List of Mount Holyoke College people
The following is a list of individuals associated with Mount Holyoke College through attending as a student, or serving as a member of the faculty or staff.
Notable alumnae
Academics and scientists
- Mildred Sanderson, 1910 - mathematician
- Cornelia Clapp, 1871 - zoologist and marine biologist
- Mary Cutler Fairchild, 1875 - pioneering librarian
- Alice Carter Cook, circa 1888 - botanist and later faculty, first female recipient of an American botany PhD
- Martha Warren Beckwith, 1893 - anthropologist
- Abby Howe Turner, 1896 - founded Mount Holyoke's department of physiology
- Margaret Morse Nice, 1905 - ornithologist
- Louise Freeland Jenkins, 1911 - astronomer
- Marion Elizabeth Blake, 1913 - classics professor
- Rachel Fuller Brown, 1920 - chemist who discovered Nystatin
- Mildred Trotter, 1920 - forensic anthropologist
- Lucy Weston Pickett, 1925 - chemist
- Helen Sawyer Hogg, 1926 - astronomer
- Alice Standish Allen, 1929 - the first female engineering geologist in North America
- Janet Wilder Dakin, B.A. 1933, M.A. 1935 - zoologist who was the youngest sister of Thornton Wilder and Charlotte Wilder
- Carolyn Shaw Bell, 1941 - economics professor
- Mary McHenry, 1954 - professor of English credited with introducing African American literature to Mount Holyoke
- Jane English, 1964 - physicist, translator, photographer
- Phyllis Young Forsyth, 1966 - Distinguished Professor of Classical Studies, Emerita; founding chair, Classical Studies, University of Waterloo
- Dolores Hayden, 1966 - professor of architecture, urbanism, and American studies
- Carolyn Collette, 1967 - professor of English
- Karen E. Rowe, 1967 - English professor at UCLA
- Susan Shirk, 1967 - professor of political science and the former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for North Asia during the Clinton administration
- Nancy Perkins, 1975 - Dean of Duquesne University School of Law
Activists
- Lucy Stone, (attended 1839) - women's rights activist
- Olympia Brown, (attended 1854-55) - women's rights activist
- Helen Pitts, 1859 - women's rights activist, second wife of Frederick Douglass, and founder of the Frederick Douglass Memorial and Historical Association
- Hortense Parker, 1883 - daughter of African American abolitionist, John Parker and the first African American student to graduate from Mount Holyoke College
- Alice Bradford Wiles, 1873 - Chicago clubwoman
- Elizabeth Holloway Marston, 1915 - involved in the creation of Wonder Woman
- Sybil Bailey Stockdale, 1946 - founded the National League of Families of American Prisoners and MIAs in S.E. Asia; Lecturer; widow of '92 U.S. Vice-Presidential nominee, Adm. James Stockdale
- Gloria Johnson-Powell (Gloria Johnson), 1958 - child psychiatrist; an important figure in the Civil Rights Movement and the first African-American woman to attain tenure at Harvard Medical School
- Susannah Sirkin, 1976 - Deputy Director,Physicians for Human Rights co-recipient of the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize as a part of The International Campaign to Ban Land Mines
- Lynn Pasquerella, 1980 - Medical ethicist; president, Mount Holyoke College
- Mallika Dutt, 1983 - Executive Director of Breakthrough: bring human rights home, an international human rights organization
- Kavita Ramdas, 1985 - President and CEO, Global Fund for Women
- Marcia Hofmann, 2000 - digital rights attorney and activist
- Adrienne Wallace, 2007 - The Hip Hop Education Project[1]
Actors, musicians, dancers and performers
- Elizabeth Eaton Converse - later known as Connie Converse, 1946 - singer and songwriter
- Dianne Consoer Leech, 1952 - Original member of the Joffrey Ballet Company touring with the company in 1956[2]
- Caitlin Clarke (Katherine Clarke), 1974 - actress
- Michelle Hurst, 1974 - actress, best known for her role as Miss Claudette on the Netflix Series Orange Is the New Black
