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Barnard College

Coordinates:40°48′35″N73°57′49″W / 40.8096°N 73.9635°W /40.8096; -73.9635
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Private women's college in New York City

Barnard College
Latin:Barnardi Collegium
Other name
Barnard College of Columbia University
MottoἙπομένη τῷ λογισμῷ (Greek)
Hepomene toi logismoi
Motto in English
Following the Way of Reason
TypePrivatewomen'sliberal arts college
Established1889; 136 years ago (1889)
Parent institution
Columbia University
Academic affiliations
Endowment$447 million (2022)[1]
PresidentLaura Rosenbury
Academic staff
388 (fall 2022)[2]
Undergraduates3,442 (fall 2022)[2]
Location,
New York
,
United States

40°48′35″N73°57′49″W / 40.8096°N 73.9635°W /40.8096; -73.9635
CampusUrban
ColorsBlue and white
  
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IIvy League
(consortium withColumbia University)
MascotMillie the Bear
Websitebarnard.edu
Map

Barnard College, Columbia University is aprivatewomen'sliberal arts college affiliated withColumbia University, located in New York City.

Barnard College was founded in 1889 by a group of women led by young student activistAnnie Nathan Meyer, who petitioned Columbia University's trustees to create an affiliated college named after Columbia's 10th president,Frederick A. P. Barnard. The college is one of the originalSeven Sisters—sevenliberal arts colleges in theNortheastern United States that were historicallywomen's colleges.

Barnard College has independent admission, curricula, and finances separate from Columbia.[3] It sharessports teams with Columbia through the Columbia–Barnard Athletic Consortium, an agreement that makes Barnard the only women's college to compete inNCAA Division I athletics.[4][5]

Barnard offersbachelor of arts degree programs in about 50 areas of study. In addition to Columbia, students may also pursue elements of their education at theJuilliard School, theManhattan School of Music, and theJewish Theological Seminary which are also based in New York City. Its 4-acre (1.6 ha) campus is located in theUpper Manhattan neighborhood ofMorningside Heights, stretching alongBroadway between116th and120th Streets. It is directly across from Columbia's main campus.

Barnard College alumnae include leaders in science, religion, politics, thePeace Corps, medicine, law, education, communications, theater, and business. Barnard graduates have been recipients ofEmmy,Tony,Grammy,Academy, andPeabody awards,Guggenheim Fellowships,MacArthur Fellowships, thePresidential Medal of Freedom, theNational Medal of Science, and thePulitzer Prize.

History

[edit]

Founding

[edit]
Barnard College of Columbia University Main Entrance Gate

From its founding in 1754 until the mid-1980s,Columbia College ofColumbia University admitted only men for undergraduate study.[6] Barnard College was founded in 1889 as a response to Columbia's refusal to admit women. Classes took place in a rented brownstone at 343 Madison Avenue, where a faculty of six offered instruction to 36 students.[7]

The college was named afterFrederick Augustus Porter Barnard, adeaf American educator and mathematician who later served as Columbia's president for over twenty years. He advocated for coeducational settings and proposed in 1879 that Columbia admit women.[8] Columbia's Board of Trustees repeatedly rejected Barnard's suggestion,[8] but in 1883 agreed to create a syllabus that would allow the college's students to receive degrees. The first such graduate received her bachelor's degree in 1887. A former student of the program,Annie Meyer,[9] and other prominent New York women persuaded the board in 1889 to create a women's college connected to Columbia.[8][10] Men and women were evenly represented among the founding trustees of Barnard College.[11]: 212 

Morningside campus

[edit]

When Columbia University announced in 1892 its impending move to Morningside Heights, Barnard built a new campus nearby with gifts from Mary E. Brinckerhoff,Elizabeth Milbank Anderson and Martha Fiske.[12] Two of these gifts were made with several stipulations attached. Brinckerhoff insisted that Barnard acquire land within 1,000 feet of the Columbia campus within the next four years.[13] The Barnard trustees purchased land between 119th–120th Streets after receiving funds for that purpose in 1895.[14][15] Anderson requested thatCharles A. Rich be hired.[16] Rich designed theMilbank, Brinckerhoff, and Fiske Halls, built in 1897–1898;[16] these were listed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 2003.[17] The first classes at the new campus were held in 1897. Despite Brinckerhoff's, Anderson's, and Fiske's gifts, Barnard remained in debt.[12]

