A
History of Vassar College
Considered a pioneer for women's education and liberal arts education
in the United States, Matthew Vassar founded Vassar College in 1861.
Opening its doors to its first class of 353 students paying $350 for
tuition and "residence" on September 26, 1865, the college
offered young women a liberal arts education equal to that of the best
men's colleges of the day. Coeducational since 1969, Vassar College
set the standard for higher education for women for more than 100 years
and now sets the standard for true coeducation. Recognized as one of
the best liberal arts colleges in the country, Vassar has successfully
fulfilled its founder's goals.
An Englishborn brewer and businessman, Matthew Vassar established
his college in Poughkeepsie, New York, a small city on the Hudson River,
75 miles north of New York City. Only 33 years after opening its doors,
Vassar had gained a reputation for intellectual rigor that led to the
founding of the first chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at a women's college.
For the first time, women were offered courses in art history, physical
education, geology, astronomy, music, mathematics, and chemistry, taught
by the leading scholars of the day.
From the beginning, the Vassar curriculum was characterized by boldness,
breadth, and flexibility, and Vassar graduates were recognized as a
"breed apart" for their independence of thought and their
inclination to "go to the source" in search of answers. The
Vassar approach to learning was shaped by faculty members such as noted
astronomer Maria Mitchell the first woman to be elected to the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Frederick Louis Ritter, one of America's
first historians of music. In 1869, Maria Mitchell took her students
to Iowa to observe an eclipse of the sun, and in the 1880s Lucy Maynard
Salmon, professor of history, was exploring the "seminar method"
of teaching through original source materials.
Vassar continues to use original source materials as essential teaching
elements in several departments. The college holds an extensive collection
of manuscripts in the Virginia B. Smith Manuscript Collection, named
for president emerita Virginia B. Smith upon her retirement in 1986.
The collection ranges from medieval illuminated manuscripts to modern
manuscripts of literary and historical importance. Outstanding among
the many manuscripts are the papers of Mary McCarthy, Robert Lowell,
Sir Stephen Spender, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Elizabeth Bishop.
Education at Vassar was also shaped by the study of art. When creating
his college, Matthew Vassar stated that art should stand "boldly
forth as an educational force." To fulfill this mission, Vassar
was the first college in the country to include a museum and teaching
collection among its facilities. The college's gallery predates such
institutions as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which was founded in
1880, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, established in 1870. The
college's Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, with over 16,000 works in
its collection, stands as a contemporary acknowledgment of that early
commitment.
Today, the Vassar curriculum is broader, richer, and more varied than
ever with concentrations ranging from Latin to cognitive science, from
biochemistry to religion, from astronomy to Africana Studies. Vassar,
among the first to offer courses in drama, psychology, and Russian,
has experimented with interdepartmental courses since the early 1900s
and has long been recognized for curricular innovation.
After declining an invitation to merge with Yale, Vassar decided to
open its doors to men in 1969. In keeping with its pioneering spirit,
Vassar was the first all women's college in the country to become
coeducational: men now represent 40 percent of the student body of 2,250.
The unique traditions upon which the college was founded continue to
be upheld today: a determination to excel, a willingness to experiment,
a dedication to the values of the liberal arts and sciences, a commitment
to the advancement of equality between the sexes, and the development
of leadership. Vassar continues to stand at the forefront of liberal
arts institutions and has positioned itself as a leading force in higher
education in the twentyfirst century.
| Presidents of Vassar College |
| Milo P. Jewett |
1861-1864 |
| John H. Raymond |
1864-1878 |
| Samuel L. Caldwell |
1878-1885 |
| James Monroe Taylor |
1886-1914 |
| Henry Noble MacCracken |
1915-1946 |
| Sarah Gibson Blanding |
1946-1964 |
| Alan Simpson |
1964-1977 |
| Virginia B. Smith |
1977-1986 |
| Frances D. Fergusson |
1986- |