Education
Throughout her life she was an avid seeker of knowledge and began a teaching career as soon as she graduated from Colby College.
Throughout her life she was an avid seeker of knowledge and began a teaching career as soon as she graduated from Colby College.
She taught in Bangor High School for more than 20 years, while continuing her own education in her spare time. In order to further her knowledge, she worked in the laboratories of Asa Gray and Agassiz. Susan Hallowell pioneered higher education for women.
The many courses she organised have hardly changed - except where additional scientific knowledge has been incorporated into them - since their inception.
She built up a botanical library, which even today is only excelled by those of the greatest United States universities. Mission Hallowell was 67 years old when, in 1902, she retired from her position of Professor of Natural History at Wellesey College.
From that time on she was Emeritus Professor of Botany. lieutenant is said that she cultivated her "disciples", inviting her pupil, Margaret Ferguson, from the class of 1891, to major in botany. made her an instructor in 1893 and appointed her as Head of Department in 1894.
Mission Hallowell was a member of the Torrey Botanical Society.