Peter Dreier is a professor of politics at Occidental College in California. In this post, he writes about Katherine Lee Bates, who was the writer of “America the Beautiful.” I first learned the song when I was in public school in Houston. It was a standard at every school celebration or songfest. Later, when I was a student at Wellesley College, I learned that one of the dormitories–Bates Hall–was named for this very illustrious woman.
Dreier writes:
Listening to the Mormon Tabernacle Choir sing “America the Beautiful” at Donald Trump’s inauguration, I couldn’t help thinking about Katharine Lee Bates, the song’s author, who would have been appalled by the sight of Trump taking the oath of office to her most famous creation.
Bates, you see, was a Christian socialist, an ally of labor unions, an advocate for immigrants, a feminist, an ardent foe of imperialism, and a lesbian. A well-respected poet and professor of English at Wellesley College, Bates (1859-1929) was part of progressive reform circles in the Boston area, concerned about labor rights, urban slums and women’s suffrage.
For decades Bates lived with and loved her Wellesley colleague Katharine Coman, founder of the college’s economics department, who authored The History of Contract Labor in the Hawaiian Islands and The Economic History of the Far West. Coman was also a poet. She and Bates jointly wrote English History as Taught by English Poets.
Although they lived together for 25 years in what was then called a “Boston Marriage,” they could not publicly acknowledge their intimate relationship. When Coman died, however, Bates published Yellow Clover: A Book of Remembrance that celebrated their love and their involvement in the radical and social reform movements of their day.
Were Bates and Coman alive today, they would probably have taken advantage of our current laws allowing same-sex couples to marry — a law that many Trump supporters hope that the Supreme Court will overturn.

I have often thought that “America the Beautiful” would make a much better national anthem than “The Star Spangled Banner.” First of all, it is a lot more singable, and it celebrates America’s beauty and natural resources. While The “Star Spangled Banner” is a war anthem and a tale of courage under fire, I find “America the Beautiful” more inclusive and beautiful. Thanks for the history lesson as I had no idea about the songwriter.
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My mother has been saying the same thing for as long as I can remember. Think we have a chance of changing it?
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Francis Bellamy was also a Christian socialist. He wrote the Pledge of Allegiance (without the “under God” thingie). Ha, ha, ha, all these capitalist pigs are reciting a socialist pledge.
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Joe, all that head banging seems to make you more articulate and wise! I know this will offend many, but I have always despised the Star Spangled Banner because it’s a horribly written poem that glorifies militarism. My first two choices to replace it, in order, are This Land is Your Land and American the Beautiful. They put our people, ideals and constitutional principles at the center of our national identity.
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America the Beautiful, if only I could proofread.
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Thanks Joe – and why I won’t say it. I do thank you Diane for sharing this great story. It needs to be shared widely!
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With all due respect to the owner of this blog and all those for a “better education for all”…
Rolling over in graves? When there was something much more important and productive to be done?
Katherine Lee Bates and Katharine Coman would have been in Washington, DC, yesterday. Together, One or both of them at the podium speaking, or perhaps to sing “America the Beautiful.”
And I wouldn’t have been surprised to see them, arm in arm, jointly carrying a sign:
“It is the hour to rend thy chains, the blossom time of souls.” [Katherine Lee Bates]
😎
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Katherine Lee Bates Road runs parallel to Main Street here in Falmouth, MA. Big rally here yesterday. She would be proud!
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Ravitch: I first learned the song when I was in public school in Houston. It was a standard at every school celebration or songfest.
I’m sure you know that many schools don’t teach general music to students these days, and so many more students don’t know that song. Fewer students know the words to the National Anthem. And of course underprivileged families also have less access to school athletics, student government, student newspaper, yearbook, performing arts, robotics teams, etc.
Today it’s understood to be time that could be better spent on math or ELA.
I also grew up learning to sing a number of patriotic songs, Broadway musical songs, Disney movie songs (Zippity-do-da, etc.), seasonal songs, folks songs, songs from other cultures, American songbook, etc.
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What a beautiful story about these two women. Brings tears to my eyes, imagining the two of them walking and talking at Saturday’s March.
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Another Wellesley grad here. That song was sung often on campus, but, of course, with the words slightly changed – “and crown thy good with sisterhood.” Thanks for bringing back warm memories.
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A couple of factoids about “The Star-Spangled Banner”.
It was written by a civilian on a prisoner of war ship
It was written in 1814, but did not become the official anthem until 1931.
The tune is a old English Drinking song “To Anacreon in Heaven”, the British equivalent of “99 bottles of beer on the wall”.
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