Vassar College

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Vassar College
Vassar College Seal.svg
Former name
Vassar Female College[1]
TypePrivate liberal arts college
Established1861; 160 years ago (1861)
Endowment$1.10 billion (2020)[2]
PresidentElizabeth H. Bradley
Academic staff
355 (2019)[3]
Undergraduates2,441 (2019)[4]
Location,
New York
,
United States
CampusSuburban; 1,000 acres (400 ha)[5]
NewspaperThe Miscellany News
ColorsBurgundy and gray[6]
   
AthleticsNCAA Division IIILiberty League
NicknameBrewers
Affiliations
  • NAICU
  • Annapolis Group
  • Oberlin Group
  • CLAC
MascotThe Brewer[7]
Websitewww.vassar.edu
Vassar College logo.svg

Vassar College (/ˈvæsər/ VASS-ər) is a private liberal arts college in Poughkeepsie, New York. Founded in 1861 by Matthew Vassar, it was the second degree-granting institution of higher education for women in the United States, closely following Elmira College. It became coeducational in 1969 and now has a gender ratio at the national average. The college is one of the historic Seven Sisters, the first elite women's colleges in the U.S., and has a historic relationship with Yale University, which suggested a merger before they both became coeducational institutions. About 2,450 students attend the college.

The college offers B.A. degrees in more than 50 majors and features a flexible curriculum designed to promote a breadth of studies. Student groups at the college include theater and comedy organizations, acappella groups, club sports teams, volunteer and service groups, and a circus troupe. Vassar College's varsity sports teams, known as the Brewers, play in the NCAA's Division III as members of the Liberty League.

The Vassar campus comprises over 1,000 acres (400 ha) and more than 100 buildings, including two National Historic Landmarks and an additional National Historic Place. A designated arboretum, the campus features more than 200 species of trees, a native plant preserve, and a 530-acre (210 ha) ecological preserve.

History[]

Matthew Vassar

Vassar was founded as a women's school under the name Vassar Female College in 1861.[1] Its first president was Milo P. Jewett, who had previously been first president of another women's school, Judson College;[8] he led a staff of ten professors and twenty-one instructors.[9] But after only a year, its founder, Matthew Vassar, had the word Female cut from the name, prompting some residents of the town of Poughkeepsie, New York to quip that its founder believed it might one day admit male students. The college became coeducational in 1969.[1]

Vassar was the second of the Seven Sisters colleges, higher education schools that were formerly strictly for women, and historically sister institutions to the Ivy League. It was chartered by its namesake, brewer Matthew Vassar, in 1861 in the Hudson Valley, about 70 miles (110 km) north of New York City. The first person appointed to the Vassar faculty was the astronomer Maria Mitchell, in 1865.

Vassar adopted coeducation in 1969. However, immediately following World War II, Vassar accepted a very small number of male students on the G.I. Bill. Because Vassar's charter prohibited male matriculants, the graduates were given diplomas via the University of the State of New York. These were reissued under the Vassar title after the school formally became co-educational.[10] The formal decision to become co-ed came after its trustees declined an offer to merge with Yale University, its sibling institution, in the wave of mergers between the historically all-male colleges of the Ivy League and their Seven Sisters counterparts.[11]

Main Building, built in 1861 by architect James Renwick, Jr., had the most interior space of any building in the United States, until the U.S. Capitol was completed in 1868.[12]

In its early years, Vassar was associated with the social elite of the Protestant establishment. E. Digby Baltzell writes that "upper-class WASP families educated their children at colleges such as Harvard, Princeton, Yale, and Vassar."[13] A select and elite few of Vassar's students were allowed entry into the school's secret society Delta Sigma Rho, started in 1922.[14] Before becoming President of the United States, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was a Trustee.[15]

Roughly 2,450 students attend Vassar, and 98% live on campus.[5] About 60% come from public high schools, and 40% come from private schools (both independent and religious).[5] Vassar is currently 56% women and 44% men, at national average for national liberal arts colleges.[16] Students are taught by more than 336 faculty members, virtually all holding the doctorate degree or its equivalent.[5] The student-faculty ratio is 8:1, average class size, 17.[5]

In recent freshman classes, students of color constituted 32–38% of matriculants.[5] International students from over 60 countries make up 8-10% of the student body.[5] In May 2007, in keeping with its commitment to diverse and equitable education, Vassar returned to a need-blind admissions policy wherein students are admitted by their academic and personal qualities, without regard to financial status.

