Susan Cobb Milton Atkinson (1860 — 1942) was an American educator who was influential in promoting education to women in Georgia in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. As the wife of William Yates Atkinson, the Governor of Georgia from 1894 to 1898, she used her position as the state First Lady to advocate for state funding for women to attend college.[1] After her time at Georgia College, she went into the insurance business.[1] In her later life, Atkinson served as the postmistress in Newnan—a title bestowed upon her by President Theodore Roosevelt himself.[2]
^ ab"Susan Cobb Milton Atkinson". Georgia Women of Achievement. March 1996. Archived from the original on August 27, 2020. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
^Cite error: The named reference Arnold was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
and 27 Related for: Susan Cobb Milton Atkinson information
SusanCobbMiltonAtkinson (1860 — 1942) was an American educator who was influential in promoting education to women in Georgia in the late 19th and early...
a Confederate memorialist and postmistress. In Governor William Yates Atkinson's first campaign, she rendered him valuable service by her vigorous editorials...
organizing the 67 Corps of the Women's Relief Corps in 1886. Susie Taylor, born Susan Ann Baker, was the first of nine children born to Raymond and Hagar Ann...
friends to the committee. By using her connections, she was able to convince Susan Ludlow Parish, Eleanor Roosevelt's godmother, Mina Miller Edison, the wife...
Chapel. The former Lucy Cobb Institute became the home of the Carl Vinson Institute of Government. SusanCobbMiltonAtkinson Sarah Johnson Cocke Julia...
married SusanCobbMilton, granddaughter of Florida Governor John Milton, in 1880. After graduating from the University of Georgia, Atkinson began practicing...
initially in Good Hope and then in Monroe, Georgia. She taught at the Lucy Cobb Institute and State Normal School, both located in Athens, Georgia. She studied...
McEachern was a teacher in the Oregon area of Cobb County in her early 20s. She married fellow Cobb County native and Confederate veteran John Newton...
Flisch yearned to attend the university after graduating from the Lucy Cobb Institute, but she was denied entrance in 1869 because she was a woman. Though...