Ruth Boleman
Conner, 1897-1989
Ruth Boleman Conner is a
familiar name in the Akron education. She taught school, served as an administrator
and then served on the board of education. But there was more to Ruth Boleman
Conner.
Born Ruth Boleman in 1897,
Conner received her BA from Smith College in Boston. She began her teaching career
at a high school in Nashua and earned a Master's at Columbia University.
Conner moved to Akron in
1928, where she became a history teacher at Old Trail School, an exclusive private
school in the Akron area. In 1931, Conner took over as acting principal.
Two years later, the same
year she became principal of Old Trail, she married Chester F. Conner, a former
Beacon Journal reporter who was the general manager of sales at BFG Industrial
Products. Conner stayed on as principal long enough for Old Trail to find her
replacement.
Once Conner married, she
moved into a new stage of life. While living in Boston, Conner studied the violin
and followed the Boston Symphony Orchestra closely. In Akron, she helped begin
the Akron Symphony Orchestra by co-chairing the committee that got the orchestra
started. In 1939, she was a member of the Akron Chapter of the National Committee
for Music Appreciation.
Conner's contributions were
not just with the arts. She spent 11 years as a volunteer on the committee for
the Family Services Board. Conner was a member of the League of Women Voters,
the Akron branch of the United World Federalists (a group seeking global solutions
to problems), and the Women's Auxiliary of Summit County Children's Home. She
also served as president of the Smith College Club of Akron from 1934 - 1938.
After World War II, she
re-entered education, teaching part-time as an English instructor at the Akron
Art Institute. She was elected to the Akron Board of Education in 1947.
Conner had three children,
Evelyn, Grace and George. She died in Lake Worth, Fla., in 1989 at the age of
92.
Photo courtesy of The University
of Akron Archives.
--Jennifer
Petric