Vassar president Frances D. Fergusson served for two decades. She retired in the spring of 2006, and was succeeded by Catharine Bond Hill, former provost at Williams College, who served for 10 years until she departed in 2016. Hill was replaced by Elizabeth Howe Bradley in 2017.[17]

The college was listed as a census-designated place in 2019.[18]

Presidents[]

A woman in purple academic regalia passes a diploma to a student, out of frame.
Catharine Bond Hill served as college president from 2006–2016.
Name Dates
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 1986–2006
Catharine Bond Hill 2006–2016
Elizabeth H. Bradley 2017–present

Campus[]

Architecture[]

The Vassar College Observatory is one of two National Historic Landmarks on the college's campus, along with Main Building.

Vassar's campus, also an arboretum,[19] is 1,000 acres (400 ha) and has more than 100 buildings, ranging in style from Collegiate Gothic to International, with several buildings of architectural interest. At the center of campus stands Main Building, one of the best examples of Second Empire architecture in the United States. When it was opened, Main Building was the largest building in the U.S. in terms of floor space. It formerly housed the entire college, including classrooms, dormitories, museum, library, and dining halls.[12][20] The building was designed by Smithsonian architect James Renwick Jr. and was completed in 1865. It was preceded on campus by the original observatory. Both buildings are National Historic Landmarks. Rombout House was purchased by the college in 1915 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.[21][22]

Many original brick buildings are scattered throughout the campus, but there are also several modern and contemporary structures of architectural interest. Ferry House, a student cooperative, was designed by Marcel Breuer in 1951. Noyes House was designed by Finnish-American architect Eero Saarinen. More recently, New Haven architect César Pelli was asked to design the Lehman Loeb Art Center, which was completed in the early 1990s. In 2003, Pelli also worked on the renovation of Main Building Lobby and the conversion of the Avery Hall theater into the $25 million Vogelstein Center for Drama and Film, which preserved the original 1860s facade but was an entirely new structure.

Libraries[]

Vassar's Thompson Library

Vassar is home to one of the largest undergraduate library collections in the U.S. The library collection today – which actually encompasses eight libraries at Vassar – contains about 1 million volumes and 7,500 serial, periodical and newspaper titles, as well as an extensive collection of microfilm and microfiche, with special collections of Ellen Swallow Richards, Albert Einstein, Mary McCarthy, and Elizabeth Bishop.[23][24] Vassar has been a Federal Depository library for selected U.S. Government documents since 1943 and currently receives approximately 25% of the titles available through the Federal Depository Program.[25] Since 1988, Vassar has been a New York State Reference Center, part of the New York Depository Program. The library also selectively purchases United Nations documents.

A major renovation to Thompson Library was completed in 2001.

The interior and exterior of the Van Ingen Art Library was renovated from June 2008 – May 2009 in an effort to restore its original design and appearance. This was the library's first major renovation since its construction in 1937.[26]

Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center[]

The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center

Vassar College was the first college in the United States to be founded with a full-scale museum as part of its original plan. Matthew Vassar was known for declaring that "art should stand boldly forth as an educational force". The art collection at Vassar dates to the founding of the College, when Vassar provided an extensive collection of Hudson River School paintings to be displayed in the Main Building. Referred to as the Magoon Collection, it continues to be one of the best in the nation for Hudson River School paintings. One of the largest U.S. college or university art museums, the Frances Lehman Loeb Gallery displays a selection of Vassar's 18,000 articles of art in the building designed by Cesar Pelli.

Today, the gallery's collection displays art from the ancient world up through contemporary works. The collection includes work by European masters such as Brueghel, Gustave Doré, Picasso, Balthus, Bacon, Vuillard, Cézanne, Braque and Bonnard, as well as examples from leading twentieth-century American painters Jackson Pollock, Agnes Martin, Mark Rothko, Marsden Hartley, Georgia O'Keeffe, Charles Sheeler, and Ben Shahn. The Loeb's works on paper represent a major collection in the United States, with prints by Rembrandt (including important impressions of the Hundred Guilder Print and the Three Trees) and Dürer as well as photographs by Cindy Sherman, Diane Arbus, and others. Students at the college can act as liaisons between the art center and the wider college community through work on the Student Committee of the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, to which incoming freshmen can apply.

