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  1. Millicent Carey McIntosh (November 30, 1898 – January 3, 2001) was an educational administrator and American feminist who led the Brearley School (1930–1947), and most prominently Barnard College (1947–1962).

  2. 5 de ene. de 2001 · Millicent Carey McIntosh, whose stewardship of the Brearley School and then Barnard College made her a national role model for generations of young women who wanted to combine career and...

  3. This fall, the second-floor student dining room in The Diana Center was named in honor of Barnard’s fourth dean and first president, Millicent Carey McIntosh. “Mrs. Mac” was a role model and an inspiration for those women who passed through Barnard from 1946 to 1962.

  4. Millicent Carey McIntosh, Class of 1916, headmistress of the Brearley School for 17 years and the first married female president of a Seven Sisters College, serving at Barnard College from 1947 to 1962. Ida Martha Metcalf, the second American woman to receive a Ph.D. in mathematics; Sheila Murnaghan, Class of 1969, classicist

  5. Encyclopedias almanacs transcripts and maps. McIntosh, Millicent Carey. views 1,304,658 updated. Millicent Carey McIntosh (măk´əntŏsh´), 1898–2001, American educator, b. Baltimore, grad. Bryn Mawr, 1920, Ph.D. Johns Hopkins, 1926. From 1926 to 1930 she taught at Bryn Mawr and was acting dean in 1929–30.

  6. American educator and feminist. Born Millicent Carey, Nov 30, 1898, in Baltimore, MD; died Jan 3, 2001, in Tyringham, MA; dau. of Anthony Morris Carey and Margaret Cheston (Thomas) Carey (both Quakers); niece of M. Carey Thomas; attended Bryn Mawr College and Johns Hopkins University; m. Dr. Rustin McIntosh (pediatrician), 1932; children: James

  7. Millicent Carey McIntosh, a native of Baltimore, was chosen from more than 60 candidates to become the fourth dean of Barnard in October 1947. She was later named the first president of the College in 1952, and she served in both roles until 1962.