they would be great partners.[1] Laura first arrived in Beaufort, South Carolina 1862 due to the capture of the Port Royal Sound area by Union Forces in 1861. Towne helped organize relief commissions for about 10,000 former slaves who were left behind.[1] The Penn School was considered a historic freedmen's school, dedicated to teaching former slaves located on St. Helena Island.[1] She taught a curriculum that consisted of "reading, spelling, writing, grammar, and geography. Murray devoted some of her time to pursuing writing, as she published her first book in The National Anti-Slavery Standard.[1] Her poem touches on the importance of freedom and equality. She expresses America's need for the abolition of slavery.[4] Murray highlights the urgency for moral conviction regarding slavery.[4] In 1865, the Pennsylvania Freedman's Relief Commission sent a building to St. Helena's Island. Murray and Towne became co-founders of the new Penn School after moving their classes there and renaming it.[1] It became St. Helena's first African-American school.[3]

Late life and death

The Penn School experienced various financial problems in the late 1800s, and the families of both Ellen and Laura had donated funds to their school.[1] For a short period of time, the two were not able to give out salaries to the teachers of the school in order to keep the school financially stable. Both Ellen and Laura continued to teach up until their last days.[1] Their curriculum stayed firmly in place, allowing the students to learn how to read, write, gain land rights, and obtain medical care.[5] Her partner, Laura M. Towne, passed away in 1901, leaving her in partnership with Towne's second appointed partner, Hollis Burke Frissell. Murray became the principal of the school and continued to refrain from using the new industrial curriculum that Frissell insisted on using.[1] Murray was dedicated to her work and even worked up until the day before her death on January 14, 1908.[1] Ellen Murray's memorial service was held on the campus of Penn School three days later, where her students paid their respects. She was remembered as a committed abolitionist and educator who dedicated her time to helping the uneducated.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Ellen Murray". U.S. National Park Service. 2024. Retrieved 2025-11-13.
  2. ^ a b Davies, Gwendolyn (1994). "MURRAY, FRANCES ELIZABETH". Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol.13. University of Toronto/Université Laval. Retrieved 2025-12-05.
  3. ^ a b "Ellen Murray | History of SC Slide Collection". KnowItAll. Retrieved 2025-11-14.
  4. ^ a b "FOR THE ANTI-SLAVERY STANDARD. THE WORKINGMAN". Scholarly Editing: The Annual of the Association for Documentary Editing. Retrieved 2025-12-05.
  5. ^ "Ellen Murray". studySC. 2022-06-17. Retrieved 2025-11-13.