Harriet Noble
Harriet Noble was an American academic and suffragist. She taught at Butler University and campaigned with organisations including the Indiana Women's School League, Equal Suffrage Association and Women's Franchise League of Indiana.
Biography
Noble was born on July 12, 1851, in Centerville, Wayne County, Indiana. Her parents were lawyer Lazarus Noble and Catherine Noble and she was the eldest of their three children.Noble was educated at the all-girls school Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York, graduating with a teaching degree in 1873. In 1912, she was described as "the Indiana grandmother of the Vassar Alumnae."
From 1883 to 1893, Noble worked as a Professor of English at Butler University in Indianapolis. Noble was known by her students for wearing reform dress and was a member of the National Rationalist Association.
In 1909, Noble became treasurer of the Indiana Women's School League, which succeeded in its aim "to elect a woman to the school board... of Indianapolis." She was also a member of the Indianapolis Women's Club.
In 1911, after a resolution was made at the Indiana State Legislature to amend the State constitutions in [the United States|state constitution] by striking out the word "male," Noble was among representatives of the Equal Suffrage Association who spoke at the Municipal League's annual meeting at Crawfordsville on the resolution.
From 1911 to 1915, Noble served as field secretary for the Women's Franchise League of Indiana. She was a member of the Indianapolis Local Council of Women and was acting president during the two-month illness of president Mrs. Nichols, on Nichols' request.
Noble died on March 30, 1919, in Indianapolis, aged 67.
Nine years after her death, the Harriet Noble Friendship Circle social club commissioned Constance Forsytah to paint a portrait of Noble to be hung in Butler University's English Department.