- Nancy Gustafson, 1978 - opera singer
- Melinda Mullins, 1979 - actress
- Donna Kane, 1984 - actress
- Martha Mason, 1988 - dancer, founder and artistic director of the Snappy Dance Theater
- Geneva Carr, 1988 - actress, Tony Award nominee
- Mara Bonde Ricker, 1991 - opera singer
- Kimberly Hebert Gregory, 1994 - actress
- Zeb Bangash, 2004 - part of Pakistani music duo Zeb and Haniya
- Laura Kamrath, 2004 - actress
- Alexandra Turshen, 2008 - actress, Red Oaks, Body, Boy Meets Girl[3]
- Melissa Stone, 2013 - actress
Artists
- Esther Howland, 1847 - artist noted for her role in popularizing St. Valentine's Day cards
- Minerva J. Chapman, 1880 - painter
- Jane Hammond, 1972 - artist
- Susan Mohl Powers, 1966 - sculptor, painter
- Veneliza Salcedo, 2007 - medical illustrator, Salcedo Studios[4]
Athletes
- Margaret Hoffman, 1934 - swimmer who participated in both the 1928 Summer Olympics and 1932 Summer Olympics (200M Breaststroke)
- Imogene Opton Fish, 1955 - alpine skier who was captain of the U.S. women's 1952 Winter Olympics ski team
- Michele Drolet, 1976 - blind cross-country skier who was the first American woman to ever earn a Paralympic cross-country skiing medal - bronze at the 1994 Winter Paralympics
- Harriet (Holly) Metcalf, 1981 - Executive Director and founder of Row As One Institute who won a Gold medal in rowing at the 1984 Summer Olympics
- Mary Mazzio, 1983 - filmmaker and olympic athtlete who participated in rowing at the 1992 Summer Olympics
- Olga Maria Sacasa, 1984 - cyclist was the first woman ever to represent Nicaragua in cycling at the 1992 Summer Olympics
- Katheryn Curi, 1996 - cyclist who placed first at the National Road Race Championships in Park City, Utah in June 2005
Businesswomen
- Jean Picker Firstenberg, 1958 - Director and CEO of the American Film Institute
- Mary Duffy, 1966 - Feminist fashion expert, spokeswoman, entrepreneur, author, and motivational speaker, expanding concepts of beauty for the majority of women who do not fit ideal stereotypes popularized by fashion and media Big Beauties/Little Women, Ford Models
- Barbara J. Desoer, 1974 - CEO for Citibank N.A. and a member of its board of directors
- Audrey A. McNiff, 1980 - Managing Director and co-head of Currency Sales, Goldman Sachs
- Barbara Cassani, 1982 - first leader of London's successful bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics
- Barbara Byrne, 1976 - Vice Chairman of Investment Banking Division, Barclays Capital
- Sheila Lirio Marcelo, 1993 - Founder and CEO of Care.com
- Vicki Roberts, 1980 - attorney, on-air legal commentator, television and film personality
- Margaux Avedisian, 2006 - Renowned bitcoin entrepreneur and radio personality.
College presidents
- Susan Tolman Mills, 1845 - co-founder and first president of Mills College
- Ada Howard, 1853 - first president of Wellesley College
- Abbie Park Ferguson, 1856 - founder and president of Huguenot College
- Sarah Ann Dickey, 1869 - founder of Mount Hermon Female Seminary
- Florence M. Read, 1909 - former president, Spelman College
- Barbara M. White, 1941 - former president, Mills College
- Pauline Tompkins, 1941 - former president, Cedar Crest College
- Alice Stone Ilchman 1957 - former president, Sarah Lawrence College
- Elizabeth Topham Kennan, 1960 - former president, Mount Holyoke College
- Nancy J. Vickers, 1967 - President, Bryn Mawr College
- Carol Geary Schneider, 1967 - president, Association of American Colleges and Universities
- Elaine Tuttle Hansen, 1969 - president, Bates College
- Lynn Pasquerella, 1980 - president, Mount Holyoke College
Computer scientists and graphic designers
- Jean E. Sammet, 1948 - computer scientist who developed the FORMAC programming language
- Susan Kare, 1975 - the original designer of many of the interface elements for the original Apple Macintosh.