In November 2016, the gallery opened the Hoene Hoy Photography gallery on the second floor, named after Anne Hoene Hoy from the class of 1963.[27]

Capital Improvements[]

Bridge for Laboratory Sciences exterior west nearing completion, March 2016

In 2011, Vassar embarked on a $120 million project to improve science facilities at the college, centering on the construction of a new $90 million Bridge for Laboratory Sciences.[28] The project will include renovations of Olmsted Hall of Biological Sciences, New England Building and Sanders Physics Building as well as the construction of a new Integrated Science Center, a bridge building that will connect to Olmsted Hall and cross over the Fonteyn Kill. It is intended both to modernize and to support a collaborative and cross-disciplinary science community. The bridge building was completed in 2016.

Davison, one of Vassar's nine residence houses, was renovated during the 2008–2009 school year. During the year of renovation, Davison's residents were absorbed into the college's remaining residence houses.[29] This is the second dorm to be renovated as part of the school's master plan to renovate all dorms, followed by Jewett a few years earlier. Lathrop was scheduled to be closed and renovated during the 2010–2011 school year, but complete renovation was cancelled due to the economic downturn, with a number of improvements phased-in instead. Improvements were also made to Josselyn in 2011.[30]

Academics[]

Rockefeller Hall, built in 1897, is home to the departments of Political Science, Philosophy, and Mathematics.

Vassar confers a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in more than 50 majors, including the Independent Major, in which a student may design a major, as well as various interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary fields of study. Students also participate in such programs as the Self-Instructional Language Program (SILP) which offers courses in Hindi, Irish/Gaelic, Korean, Portuguese, Swahili, Swedish, Turkish, and Yiddish. Vassar has a flexible curriculum intended to promote breadth in studies. While each field of study has specific requirements for majors, the only universal requirements for graduation are proficiency in a foreign language, a quantitative course, and a freshman writing course. Students are also encouraged to study abroad, which they typically do during one or two semesters of their junior year. Students (usually juniors) may apply for a year or a semester away either in the U.S. or abroad. Vassar sponsors programs in China, England, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Turkey, Mexico, Morocco, Spain, and Russia; students may also join pre-approved programs offered by other colleges. Students may also apply for approved programs at various U.S. institutions, including the historically Black colleges and members of the Twelve College Exchange.

All classes are taught by members of the faculty, and there are no graduate students or teachers' assistants. The most popular majors, in terms of sheer numbers, are English, political science, psychology, economics and biology.[16] Vassar also offers a variety of correlate sequences, or minors, for intensive study in many disciplines.

Admissions[]

Enrolled Fall Freshman Statistics
  2019[31] 2018[32] 2017[33] 2016[34] 2015[35]
Applicants 8,961 8,312 7,746 7,284 7,556
Admits 2,127 2,043 1,842 1,964 1,947
Admit rate 23.7 % 24.6% 23.8% 27.0% 25.8%
Enrolled 691 685 625 659 667
SAT mid-50% range* 1380-1500 1370-1510 1370-1510 1330-1500 1330-1490
ACT mid-50% range 31-34 31-33 31-33 30-33 30-33
* SAT out of 1600

For the Class of 2025 (enrolling fall 2021), Vassar received 10,884 applications, a 25% increase over the previous year, and accepted 2,068 (19%).[36] For the Class of 2023 (enrolling Fall 2019), Vassar received 8,961 applications and accepted 2,127 (23.7%), with 691 enrolling.[31] The middle 50% range of SAT scores for enrolling freshmen was 680-750 for evidence-based reading and writing, 690-780 for math, and 1380-1500 for the composite.[31] The middle 50% ACT score range was 28-33 for math, 32-34 for English, and 31-34 for the composite.[31]

Students of color (including non-citizens) made up 45.5% of the incoming class;[4] international students were 8.8% of enrolling freshmen.[4]

Rankings[]

Academic rankings
National
Forbes[37] 61
THE/WSJ[38] 56
Liberal arts colleges
U.S. News & World Report[39] 13
Washington Monthly[40] 7

