Elizabeth "Bessie" Sutherland () was a prominent educator on the south side of
Chicago throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s. Born in 1851 in
Blue Island and educated at the
Cook County Normal School, Sutherland was strongly influenced by the
progressive era of education and the advent of
common schools. After working at several schools, she took employment at the Washington Heights School, now called the Alice L. Barnard School of Chicago. She was appointed principal in 1883, making her the first woman to be principal of a school in
Cook County. Eventually, Sutherland had three schools, 19 teachers and 800 students under her charge. Sutherland was also responsible for a set of portable classrooms on the corner of 100th and Leavitt streets to accommodate the growing population of
Beverly students. Sutherland retired as principal in 1923 and died in 1924. The year following her death, a permanent school building was constructed at the site of the portable classrooms. It was named Elizabeth H. Sutherland Elementary School in her honor. In 2011, following years of budget cuts and the elimination of the school's music teacher position, parents formed the Sutherland Foundation for Education and Enrichment. The
charitable foundation seeks to enhance the quality and depth of the school's education program. The foundation secures and distributes funding through grand opportunities, local donations, corporate sponsorships, and the personalized paver program on the grounds of the school. In 2013, French teacher Alan Wax discovered a
scrapbook in a school storeroom which was created by the Sutherland
PTA (which was formed in 1927) with historical accounts of the first 25 years of the school by the first principal, Lilias Williamson. This discovery prompted research by the Ridge Historical Society. The scrapbook and
Chicago Tribune research revealed that the school building was in dire need of repair due to faulty design and cheap construction. In her history, Williamson congratulates local fathers for their "vital interest shown in assuring safe housing for the children, in obtaining from the
Board of Education, emergency action, as far as the safety of the school was concerned, and by their unremitting demands until permanent and complete repairs were made in 1929 and 1930.” The scrapbook remains in the care of the Ridge Historical Society. ==Campus==