She Flourishes:” Chapters in the History of Princeton Women.

Mudd Man­u­script Library’s new exhi­bi­tion fea­tures women at Prince­ton, from the days of Eve­lyn Col­lege (1887–1897), mainly attended by daugh­ters of Prince­ton Uni­ver­sity and Prince­ton The­o­log­i­cal Sem­i­nary pro­fes­sors, to the appoint­ment of Shirley Tilgh­man as the first woman pres­i­dent of Prince­ton Uni­ver­sity in 2001. For the first time our exhibit is accom­pa­nied by his­tor­i­cal film footage from the archives. This com­pi­la­tion of seg­ments from films and videos, most of which was fea­tured pre­vi­ously in The Reel Mudd, is shown here.

The footage cov­ers forty years of his­tory of Prince­ton women, from the admis­sion of Sabra Meser­vey as the first woman at the Grad­u­ate School in 1961 to Shirley Tilghman’s pres­i­dency. Sub­jects cov­ered include the intro­duc­tion of coed­u­a­tion, stu­dent activism and Sally Frank, and activ­i­ties of the Women’s Cen­ter and SHARE (Sex­ual Harassment/Assault Advis­ing, Resources, and Education).

The com­pi­la­tion opens with footage of the Class of 1939’s junior prom in 1938 (taken from its Class film), which was attended by 606 women (all listed by name in the Daily Prince). Women only entered aca­d­e­mic life at Prince­ton in 1961, when Sabra Meser­vey was admit­ted at to the Grad­u­ate School. The footage at 0:37 shows Meservey’s humor­ous account of her ini­tial con­ver­sa­tion with Pres­i­dent Robert Goheen, who ulti­mately over­saw the intro­duc­tion of under­grad­u­ate coed­u­ca­tion in 1969, and wanted to use Meser­vey as a “test case” at the Grad­u­ate School. (For the full story, see the the blog about the Cel­e­bra­tion of Coed­u­ca­tion at the Grad­u­ate School.)

The only filmed rec­ol­lec­tions about the early years of coed­u­ca­tion were found on the doc­u­men­tary Look­ing Back: Reflec­tions of Black Prince­ton Alumni (1:32), cre­ated on the occa­sion of Princeton’s 250th anniver­sary in 1996. The changes on cam­pus did not please every­body. In 1974 Prince­ton icon Fred­er­ick Fox ’39 reached out to dis­grun­tled alumni in the film A Walk in the Spring­time, point­ing out, per­haps tongue in cheek, that Nas­sau Hall’s two bronze tigers were male and female (3:19). In the fol­low­ing frag­ment, taken from the short Acad­emy award win­ning film Prince­ton, A Search For Answers (1973), women fea­ture promi­nently (3:55).

The last frag­ments fea­ture woman activism and the gains of the women’s move­ment of the 1970s and the 1980s. Two frag­ments were taken from the Class of 1986’s Video Year­book: a speech from Sally Frank ’80, who sued the last three all-male eat­ing clubs (4:18), and a Women’s Cen­ter sit-in in May 1, 1986 (4:45). The last two frag­ments have not been fea­tured yet in The Reel Mudd but will be shortly. The first is a sketch from “Sex on a Sat­ur­day Night,” a the­ater per­for­mance for fresh­men about sex­ual harass­ment, pre­sented by SHARE (5:11), The film ends with the inau­gu­ra­tion of Shirley Tilgh­man (5:11) in 2001, taken from the doc­u­men­tary “Robert F. Goheen ’40, *48; Reflec­tions of a Pres­i­dent” (2006).

The exhibit “She Flour­ishes:” Chap­ters in the His­tory of Prince­ton Women may be vis­ited dur­ing Mudd Library’s open­ing hours on week­days between 9.00 am and 4.45 pm. from now until the end of August 2012.