Ella Weed supervised the college in its first four years;Emily James Smith succeeded her as Barnard's first dean.[8]Jessica Finch is credited with coining the phrasecurrent events while teaching at Barnard College in the 1890s.[18]

The college received the three blocks south of 119th Street from Anderson in 1903.[19][20] Rich provided a master plan for the campus, but onlyBrooks Hall was built, being constructed between 1906 and 1908.[21][22] None of Rich's other plans was carried out.Students' Hall, now known as Barnard Hall, was built in 1916 to a design byArnold Brunner.[23]Hewitt Hall was the last structure to be erected, in 1926–1927.[22] All three buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.[17][24]

By the mid-20th century, Barnard had succeeded in its original goal of providing a top-tier education to women. Between 1920 and 1974, only the much largerHunter College andUniversity of California, Berkeley produced more women graduates who later received doctorates.[25] In the 1970s, Barnard faced considerable pressure to merge with male only Columbia College, which was fiercely resisted by its president,Jacquelyn Mattfeld.[26]

Presidents

[edit]

List of presidents and deans of Barnard College from 1889 to present:[27][28][29][30]

No.ImagePresidentTerm startedTerm endedRefs.
Chair of the academic committee of Barnard College (1889–1894)
1Ella Weed1889January 10, 1894[a]
Deans of Barnard College (1894–1952)
2Emily James Smith PutnamMay 11, 1894February 1, 1900
3Laura Drake GillJanuary 1901June 1907
interimWillian Tenney Brewster19071911
4Virginia GildersleeveFebruary 19111947
Presidents of Barnard College (1952–present)
5Millicent McIntosh1947June 1962
6Rosemary ParkJuly 1962June 1967
interimHenry Boorse[b]July 1967November 1967
7Martha PetersonNovember 1967May 1975[c]
interimLeroy Breunig[d]May 1975June 1976
8Jacquelyn MattfeldJune 1976May 29, 1980
actingEllen V. Futter1980April 1981
9April 1981October 1993[e]
interimKathryn RodgersJuly 1993April 1994
10Judith R. ShapiroJuly 1, 1994June 30, 2008[31][32]
11Debora L. Spar[f]July 1, 2008March 5, 2017[33][34]
interimRobert GoldbergMarch 6, 2017June 30, 2017
12Sian BeilockJuly 1, 2017June 11, 2023[g][35][36]
13Laura RosenburyJune 12, 2023present[37][38]

Table notes:

  1. ^Died in office
  2. ^Dean of Faculty
  3. ^Resigned to lead Beloit College.
  4. ^Dean of Faculty
  5. ^Resigned to lead the American Museum of Natural History.
  6. ^Resigned to lead the Lincoln Center.
  7. ^Resigned to lead Dartmouth College.

Academics

[edit]

Barnard students are able to pursue abachelor of arts degree in about 50 areas of study.[39] Joint programs for thebachelor of science and other degrees exist with Columbia University,Juilliard School, and theJewish Theological Seminary. The most popular majors at the college by 2021 graduates were:[40]

Econometrics and Quantitative Economics (62)
Research and Experimental Psychology (56)
History (43)
English Language and Literature (39)
Political Science and Government (36)
Neuroscience (33)
Art History, Criticism and Conservation (33)

The liberal arts general education requirements are collectively called Foundations. Students must take two courses in the sciences (one of which must be accompanied by a laboratory course), study a single foreign language for two semesters, and take two courses in the arts/humanities as well as two in the social sciences. In addition, students must complete at least one three-credit course in the so-called "Modes of Thinking" series, and fulfill other requirements.[41]

Admissions

[edit]
Enrolled first-year student statistics
 2022[42]2021[42]2020[42]2019[43]2018[44]
Applicants12,00910,3959,4119,3207,897
AdmitsNA1,0841,0221,0971,099
Admit rate6%10%10.8%11.8%13.9%
EnrolledN/AN/AN/A632605
SAT mid-50% rangeN/AN/AN/A1360–15001330–1500
ACT mid-50% rangeN/AN/AN/A31–3430–33

