Mary Hamilton Swindler, nicknamed "Mayme", was born in Bloomington, Indiana, on January 2, 1884. Her parents were Harrison T. and Ida Hamilton Swindler. Swindler attended public school in Bloomington and described her youth as filled with activity: "playing football, doing circus stunts, riding a bicycle violently and expending surplus energy on athletics of various kinds." Upon graduation from high school, Swindler attended Indiana University in Bloomington, where she received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1905 and a master's degree in 1906. She specialized in Greek, Latin, and archaeology studies. Swindler continued her education at Bryn Mawr College. The college awarded Swindler a Greek fellowship in 1906-07. She was also the recipient of the Mary E. Garrett European Fellowship in 1909-10, which allowed her to pursue graduate studies at the University of Berlin and the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Greece, before returning to Bryn Mawr. Swindler earned a doctoral degree from Bryn Mawr College in 1912 and joined the Bryn Mawr faculty.
Career
Swindler began her teaching career as an instructor of Latin and archaeology at Bryn Mawr College in 1912. From 1931 until her retirement in 1949, she was a professor of classical archaeology at Bryn Mawr. In addition to her teaching responsibilities, Swindler founded the Ella Riegel Memorial Museum for Archaeology, also known as the Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology Collection, in 1940 and the Ella Riegel Study Collection at Bryn Mawr College. Dorothy Burr Thompson, a renowned student of Bryn Mawr, was influenced by Swindler. Swindler worked with Thompson on studies of ancient vases at the Bryn Mawr College Museum's Mediterranean Section. Swindler also organized Bryn Mawr's participation in archaeological expeditions to Cilicia in Tarsus, Turkey. From 1932 to 1936, Swindler was the first female editor-in-chief of the American Journal of Archaeology . She also served as a consulting editor for the Encyclopædia Britannica. Swindler wrote several books on early ancient art. Her seminal work, Ancient Painting, from the Earliest Times to the Period of Christian Art, offered a comprehensive review the subject for scholars as well as students.
Swindler died on January 16, 1967, in Haverford, Pennsylvania, of bronchopneumonia. Swindler, who joined the faculty at Bryn Mawr College in 1912, was a noted professor of classical archaeology at the college and a scholar of ancient painting. She also founded the Ella Riegel Memorial Museum at Bryn Mawr. In addition, Swindler was the first woman editor of the American Journal of Archaeology . In 1941, when she was awarded an honorary degree from Indiana University, Swindler became the first woman to deliver a commencement address at IU.
Awards and honors
Swindler was regarded as an authority on ancient Greek paintings and received numerous honors and awards, including the following:
1941 – honorary LL.D. degree from Indiana University.