A promise of equal education fulfilled at Vassar
Founded in 1861, Vassar Female College in Poughkeepsie opened Sept.
26, 1865, funded and endowed by Matthew Vassar so women could obtain
an education that was equal to the best education available to men
in America.
Today, Vassar College enjoys a reputation as a premiere liberal
arts school.
From 350 students and a faculty of 30 in 1865, modern-day Vassar
has 2,346 students and more than 200 faculty members.
Its library contains nearly one million volumes; in its art collection
are works that span the millennia, from ancient Egypt to modern-day
New York; its rare book room houses 17th-century Bibles and its
astronomical observatory is one of its sources of pride.
The first meeting of Vassars board of trustees took place
at the Hotel Gregory in Poughkeepsie in February 1861.
A small tin box that Matthew Vassar brought to the meeting held
the future of the college: securities amounting to $408,000 and
a deed for 200 acres for the college site and a farm.
Matthew Vassar died at a June 23, 1868 meeting of the board of
trustees. His last gift to the school he founded was a magnificent
cabinet of stone and rocks. His will provided for a
lecture fund of $50,000, an auxiliary fund of $50,000 for aiding
students of superior promise, a library, art and cabinet fund of
$50,000, and a repair fund, the residue of the estate, amounting
to more than $100,000.
Today, Vassar has an endowment of $403 million.
The word female was removed from the name of the college in June
1866, although the school continued to admit only women until the
late 1960s.
Scores of well-known scholars, writers and scientists have lectured
at Vassar over the years. One of them was Ralph Waldo Emerson, who
addressed the students at their request, in May 1867 on The
Man of the World.
There was considerable indignation, after the lecture,
on the part of the students, that Emerson had thought us incapable,
to paraphrase his own language, of aiming our arrows at a
star. Today how glad I am that I witnessed a manifestation
of his characteristic independence of action, and that I even am
able to compare his pictures with my recollection of his appearance,
wrote Mary H. Norris, an 1870 graduate of Vassar, in Golden
Age of Vassar.
Among other legends who have visited the Vassar campus: Mark Twain,
Louisa May Alcott, Charles Dickens, John D. Rockefeller.
Vassar survived and thrived during the next century, but times
were changing. By the late 1960s, with declining enrollment, Vassar
had to decide whether to accept an offer from Yale University to
move to New Haven, Conn.
In 1968, Vassars board decided the college would become
co-educational. In September 1968, 20 men sponsored by local companies
enrolled in chemistry, physics and math courses on a trial basis,
becoming the first male students enrolled at Vassar since the college
enrolled veterans after World War II. The first male transfer students
arrived in the fall of 1969. Today, 40 percent of Vassar students
are male.
(When anthropologist Margaret Mead spoke in the Vassar Chapel
in 1972 on A Cross-Cultural View of Human Sexuality
she predicted the residents of coed dorms would observe an incest
taboo, a self-imposed restriction on dating.)
Vassar has continued to move forward. Its Class of 1951 Observatory,
a three-domed observatory with a 32-inch telescope, one of the two
largest telescopes in the state, was dedicated in 1997. The original
observatory, built in 1864, is one of the colleges first buildings
and is a National Historic Landmark. Astronomer Maria Mitchell,
the first member of the faculty hired by the college, was the first
woman to gain membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,
now the National Academy of Sciences. Mitchell taught her students
in the original observatory, which also was her home.
Vassars $200 million capital campaign begun in 1993 to upgrade
facilities added the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center. An expansion
of the library and athletics facilities is under way.
Compiled by Carol Trapani from Poughkeepsie Journal and Vassar
College files and the Vassar College Web site.
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