Admissions to Barnard are considered "most selective" byU.S. News & World Report.[45] It is the most selective women's college in the nation;[46] in 2017, Barnard had the lowest acceptance rate of the fiveSeven Sisters that remain single-sex in admissions.[47]

The class of 2026's admission rate was 8% of the 12,009 applicants, the lowest acceptance rate in the institution's history.[48] The median SAT composite score of enrolled students was 1440, with median subscores of 720 in Math and 715 in Evidence-Based Reading and Writing.[43] The median ACT Composite score was 33.[43]

In 2015, Barnard announced that it would admit transgender women who "consistently live and identify as women, regardless of the gender assigned to them at birth" and would continue to support and enroll those students who transitioned to male after they had already been admitted.[49]

The college practicesneed-blind admission for domestic first-year applicants.[50]

Rankings

[edit]
Academic rankings
Liberal arts
U.S. News & World Report[51]14 (tie) of 211
Washington Monthly[52]63 of 194
National
Forbes[53]73 of 500
WSJ/College Pulse[54]50 of 600

In 2025,U.S. News & World Report ranked Barnard as tied at 14th of 211 U.S. liberal arts colleges overall. Barnard was tied for 30th for "Best Undergraduate Teaching," among U.S. liberal arts colleges byU.S. News & World Report.[55]Forbes ranked Barnard 73rd of 500 colleges in 2023.[56] In 2024,Washington Monthly ranked Barnard 63rd among 194 liberal arts colleges in the U.S. based on its contribution to the public good, as measured by social mobility, research, and promoting public service.[57]

Campus

[edit]

Library

[edit]
Milbank Hall
photo of the Milstein Center for Teaching and Learning
The Milstein Center for Teaching and Learning

While Barnard students have access to the libraries at Columbia University, the college has always maintained a library of its own. The Barnard Library also encompasses the Archives and Special Collections, with material that documents Barnard's history from its founding to the present day.[58] Among the collections are theNtozake Shange papers.[59]

Zine collection

[edit]

The Barnard Zine Library is a unit of the Barnard Library and Academic Information Systems (BLAIS). Zine collections target primarily female, default queer, intentionally of color, and gender expansive topics. In 2004, it became the first zine library in the United States to be fully cataloged in theOCLC.[60] It opened for circulation in 2008, and holds roughly 5,000 processed zines as of 2018.[61] The library supports the student-run Barnard Zine Club.[62]

Student life

[edit]

Student organizations

[edit]
College life as depicted by the college's newspaper in 1923
A 1902 depiction of a "modern" Barnard woman
A depiction of the Barnard Bear, commonly referred to by students as Millie the Dancing Bear

Every Barnard student is part of the Student Government Association (SGA), which elects a representativestudent government. SGA aims to facilitate the expression of opinions on matters that directly affect the Barnard community.[63]

Student groups include theater and vocal music groups, language clubs, literary magazines, a freeform radio station calledWBAR, a biweekly magazine called theBarnard Bulletin, Club Q, community service groups, and others.

Barnard students can join extracurricular activities or organizations at Columbia University, while Columbia University students are allowed in most, but not all, Barnard organizations. Barnard's McIntosh Activities Council organizes various community focused events on campus, such as Big Sub and Midnight Breakfast. There are sub-committees focussed on cultural events (Mosaic), health and wellness (Wellness), networking (Network), event-planning (Community), and service (Action).

Sororities

[edit]

Barnard students participate in various sororities. As of 2010[update], Barnard does not fully recognize the National Panhellenic Conference sororities at Columbia, despite it being home to the Alpha chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi which was founded at Barnard in 1897, but it does provide some funding to account for Barnard students living in Columbia housing through these organizations.[64]

Traditions

[edit]

Barnard Greek Games: One of Barnard's oldest traditions, the Barnard Greek Games were first held in 1903, and occurred annually until theColumbia University protests in 1968. Since then they have been sporadically revived. The games consist of competitions between each graduating class at Barnard, and events have traditionally included Greek poetry recitation, dance, chariot racing, and a torch race.[65]

Take Back the Night: Each April, Barnard and Columbia students participate in theTake Back the Night march and speak-out. This annual event grew out of a 1988Seven Sisters conference. The march grew from less than 200 participants in 1988 to more than 2,500 in 2007.[66]

