Ida Kaplan Langman scrapbook

Ida Kaplan was born in Ukraine in 1904. While still an infant, Ida and her parents, Hyman and Dora, immigrated to the United States and settled in South Philadelphia. Ida graduated from the South Philadelphia High School for Girls (SPHS) in 1920. She went on to receive a teaching certificate from...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Langman, Ida Kaplan 1904-1991. (Creator)
Collection:Ida Kaplan Langman Scrapbook
Collection Number:Am.0877
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
Subjects and Genres:
Online Access:Link to finding aid
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Item Description: Materials Separated from the Resource: None.
Processing Information: Some of the information in the biographical note was very graciously supplied by Ida Langman’s sister, Mae K. Millstone.
Physical Description: 0.3 Linear feet ; 1 volume
Access: The collection is open for research.
Summary: Ida Kaplan was born in Ukraine in 1904. While still an infant, Ida and her parents, Hyman and Dora, immigrated to the United States and settled in South Philadelphia. Ida graduated from the South Philadelphia High School for Girls (SPHS) in 1920. She went on to receive a teaching certificate from the Philadelphia Normal School, and eventually earned a Master’s degree in botany from the University of Pennsylvania in 1945. She continued her career as a teacher, botanist, and bibliographer. Ida married Oscar Langman in 1928. They had no children and Ida died in 1991. Her scrapbook documents her last year at SPHS and includes photographs of classmates, faculty, and field trips, as well as newspaper clippings about SPHS; programs for school plays and local events and performances; speeches, including two that she delivered; and a history of her class.
Ida Kaplan’s scrapbook, which is entitled “My Record Book,” is a snapshot of her time at the South Philadelphia High School for Girls. The scrapbook itself was published in Philadelphia by Clark Printing House, and the pages feature elaborate headings and designs. Ida purchased this scrapbook and embellished it for her own use, adding colors and supplying photographs and other memorabilia. The scrapbook serves as a kind of homemade yearbook for 1919-1920, her last year there. Information on her class, such as its colors, flowers, and motto are included, and there are sections for classmates, faculty members, class history, clubs, entertainments, sports and athletics, invitations, and commencement. The section of the volume devoted to Ida’s classmates includes autographs of Ida’s friends, who often wrote her short poems or aphorisms, such as “Friends slowly won are long held.” Most girls wrote their addresses as well. Photographs of the girls, many of them wearing pearls or large hats, were often pasted next to their autographs. Only one friend chose to reflect concretely on their time at SPHS: “Remember when we were three girls in a row in our Latin Class? We used to read moving pictures magazines instead of reciting Latin.” Names and photos indicate that SPHS was a diverse school; many students were of Jewish or Italian heritage, and there were a number of black students. One student addressed Ida as “Dear Bolshevik (Redsey).” Ida’s faculty section includes photographs of faculty members, who wrote good wishes to her beside their photos. A few newspaper clippings, apparently added at a later date, refer to the deaths of some of these teachers. There is also a 1921 photograph showing all faculty members. Other sections of the scrapbook also feature photographs, some of them depicting outings with friends or club field trips. Among the materials for some of the trips are directions for getting there on public transportation. Of particular note is Ida’s class history, in which she touches on the highlights of her time at SPHS. One of her most important memories concerned the closing of the school during the winter of 1917. SPHS ran out of coal and could not obtain more, forcing the administration to close the school. Students did not attend class for three weeks, until Furness School offered their school to SPHS students. After attending Furness for a month, coal was finally delivered and SPHS was reopened. When the U.S. became involved in World War I, Ida and her classmates participated in the Liberty Loan campaigns. They were especially thrilled when they were allowed to participate in Philadelphia’s Liberty Loan celebration, for which the students made dresses and crowns to be “Goddesses of Liberty.” A page depicting this ensemble is included in the scrapbook. Ida’s scrapbook contains a section entitled “Class Prophecy.” This prophecy took the form of an imagined future conversation with Principal Wilson, in which a former student related details of what happened to Ida and her classmates in the years after graduation. Ida imagined that her classmates would embark on a variety of careers, and she envisioned beauticians, novelists, musicians, settlement workers, librarians, and nurses among them. Interestingly, Ida’s prophecy does not seem to have been at all constrained by gender roles. Although she imagined a few girls to be “social butterflies” or married with “three lovely children,” she pictured one of her classmates as a chief of police, one as a mountain climber, and another as the president of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Ida imagined herself to be the secretary of the Agricultural Department (with a friend as her private secretary). Ida gave a speech at her commencement about the importance of learning a foreign language. Although commencement programs indicate that there was emphasis on teaching girls sewing and other skills that could be used in the home, math, English, and foreign languages were also stressed as being very important. In addition to Ida’s speech, which she copied into her scrapbook, there is also a copy of a speech delivered by Principal Wilson to the class that graduated after Ida’s. Principal Wilson sent Ida a copy of the speech and asked Ida if she would translate the speech into Yiddish and deliver it at the commencement ceremony. Another of Ida’s classmates delivered the same speech in Italian. Principal Wilson’s speech reaffirms the importance of giving girls a proper education, and the principal described how gratified she was that a number of girls had gone to college after graduation. The principal was obviously Ida’s mentor; the scrapbook originally included a page dedicated to Principal Wilson, but upon the celebration of Wilson’s retirement in 1934, Ida removed the page to give her as a gift, leaving a note in its place. Other materials in the scrapbook include newspaper clippings, photographs and postcards from a field trip to Washington, D.C., commencement programs, tickets and programs for plays produced by SPHS, and programs for performances at the Academy of Music. There is a “reunion” section of the scrapbook, which is blank. Also included is a brief note inserted at a later date (labeled “pre-1956”), addressed to Mrs. Langman. The note is from some SPHS students and seems to have accompanied a gif that they gave her. With the exception of some newspaper clippings about the deaths of some faculty members, this small card is the only documentation of Ida’s life after she graduated from the South Philadelphia School for Girls.