The 2021 edition of U.S. News & World Report's "Best Colleges" ranks Vassar as tied for the 13th best liberal arts college in the U.S. out of 223 rated, 1st for "Best Colleges for Veterans", 14th for "Best Value", 19th for "Top Performers on Social Mobility", and tied for 30th in "Best Undergraduate Teaching".[41] It also ranked Vassar 3rd among top liberal arts colleges for economic diversity as measured by low-income students receiving federal Pell Grants.[42]

In its 2020 edition, Washington Monthly ranked Vassar 7th among 214 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.[43]

In its 2020 edition, The Princeton Review rated Vassar 1st for "Best Financial Aid" of all colleges and universities in the United States.[44] In its 2018 edition, The Princeton Review rated Vassar 2nd best for financial aid and 41st best for "best value".[45] In 2019, Forbes rated Vassar 27th among liberal arts colleges and 61st overall in its America's Top Colleges ranking, which includes 650 military academies, national universities, and liberal arts colleges.[46] Kiplinger's Personal Finance places Vassar 11th in its 2019 ranking of the 149 best value liberal arts colleges in the United States.[47] Money magazine ranked Vassar 145th in the country out of 739 schools evaluated for its 2020 "Best Colleges for Your Money" edition.[48]

In an article in The Christian Science Monitor, Vassar president emeritus Catharine Bond Hill argued that rankings "will always be limited in what they can tell consumers. Part of higher education's role about the rankings should be to remind students and their families that these are only one piece of information that they should take into account in deciding where to go to college. Intangibles will and should play a role in these decisions, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't also look at the tangibles".[49]

After Vassar[]

Over half of Vassar graduates pursue advanced study within five years of graduation, including one-fifth immediately post-graduation.[50] Of the seniors who applied to medical school in 2017, 76% were accepted; to law school, 96% were accepted.[50] Vassar offers a database of well over 30,000 alumnae/i where students may seek career advice and opportunities. Numerous graduates of the college have earned distinction in their fields, garnering Academy, Emmy, Tony, Peabody and Golden Globe awards for work on stage and in film and television, MacArthur Fellowships ("genius grants") for innovation in fields including astrophysics, epidemiology, and medicine, Pulitzer Prize recognition for contributions to American literature, poetry, and investigative reporting, as well as the Presidential Medal of Freedom and National Medal of Science for achievements in astronomy, computer science, and drama.

Student life[]

Traditions[]

Vassar students celebrating Founder's Day in 1935

Founder's Day is an annual campus festival at Vassar College that usually takes place in late April or early May. It started as a surprise birthday party for college founder Matthew Vassar's seventy-fourth birthday and evolved into an annual celebration.[51] Originally, Founder's Day was a spontaneous event consisting of lectures, but was soon replaced with plays, pageants, and more recreational activities. Circus and fair activities followed, with the eventual addition of the modern day music events over the course of two days. More recently themes have been added, including Alice in Wonderland,[52] Dinosaurs,[53] Vintage 1800s Vassar,[54] Nickelodeon, Nintendo, and Candyland.[54] Recent artists at Founder's Day have included The Walkmen, Edan, DJ /rupture, Odd Nosdam, Jel,[55] Toro y Moi,[56] and Odesza.[57]

Extracurricular organizations[]

