User:HazelAB/May Gorslin Preston Slosson

May Gorslin Preston Slosson (10 September 1858, Ilion, New York - November 1943) was an American educator and suffragist.

May Gorslin Preston was the daughter of Reverend Levi Campbell Preston and the former Mary Gorslin. She earned Bachelor of Science (1878) and Master of Science (1879) degrees from Hillsdale College in Michigan. In 1880 she became the first woman to earn a Ph.D. from Cornell University, and the first woman to obtain a  doctoral degree in Philosophy in the United States. Her thesis was entitled Different Theories of Beauty. After obtaining her PhD she became professor of Greek at Hastings College in Nebraska, and was later Assistant Principal at Sabetha High School in Kansas. She married Edwin Emery Slosson in 1891 in Centralia, Kansas and moved with him in 1892 to Laramie, Wyoming, where he had been appointed professor of Chemistry at the University of Wyoming. Their son Preston William Slosson, born in Laramie in 1892, went on to have long career as professor of History at the University of Michigan. A younger son, Alfred Raymond, died in childhood of scarlet fever.

May Preston Slosson organized a series of Sunday afternoon lectures for the prisoners at the State Wyoming State Penitentiary in Laramie, to be given by University of Wyoming professors. She also delivered lectures in the series. When the position of chaplain at the nearly all-male prison became vacant in 1899, she was appointed to the position at the request of the inmates and remained in the role until 1903. Her work at the prison is commemorated by the Dr. May Slosson Preston Lecture Series held at the Wyoming Territorial Prison State Historic Site. She moved with her family to New York City in 1903.

While living in Wyoming, May Preston Slosson had enjoyed rights that other states denied to women, including the right to vote. After moving to New York, both she and her husband were active in the women's suffrage movement. In 1920 she published a a book of poems, From a Quiet Garden, Lyrics in Prose and Verse.