About: Wellesley College   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/XR-Rc604VPhXAtADrSiz8A==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Francisca Uribe Del Arco was a graduate of Wellesley College. When breaking into the Museo de las Pacificas in Buenos Aires in 1937, she alluded to the school's athletic requirements, and later Jones remarked that instead of gymnastics, she should have taken pole vaulting.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Wellesley College
rdfs:comment
  • Francisca Uribe Del Arco was a graduate of Wellesley College. When breaking into the Museo de las Pacificas in Buenos Aires in 1937, she alluded to the school's athletic requirements, and later Jones remarked that instead of gymnastics, she should have taken pole vaulting.
  • Wellesley was founded by Pauline and Henry Fowle Durant, believers in educational opportunity for women. Wellesley was founded with the intention to prepare women for "…great conflicts, for vast reforms in social life." Its charter was signed on March 17, 1870, by Massachusetts Governor William Claflin. The original name of the college was the Wellesley Female Seminary, and its renaming to Wellesley College was approved by the Massachusetts legislature on March 7, 1873. Wellesley first opened its doors to students on September 8, 1875.
sameAs
image name
  • Wellesley college seal.png
dcterms:subject
foaf:homepage
dbkwik:americanfoo...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:indiana-jon...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:indianajone...iPageUsesTemplate
campus
  • Suburban, 450 acres
Nickname
  • Blue
Country
Name
  • Wellesley College
Type
undergrad
  • Approximately 2,300
President
  • H. Kim Bottomly
endowment
  • 1.27E9
Established
  • Chartered in 1870; commenced classes in 1875
Image size
  • 151(xsd:integer)
State
school color
  • Blue
City
Website
Located
  • Wellesley, Massachusetts, USA
Motto
  • Non Ministrari sed Ministrare
faculty
  • 347(xsd:integer)
mottoeng
  • Not to be ministered unto, but to minister
abstract
  • Wellesley was founded by Pauline and Henry Fowle Durant, believers in educational opportunity for women. Wellesley was founded with the intention to prepare women for "…great conflicts, for vast reforms in social life." Its charter was signed on March 17, 1870, by Massachusetts Governor William Claflin. The original name of the college was the Wellesley Female Seminary, and its renaming to Wellesley College was approved by the Massachusetts legislature on March 7, 1873. Wellesley first opened its doors to students on September 8, 1875. The first president of Wellesley was Ada Howard. There have been twelve more presidents in its history: Alice Elvira Freeman Palmer, Helen Almira Shafer, Julia Josephine Thomas Irvine, Caroline Hazard, Ellen Fitz Pendleton, Mildred H. McAfee (later Mildred McAfee Horton), Margaret Clapp, Ruth M. Adams, Barbara Wayne Newell, Nannerl Overholser Keohane (later the president of Duke University from 1993–2004), Diana Chapman Walsh, and H. Kim Bottomly. The original architecture of the college consisted of one very large building, College Hall, which was approximately 150 meters in length and five stories in height. The architect was Hammatt Billings. From its completion in 1875 until its destruction by fire in 1914, it was both an academic building and residential building. On March 17, 1914, College Hall was destroyed by fire, the precise cause of which was never officially established. The fire was first noticed by students who lived on the fourth floor near the zoology laboratory. It has been suggested that an electrical or chemical accident in this laboratory—specifically, an electrical incubator used in the breeding of beetles—triggered the fire. A group of residence halls, known as the Tower Court complex, are located on top of the hill where the old College Hall once stood. After the destruction of the central College Hall in 1914, the college adopted a master plan developed by Central Park landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., Arthur Shurcliff, and Ralph Adams Cram in 1921 and expanded into several new buildings. The campus hosted a Naval Reserve Officer training program during the second World War and began to significantly revise its curriculum after the war and through the late 1960s.
  • Francisca Uribe Del Arco was a graduate of Wellesley College. When breaking into the Museo de las Pacificas in Buenos Aires in 1937, she alluded to the school's athletic requirements, and later Jones remarked that instead of gymnastics, she should have taken pole vaulting.
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