Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA)

 - Class of 1945

Page 14 of 176

 

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 14 of 176
Page 14 of 176



Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

According to one of the catalogues, the supervision of the social life at the college was one of the duties of the president. Miss Pelletreau was responsible for all the formation of the personal habits and manners of the young ladies. It was she who enforced the dictum that the dress of the students be simple and inexpensive on all occasions. To comply with this ruling, suits were promptly adopted by the students. In that respect, the PCW woman hasn ' t changed in seventy-five years; suits are our uniform today, too. In fact, in most respects, there has been very little change. Our hats and heels are higher, our hair goes down instead of up, and just the reverse is true of our skirts, but the gin inside is still the same. She came to school for an education and that is her prime concern. But she is not adverse to a little fun on the side. Of course, dancing at the Terrace Room, movies in East Liberty, and a quick round of tennis have taken the place of our daily walks on Shady Lane, Classical concerts and literary and scientific lectures (which the early students could not attend unchaperoned ) . The hearts of all dorm students went out to the students of the ' 70 ' s when we discovered that they were not permitted to receive callers who did not present a letter of introduction from their parents, went to town for shopping only once a month, and were not allowed to leave school over weekends. This all seems to eliminate the possibility of dates, and looks rather dull to us, but a second thought reminds us that we have no dates now, so who are we to pity the former students? And a third thought makes us feel a little foolish for pitying them at all. As far as they were concerned, they weren ' t missing anything; such rules and regulations were the normal thing. We don ' t have the rules to contend with, but it might be easier than trying to wheedle a leave out of the U. S. armed forces. Miss Pelletreau may have been strict, but she was never like that. In delving into old catalogues and letters for anniversary material, we found one of the nicest of the PCW traditions, one that we would like to reinstate. When graduation day approached, each senior was permitted to select ' the man of her choice ' to escort her in the graduation march. Following the ceremonies there seems to have been a dance, the girls in white dresses and the men in evening dress.

Page 13 text:

history of the College Back in 1869, when tunes, times and girls were sweet and simple, a group of Pittsburgh men decided to do something about the girls, knowing that the tunes and times would follow. And they did. the men. 1 mean. They founded Pennsylvania Female College on a hill above Fifth Avenue here in Pittsburgh. The men who took the destiny of Pittsburgh into their hands by making this initial break with convention and educating women were Messrs. Thos. Aiken, Jos. Dilworth, Jno. A. Renshaw, Alfd. Harrison, Alex. Chambers, David Aiken. Jr., W. B. Xegley, W. Scully, and Rev. W. T. Beatty. We owe these men a real debt of gratitude. If it hadn ' t been for their willingness to risk male superiority in giving us poor benighted females a chance, do you realize where and what we might be today? I suspect, though, that these men had no idea of the snowball of progress they were starting that February evening in Mr. Aiken ' s home, or they might have thought twice or more about leading us into the light. Since that evening, Pennsylvania Female College has become Pennsylvania College for Women, its one building has become fourteen, its 103 students now number 370, and its curriculum has been enlarged from instruction in spelling, reading, writing. English grammar, arithmetic, geography and history to include everything from setting a table to plotting the course of the stars. Many great names in the field of education have been connected with the college in the course of its seventy-five years, and many of its graduates have made their place in the world as educated women, just as the founders hoped they would. No book, no series of books, could ever tell a complete history of the college; there would always be a few little incidents left out. a name neglected, a teacher forgotten. You know the history of your college, because you have made it. but we would like you to know more about the people who made it before you. Dr. Black and Miss Pelletreau. first president and first preceptress of the college, were the Dr. Spencer and Miss Marks to the early students at PCW.



Page 15 text:

Romance flourished in their day, as in ours. In fact, the class of 1894 chose Always keep a certain end in view as their motto, and left no doubt as to their aim in life. Maybe we should take lessons ! Dr. Henry D. Lindsay, Miss Cora Helen Coolidge and Miss Janet Brownlee were the next three people to leave a mark upon the college. Dr. Lindsay as Pres- ident, Miss Coolidge, as Dean and President, and Miss Brownlee as principal of Dilworth Hall, the preparatory department of the college, exerted a very strong in- fluence over the college in this vital period of its growth. Under them, it became an established, not a struggling ins titution. They bridged the gap between PCW ' s beginning and its maturity. Under them, the school ' s adolescent years were happy ones. They handed a scholastically recognized college of the first degree into the keeping of Dr. H. L. Spencer and Miss Mary Helen Marks, who have guided it into being one of the foremost women ' s colleges in America. The history of this college has been a history of people. Of its presidents and deans, of its students, and of its faculty. All of them have added something to what is Pennsylvania College for Women today. And of all these, no two have been of such importance as Miss Marks and Dr. Spencer. They have given the students something of their own fineness and character, they have guarded the tra- ditions, both academic and otherwise, of PCW, and have been sympathetic and helpful to all students in all situations. It was a blow to all of us here in school, and to the alumnae all over the country, when we learned that Dr. Spencer was leaving at the close of the school year. We cannot conceive of a PCW without him, and as seniors are a little pleased that we will never know it. He has been the greatest single force in the history of the college, and under his guiding hand we have become a truly liberal college. He leaves an enviable record behind him, but also leaves his personality in every part of the school. We know that Miss Marks will continue to do in the future all that she has done in the past for PCW. A college is the people who make it. and these two people have indeed made the PCW of 1945.

Suggestions in the Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) collection:

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948


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