A row of singers dressed mostly in pink and black support a soloist holding a microphone in front of a full house in a small, darkened, crowded auditorium.
The Vastards performing in 2014
  • The Night Owls, established in the 1940s, are, as of 2017, one of the oldest extant collegiate a cappella groups in the United States, and one of nine vocal music groups at Vassar.[58][59] Other groups include the Vastards (specializing in the music of the 2000s), Broadway and More (BAM; showtunes), the Accidentals (the Axies; the sole all-men's a cappella group at Vassar), Beauty and the Beats (focusing on music from Disney movies), Home Brewed (formerly Matthew's Minstrels, the college's first mixed-gender a cappella group), the Vassar Devils, Measure 4 Measure (both themeless groups), and AirCappella (an all-whistling ensemble).[59] Some a cappella groups tour and compete, including the Vassar Devils, who competed in the 2015 International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella.[60][61][62]
  • The Philaletheis Society, which was founded in 1865 as a literary society, is the oldest theater group on campus. It has now become a completely student run theater group.[63] Others include Unbound (experimental theater), Woodshed (a troupe focused on devised theater), and Idlewild (an all-female ensemble).[64] Britomartis, Vassar's only theater group exclusively creating devised theater, was founded in 2011.[65] Further groups include the Future Waitstaff of America (for musical theater), Ebony Theatre Ensemble (focusing on Black theater), and two Shakespeare-specific troupes, Shakespeare Troupe and Merely Players.[64] Performances happen throughout campus including in the Susan Stein Shiva Theater, an all-student-run black box theater. The college also hosts the Powerhouse Summer Theater workshop series.
  • Happily Ever Laughter ("HEL") is the college's oldest active sketch comedy group, founded in 1993.[66] Another Comedy Group, No Offense, which was started by two former members of an earlier group called Laughingstock (which was derecognized by the VSA in March 2000 as a result of a controversial skit), was started in September 2000.[67] Another sketch comedy group The Limit was started a few years later.[68] Indecent Exposure, an all-women's troupe performing both sketch and stand-up comedy, was founded in 2004.[69] Comedynormative, which began in 2009, performs exclusively stand-up comedy.[70] Vassar has three improv comedy groups: Vassar College Vassar Improv (VCVI), Committed, and Casual Improv.[71][72][73]
  • The Vassar Greens are Vassar's environmental group. This group strives to create real and lasting change on campus and in the greater Poughkeepsie community through initiatives like banning bottled water, on campus composting, and encourage local policy makers to adopt more sustainable waste management practices. Recently, the group opened the 'Free Market' on campus. This a store that students can donate to and take from freely to promote recycling and reduce waste.[74]
  • Vassar College Television (VCTV) is the college's first student-run video production company. Students collaborate to develop, write, produce, direct, edit, and act in video productions, including an annual web series. These productions cover a variety of genres, including drama and comedy.[75]

Campus publications[]

An all-text newspaper broadsheet with the flag reading "The Vassar Miscellany News"
Front page of the May 20, 1922, Miscellany News
  • The Miscellany News has been the weekly paper of the college since 1866, making it one of the oldest college weeklies in the United States.[76] It is available for free most Thursdays when school is in session. In 2008–09, it became one of the only college newspapers in the country to begin updating its website daily.
  • The Vassar Chronicle is the college's only political journal, which seeks to expand the breadth of political dialogue on campus by publishing long-form opinion columns. The Chronicle is the revivification of a student publication that appeared from 1944–1959 and during the 1970s; the modern-day Chronicle has been published monthly since 2010 and currently has a 1,000-copy circulation.
  • The Vassar Student Review is an annual literary and art magazine featuring works (fiction, creative non-fiction, poetry, artwork, photography, essays, etc.) by Vassar students. It is the oldest student-run literary publication in the college's history. Its purpose is to serve the needs and expand the creative voice of Vassar's literary and art community. The VSR also orchestrates events and activities garnered towards the enrichment of Vassar's writers community. Some past events have included regularly scheduled Writing Workshops and Writer's Nights in the Cafe as well as the sponsoring of various relevant speakers brought by other organizations.
  • Squirm "is a submissions-based magazine about sex and sexuality. Squirm seeks to create a sex-positive forum on campus for the artistic, literary, and creative exploration of sex."[77] The magazine, published annually since 1999, typically runs around 60 pages and is only distributed to the campus community.[78]
  • Contrast is the college's art and style magazine. It is published each semester.
  • Boilerplate Magazine is a student-run publication that calls itself an "alternative news source... that aims to publish radical pieces and creative works which address issues through a socially conscious lens." Due to its independence from collegiate funds, Boilerplate Magazine is generally more critical of the college than other student-run outlets.[79][80]
  • Unscrewed (1 October 1976 - 1 April 1989) was a student-run consumer report on campus residential and classroom safety, local food and drug price comparison, an annual local pizza delivery survey, and long-term topics such as the college's endowment and staffing.[81]

Radio station[]

WVKR, 91.3 FM, is the college's radio station, established in 1971. The station's disc jockeys, primarily student volunteers, play an eclectic variety of music genres.