Midnight breakfast marks the beginning of finals week. As a highly popular event and long-standing college tradition, Midnight Breakfast is hosted by the student-run activities council, McAC (McIntosh Activities Council). In addition to providing standard breakfast foods, each year's theme is also incorporated into the menu. Past themes have included "I YUMM the 90s," "Grease," and "Take Me Out to the Ballgame." The event is a school-wide affair as college deans, trustees and the president serve food to about a thousand students. It takes place the night before finals begin every semester.[67]

Big Sub: Toward the beginning of each fall semester, Barnard College supplies a 700+ feet longsubway sandwich. Students from the college can take as much of the sub as they can carry. The sub has kosher, dairy free, vegetarian, and vegan sections. This event is organized by the student-run activities council, McAC.[68]

Academic affiliations

[edit]

Relationship with Columbia University

[edit]
Greek Games statue
Front gates read "Barnard College of Columbia University"

TheBarnard Bulletin in 1976 described the relationship between the college and Columbia University as "intricate and ambiguous".[69] Barnard presidentDebora Spar said in 2012 that "the relationship is admittedly a complicated one, a unique one and one that may take a few sentences to explain to the outside community".[70]Outside sources often describe Barnard as part of Columbia;The New York Times in 2013, for example, called Barnard "an undergraduate women's college of Columbia University".[8][71] Its front gates read "Barnard College of Columbia University."[72]

Barnard describes itself as "both an independently incorporated educational institution and an official college of Columbia University"[73] that is "one of the University's four colleges, but we're largely autonomous, with our own leadership and purse strings",[74] and advises students to state "Barnard College, Columbia University" or "Barnard College of Columbia University" on résumés.[75]

Columbia refers to Barnard as one of its schools[76]and an affiliated institution[77] that is a faculty of the university.[78] Both the college and Columbia evaluate Barnard faculty for tenure;[79] in other words, a Barnard tenured professor is a Columbia tenured professor.

Barnard graduates receive Columbia diplomas signed by the Barnard and the Columbia presidents; both diplomas are titledCvratores Vniversitatis Colvmbiae ('Trustees of Columbia University').[80][81] According to the university, a Barnard College degree holds the same value as a Columbia College degree.[82] Additionally, both—Barnard College and Columbia College—Columbia University diplomas are written in Latin.[83]

Barnard graduates are also considered members of the Columbia Alumni Association (CAA), and are eligible to receive honors such as the annual Columbia Alumni Medal.[84]

Barnard students wear the same graduation gown as undergraduates from Columbia College, the School of Engineering and Applied Science, and the School of General Studies, and their degrees are conferred during the University Commencement ceremony.

Before coeducation at Columbia

[edit]

Smith and Columbia presidentSeth Low worked to open Columbia classes to Barnard students. By 1900 they could attend Columbia classes in philosophy, political science, and several scientific fields.[8] That year, Barnard formalized an affiliation with the university that made available to its students the instruction and facilities of Columbia.[73]Franz Boas, who taught at both Columbia and Barnard in the early 1900s, was among those faculty members who reportedly found Barnard students superior to their male Columbia counterparts.[25] From 1955, Columbia and Barnard students could register for the other school's classes with the permission of the instructor; from 1973 no permission was needed.[9]

Except for Columbia College, by the 1940s, other undergraduate and graduate divisions of Columbia University admitted women.[6] Columbia presidentWilliam J. McGill predicted in 1970, that Barnard College and Columbia College would merge within five years. In 1973, Columbia and Barnard signed a three-year agreement to increase sharing classrooms, facilities, and housing, and cooperation in faculty appointments,[85] which they described as "integration without assimilation";[86] by the mid-1970s, most Columbia dormitories were coed.[87] The university's financial difficulties during the decade increased its desire to merge[88] to end what Columbia described as the "anachronism" of single-sex education,[86] but Barnard resisted doing so because of Columbia's large debt,[87] rejecting in 1975 Columbia deanPeter Pouncey's proposal to merge Barnard and the three Columbia undergraduate schools.[85] The 1973–1976 chairwoman of the board at Barnard, Eleanor Thomas Elliott, led the resistance to the takeover.[89] The college's marketing emphasized the Columbia relationship, however; theBulletin in 1976 said that Barnard described it as identical to the one betweenHarvard College andRadcliffe College ("who are merged in practically everything but name at this point").[69]

