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Mount Holyoke College
Archives and Special Collections
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Archival Inventory
Office of the President
Mary Emma Woolley Records, 1901-1946
Record Group Number: RG 4.13
78 boxes (34.13 linear feet)
Historical Sketch:
Mary E. Woolley was born in 1863, in South Norwalk, Connecticut.
An 1884 graduate of Wheaton Seminary, she taught there for five
years and in 1894 became the first woman to receive an AB from Brown
University. She later received an MA from Brown and was Professor
and Chair of Biblical History and Literature at Wellesley before
she was appointed President of Mount Holyoke College in 1900. During
the 37 years of her tenure Woolley oversaw many improvements to
the College. Among them were increases in enrollment, the College's
endowment and faculty salaries, as well as the abolishment of student
domestic work. New buildings included five dormitories, Dwight Art
Memorial (1902), Williston Memorial Library (1905), the President's
House (1908), Clapp Laboratory (1924) and Abbey Chapel (1936). Several
Mount Holyoke traditions were also initiated, such as Christmas
Vespers, Faculty Show, the Phi Beta Kappa chapter and the publication
of the Alumnae Quarterly and the Mount Holyoke News. Woolley's engagement
with social issues, labor concerns, the suffragette movement and
international politics, together with her public speaking skills,
helped to internationally establish Mount Holyoke as a center of
higher education for women.
Description of Records:
The records of Mary E. Woolley contain personal and professional
information. They consist of correspondence dated 1901-1946; other
autobiographical material including diaries (1901-1928); address
and birthday books and a "ghost book" of signatures; a school essay;
scrapbooks (1901-1902, 1908-1919, 1932); articles and speeches (including
a sound recording of a 1920 "Chapel talk") dating from 1894-1943;
and a bibliography of her publications. Biographical material concerning
Woolley includes 4 Bibles; 2 copies of a biography of Woolley by
Jeanette Marks (1955); articles about Woolley dating from 1900-1931;
tributes and obituaries; and honors (1900-1946), including medals,
citations, memberships and honorary degrees. Also available are
card indices of her correspondence; speeches and articles; affiliations;
and prominent academic events which occurred during her tenure.
Included in the records are "Petitions for Peace" related to the
1932 Geneva Conference; and photographs. Documents pertaining to
Woolley's tenure as President (1901-1937) include invitations to
Commencement speakers, interdepartmental correspondence and letters
to numerous faculty and alumnae of Mount Holyoke. Individual correspondents
associated with her career as public servant include Presidents
Herbert Hoover, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and William Howard Taft;
Dorothy Canfield Fisher, Cordell Hull, Frances Perkins, Eleanor
Roosevelt, Henry L. Stimson and Dorothy Thompson. Organizations
with which Woolley corresponded regularly include the American Association
of University Women; the League of Women Voters; the League of Nations
Association; and business and professional clubs throughout the
country. The records also document her participation at international
conventions such as the China Christian Educational Commission Conference
in Shanghai and Hankow (1921); the Institute of Pacific Relations
conventions in Honolulu (1925, 1927); and the American Delegation
to the Disarmament Conference in Geneva (1932). Material available
after 1937 largely documents Woolley's extensive speaking engagements
at various colleges, women's clubs, Mount Holyoke College Alumnae
functions and organizations advocating international peace. Woolley's
speeches and articles have ranged from "Freshmen Welcome" to "Some
Aspects of Our Foreign Policy" and "Evolution in the Feminine World."
The scrapbooks mainly contain articles about Woolley, as well as
her sketches of the Geneva delegates. The family Bible records the
births, deaths and marriages of the Woolleys from 1854-1877.
Cite as: Office of the President, Mary Emma
Woolley Records, Mount Holyoke College Archives and Special Collections,
South Hadley, MA.
Access Restrictions: Unrestricted.