Alger hiss7/5/2023 ![]() Harry Ransom had her designed professor emeritus upon her retirement. By 1948, she had become a full professor. In 1925, her four-year curriculum to train teachers in women's physical education received approval. In 1921, she received promotion to director. In 1918, her first role was to teach "physical training" to women. In 1918, Hiss started teaching at the University of Texas and served there 36 years until retirement in 1957. Hiss taught briefly at the Friends School in Baltimore. She studied at Bryn Mawr School, then Hollins College (1911–1912), and graduate from the Sargent School of Physical Education in Boston (1917). ![]() Īs a child, she attended the Aloha Kanaka camp. In 1929, her sister Mary Ann committed suicide. ![]() In 1926, her brother Bosley Hiss died of Bright's disease. She was the eldest of five children: Anna, Mary Ann (1895), Bosley (1900), Alger (1904), and Donald (1906). Background Īnna Hiss was born on May 11, 1893, in Baltimore, Maryland, to Mary "Minnie" Lavinia (née Hughes) and Charles Alger Hiss. She was also professor of physical education at the University of Texas at Austin, as well as older sister of Donald Hiss and Alger Hiss. ![]() Anna Hiss (1893–1972) was a 20th-century American professor, instrumental in improving the field of physical education by professionalizing the field, establishing university degrees, and developing programs for preparing physical education teachers. 20th-century American physical education teacherĭr. ![]()
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