After Barnard rejected later merger proposals from Columbia and a one-year extension to the 1973 agreement expired, in 1977, the two schools began discussing their future relationship. By 1979, the relationship had so deteriorated that Barnard officials stopped attending meetings. Because of an expected decline in enrollment, in 1980 a Columbia committee recommended that Columbia College begin admitting women without Barnard's cooperation. A 1981 committee found that Columbia was no longer competitive with other Ivy League universities without women, and that admitting women would not affect Barnard's applicant pool. That year Columbia presidentMichael Sovern agreed for the two schools to cooperate in admitting women to Columbia, but Barnard faculty's opposition caused presidentEllen Futter to reject the agreement.[85]

A decade of negotiations for a Columbia-Barnard merger akin to Harvard and Radcliffe had failed.[86] In January 1982, the two schools instead announced that Columbia College would begin admitting women in 1983, and Barnard's control over tenure for its faculty would increase;[85][6] previously, a committee on which Columbia faculty outnumbered Barnard's three to two controlled the latter's tenure.[86] Applications to Columbia rose 56% that year, making admission more selective, and nine Barnard students transferred to Columbia. Eight students admitted to both Columbia and Barnard chose Barnard, while 78 chose Columbia.[90] Within a few years, however, selectivity rose at both schools as they received more women applicants than expected.[6]

After coeducation

[edit]

The Columbia-Barnard affiliation continued.[86] As of 2012[update], Barnard paid Columbia about $5 million a year under the terms of the "interoperate relationship", which the two schools renegotiate every 15 years.[70] Despite the affiliation, Barnard is legally and financially separate from Columbia with an independent faculty and board of trustees. It is responsible for its own separate admissions, health, security, guidance and placement services, and has its own alumnae association. Nonetheless, Barnard students participate in the academic, social, athletic and extracurricular life of the broader university community on a reciprocal basis. The affiliation permits the two schools to share some academic resources; for example, only Barnard has anurban studies and dance department and only Columbia has acomputer science department. Most Columbia classes are open to Barnard students and vice versa. Barnard students and faculty are represented in the University Senate, and student organizations such as theColumbia Daily Spectator are open to all students. Barnard students play on Columbia athletics teams, including the Ivy League Consortium, and Barnard uses Columbia email, telephone, and network services.[70][81]

Barnard athletes compete in theIvy League (NCAA Division I) through the Columbia-Barnard Athletic Consortium, which was established in 1983. Through the arrangement, Barnard is the onlywomen's college offering Division I athletics.[91] There are 15intercollegiate teams, and students also compete at theintramural and club levels. From 1975 to 1983, before the establishment of the Columbia-Barnard Athletic Consortium, Barnard students competed as the "Barnard Bears".[92] Prior to 1975, students referred to themselves as the "Barnard honeybears".[93]

Controversies

[edit]

In the spring of 1960, Columbia University presidentGrayson Kirk complained to the president of Barnard that Barnard students were wearing inappropriate clothing. The garments in question were pants andBermuda shorts. The administration forced the student council to institute a dress code. Students would be allowed to wear shorts and pants only at Barnard and only if the shorts were no more than two inches above the knee and the pants were not tight. Barnard women crossing the street to enter the Columbia campus wearing shorts or pants were required to cover themselves with a long coat.[94][95]

In March 1968,The New York Times ran an article on students who cohabited, identifying one of the persons they interviewed as a student at Barnard College fromNew Hampshire named "Susan".[96] Barnard officials searched their records for women from New Hampshire and were able to determine that "Susan" was the pseudonym of a student (Linda LeClair) who was living with her boyfriend, a student at Columbia University. She was called before Barnard's student-faculty administration judicial committee, where she faced the possibility of expulsion. A student protest included a petition signed by 300 other Barnard women, admitting that they too had broken the regulations against cohabitating. The judicial committee reached a compromise and the student was allowed to remain in school, but was denied use of the college cafeteria and barred from all social activities. The student briefly became a focus of intense national attention. Barnard president Martha Peterson overruled the committee and expelled LeClair.[9][97][98][99]

In February 2025, Barnard College expelled two students following their disruption of a "History of Modern Israel" class at Columbia University on January 21, 2025. The students interrupted the lecture taught by Professor Avi Shilon, a lecturer with Columbia University's Institute for Israel andJewish Studies, and distributed materials which condemned the course as "Zionist propaganda".[100][101] In response to these expulsions, on February 26, 2025, several dozen pro-Palestinian student protesters staged a sit-in at Barnard's Milbank Hall, outside the office of Dean Leslie Grinage. The protesters demanded the reversal of the expulsions, amnesty for students disciplined for pro-Palestinian actions, and a public meeting with college administrators. During the protest, a Barnard employee was physically assaulted and required hospitalization.[102][103] Barnard's faculty members Nara Milanich, professor of history, and Severin Fowles, professor of anthropology and American studies, served as mediators between the protesters and the administration. The sit-in lasted for over six hours before an agreement was reached to disperse, with a private meeting between the protesters and administrators scheduled for the following day.[104][102] In July, Barnard College settled its lawsuitStudents Against Antisemitism, Inc. et al v. The Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York et al which accused Barnard of not taking enough measures to combat campus antisemitism.[105]

Notable people

[edit]
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For a more comprehensive list, seeList of Barnard College people.

Barnard College has graduated many prominent leaders in science, religion, politics, thePeace Corps, medicine, law, education, communications, theater, and business as well as acclaimed actors, architects, artists, astronauts, engineers, human rights activists, inventors, musicians, philanthropists, and writers. Graduates include academicLouise Holland (1914),[106] authorZora Neale Hurston (1928),[107]Grace Lee Boggs, author and political activist (1935),[108] authorPatricia Highsmith (1942), television hostRonnie Eldridge (1952),[109]Phyllis E. Grann, CEO ofPenguin Putnam,[110]U.S. RepresentativeHelen Gahagan (1924),[111] authorErica Jong (1963),Helene D. Gayle,Spelman College's 11th President and former chair of thePresidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (1970),[112]Susan N. Herman, president of theAmerican Civil Liberties Union (1968),[113]Judith Kaye, Chief Judge of theNew York Court of Appeals (1958),[114]Wilma B. Liebman,chairof the National Labor Relations Board (1971),[115]Laurie Anderson, musician and performance artist (1969),[116]Cynthia Nixon, actress, activist, and gubernatorial candidate (1988),[117] authorJhumpa Lahiri (1989),Ann Brashares, author ofThe Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants (1989),[118]Amy Hwang,The New Yorkercartoonist (2000),[119]Kelly McCreary, actress fromGrey's Anatomy (2003),[120]Greta Gerwig, writer and director (2004),[121] andChristy Carlson Romano,Disney Channel actress (2015).[122]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^As of March 7, 2022.U.S. And Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2021 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY20 to FY21 (Report). National Association of College and University Business Officers andTIAA. 2022. RetrievedJune 5, 2023.
  2. ^ab"Common Data Set 2022–2023"(PDF). Barnard College.Archived(PDF) from the original on June 30, 2023. RetrievedSeptember 11, 2023.
  3. ^"The College < Barnard College | Columbia University".catalog.barnard.edu. RetrievedJuly 24, 2025.
  4. ^"Athletics".Women's NCAA Athletics. Barnard College.Archived from the original on April 27, 2020. RetrievedApril 29, 2020.
  5. ^"Small-School Support, Big-School Athletics". Barnard College.Archived from the original on June 27, 2022. RetrievedJune 8, 2022.
  6. ^abcdFarmer, Melanie."College Marks 25 Years of Coeducation".The Record.Archived from the original on April 29, 2015. RetrievedOctober 23, 2014.
  7. ^"Barnard College: An Early Timeline, To 1939 | Barnard 125".Archived from the original on September 18, 2020. RetrievedOctober 12, 2020.
