Contents

  • Histories

    Essays on periods and aspects of New School history, partial and evolving.

  • People

    Profiles of people who have passed through the New School. Entries focus on their time at the school.

  • Reader

    Readings, artworks, and materials by and about people associated with the school, including faculty, staff, and students.

  • Reflections & Analysis

    Podcasts, scholarly commentary, and opinion.

About

This website seeks to explore and interrogate the past at a school dedicated to the new. Contributions by students, staff, faculty, alumni, and researchers.

Editors
Julia L. Foulkes, Professor of History
Mark Larrimore, Associate Professor of Religious Studies
Wendy Scheir, Director, New School Archives and Special Collections

Connections
The New School Archives Digital Collections from the Archives Public Seminar The New School

Contact
[email protected]

Link here to the Style Guide for the Histories of The New School website This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Margaret McKay Tee

Margaret McKay Tee was born in 1882 and raised in Pennsylvania until her family moved to Colorado. Following her education at Colorado College, she trained at New York’s Cooper Union and Columbia Teacher’s College, where she met Frank Alvah Parsons.
In the Reader:

Margaret McKay Tee was born in 1882 and raised in Pennsylvania until her family moved to Colorado. Following her education at Colorado College, she trained at New York’s Cooper Union and Columbia Teacher’s College, where she met Frank Alvah Parsons. Tee subsequently worked for Parsons as a student instructor when he joined the faculty of the New York School of Fine and Applied Art (later, Parsons The New School for Design). Tee’s papers are held by the New School Archives.

Before her marriage to John Tee in 1913, she also apprenticed with Jean Griest, a New York decorator. The Tees returned to Colorado and eventually settled at Brinton Terrace, an artists’ colony in Denver. During World War II, Tee and her husband worked at the Ogden Air Service Command base.

For more in the New School Archives on Margaret McKay Tee, see the Margaret McKay Tee papers, 1908-1993.

Margaret McKay Tee Biographical note. Kellen Design Archives. Web. 09 Nov 2014.

Photograph of Margaret McKay Tee painting. 1920s. Margaret McKay Tee papers. New School Archives and Special Collections Digital Archive. Web. 12 Nov 2014.

Margaret McKay Tee
In the Reader: