When did Yale admit female students?

November 1968. The Yale Corporation secretly votes in favor of full coeducation, or accepting women into Yale College, in the fall of 1969. On November 4th, Coeducation week commences. 750 women from 22 colleges arrive on campus.
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When did Yale and Princeton start accepting female students?

Princeton and Yale began admitting women in 1969, and Brown followed in 1971. Dartmouth held out until 1972. After that, only a single Ivy League school maintained its men-only admission policy: Columbia.
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When did Princeton accept female students?

The big decision came in early 1969, when the Board voted to admit women undergraduates for a “better balance of social and intellectual life” — just a few months after Yale had a similar vote.
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Who was the first woman to graduate from Yale?

Alice Rufie Jordan Blake remained the sole female graduate of the law school until 1920. Her name is on the list of women proposed by Yale's Women Faculty Forum as namesakes for one of the planned new undergraduate residential colleges. Welcome to the Yale Alumni Magazine website!
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When did Harvard start accepting female students?

The beginning. The history of women at Harvard is long, layered, nuanced, and complex. Although they did not have any academic opportunities until the late 19th century, women participated in the University community from its founding in 1636, as family members of faculty, administrators, and students.
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Yale's First Female Students



When did Yale admit black students?

History. In September 1964, 14 black males students matriculated to Yale, a record number for the time. Along with black upperclassmen, these freshmen launched the first Spook Weekend, a huge social weekend that brought hundreds of Black students to Yale from throughout the Northeast.
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When did Cornell go coed?

Cornell was the first American university to be divided into colleges offering different degrees, and it was among the first Eastern universities to admit women (1870).
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When did Dartmouth go coed?

This student-curated exhibit explores the integration of female students at Dartmouth College. Using documents curated from the archives at Rauner Library, it considers the evolution of the College's social character in the decades since the adoption of coeducation in 1972.
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When did Ivies go coed?

Sister Schools Try to Offer Women a Compromise

Many of the Ivy League schools did not admit women until the 1960s and 1970s. That being said, several paired up with "sister schools" that educated women. In 1879, Harvard created the "Harvard Annex" to educate women separately from its male undergraduates.
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When did Cambridge allow female students?

Cambridge remained the last university to allow women full membership, not granting them degrees until 1948. (In 1998, a special graduation ceremony was held for students who completed their degrees before this point: photographs from that day are some of the most joyful in the show.)
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What was the first college to admit female students?

Otterbein University

Founded by the Church of the United Brethren in Christ in Westerville, Ohio, in 1847, Otterbein was the first college that opened with women as both faculty and students. It was another Ohio school involved in the liberation of runaway slaves.
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When did Penn go coed?

A College of Liberal Arts for Women was established in 1933, thus allowing women to pursue undergraduate degrees in subjects other than education; the university was not made fully coeducational, however, until 1974, when the women's school was merged into the School of Arts and Sciences.
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When did Brown go coed?

Women were first admitted to Brown in 1891. The Women's College was later renamed Pembroke College in Brown University before merging with Brown College, the men's undergraduate school, in 1971.
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Why did Dartmouth become coed?

Coeducation in Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire began in 1972 when Dartmouth College president John G. Kemeny installed a year-round program ensuring women's admission to the college. Kemeny's action created significant controversy among alumni and male students.
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What was the first US college to become coed?

Oberlin College:

Pictured above, this liberal arts college in Ohio was the first to accept men and women as well as black students in 1835.
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When did OSU become coed?

The university opened its doors to 24 students on September 17, 1873. In 1878, the first class of six men graduated. The first woman graduated the following year.
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When did Harvard allow black students?

1850: Harvard Medical School accepts its first three black students, one of whom was Martin Delany. But Harvard later rescinds the invitations due to pressure from white students. 1854: Ashmun Institute (now Lincoln University) is founded as the first institute of higher education for black men.
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When did Yale desegregate?

The trend toward greater numbers of African Americans at Yale continued, but it was not until the fall of 1964 that Yale College admitted its first substantial group of African American men.
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When did Princeton admit black students?

Such was the case with Bruce M. Wright, the first African American admitted to Princeton in the 20th-century, in 1935.
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When did Colgate go coed?

In September 1970, 132 women joined 452 men in the first official coeducation class at Colgate.
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How long has Harvard been coed?

In 1946, Harvard's classes became co-ed, though Harvard faculty members were responsible for the academic training of Radcliffe students, and played no part in their social or extracurricular involvements. Then-Radcliffe president Mary I.
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Is Bryn Mawr all female?

We are. Located in Baltimore, Maryland, The Bryn Mawr School is a private all-girls kindergarten, elementary, middle and high school with a coed preschool for ages 2 months through 5 years. Bryn Mawr provides students with exceptional educational opportunities on a beautiful 26-acre campus within the city limits.
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When did Cornell admit black students?

Although it wouldn't have an African-American graduate for 30 more years, Cornell admitted its first student of color in 1870. His presence was noted in the predecessor of The Cornellian, which wrote that the student had been a slave six years earlier.
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When did Radcliffe merge with Harvard?

1999. Radcliffe College and Harvard University officially merge, thereby establishing the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard, where individuals pursue advanced learning at its outermost limits and create new knowledge in every field from poetry to biomimetics.
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When did Oxford accept female students?

The first Oxford degrees for women

On 7 October 1920, the matriculation of the first 130 women took place in the Divinity School. Although by 1920 women had been studying at Oxford for decades, this date marks the first time that they could take their degrees.
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