Anna Ahlström


Anna Ahlström was a Swedish teacher and principal who, in 1902, founded the New Elementary School for Girls - Ahlströmska school - in Stockholm. The school's director was her life partner.

Biography

Anna Sofia Charlotta Ahlström was born in Stockholm, July 19, 1863. She was the daughter of Jonas Ahlström. She received her high school diploma in 1885 at the Wallinska school, in Stockholm. She continued her studies in Uppsala University and graduated from the bachelor's degree in 1891 after which, she traveled in Italy and France, living in Paris. She studied modern languages in Paris, London, and Berlin. In 1899, she defended her Ph.D. thesis in Uppsala. She was one of the first women to receive a doctorate in Sweden, and Sweden's first female doctor in Romance languages. She wrote her thesis on Gustave Flaubert's language in French in France.
Before her doctoral degree, she taught in 1893 at several girls' schools in Stockholm. When she was not allowed to apply for an associate professorship, she decided to start her own girls' school. After completing her doctoral degree, she established the New Elementary School for Girls in Stockholm in 1902, and began teaching the girls autumn term 1903, first in her own floor on Jungfrugatan 17, and a few months later, in various school premises on Kommendörsgatan in Östermalm, among others at Kommendörsgatan 25.
In 1907, Ahlström employed a younger teacher, Ellen Terserus, who became the school's director. Terserus graduated universities in England and the United States. Ahlström led this free school together with Ellen Terserus, her life partner. When Ahlström was almost 50 years old, she and Ellen Terserus moved into a common apartment on Sibyllegatan and ten years later, they moved to a large floor in the actual school house. Ahlström and Terserus both retired in 1930.
Ahlström died October 12, 1943, three weeks after Terserus.

Honors