Doctors, nurses, psychologists, and psychiatrists
- Nancy M. Hill, 1859 - Civil War nurse and one of the first female doctors in the U.S.[5]
- Mary Phylinda Dole, 1886, 1889 - became a doctor at a time when it was difficult for women to do so
- Dorothy Hansine Andersen, 1922 - doctor involved in cystic fibrosis research (first to identify the disease)
- Virginia Apgar, 1929 - doctor who developed the Apgar score for evaluating newborns; anesthesiologist
- Ellen P. Reese, 1948 - psychologist
- Florence Wald 1938 - nurse who was the leader of the U.S. hospice movement
- Gloria Johnson-Powell (Gloria Johnson), 1958 - child psychiatrist; an important figure in the Civil Rights Movement and the first African American woman to attain tenure at Harvard Medical School
Filmmakers, broadcast presidents, and producers
Elizabeth Martin Holyoke MA Rhode Island
- Dulcy Singer, 1955 - former Emmy Award-winning producer of Sesame Street
- Julia Phillips (Julia Miller), 1965 - Hollywood producer and author
- Debra Martin Chase, 1977 - Hollywood producer
- Mary Mazzio, 1983 - filmmaker and olympic athtlete who participated in rowing at the 1992 Summer Olympics
- Sonali Gulati, 1996 - filmmaker and director of the film Nalini by Day, Nancy by Night
- Elizabeth Cheluget-Thomas (Jepchumba), 2007 - publisher, African Digital Art[6]
- Lesley-Ann Welsh (Laava Royal), 2007 - writer, producer, artivist
Journalists
- Janet Huntington Brewster, 1933 - philanthropist, writer, and radio broadcaster; wife of Edward R. Murrow
- Beth Karas, 1979 - senior reporter, CourtTV
- Priscilla Painton, 1980 - editor in chief, Simon & Schuster; former deputy managing editor, Time Magazine
- Dari Alexander, ca. 1991 - co-anchor of WNYW's weeknight 6 p.m. newscast, and previously a reporter and part-time anchor for the Fox News Channel.
- Jenna Caiazzo, 2006 - anchor, WJZY
- Shoshana Walter, 2007 - journalist, national reporting prize in the 2015 Livingston Awards for Young Journalists[7]
Judges
- Maryanne Trump Barry, 1958 - judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit; older sister of 45th president of the United States Donald Trump
- Glenda Hatchett, 1973 - judge on nationally syndicated television series, Judge Hatchett
Politics
- Louisa “Louise” Maria Torrey Taft, 1845 - mother of president William Howard Taft
- Frances Perkins, 1902 - first woman cabinet member (U.S. Secretary of Labor from 1933-1945 under President Franklin D. Roosevelt)
- Marion West Higgins, 1936 - first female Speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly
- Ella T. Grasso, 1940 - Governor of Connecticut; the first female Governor elected in her own right in United States history
- Joanne H. Alter, 1949 - American activist and politician
- Nancy Kissinger (Nancy Maginnes), 1955 - philanthropist; wife of former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
- Nita Lowey, 1959 - United States House of Representatives member (D-NY)
- Susan Shirk, 1967 - professor of political science and the former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for North Asia during the Clinton administration
- Judith Kurland, 1967 - former Regional Director, United States Department of Health and Human Services
- Jane Garvey (Jane Famiano), 1969 (M.A.) - former head of Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
- Elaine Chao, 1975 - U.S. Secretary of Labor, 2001–2009; Director of the Peace Corps, 1991–1992; former national director, United Way
- Susan Longley, 1978 - State Senator and Judge of Probate from Maine
- Karen Middleton, 1988 - legislator in the U.S. state of Colorado