Student government[]

In March 2016, in a 15-2 vote, the Vassar Student Association (VSA) passed a resolution calling for the support of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement and the boycott of Israel.[82][83] In April 2016, the BDS resolution went to a school-wide referendum, where it was defeated 573-503.[84]

Athletics[]

The Butterbeer Broooers, Vassar's Muggle Quidditch team

Vassar teams, known as the Brewers, compete in Division III of the NCAA, as a member of the Liberty League. The nickname originates from the college's founder and namesake Matthew Vassar, whose family ran a brewery in Poughkeepsie and would later amass a sizable fortune in the industry.

Vassar College currently offers the following varsity athletics: basketball, baseball, cross-country, fencing (competes in the Northeast Fencing Conference), field hockey (women only), golf (women only), lacrosse, rowing, rugby, soccer, squash, swimming/diving, tennis, track, and volleyball. Club sports include Ultimate (Open, Mixed and women's), ski team (competes in USCSA) , equestrian team (competes in IHSA), polo team (USPA), cycling team (competes in ECCC), Quidditch, and co-ed U.S. Figure Skating synchronized skating team.

Basketball teams play in Vassar's new Athletics and Fitness Center. Volleyball teams play in Kenyon Hall, reopened in 2006. Soccer, baseball, field hockey and lacrosse teams play at Prentiss Fields, which have been completely renovated in 2007 to feature a lighted turf, four grass fields, a baseball field and a track surrounding the turf. Also in 2007, a varsity weight room was opened in the basement of Kenyon Hall, exclusively for the training of varsity athletes.

In 2008, the Vassar men's volleyball team made the school's first appearance in a national championship game, beating UC Santa Cruz 3–0 in the semifinal before falling to Springfield in the championship game.[85]

In 2007, the Vassar cycling team hosted the Eastern Collegiate Cycling Championship in Poughkeepsie and New Paltz, New York. The competition included a 100-mile (160 km) road race over the Shawangunk Mountains in New Paltz as well as a Criterium in Poughkeepsie just blocks from the school's campus.[86]

In a controversial move, on November 5, 2009, the Athletics Department decided the men's and women's rowing team would transition over a two-year period from a varsity to a club sport as a cost-saving measure.[87]

In 1940, 1941 and 1942, Vassar athletes won national intercollegiate women's tennis championships each year in both singles (Katherine Hubbell) and doubles (Hubbell, Carolyn "Lonny" Myers).[88][89]

In 2018, the Vassar women's rugby team won the school's first team national championship, beating Winona State 50-13 in the final of the USA Rugby Women's Division 2.[90]

Notable people[]

Notable Vassar alumni include:

  • Elizabeth Hazleton Haight (1894), notable feminist and Classics scholar
  • Anita Florence Hemmings (1897), their first graduate of African ancestry
  • Edith Clarke (1908), the first female Electrical Engineer
  • Mary Ingraham (1908), founder of the United Service Organizations (USO)
  • Ruth Starr Rose (1910), artist
  • Edna St. Vincent Millay (1917), poet
  • Grace Hopper (1928), computer pioneer
  • Mary McCarthy (1933), critic and novelist
  • Elizabeth Bishop (1934), poet
  • Frances Scott Fitzgerald (1942), writer and journalist
  • Beatrix Hamburg (1944), physician
  • Frances Farenthold (1946), politician and activist
  • Vera Rubin (1948), astrophysicist
  • Linda Nochlin (1951), Art Historian
  • Lois Haibt (1955), member of FORTRAN development team
  • Nina Zagat (1963), Zagat Survey co-founder
  • Bernadine P. Healy (1965), physician and National Institutes of Health director
  • Lucinda Cisler (1965), feminist and abortion rights activist
  • Geraldine Laybourne (1969), Nickelodeon President and Oxygen Media founder and CEO
  • Linda Fairstein (1969), author and prosecutor
  • Rebecca Eaton (1969), Emmy award-winning executive producer of Masterpiece on PBS
  • Meryl Streep (1971), three-time Academy Award winner actress
  • Jane Smiley (1971), Pulitzer Prize-winning fiction writer
  • Michael Wolff (1975), author and journalist
  • Richard L. Huganir (1975), Neuroscientist and Director of Johns Hopkins Medicine Brain Science Institute
  • Chip Reid (1977), CBS News Chief White House Correspondent
  • Jeffrey Goldstein (1977), former World Bank CFO and Undersecretary of the Treasury for Domestic Finance
  • Michael Specter (1977), The New Yorker magazine science writer
  • Jamshed Bharucha (1978), Cooper Union President
  • Phil Griffin (1979), MSNBC President
  • John Carlstrom (1981), astrophysicist and MacArthur Award Fellow
  • Mark Burstein (1984), President of Lawrence University of Wisconsin
  • Lisa Kudrow (1985), actress
  • Hope Davis (1986), actress
  • Evan Wright (1988), journalist
  • Jonathan Karl (1990), ABC News Chief White House Correspondent
  • Jeffrey Brenner (1990), physician and MacArthur Award Fellow
  • (1990), editor in chief of Knopf [91]
  • Noah Baumbach (1991), writer-director
  • Jason Blum (1991), film and television producer
  • Caterina Fake (1991), Flickr founder
  • Elisabeth Murdoch (1992), Shine Limited CEO and Chairman
  • Jon Fisher (1994), author
  • Katherine Center (1994), novelist
  • Joe Hill (1995), novelist
  • Jessi Klein (1997), Emmy Award-winning comedy writer-producer
  • Jesse Ball (2000), writer
  • Alexandra Berzon (2001), Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and Wall Street Journal reporter
  • Shaka King (2001), film director, screenwriter, and producer
  • Victoria Legrand (2003), musician and songwriter
  • Jonás Cuarón (2005), screenwriter and director
  • Sasha Velour (2009), winner of RuPaul's Drag Race Season 9
  • Lilli Cooper (2012), Tony Award-nominated actress
  • Ethan Slater (2014), Tony Award-nominated actor
  • Raph Korine (2017), and runner-up of Big Brother 18 (UK)


