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Elizabeth Avery Colton : ウィキペディア英語版 | Elizabeth Avery Colton
Elizabeth Avery Colton (; December 30, 1872 – August 24, 1924) was an educator and an advocate for women's colleges. She is best known for her publications on the improvement of women's colleges, such as ''The Various Types of Southern Colleges for Women'' and ''Standards of Southern Colleges for Women.'' ''The History of the American Association of University Women'' honored Elizabeth Avery Colton for pioneering a new era for women's colleges. ==Early life and education==
Elizabeth Avery Colton was born on December 30, 1872, in the Choctaw Nation's part of Indian Territory, later to become the state of Oklahoma. She was the eldest of the eight children of James Hooper Colton and Eloise Avery Colton. Colton's paternal grandfather moved the family from Massachusetts to North Carolina in his early years. He was both a minister and a teacher. On her mother's side were some of great leaders of the North Carolina state, especially the notable Waightstill Avery. As Mary Lynch Johnson notes, Colton thus came from a long line of "religious and educational heritage"
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