Lucy Maynard Salmon (born July 27, 1853, Fulton, N.Y., U.S.—died Feb. 14, 1927, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.) was an American historian who extended the offerings in history during her long tenure at Vassar College. She also was instrumental in building a library there of high scholarly merit.
Salmon graduated from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 1876, and during the following five years she was assistant principal and then principal of the high school in McGregor, Iowa. She returned to the University of Michigan, earning an M.A. in history in 1883. After three years of teaching at the Indiana State Normal School (now Indiana State University) in Terre Haute, she was awarded a fellowship for a year’s graduate study in American history at Bryn Mawr (Pennsylvania) College. From there she went to Vassar in 1887 as that college’s first history teacher; she was appointed a full professor in 1889.
Except for a leave of absence for European study and travel in 1898–1900, Salmon remained at Vassar for the rest of her life. The number of history courses offered by the college multiplied under her influence, and she was a leader in the long drive to create a major scholarly library for Vassar. She was an innovative teacher, known for incorporating materials reflecting the realities of daily life rather than relying solely on official documents and formal pronouncements in the study of history. Her pioneering use of statistical reports helped make her study Domestic Service (1897) a major contribution to both history and historiography.
In 1903 she founded and served as the first president of the Association of History Teachers of the Middle States and Maryland, and in 1915–19 she was the first woman to sit on the executive committee of the American Historical Association.