Notable attendees who did not graduate from Vassar include:

  • Julia Tutwiler, notable education and prison reform advocate
  • Anthony Bourdain, professional chef and television personality
  • Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, First Lady of the United States
  • Katharine Graham, Washington Post publisher
  • Susan Berresford, president of the Ford Foundation
  • Anne Hathaway, actress
  • Jane Fonda, actress
  • Justin Long, actor
  • Mike D, member of the Beastie Boys
  • Mark Ronson, Oscar-winning musician
  • Rachael Yamagata, musician
  • Curtis Sittenfeld, writer


Notable Vassar faculty include:

  • Maria Mitchell, pioneering female astronomer
  • Grace Hopper, computer scientist
  • Monique Wittig, philosopher
  • Grace Macurdy, classicist
  • Richard Edward Wilson, composer
  • Uma Narayan, philosopher
  • Mitchell Miller, philosopher
  • Bryan W. Van Norden, philosopher
  • James Merrell, historian
  • Peter Stillman, political scientist
  • Paul Russell, writer
  • Hua Hsu, writer
  • Nancy Willard, writer
  • Frank Bergon, writer
  • Michael Joyce, writer and pioneer of hypertext fiction
  • , scholar and editor of Samuel Johnson

Gallery[]

References[]

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  2. ^ As of June 30, 2020. U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2020 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY19 to FY20 (Report). National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA. February 19, 2021. Retrieved February 19, 2021.
  3. ^ "Vassar College Common Data Set 2019-2020, Part I" (PDF). Vassar College.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Vassar College Common Data Set 2019-2020, Part B" (PDF). Vassar College.
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  6. ^ "Color - Style Guidelines". Retrieved August 28, 2020.
  7. ^ O'Connor, Acacia (October 8, 2004). "Vassar mascot suits school's spirit". The Miscellany News. Retrieved February 5, 2015.
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Further reading[]

  • Bruno, Maryann; Daniels, Elizabeth A. (2001). Vassar College. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-0454-4.
  • Elet, Yvonne; Duncan, Virginia (2019). "Beatrix Farrand and campus landscape at Vassar: pedagogy and practice, 1925–29". Studies in the History of Gardens & Designed Landscapes. 39 (2): 105–136. doi:10.1080/14601176.2018.1556509. S2CID 150106489.
  • Horowitz, Helen Lefkowitz (1993). Alma mater: design and experience in the women's colleges from their nineteenth-century beginnings to the 1930s (2nd ed.). Amherst, MA: University of Massachuchusetts Press. ISBN 0-87023-869-8.

External links[]

Coordinates: 41°41′15″N 73°53′45″W / 41.68750°N 73.89583°W / 41.68750; -73.89583

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