Julia Flisch was a Georgia writer, educator, and advocate for women's rights to education and independence. Flisch was known for her call to "Give the girls a chance!" in her fight for equity in education access.
After she was rejected from the University of Georgia, Flisch published letters and articles in numerous newspapers advocating for women's right to a higher education. Flisch mocked the superficiality of finishing schools and argued that women should receive training that would allow them to earn a living wage. In the 1920s, she led a strike that aimed to procure equal wages for women teachers. The Lucy Cobb Institute was the first school to offer Flisch a path in life unique to women during her lifetime, and she returned often after graduating with honors in 1877. Her speeches urged women to pursue ambitious lives, and her 1884 address was touted as "the best paper ever read from that platform."
Teaching career
When ground broke on Georgia Normal and Industrial College in Milledgeville, the first public college for women in the state of Georgia, Flisch gave a speech about women's capabilities and eagerness to learn and work. She was the only woman to participate in the dedication ceremony. She joined the college's faculty, beginning her teaching career. After completing her master's degree, Flisch accepted a job in Augusta at Tubman High School, where she taught for seventeen years. She later became the first female founding faculty member at the Junior College of Augusta and a fast favorite for students. Edward J. Cashin's book A History of Augusta College proclaims, "Her students were convinced that she had two brains: The story was handed from one class to the next as solemn fact and added a new dimension to the wonder which surrounded her."
Writing career
In addition to Flisch's nonfiction writing and newspaper articles, she wrote fiction. In 1886, she published her first novel, Ashes of Hope, about young girls seeking independence. Her second novel, published in 1925, Old Hurricane, received good reviews.
Honors
The University of Georgia gave Julia Flisch an honorary master's degree in 1889, 20 years after she was not admitted, making her the first woman to receive this honor from the university. When Flisch died in 1941, she was acclaimed as having done "more than any other person to advance the cause of women’s education in the state of Georgia." In 1994, Flisch was inducted into the Georgia Women of Achievement.