- Mona Sutphen, 1989 - Deputy White House Chief of Staff in the Obama administration
Writers
Beth Martin Elizabeth Martin Holyoke MA Rhode Island
- Emily Dickinson, (attended 1847-1848) - poet
- Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman, (attended 1870-1871) - novelist and short story writer
- Anne W. Armstrong, (attended 1890–1892) - novelist
- Caroline Henderson, 1901 - Dust Bowl author
- Alice Geer Kelsey, 1918 - writer, children's literature
- Charlotte Wilder, 1919 - poet
- Kathryn Irene Glascock, 1922 - poet
- Constance McLaughlin Green, 1925 (Master's degree) - historian who won the 1963 Pulitzer Prize for History for Washington, Village and Capital, 1800-1878
- Roberta Teale Swartz, 1925 - poet
- Virginia Hamilton Adair, 1933 - poet
- Martha Whitmore Hickman, 1947 - non-fiction author
- Jean Rikhoff, 1948 - author
- Nancy McKenzie, 1948 - Arthurian legend author
- Martha Henissart, 1950 - mystery author writing under the pen-name of Emma Lathen with Mary Jane Latsis
- Nancy Bauer (Nancy Luke), 1956 - non-fiction author
- Elizabeth Topham Kennan, 1960 - author writing under the pen-name of Clare Munnings with Jill Ker Conway
- Nancy Bond, 1966 - writer, children's literature
- Patricia Roth Schwartz, 1968 - poet
- Olivia Mellan, 1968 - Author of 6 books on Money Psychology
- Kathleen Eagle (Kathleen Pierson), 1970 - romance novelist
- Marisabina Russo, 1971 - writer, children's literature
- Wendy Wasserstein, 1971 - playwright who won the 1989 Tony Award for Best Play and the 1989 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for The Heidi Chronicles
- Susan Shwartz, 1972 - science fiction and fantasy author
- Lynne Barrett, 1972 - author
- Gjertrud Schnackenberg, 1975 - poet
- Kathleen Hirsch, 1975 - non-fiction author
- Judith Tarr, 1976 - science fiction and fantasy author
- Carol Higgins Clark, 1978 - mystery author
- Jacqueline Jones LaMon, 1978 - poet and novelist
- Lan Cao, 1983 - novelist
- Suzan-Lori Parks, 1985 - playwright who won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize in Drama for Topdog/Underdog
- Sehba Sarwar, 1986 - novelist
- Deborah Harkness, 1986 - author of The New York Times best selling novel A Discovery of Witches
- C. Leigh Purtill, 1988 - young adult author
- Sabina Murray, 1989 - screenwriter; wrote screenplay for The Beautiful Country
- Sherri Browning Erwin, 1990 - author of "Thornbrook Park" and "Jane Slayre", member of Romance Writers of America (RWA)
- Amy Glynn, 1992 - poet, author of "A Modern Herbal",
- Tahmima Anam, 1997 - author
- Susan J. Elliott, 2000 - non-fiction author
- Hanna Pylväinen, 2007 - author of We Sinners[8]
Notable faculty, past and present
Artists
- Leonard DeLonga - professor of art
- (Charles) Denoe Leedy - concert pianist and music journalist
- Harrison Potter - concert pianist and accompanist
- David Sanford (composer) - professor of music
- Bonnie Catto - cellist
- Emmett Williams - artist in residence 1975-6
Athletics
- Mary Ellen Clark - former head diving coach; diver who won two Olympic bronze medals at the 1992 Summer Olympics and the 1996 Summer Olympics
Authors, actors, poets, and playwrights
- Awam Amkpa - actor and playwright
- W.H. Auden - poet
- James Baldwin - Five Colleges (Massachusetts) faculty and American novelist
- Sven Birkerts - author, The Gutenberg Elegies
- Joseph Brodsky - winner of the 1987 Nobel Prize in Literature, and Poet Laureate of the United States for 1991–1992
- Luis Cernuda - poet
- Anita Desai - novelist
- Anthony Giardina - novelist
- Donald Hendrie Jr. - author and colleague of John Irving's
