Annette Kar Baxter
Annette Kar Baxter was an historian of American history and an American women's history expert, professor, and author. She spent much of her career at Barnard College, where she taught one of the earliest women's history courses to undergraduate students, in 1966. She was a pioneer in helping to create the field of Women's Studies.
Early life and education
Annette Kar was born on November 12, 1926, in Manhattan. She attended New York University for one year before transferring to Barnard College. In 1947 she received an A.B. from Barnard, summa cum laude and as a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and began working full-time as an editorial assistant at Random House, a position that she began on a part-time basis her senior year. In the fall, she returned to school, earning an A.M. from Smith College in 1948 and another A.M. from Radcliffe College in 1949.Career
She then began her life-long career at Barnard, working at first as a lecturer and then as an associate in the history department. She served as the executive secretary for the University Seminar on American Civilization at Columbia from 1953 to 1959, and served as the secretary for the American Studies Bibliography Project of the American Studies Association from 1953 to 1956.She received her Ph.D. from Brown in 1958 with Henry Miller: Expatriate, one of the earliest scholarly treatments on the writer Henry Miller. She was promoted to the status of lecturer in the History Department at Barnard. Two years later she became an associate in History. In 1966 she was appointed as an assistant professor of history and was quickly promoted to associate professor status. She reached full professorship in 1971, and in 1975 had the honor of being one of a handful of women to be awarded an endowed chair, named for Adolph and Iphigene ("Effie") Ochs Sulzberger.
Baxter was a pioneer in the field of women's studies, teaching one of the earliest women's history classes to undergraduates in 1966. Her course served as a model for many future classes at other institutions. She remained involved in a wide variety of activities at Barnard throughout her career, including serving as an advisor to the class of 1962, membership on the Board of Trustees, regularly participating in the Seven College Conference, advising the Thursday Noon Meetings, and playing a vital role in the creation and expansion of the Women's Center at Barnard College, now the Barnard Center for Research on Women. She was acting chair of the American Studies Program in 1960-61 and 1963–64, and was made permanent chair of the department in 1967; she also served as chair of the history department from 1974 to 1983. Baxter was also a founding member of the Barnard College Archive.
In addition to her career at Barnard, Baxter involved herself in many other organizations. She served on the board of trustees for Conference in Theology for College and University Faculty, Kirkland College and Middlesex School. She was a consultant for the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Ford Foundation, National Council of Women, and Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood. She served on committees for the American Association of University Women, American Historical Association, Organization of American Historians, American Studies Association, and many others. She participated in panels and gave speeches on the value of women's history and women's education. She has been called "one of the nation's foremost authorities on the history of women."
Throughout her career, Baxter remained dedicated to the cause of women's education, women's studies, and women's rights. As a member of its Board of Trustees, Baxter fought to keep Barnard independent from Columbia, highlighting what might be lost if the women's college merged with the Ivy league school.
Baxter published numerous book reviews and articles, and edited several series on women's autobiographies and women's studies. She often contributed articles to journals and popular magazines, including Nineteenth-Century Fiction and Harpers, among others. Baxter had four books in progress when she died in 1983.