Stanwood Cobb
Stanwood Cobb was an American educator, author and prominent Baháʼí of the 20th century.
He was born in Newton, Massachusetts, the son of Darius Cobb and his wife, née Laura Mae Lillie. Darius and his twin brother Cyrus Cobb were Civil War soldiers and artists, and descendants of Elder Henry Cobb of the second voyage of the Mayflower. Their mother was Eunice Hale Waite Cobb, founding president of the Ladies Physiological Institute of Boston. Darius Cobb and his wife had four daughters and three sons. Stanwood Cobb studied at Dartmouth College, where he was valedictorian of his 1903 or 1905 graduating class, and then at Harvard Divinity School, earning an A.M. in philosophy and comparative religion 1910. His thesis work, Communistic Experimental Settlements in the USA, observed that every such settlement had failed within a generation because of an inability of communism to get people to subordinate their own desires for the good of the group. In 1919 he married Ida Nayan Whitlam. Cobb was a member of several literary associations and of the Cosmos Club of Washington, D.C..
Cobb lived internationally for some years before settling in Chevy Chase, Maryland, where he died.
Career as educator
In 1907–1910, Cobb taught history and Latin at Robert College in Constantinople, followed by several years teaching in the US and Europe. He later headed the English department at St. John's College in Annapolis, Maryland, taught at Asheville School in Asheville, North Carolina, and was instructor in history and English at the United States Naval Academy. Frustrated by the teaching experience at the Academy, Cobb heard a lecture by Marietta Johnson who helped marshal and crystallize his thoughts on education practice and curriculum theory. As a result, in 1919, Cobb founded the Chevy Chase Country Day School, of which he was the principal until his retirement, and, active in the progressive education movement in the United States, became a founder and motivating force, first secretary, and eventually president of The Association for the Advancement of Progressive Education, in 1931 renamed Progressive Education Association and then American Education Fellowship. The first president was Arthur E. Morgan. Later the influential John Dewey served as president. Cobb resigned the presidency in 1930 following the influx of supporters of George Counts who moved the focus of the Association from a student-centered learning approach to one of a social policy oriented approach to education theory. However, between the enormous impact of World War II on all thought and the involvement of many members of the PEA in communism and the general atmosphere of Anti-communism in the United States the achievements of the PEA both before Cobb's resignation and after were largely lost.Life as a Baháʼí
After looking at Theosophy and Reform Judaism and other themes in religion' Cobb investigated the Baháʼí Faith after a series of articles in the Boston Transcript on the religion attracted his attention. He pursued the interest to Green Acre conference center in Eliot, Maine in 1906 during his studies at Harvard Divinity School preparing for the Unitarian ministry. Sarah Farmer much affected Cobb, and Thornton Chase was giving a series of talks. It was on that occasion that Cobb became a Baháʼí.Between 1909 and 1913 he met with ʻAbdu'l-Bahá five times. In 1911 Cobb and a number of others gave talks in honor of the personal invitation by ʻAbdu'l-Bahá to pilgrimage of Louis Gregory.
Cobb was a founding member of the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Washington D. C. in 1933, and served on various committees and edited two Baha'i journals: Star of the West in 1924, and World Order from 1935–39.
Books and articles authored
Cobb was a prolific writer. Among his books were:- The Real Turk, ISBN B000NUP6SI, 1914, The Pilgrim Press Publisher,
- , 1915, Boston Murray and Emery Co. Publisher
- . 1918 Four Seasons Publisher,
- Simia, A Tale in Verse. 1919 Cornhill Publisher
- The New Leaven: Progressive Education and Its Effect upon the Child and Society. 1928.
- The Wisdom of Wu Ming Fu 1931, Henry Holt and Company
- Discovering the Genius Within You 1932, John Day Publisher, and again, World Publishing Co., Cleveland, 1941.
- New Horizons for the Child. 1934 The Avalon Press Publisher
- Security in a Failing World. 1934 The Avalon Press Published
- The Way of Life of Wu Ming Fu. 1935 The Avalon Press Publisher
- Character - A Sequence in Spiritual Psychology. 1938 The Avalon Press Publisher
- Symbols of America. 1946, The Avalon Press Publisher
- Tomorrow and Tomorrow. 1951 The Avalon Press Publisher
- The Donkey Or the Elephant. 1951 The Avalon Press Publisher
- What is Man?. 1952
- Sage of the Sacred Mountain; a Gospel of Tranquility. 1953, The Avalon Press
- Magnificent Partnership. 1954, Vantage Press Publisher
- What is God?. 1955
- What is Love?. 1957, The Avalon Press, Publisher
- . 1963
- Memories of ʻAbdu'l-Baha. 1962, The Avalon Press Publisher
- The Importance of Creativity. 1967, Published Scarecrow Press
- Life With Nayan. 1969, The Avalon Press Publisher
- Radiant Living. 1970, The Avalon Press Publisher
- The Meaning of Life. 1972, The Avalon Press Publisher
- Thoughts on education and life. 1975, The Avalon Press Publisher
- A Call to Action: Develop Your Spiritual Power : Man's Fulfillment on the.... 1977, The Avalon Press Publisher
- A Saga of Two Centuries 1979
- The Atlantic Monthly
- The Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research by the American Society for Psychical Research,
- The School Arts Magazine by Davis Press,
- Childhood Education by the Association for Childhood Education International
- Child Study by Child Study Association of America
- The New England Magazine by the Making of America Project
- The Path of Learning: Essays on Education by Henry Wyman Holmes, Burton P. Fowler, Published 1926 by Little, Brown and Company
- Progressive Education by Progressive Education Association
- The Baha'i World
- World Order