- John Irving - author of The Cider House Rules, and The World According to Garp
- Denis Johnston - playwright
- Brad Leithauser - author, poet
- Jaime Manrique - author, poet
- Valerie Martin - novelist and short story writer
- Mary Jo Salter - poet and a coeditor of The Norton Anthology of Poetry
- Margaret Chai Maloney - author
- Bapsi Sidhwa - novelist
- Paul Smyth - poet
- Genevieve Taggard - poet
- Peter Viereck - 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for Terror and Decorum and professor of Russian History
- Richard Weber - Irish poet; visiting lecturer from 1967 to 1970
- Douglas Whynott - author
Education
- Mary Lyon - founder of Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in 1837 (later Mount Holyoke College)
- Beverly Daniel Tatum - president of Spelman College
Historians
- Michael Burns
- Joseph Ellis
- Robert Matteson Johnston
- Stephen F. Jones
- William S. McFeely
- Nellie Neilson
- Bertha Putnam
Humanities
- Christopher Benfey - professor of English
- Peter Berek - professor of English
- Marion Elizabeth Blake - classics professor
- Gordon Keith Chalmers - professor of English
- Carolyn Collette - professor of English
- Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze - philosopher
- Leah Blatt Glasser - Dean of First-Year Studies and Lecturer in English
- Lynne Hanley - professor of English
- Mary McHenry - professor of English
- Indira Viswanathan Peterson - professor of Asian Studies
- William H. Quillian - professor of English
- David Staines - literary critic
- Jean Wahl - philosopher
- Donald Weber - professor of English
Politics
- Shirley Chisholm - U.S. Representative, 1968–1983, founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus, and simultaneously the first woman and the first African-American to run for U.S. President
- Jean Grossholtz - professor emeritus of politics; bodybuilder who won a silver medal at the 1994 Gay Games
- W. Anthony Lake - U.S. National Security Advisor, 1993–1997
- Christopher Pyle - professor of politics, journalist and whistleblower
- Margaret Rotundo - Maine State Legislator
- Cyrus Vance - U.S. Secretary of State, 1977–1980
Sciences and social sciences
- A. Elizabeth Adams - zoologist
- Mildred Allen - physicist
- John Bissell Carroll - psychologist
- Sheila Ewing Browne - chemist, winner of "Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring"
- Cornelia Clapp - zoologist and marine biologist
- Janet Wilder Dakin - zoologist who was the youngest sister of Thornton Wilder and Charlotte Wilder
- Anna J. Harrison - professor of chemistry
- Olive Hazlett- mathematician
- Mark McMenamin - paleontologist and geologist, winner of the Presidential Young Investigator Award (PYI)
- Ann Haven Morgan - zoologist
- Lucy Taxis Shoe Meritt, classical archaeologist and a scholar of Greek architectural ornamentation and mouldings
- Becky Wai-Ling Packard - winner of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE)
- Lucy Weston Pickett - chemist
- Caroline Louise Ransom, Egyptologist
- Ellen P. Reese, 1948 - psychologist
- Lydia White Shattuck - botanist
- Mignon Talbot - professor of Geology and Geography, who recovered the only fossils of the dinosaur, Podokesaurus holyokensis
- Abby Howe Turner - founded Mount Holyoke's department of physiology
- Esther Boise Van Deman - archeologist
- Anne Sewell Young - astronomer, director of the John Payson Williston Observatory
- Antoni Zygmund - mathematician who exerted a major influence on 20th-century mathematics
Actors
- Michael Burns - Moondoggie in Gidget Gets Married, 1972 <imdb.com>
Presidents
