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Lovancia Pease was born on December 23, 1821 in Madison, Ohio, the oldest daughter of the six children of George Pease and Lucinda Campbell Pease -- pioneer farmers, educated, "staunch and god-fearing." In 1839 she traveled for nearly two days, probably by coach, from Madison to Oberlin, Ohio to enter the Preparatory Department at Oberlin College. Letters show that she studied arithmetic, composition, and singing and became known for her fine singing voice. Between terms of study, she taught local children to help defray her expenses. During her years in the Preparatory Department, she changed the spelling of her name from Lovantia to Lovancia.
Leaving Oberlin in 1841, she taught for nearly ten years in the schools in Madison, Unionville, and Painseville, Ohio until her marriage on September 18, 1950 to Henry Martyn Lyman, a former schoolmate from her student days in the Madison school. She then moved to Downer's Grove, IL where her husband's family, originally from New England, were farming as homesteaders. In time, her home, where she lived for over 61 years, became known as "The Lyman Homestead." Apparently, she had two children: a daughter about whom there is no information and a son, Walter C. Lyman, who pre-deceased her.
At Oberlin, Lovancia Peace became interested in the plight of the Negro and the role of women in American society. Her daughter-in-law, Jessie Woodward Lyman, wrote that Mrs. Lyman "bore her lot in life though not agreeing with the popular and accepted idea of male supremacy." Around, 1870, Lovancia Lyman wrote and published a small monograph, The Lost Image: Found in which she examines the role of women in its Biblical context. She concludes that men and women must work together for the equality of all humanity. In 1899, she added a preface to the piece, reaffirming her conviction that women's suffrage would come.
Lovancia Pease Lyman died at Downer's Grove on March 25, 1912.
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