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Home > Parents Handbook > History of MHC
History of MHC
“Go Where No One Else Will” Chemist and educator Mary Lyon
founded Mount Holyoke College (then called Mount Holyoke Female
Seminary) in 1837, nearly a century before women gained the right to
vote. Today, her famous words—"Go where no one else will go, do what no
one else will do"—continue to inspire Mount Holyoke students.
As the first of the Seven Sisters—the female equivalent of the once
predominantly male Ivy League—Mount Holyoke has led the way in women's
education. A model
upon which many other women's colleges were patterned, it quickly became synonymous with brilliant teaching and academic
excellence. In 1861 the three-year curriculum was expanded to four, and
in 1893 the seminary curriculum was phased out and the institution's
name was changed to Mount Holyoke College.
A Tradition of Educating Leaders Throughout
the twentieth century, academic programs and physical facilities grew,
with the 1960s witnessing the construction of many new academic
buildings and residence halls. Mount Holyoke's reputation for
excellence grew as well, with many of our notable alumnae breaking new ground in the sciences, the arts, and the women's movement.
Plans for an Unsurpassable Learning Environment In 1997, under the leadership of current president Joanne V. Creighton, the College adopted The Plan for Mount Holyoke 2003,
a six-year strategic plan that resulted in a set of innovative programs
and advanced facilities for the start of the new century. Following the
successful completion of The Plan for 2003, Mount Holyoke embarked on a new set of ambitious goals, set forth in the Plan for Mount Holyoke 2010. The initiatives born from the Plan—some
of which are already completed—will ensure that Mount Holyoke will
continue to create an unsurpassable learning environment in which women
can—and do—excel.
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