Fannie Fern and Frank Edward Phillips were twins, born on 25 September 1867 at Middleton, Annapolis (Nova Scotia) to Annie M. (née Brown) and William Wallis Phillips.[1] Between 1871 and 1880, the family, which included 5 children, migrated from Middleton to Lynn, Massachusetts.[2][3] Later, they moved to Salem, where she attended the public schools[4] and graduated from the Salem Normal School. On July 16, 1890, she was married to Edwin G. Andrews. She taught for six years[citation needed] before receiving a degree in psychology and education from Radcliffe College in 1902.[5] She also attended Harvard Summer School.[6][7][4]
Andrews founded the Boston Home and School Association in 1907, with the goal of involving students' parents in education.[8] Through her work in the public schools in Boston, she became convinced that differing ethnic and economic backgrounds spurred conflict, and that each must be taught to understand the others in order to communicate and negotiate on peaceful terms.
In 1908, Andrews founded the American Peace League. This organization sought peace by teaching the principles of 'international justice' in American schools.[5][9] She envisioned an international bureau of education, which would promote understanding among all nations. When World War I broke out, Andrews changed the name of her organization from the "American Peace League" to the "American School Citizenship League" in 1918.
Andrews was an advocate of the ideal of peace education, and promoted action at an official level to obtain curriculum changes. Today's Civil Education classes are a result of the efforts she and others made.[citation needed] She died on 24 January 1950, after a lengthy illness, at the Hillcrest Nursing Home in Somerville, Massachusetts, was cremated at Mount Auburn Cemetery, and was buried at Pine Grove Cemetery in Lynn, Massachusetts.[5]
Works
The United States and the World (1918)
The World Family (1918)
The War - What Should Be Said about it in the Schools? (Boston, 1914)
Central Organization for a Durable Peace (Boston, 1916)
Freedom of the Seas (The Hague, 1917)
A Course in Citizenship and Patriotism (:Houghton Mifflin, 1918)[12]
A Course in Foreign Relations, prepared for the Army Education Commission (Paris, 1919)