Grace Institute

The nonprofit Grace Institute is dedicated to providing tuition-free education and training in business and administrative skills to economically disadvantaged women, along with the personal skills necessary for self-sufficiency, employability, and an improved quality of life.

Founding

In 1897, William R. Grace, twice Mayor of New York City, and his brother, Michael P. Grace, with the help and support of William’s wife, Lillius, established Grace Institute as a tuition-free nonsectarian educational and vocational school for immigrant women. They purchased the old Moore mansion on Tenth Avenue and West 60th Street to house the school that was incorporated by the New York State Legislature on April 16, 1897. Grace Institute was endowed as a memorial to William’s and Michael’s parents, James and Ellen Grace of Ireland.

An Irish immigrant who achieved the American dream, William Russell Grace was a success in business. He founded the W. R. Grace and Company, and was twice Mayor of the City of New York. He knew what it took to make a home and a life in a new country. He was determined to provide new arrivals with the opportunity not only to succeed in America, but to also contribute to the growth and prosperity of their adopted country.

The Grace family chose to open the Grace Institute to meet the training needs of immigrant women arriving in New York by the hundreds of thousands in the late 1800s. Many women arrived as young wives with families, needing to learn how to care for a home and family in their new country. Still others arrived alone without the skills to earn a living.

The Sisters of Charity of New York were asked to administer and staff the school. Sister Marie Dolores Van Rensselaer, who had opened Seton Hospital three years earlier, was appointed first superior of Grace Institute. Three hundred women were enrolled when Grace Institute first opened its doors in 1898. The following winter enrollment grew to 500 students. From 1900 to 1962, over 900 students each year attended classes at the West Side mansion.

The early years

The curriculum guide in 1898 listed cookery, millinery, childcare, Red Cross, children’s sewing, and dressmaking as course offerings. Classes in the daytime were organized for housewives and included an informal day nursery. Evening classes were scheduled for working women.

By the turn of the century, Grace Institute was offering a schedule of business classes in typing, bookkeeping, and stenography to help women secure jobs in New York City’s rapidly growing business community. This training qualified women for the better paying positions in offices that were a welcome alternative to factory work. In 1902 the school had 1002 students with 497 in Dressmaking, 272 in Stenography and Type- writing, and 233 in Cooking.[1]

Over the years, the school evolved into a secretarial school that prepared young women for careers in the business world. From 1898 to 1962, over 70,000 women received training.

New Location

In the early 1960s part of Fordham University was to be located in the new Lincoln Center complex, necessitating that the Trustees of the Institute find another facility to house the school. Under the leadership of Grace Institute President J. Peter Grace, grandson of William Russell Grace and chairman and chief executive officer of W. R. Grace & Co., the Institute chose to construct a new school on Second Avenue between 64th and 65th Streets. The new 14-story construction included three floors for the school.

Shortly after opening at the new site, Grace Institute offered a new one-year curriculum in fashion merchandising. Courses in foods and nutrition and clothing construction were also offered on a day and evening schedule.

Continuing as a tuition-free, nonsectarian school, Grace Institute programs attracted women of all ages and from all walks of life who lived in the greater New York metropolitan area.

Today

Over one hundred years after its founding, the Grace family is still actively involved in the work of the Grace Institute. Grace Institute continues to provide New York area women with a tuition-free education, charging only a nominal fee for registration and materials. This ensures that immigrant women and women who are economically disadvantaged have access to training in the most current business technologies and the opportunity to qualify for competitive employment with major New York area corporations.

A day and evening program is offered in business skills emphasizing computers, keyboarding, business writing, and more. Students learn personal skills such as interviewing and resume-writing techniques. All women must have a high school diploma or GED, be fluent in English, and be eligible to work in the United States. Grace Students come from diverse racial, ethnic, and religious backgrounds and range in age from late teens to seniors. Since 1897, over 100,000 women have graduated from Grace.

Grace currently has an 80% placement rate after graduation, and assists women in finding jobs with benefits. Job fairs are organized to give employers and graduates the opportunity to meet and interact. Grace graduates are employed by New York City law firms, corporations, nonprofits, hospitals, schools, and more. Employers have included Citigroup; Forbes; Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; McCann Erickson; Fordham University; American Museum of Natural History; Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP, among others.

References

  1. 1902 courses and attendance- Retrieved 2012-04-25

External links

[Grace Institute http://www.graceinstitute.org]