Gladys Bryson
Gladys Eugenia Bryson was the Mary Huggins Gamble Professor of Sociology and chairman of the Sociology Department at Smith College. She was a human rights activist from an early age and a national leader on issues relating to international students in the U.S.
Early life
Gladys Eugenia Bryson was born in Carlisle, Kentucky, to Minnie Mann and Homer Buell Bryson. She had at least three siblings - these were named in her obituary: Harold, Professor of Music at Oberlin College; Theodore, of St. Petersburg Beach, Fla., and Paul, of Cincinnati. Bryson was a student at Georgetown College at the time she wrote a prize-winning essay on women's suffrage, and she would go on to graduate with an A.B. in 1918.From 1919 to 1925, Bryson served as the national secretary with the student council of the national board of the Young Women's Christian Association. Her address was New York, NY, in the University of California, Berkley Register for 1926-27 when she was enrolled there for a master's degree in Social Institutions.
She graduated from UC Berkley in 1927 and was named a Sterling Fellow at Yale University during the 1927–1928 academic year. She continued on at UC Berkeley with her PhD studies. She was the founding director of the International House Berkeley in 1930–31. Her doctoral thesis for graduation in 1930 was “The Influence of Scottish Moral Philosophers upon the Social Sciences.”
Professional life
Bryson was hired to teach at Smith College in 1931. She was appointed chairman of the Department of Sociology in 1945, and served as faculty resident of Lawrence House. Three years later she was appointed chairman of the Division of Social Sciences. She was honored with the named seat of the Mary Huggins Gamble Professor of Sociology at Smith College.In 1941, Bryson was appointed as member of a national advisory committee on the "adjustment of foreign students in the United States." This committee worked for the Division of Cultural Relations of the United States Department of State. In 1942 she was part of a conference of representatives from over 100 colleges and universities that explored the policy of government and academic institutions' interactions with international students.
In 1944, Bryson used her home in the San Fernando neighborhood to start up a primary school called the Colegio Anglo-Americano de Cali. By 1950, the school had greatly expanded and was renamed Colegio Bolivar. She served as President of the Eastern Sociological Society from 1946 to 1947.
Writings
The Georgetown Times.- "The Comparable Interests of the Old Moral Philosophy and the Modern Social Sciences,", Vol. 11, No. 1, pp. 19–27.
- "Some Eighteenth-Century Conceptions of Society," Volume a31, Issue 4, pp. 401–421.
- , Princeton University Press, 1945.