Background
Jessie M. Parker was born on February 25, 1880, in rural Black Hawk County, Iowa, United States.
Jessie M. Parker was born on February 25, 1880, in rural Black Hawk County, Iowa, United States.
Jessie Parker attended elementary and secondary school in Lake Mills. Following graduation as a member of the first Lake Mills graduating class in 1896, she attended and graduated from Iowa State Normal School. Her subsequent higher education included music study at Grinnell College, a bachelor of pedagogy degree from Valparaiso University in Indiana, and a bachelor of arts degree from Des Moines University.
Jessie Parker began her education career in 1898 in the Lake Mills schools, where she taught at all elementary grade levels before being transferred to the eighth grade because of her ability to control the "bad boys" or "rowdy little rascals" she regarded as "full of life and aware of everything that’s going on." Jessie Parker later became principal of the high school, remaining there until 1915, when she ran for Winnebago County Superintendent of Schools. She won the election, becoming the first woman to hold an elective office in that county.
In 1927 Iowa Superintendent of Public Instruction Agnes Samuelson appointed Jessie Parker rural superintendent for the state. One of Parker’s goals in that position was to "make Iowa the ‘singing’ state in the nation" by acquiring phonographs or pianos for as many of the more than 9,000 one-room schools as possible. When Samuelson retired in 1938, Jessie Parker was elected Superintendent of Public Instruction as a Republican and won reelection in 1942, 1946, and 1950, making her the longest-serving Superintendent of Public Instruction up to that time. By the time she retired in 1954, she had persuaded the state legislature to make the Superintendent of Public Instruction an appointive position, one of her primary objectives while in office.
In 1937 Jessie Parker was a U.S. delegate to the International Educational Association conference held in Tokyo. She spent two months in Japan and China, and in spite of difficulty leaving China due to the impending hostilities between Japan and China, regarded the experience as a highlight of her life that gave her firsthand knowledge of other customs and cultures. In recognition of her leadership in education, she received an honorary LL.D. from Buena Vista College in Storm Lake, Iowa. Jessie Parker was also active in women’s organizations such as the Business and Professional Women’s League of Des Moines and the Iowa Federation of Women’s Clubs, participating in conservation activities for the latter.
In 1952 Jessie Parker persuaded the Iowa Executive Council to give her the use of three wood buildings vacated when the Lucas Building opened that year on the capitol grounds in Des Moines. She made them accessible to people with disabilities, thereby establishing the groundwork for a vocational rehabilitation building that opened in 1980 on that site. Upon returning to Lake Mills after her retirement in 1954, Jessie Parker served one term on the local school board. She renewed her activities in her local church, where she had been the organist from the age of 12 until she moved to Des Moines.
Jessie M. Parker was inducted into the Iowa Women’s Hall of Fame in 1986.
In 1988, at the conclusion of a campaign conducted by former and present state officials and organizations, the Iowa legislature honored Parker’s legacy by naming the building the Jessie M. Parker Building, the first state building named for a woman.
During her professional career, Jessie Parker was a lifetime member of the National Education Association, a member of the American Association of School Administrators, and a charter member of Iowa’s Delta Kappa Gamma chapter, an organization formed to address equality issues for professional women educators, and she served as second vice president of the National Council of Chief State School Officers.