A number of individuals have acted as head of Mount Holyoke. Until 1888, the term principal was used. From 1888 to the present, the term president has been used.[9]
- 1837-1849: Mary Lyon, 1st President (Founder and Principal)
- 1849-1850: Mary C. Whitman, 2nd President (Principal)
- 1850-1865: Mary W. Chapin, 3rd President (Principal)
- 1865-1867: Sophia D. Stoddard 4th President (Acting Principal)
- 1867-1872: Helen M. French, 5th President (Principal)
- 1872-1883: Julia E. Ward, 6th President (Principal)
- 1883-1889 Elizabeth Blanchard, 7th President (Principal and President)
- 1889: Mary A. Brigham, 8th President (President Elect - died in an accident)
- 1889-1890: Louisa F. Cowles, 9th President (Acting President)
- 1890-1900: Elizabeth Storrs Mead, 10th President
- 1900-1937: Mary Emma Woolley, 11th President
- 1937-1957: Roswell G. Ham, 12th President (first male president of MHC)
- 1954: Meribeth E. Cameron, served as Acting President for part of 1954 while President Ham was on leave
- 1957-1968: Richard Glenn Gettell, 13th President
- 1966: Meribeth E. Cameron, served as Acting President part of 1966 while President Gettell was on leave
- 1968-1969: Meribeth E. Cameron, 14th President (Acting President)
- 1969-1978: David Truman, 15th President
- 1978-1995: Elizabeth Topham Kennan '60, 16th President
- 1984: Joseph Ellis, served as Acting President for part of 1984 while President Kennan was on leave
- 1995: Peter Berek, served as interim president in Fall 1995
- 1996-2010: Joanne V. Creighton, 17th President
- 2002: Beverly Daniel Tatum, served as Acting President for part of 2002 while President Creighton was on leave
- 2010–2016: Lynn Pasquerella '80, 18th President
- 2016-present: Sonya Stephens, 19th President (Acting President)
Commencement speakers
The following is a list of Mount Holyoke College Commencement Speakers by year.[10]
Notes
- ↑
- ↑ "The Joffery Ballet" by Sasha Anawalt
- ↑ Alexandra Turshen - IMDb
- ↑
- ↑ Voight, Sandye (September 22, 2005). "Character reference; Costumed performers bring history forward at Linwood walk". Telegraph Herald.
- ↑ African Digital Art
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Principals & Presidents (1837-)
- ↑ Commencement Speakers by Year
- ↑ Dolores Huerta Selected As Commencement Speaker
- ↑ Student Commencement Address 2017
- ↑ Transcript of the keynote speech by Joia Mukherjee, the chief medical officer for Partners In Health.
- ↑ The Paradox of Belonging: Mount Holyoke as a Microcosm of the Larger World
- ↑ Connecting the Liberal Arts with the World's Important Questions
- ↑ Carrying the Call to Welcome: Remarks on Leaving and Coming Home
- ↑ Deborah Bial, Founder and President of Posse Foundation
- ↑ Moment of Impact
- ↑ Kavita Ramdas ’85 Named Commencement Speaker
- ↑ Student Address, Jenna McCutcheon Ruddock '13
- ↑ Azar Nafisi to Give 175th Commencement Address
- ↑ Tamar Spitz Westphal ‘12
- ↑ Martha Nussbaum to Give MHC Commencement Address
- ↑ Commencement Greetings
- ↑ Columnist to deliver Mount Holyoke College graduation address
- ↑ Student Address
- ↑ McAleese to MHC Grads: "The World Needs You"
- ↑ Commencement Address Caitlin Healey ’09
- ↑ Carol Gilligan Delivers 171st Commencement Address
- ↑ Commencement Address Sally Brzozowski '08
- ↑ Commencement Speakers Offer Inspiration
- ↑ Commencement Address by Sarah Richards
- ↑ Joyce Carol Oates Commencement Speech
- ↑ Joyce Carol Oates to Graduates: We Do Love Our Students
- ↑ Commencement Address by Margaret "Mollie" McDermott '06
- ↑ Nina Totenberg Commencement Speech
- ↑ Student Commencement Address Claudia Y. Calhoun '05