  8. ^abcdefWeneck, Bette (Spring 1991). "Social and Cultural Stratification in Women's Higher Education: Barnard College and Teachers College, 1898–1912".History of Education Quarterly.31 (1):1–25.doi:10.2307/368780.JSTOR 368780.S2CID 144543745.
  9. ^abcRosenberg, Rosalind (September 21, 1999)."The Woman Question". Barnard College. Archived fromthe original on July 5, 2008. RetrievedJuly 26, 2008.
  10. ^"First Barnard Board of Trustees, 1889".Alma Mater: The History of American Colleges & Universities.Archived from the original on August 6, 2020. RetrievedJuly 3, 2020.
  11. ^Putnam, Emily Jane (1900)."The Rise of Barnard College".Columbia University Quarterly.II (3):209–217.Archived from the original on July 14, 2020. RetrievedJuly 2, 2020.
  12. ^abDolkart 1998, p. 215.
  13. ^Dolkart 1998, p. 209.
  14. ^Dolkart 1998, p. 210.
  15. ^"GIFTS TO BARNARD COLLEGE; TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS FOR A BUILDING FUND. Money Needed for Land on Morningside Heights – Money Guaranteed for Post-Graduate Professors".The New York Times. February 19, 1895.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on December 23, 2019. RetrievedDecember 23, 2019.
  16. ^abDolkart 1998, pp. 211–214.
  17. ^ab"National Register Information System".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  18. ^"Mrs. John Cosgrave Is Dead Founded Finch Junior College: Was Institution's President Nearly 50 Years; Coined 'Current Events' Phrase". New York Herald Tribune. November 1, 1949.
  19. ^Plimpton Papers, Barnard College Archives
  20. ^Dolkart 1998, p. 217.
  21. ^Dolkart 1998, pp. 218–219.
  22. ^abKathleen A. Howe (June 2003)."National Register of Historic Places Registration: Brooks and Hewitt Halls".New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.Archived from the original on October 19, 2012. RetrievedMarch 19, 2011.
  23. ^Dolkart 1998, pp. 220–221.
  24. ^Dolkart 1998, p. 223.
  25. ^abZimmerman, Jonathan (March 14, 2012)."Barnard College Flap: Competition Among Women Shouldn't Be over Men".Christian Science Monitor.Archived from the original on February 15, 2013. RetrievedMarch 1, 2013.
  26. ^Maeroff, Gene I. (May 30, 1980)."Tie to Columbia Called Big Issue In Mattfeld Shift; Barnard President Seen as Too Intensely Opposed Areas of Disagreement Autonomy and Affiliation Turnover in Personnel".The New York Times.Archived from the original on July 31, 2022. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2021.
  27. ^"Past Presidents". Archived fromthe original on November 25, 2011. RetrievedSeptember 18, 2011.
  28. ^Harris, Elizabeth A. (May 22, 2017)."Barnard Chooses a Leader Whose Research Focuses on Women".The New York Times. Archived fromthe original on January 1, 2022. RetrievedFebruary 17, 2018.
  29. ^"Past Leaders of the College".Barnard College.
  30. ^"Notes on the Barnard Presidency".Columbia University.
  31. ^Richardson, Lynda (March 22, 1994)."New President Is Appointed At Barnard".The New York Times. p. B1.
  32. ^Goldenberg, Kira (April 10, 2007)."Head of College to Step Down After Marathon Tenure".Columbia Daily Spectator.
  33. ^"Barnard Names Spar 11th President".Columbia College Today. March–April 2008.
  34. ^"Barnard President Debora Spar To Step Down In March".Bwog. November 16, 2016.
  35. ^"Leading Cognitive Scientist Sian Beilock Named 8th President of Barnard College".Barnard College. May 22, 2017.
  36. ^"Barnard Bids a Fond Farewell to President Sian Leah Beilock".Barnard College. April 17, 2023.
  37. ^"UF Law's Laura Rosenbury Named President of Barnard College".The Florida Bar. March 10, 2023. RetrievedMarch 21, 2023.
  38. ^"Columbia Celebrates the Inauguration of Barnard President Laura Rosenbury".Columbia University. February 1, 2024.
  39. ^"Barnard at a Glance". Barnard College. Archived fromthe original on August 3, 2016. RetrievedAugust 7, 2016.
  40. ^"Barnard College".nces.ed.gov. U.S. Dept of Education. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2023.
  41. ^"Foundations | Barnard College".barnard.edu.Archived from the original on November 13, 2019. RetrievedNovember 12, 2019.
  42. ^abc"Barnard College Admits 1,084 To the Class of 2025". Barnard College.Archived from the original on April 1, 2021. RetrievedMarch 30, 2020.
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