The House ![]() "In the evening I went to speak to the home economics section of the Land Grant Colleges Association, meeting here for their annual convention. It was good to see Dr. Louise Stanley and Miss Flora Rose, of Cornell University again. Some people lift your spirit just by contact and Flora Rose has always had that effect on me." ~ Eleanor Roosevelt, Nov. 18, 1939
The Flora Rose House is the last of five houses on West Campus that are part of the Residential Initiative at Cornell University. The House was named in honor of Cornell faculty member Flora Rose (1874 - 1959). The House has its own dining room, leisure common area, library, pantry, guest suite and rooms for computing, seminars, academic support, and programs, engaging faculty, students, and staff in an environment of collegiality, civility, and stewardship. If Flora Rose had followed the expectations of her well-to-do Denver family, she would have been a woman of high society. By her mid-twenties, however, Rose found that lifestyle unfulfilling and abandoned it for a career in the new field of home economics. She borrowed money and enrolled in a household arts program at Framingham (Massachusetts) Normal School. In 1904, she earned a B.S. from Kansas State University, where she taught food and nutrition classes. By 1907, Rose had received an M.A. in Food and Nutrition from Columbia University. In 1905, Rose wrote a letter to administrators at both Stanford and Cornell University encouraging these forward-thinking, coeducational universities to start programs in home economics. She later explained: "Neither of them had home economics, and in my reforming mood I decided that they should." Rose's letter convinced the Cornell administration to invite her as a lecturer in nutrition in 1907, which led to a full-time appointment in the agriculture department in the hope that Rose would help establish a home economics department. Flora Rose Presentation (pdf) Article About Flora Rose http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_history_of_sexuality/v015/15.1elias.html http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_history_of_sexuality/v015/15.1elias.pdf |