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  1. Barnard College, officially titled as Barnard College, Columbia University, is a private women's liberal arts college in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It was founded in 1889 by a group of women led by young student activist Annie Nathan Meyer , who petitioned Columbia University 's trustees to create an affiliated college named after Columbia's then-recently deceased 10th ...

    • Urban
    • Following the Way of Reason
    • Millie the Bear
    • Laura A. Rosenbury
  2. 24 de abr. de 2017 · Early Barnard (1889-1911) 1889. October 7 – Barnard College opens in a leased 4-story brownstone on 343 Madison Avenue between East 44 th and 45 th Street, four blocks south of the Columbia College campus at Madison and 49 th. Campus. 1889-90.

  3. 343 Madison Avenue, circa 1889. Barnard’s first class met in a rented brownstone at 343 Madison Avenue, just blocks from Grand Central Station; there were six faculty members and 14 students in the School of Arts. Nine years later, the College moved to its current site in Morningside Heights. One of the original Seven Sisters colleges ...

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  4. Search the Barnard History database of people, places, documents, and images. Narrative. ... Interactive Institutional History of Barnard College in New York City.

  5. It is in the nature of origin stories that they aspire to the mythic. Should Barnard’s beginnings be so rendered, the story would properly begin with the college’s two prime movers, the admirable Frederick A. P.Barnard, who tried in 1879, at the age of seventy, to open the male-only Columbia College to women, and the estimable Annie Nathan ...

  6. Creative Space for Dance, Barnard Parents Weekend Dance Event, Spring Dance Concert, Barnard Winter Festival 1980, December Dance Concert, Bicentennial Celebration, Footings), copy of ad from Barnard Bulletin (April 10, 1978) 135. Gilboy, Elizabeth (Waterman) ’24: transcript (1924) 136.

  7. Barnard Yearbook The Barnard College yearbooks—The Annual and later the Mortarboard—depict life at Barnard and honor the graduating classes. Many volumes feature original artwork, photography, and design done by students, as well as photographs (in black and white, and later, color) of student activities and formal portraits of students, faculty, and staff.