Juanita Molina was born in 1893[1] in Managua, Nicaragua. After completing her primary and secondary education in Managua, she became Principal of the Municipal School. Continuing her education, she attended the College of the Holy Names in Oakland, California and went on to earn both a Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts[2] from Columbia University.[3]
Career
Molina returned to Nicaragua and in 1924 was appointed Assistant Secretary of Public Instruction.[4] She married fellow teacher Gunnar Fromen and returned to New York,[5] where she was teaching Spanish classes in 1926[6] at such institutions as the Curtis Superior School and Hunter College High School in New York City.[2] In 1929, she and her husband were both contracted to work for the government of Nicaragua studying schooling systems in the US. Molina was contracted as an educational advisor and her husband as an instructor.[5]
Molina and her husband were active suffragists and worked with President Molina on a constitutional amendment to enfranchise women, which was submitted to the Chamber of Deputies and Senate in 1930, but the effort failed. She continued to fight from New York for the right to vote for Nicaraguan women until her untimely death.[3]
Molina suffered from a series of health issues in 1934. She underwent two appendix operations and had a mental break due to severe postpartum depression, which was revealed in a letter to Doris Stevens from Gunnar. As a result, she committed infanticide on her only child and died as a result of suicide on 22 December 1934 in the couple's New York City apartment.[11]
^ ab"Portrait of Juanita Molina de Fromen". Harvard University Library. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute. c. 1930. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
^Lee, Muna (October 1929). "The Inter-American Commission of Women"(PDF). Pan-American Magazine: 1. Retrieved 13 July 2015; contained in Cohen, Jonathan, ed. (2004). A Pan-American Life: Selected Poetry and Prose of Muna Lee. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press.