- ↑ Kim Campbell Commencement Speech
- ↑ Mount Holyoke’s Commencement Set for Weekend of May 21–23
- ↑ Judy Blume Commencement Speech
- ↑ Photo from Judy Blume's official website
- ↑ Student Commencement Speech
- ↑ Queen Noor of Jordan Commencement Speech
- ↑ Suzan-Lori Parks Commencement Speech
- ↑ Mary Patterson McPherson Commencement Speech
- ↑ Anna Quindlen Commencement Speech
- ↑ Johnnetta B. Cole Commencement Speech
- ↑ "Sister President" Johnnetta Cole Tells Grads to "Help Get the World Right-Side Up Again"
- ↑ Madeleine Albright Commencement Speech
- ↑ Chandra Rachel Bing Greene Dunn' 97 Student Address
- ↑ Donna Shalala Commencement Speech
- ↑ Commencement Speaker Shalala Sees Future President in Class of 1996
- ↑ Ann Richards Commencement Speech
- ↑ COMMENCEMENTS; Brandeis Graduates Told, 'Stay Involved'
- ↑ Wendy Wasserstein Commencement Speech
- ↑ Glenn Close Commencement Speech
- ↑ Dissident Poet Joseph Brodsky Gives Six Life Tips to College Grads (1988)
- ↑ "Commencements; Mount Holyoke". The New York Times. May 25, 1987. Retrieved 2007-10-12.
- ↑ "At Mount Holyoke: Angelou tells seniors to reflect on their education". Daily Hampshire Gazette. May 26, 1987.
- ↑ Yale Protestors Note Apartheid at Commencement
- ↑ Political Action Urged
- ↑ Graduates’ Next Challenges: Strife Among Nations, Strife Among People
- ↑ Commencement Address, the Genre
- ↑ Life After Graduation According to Garp
- ↑ David Bicknell Truman Records
- ↑ Lillian Hellman papers with draft of Mount Holyoke commencement speech
- ↑ The Education of Ella Grasso
- ↑ Mount Holyoke College Commencement Address by Ella T. Grasso
- ↑ Horner, Matina. Records of Radcliffe College President Matina Horner, 1972-1989: A Finding Aid
- ↑ Speakers at Commencements Put New Emphasis on Old Values
- ↑ David Bicknell Truman Records
- ↑ Ted Kennedy at the Mount Holyoke College class of 1970 commencement ceremony
- ↑ Dilemmas of the Educated Woman
- ↑ Forms Under Light
- ↑ College Graduates Hear Pleas for Science, Rights
- ↑ Mt. Holyoke Class Hears Norstad Urge Wider NATO
- ↑ Mount Holyoke College - South Hadley, Massachusetts, 2 June 1963
- ↑ Douglas is Speaker at Mount Holyoke, South Hadley
- ↑ Easton Socials
- ↑ Bronxville Girls To Receive Bachelor Of Arts Degrees
- ↑ Graduation Exercises Are Planned
- ↑ 1924 Commencement speaker Honorable Henry Morgenthau with Joseph A. Skinner, president of Board of Trustees, 1924
- ↑ "Mount Holyoke Graduates; The College Celebrates Its Seventy fifth Commencement.". The New York Times. June 16, 1912.
- ↑ Mount Holyoke Commencement Speech, June 18, 1907
- ↑ President Gives Diplomas; Mount Holyoke College Confers a Degree Upon Him. The First Man So Honored Speech to the Graduating Class, Among Whom Was His Niece -- The President's Trip.
- ↑ Mount Holyoke College
- ↑ The Mission of Women: An Address
- ↑ Professor Fowler's Anniversary Address Before the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, August 2, 1850
- ↑ An address / delivered at the ninth anniversary of the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, South Hadley, Massachusetts, August 6, 1846 by J.B. Condit
- ↑ A looking-glass for ladies, or, The formation and excellence of the female character : an address delivered at the eighth anniversary of the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, South Hadley, Mass., July 31, 1845.
- ↑ An address delivered at the fourth anniversary of the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, South Hadley, Mass. July 29, 1841
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