Julie Boysen

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Julie Boysen (* 1849 ; † 1931 ) was a German founder of a girls' school.

Life

Born at the time of the Kingdom of Hanover , Julie Boysen graduated from the Hanover School for Teachers and then worked for a few years as an educator and private tutor .

Boysen opened a private girls 'school in the Hanover of the German Empire in 1882 - initially with nine students in their parents' apartment on Eichstrasse .

In 1896 Boysen hired the teacher Elisabeth Granier , to whom she handed over the management in 1906 - the school now had 220 students - for health reasons. In the course of the girls' school reform of 1908, through which the higher girls' schools were put on an equal footing with the higher boys' schools and thus received permission to issue school-leaving certificates , the educational institution was subsequently run as a lyceum and initially referred to as the "Private Eastern Lyceum ".

After Julie Boysen, who was registered privately at Kollenrodtstrasse 65 in 1914 , was a retired school principal . D. was listed in the address book, city and business manual of the royal residence city of Hanover and the city of Linden of the same year as the owner of the property at Rundestrasse 20 and 20a , the property had passed to Louis Eilers in the following year 1915 , while Granier was now in Rumannstrasse 28 and 29 was recorded.

In 1928 the city took over the school as the "East Lyceum", which was later renamed the Elisabeth Granier School , then the Ricarda Huch School .

Honors

  • After the City Council of Hanover decided in 1999 to name new streets mainly after women who played an important role, a brochure was published in August 2011 that gives information about previous street names after female personalities and lists a number of people which street names should be used in the future. The latter also includes a short biography of Julie Boysen .

literature

  • Hiltrud Schroeder (Ed.): Sophie & Co. Important women of Hanover. Biographical portraits , Hanover: Fackelträger-Verlag, 1991, ISBN 3-7716-1521-6
  • Klaus Mlynek : GRANIER, Elisabeth. In: Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein, Hugo Thielen: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9 , p. 134 ( limited preview in the Google book search).
  • Klaus Mlynek: Granier, Elisabeth. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 228f.
  • Christine Kannenberg, Sabine Poppe (editor), Petra Utgenannt (design): Important women in Hanover. Help for future naming of streets, paths, squares and bridges according to female personalities , brochure, ed. from the Department for Equal Opportunities for Women and from the Planning and Urban Development Association, City of Hanover, June 2013 ( Online , PDF, 736 kB).

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Christine Kannenberg, Sabine Poppe (editor), Petra Utgenannt (design): Important women ... (see literature)
  2. a b Klaus Mlynek: Granier, Elisabeth (see literature)
  3. o. V .: History of the school / The development of the WRS from 1790 to today ... , chronicle on the website of the Hanoverian Wilhelm Raabe School on the page wrs-hannover.de in the version of August 28, 2018
  4. Michael Sauer: The development of the higher education system in Hanover from the 19th century to after the 2nd World War. In: Hannoversche Geschichtsblätter , New Series 43 (1989), pp. 1–30; here: p. 15; limited preview in Google Book search
  5. Compare section II: Street and house directory in alphabetical order of street names with details of the house owners and residents. Editorial deadline on Sept. 30th. 1913 , p. 264 as digitized version of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Lower Saxony State Library (GWLB)
  6. ^ Compare p. 266 of the address book by the GWBL
  7. Christine Kannenberg, Sabine Poppe (editor), Petra Utgenannt (design): Significant women ... (see literature)