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Western College for Women / Jacqueline Johnson.

Images of America: A History of American Life in Images and Texts Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Johnson, Jacqueline., Author.
Series:
Campus history series.
Images of America.
Campus history series
Images of America
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Universities and colleges--Ohio--Oxford--History--Pictorial works.
Universities and colleges.
Western College for Women--History--Pictorial works.
Western College for Women.
Western College for Women--History.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (127 pages) : chiefly illustrations.
Place of Publication:
Charleston, SC : Arcadia Publishing, [2014]
Summary:
Western Female Seminary, the first daughter institution of Mount Holyoke College, opened its doors in 1855 as a Christian institution. The seminary, which became Western College for Women, was founded on the Mt. Holyoke plan, with a strong emphasis on academics. Many of its graduates in the 19th century served as home and foreign missionaries, and by the 20th century, young women from many foreign countries attended Western. In the 1950s, the curriculum was expanded to include a strong international emphasis. Western was the first college in the country to have an artist-in-residence, when composer Edgar Stillman Kelley was invited to live on campus. Western attracted national attention when it hosted civil rights training for Freedom Summer 1964. In the 1970s, independent study programs were developed, and the college became coeducational. With its diverse architecture and the early emphasis on landscaping on its rolling campus, the college was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
OCLC:
900733274

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