Home > Carnegie Center > Arizona Women's Hall of Fame > Inductees > Post, Mary Elizabeth
Mary Elizabeth Post
1841 - 1934
Inducted in 2002

Used by permission from the Arizona Historical Society
Mary Elizabeth Post taught in Yuma for 41 years, beginning when Arizona
was still a territory. She became a leader in woman’s club
in Yuma and was founder and member of the board of the Carnegie Library
in Yuma. Proficient in both English and Spanish, she served as interpreter
for the Courts, the Reclamation Service, and the Spanish-speaking priests.
The oldest of nine children, Mary Elizabeth Post was born on June 17,
1841 in Elizabethtown, New York. She was privately tutored through the
local district school, then completed her higher education at the Burlington
Female Seminary in Vermont after finding the doors of the University of
Vermont closed to women.
She moved with her family to Iowa in 1862 and took her first teaching
position in a private normal school. She felt drawn further west however,
and traveling alone, endured a blizzard, a five-week train trip, a stagecoach
ride through 250 miles of open desert, and an additional 125-mile trip
up the Colorado River.
Mary Elizabeth arrived at her teaching post in Arizona Territory in April
1872. There she discovered that her pupils spoke only Spanish; she spoke
only English. But soon, with effort on both sides, teacher and students
were communicating easily. Already proficient in French, Latin, and English,
Mary Elizabeth adopted Spanish. She taught everyone who wanted an education
from young children to adults. She was particularly devoted to the Mexican
population and cared deeply about her students.
She became involved with women in politics and traveled the state. In
1903, she took the lead in organizing the first woman’s club in Yuma.
Mary Elizabeth never missed a state teachers’ meeting, and was often
in attendance at the annual convention of the Arizona Federation of Women’s
Clubs. After working tirelessly to establish the Carnegie Library in Yuma,
she became a member of its board on which she served for the remainder
of her life.
Well past her seventieth birthday, Mary Elizabeth Post retired after
teaching 41 years in Yuma. Even retirement did not slow her down. She studied
French literature, acted as a tutor, and served as interpreter for the
Courts, the Reclamation Service, and Spanish-speaking priests.
Mary Elizabeth Post died in Yuma at age 93 on September 15, 1934. Yuma’s
Mary E. Post Elementary School is named for her as a memorial to the years
she worked to improve education in that city.
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