Lucy Diggs Slowe , c. 1910-1920s
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Lucy Diggs Slowe Papers, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center

By sporting a more masculine striped buttoned shirt with a short uncurled hair cut, Slowe perhaps signals some rejection of the Edwardian feminist ideals she once portrayed. In contrast to her previous portrait, she looks directly at the camera, meeting the viewer's gaze and evoking an emboldened sense of confidence and maturity in her abilities. By 1915, armed with regional acclaim for her teaching style and her master's degree from Columbia University, Slowe moved back to Washington, DC, to teach at Armstrong Manual Training High School and then lead the city's first junior high, M Street (Shaw) Junior High School.

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Dean Lucy Diggs Slowe with a group of Howard students in front of a building in Freedmen's Square , n.d.
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Dean Lucy Diggs Slowe , 1922
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Letter from Lucy Diggs Slowe to Mary P. Burrill, May 1919, Lucy Diggs Slowe Papers, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
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Lucy Diggs Slowe, "Three Years," in The Junior High School Review's, "The Principal's Page," June 1922, Lucy Diggs Slowe Papers, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
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Lucy Diggs Slowe, "On the Formation of Right Habits," in The Junior High School Review's, "The Principal's Page," April 1922, Lucy Diggs Slowe Papers, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
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