Hermione Ridder

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Hermine Ridder (born February 28, 1843 in Lüben , Silesia , † February 10, 1938 in Hanover ) was a German educator and pioneer of German adult education , especially for women.

Life

Hermine Ridder took over the first administrative post in the Lette-Verein in Berlin in 1877 , the aim of which was to promote the employability of women.

In 1889, Ridder took over an institute similar to the Lette-Verein in Wiesbaden , the later named " Riddersche Institut ", a " housekeeping school for daughters" in - then - Adelhaidstraße 3 .

After the "Royal Trade and Housekeeping School for Girls, combined with Boarding School " had been established in Posen in 1897 , the first trade and trade school there taken over by the Prussian state, Miss Hermine Ridder was appointed director of the school in 1898.

Ridder voluntarily headed the women's group of the German trade teachers' association as chairwoman . She was the chair of the "Group for Girls' Trade Schools" affiliated to the German Trade School Association, which had around 100 members in 1917. Its job placement agency for trade school teachers was located at 19 Schleiermacherstraße in the Hanover district of Kleefeld .

Honors

  • For her services to the professional women's education Hermione Ridder was the award of the Women's Cross of Merit awarded in gold.
  • At the beginning of the 21st century, the women's biography researcher Luise F. Pusch and the journalist Annette Volland suggested naming a street after Hermine Ridder in the Lower Saxony state capital Hanover.

Publications

  • The technical teacher. Issue 16, 1899; Digitization via DigiZeitschriften :
    • Theses for the lecture "The training of handicraft teachers and their further training for advanced training and trade schools". Pp. 542-543.
    • The training of the handicraft teacher and her further education for advanced training and trade schools. Lecture given at the third general assembly of the State Association of Prussian Technical Teachers. In: The technical teacher. 16, 1899, pp. 777-785.

literature

  • Else Brehmer, Karin Ehrich: Motherhood as a profession? Volume 2: Short biographies (= women in history and society. Volume 5). Centaurus-Verlags-Gesellschaft, Pfaffenweiler 1993, ISBN 3-89085-259-9 , p. 212ff.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h Christine Kannenberg, Sabine Poppe (Red.): Hermine Ridder. In: dies .: Important women in Hanover. A help for future naming of streets, paths, squares and bridges after female personalities. ed. from the City of Hanover, the Lord Mayor, Department for Women and Equality, Planning and Urban Development Department, Hanover, June 2013, p. 30 ( PDF document )
  2. Constanze von Franken : Catechism of the female occupations and occupations . M. Hesse, Leipzig 1898, p. 70. ( Preview via Google Books ).
  3. a b Tony Kellen: Which positions can women find in trade and industry? Handbook for the girls and women dependent on the acquisition, at the same time containing statistical reports on the female employment, the women's acquisition associations, etc. Ludwig Huberti, Leipzig 1900, p. 99 ( preview via Google Books).
  4. ^ A b Gertrud Bäumer , Robert Wilbrandt , Lisbeth Wilbrandt , Josephine Levy-Rathenau : The German woman in a job. Practical advice on choosing a career (= handbook of the women's movement. Part 5). W. Moeser, Berlin 1917, p. 144. Preview of Google books
  5. ^ Elisabeth Altmann-Gottheiner (Ed.): Yearbook of the Federation of German Women's Associations. The women in the new Germany (= yearbook of the Federation of German Women's Associations. Volume 6). BG Teubner, Leipzig / Berlin 1917, p. 102; Preview over google books