Katherine Pettit
(short bio)
Katherine Pettit was born in 1868 near
Lexington, Kentucky, the child of Benjamin Pettit, a prosperous farmer. She went
to schools in Lexington and Louisville and early, developed an interest in the
social and educational problems of eastern Kentucky. Work in summer educational
programs 1899-1901, conducted in Knott and Perry counties by the Kentucky
Federation of Women’s Clubs, led to her developing a strong desire to make a
permanent contribution to the area.
With financing from the Women's Christian Temperance Union, she and May Stone
founded the WCTU Settlement School at Hindman in 1902. Its purpose was to
“found, establish, carry on and maintain a school or schools for industrial,
intellectual and moral training; to educate the youth of both sexes in habits of
sobriety in the mountainous, destitute or needy portions of the State of
Kentucky.” The school remained under the sponsorship of the Kentucky WCTU until
1915, when it was formally incorporated as a private, non-profit, non-sectarian,
and non-denominational corporation and became known simply as the Hindman
Settlement School.
In 1913 Pettit left Hindman for Harlan County, Kentucky where, with Ethel de
Long, she established Pine Mountain Settlement School. She served there as
co-director until retirement in 1930. For the next five years she employed
herself in what she termed “free lance work,” travelling throughout Harlan
County urging men to leave welfare and return to farming. She died in Lexington
of cancer in 1936 at the age of sixty-eight.