Chapter 5
The 1980s: Marcia Savage, Kathleen McGrory,
and
The Resurgence of Interest in Education for
Women
Third President: Marcia Savage, 1980-1984
Acting President: Gail Champlin, 1984-1985
Fourth President: M. Kathleen McGrory, 1985-1990
Photo: Gail Champlin, Marcia Savage, Kathleen McGrory, Joan Davis, Miriam Butterworth
Photo: Gail Champlin, Marcia Savage, Kathleen McGrory, Joan Davis, Miriam Butterworth
The 1980s and
1990s saw a resurgence of both popular and scholarly interest in the value of
single sex education for girls and women. For example, a widely-read book Reviving Ophelia: Saving the Selves of Adolescent
Girls, 1994 by Mary
Pipher and Ruth Ross pointed
to a decline in self esteem characteristic of teenage girls. Readers of the
book were led to consider the unique needs of girls compared to those of boys. On
a more scholarly level, a 1991 landmark study commissioned by the American Association
of University Women suggested that teachers paid more attention to boys than to
girls in the classroom. Even cartoonist Gary Trudeau penned a Doonesbury cartoon
in 1992 that became a favorite of advocates of women’s colleges. In the last
frame of the strip a pre-school age girl advises her mother to send her father
to talk to the girl’s teacher because, “Mom, She’ll never call on you! Send Daddy.”
In 1989 M.
Elizabeth Tidball posited a particularly compelling case for single-sex education.
Tidwell argued that women’s colleges play a unique role in the education of
women, not only by providing a supportive experience for their own students,
but by developing methods for educating women. She maintained that women’s
colleges would continue to play an important role in American education. She
also stressed that male professors at coeducational colleges could learn from
their male peers at single sex schools. Her studies found that male professors
at all women’s schools provided more help and support to female students than
their counterparts at coed institutions.
This
increased interest in the education of girls and women and in the particular
advantages of single sex education initially gave HCW a boost. However, the
breadth of women-oriented programs offered at the college during the 1980s also
points to an institution in search of a mission.The college appeared to provide
programs for women of almost every age and ethnic group.
HCW was no longer a
predominantly a feeder school for young women pursuing a four year degree. Through the combined efforts of the College
and its Career Counseling Center, by 1990, adult women accounted for twenty
five percent of the total student population. HCW also spun out a variety of
non-degree continuing education programs.
Marcia Savage 1980-1985
Marcia Savage became
president of HCW in 1980. According to a Clark alumni magazine interview, Savage
became more of a feminist during her years at HCW. When she arrived in
Hartford, she had more experience with coeducational programs. Born and raised
in Worchester, Mass., she attended college in her home town, becoming a 1961
honors graduate of Clark University. She came to Hartford from a post as Dean
of the College at Clark where she had also served as Dean of Students and
Associate Dean of Academic Affairs.
By 1985 Savage
believed that women in academic administration were no longer treated as tokens,
“but it is still an uphill struggle.” Savage oversaw the creation of the
Women’s Research Institute headed by Sharon Shepala; developed additional adult
programs, expanded the services of the Career Counseling Center, increased
staff, and raised $2.5 million - all of
which strengthened HCW as a women’s institution.
During Savage’s
years in office HCW developed a more diverse student body, faculty, and staff.
In a Chronicle article Savage
commented, “We are the place that people turn to for interesting things on
women. We have responded to aneed in a
way that has truly changed peoples lives in a tangible way. We have a special
niche in the Hartford community.” That niche still exists in the 2010s,
although it has evolved into a new form.
After leaving Hartford,
Savage took on increased responsibilities as the president of Manhattanville College
in Purchase, NY where she served from 1985-1995. Manhattanville had originally
been founded as a woman’s college affiliated with the Sisters of the Sacred
Heart in 1952. The college became an independent institution in 1966 and became
coeducational in 1971. According to a Hartford Courant article dated Oct. 26,
1984 Manhattanville had a student population of about 1,000. HCW numbered about
200 undergraduates with 3,000 women and men using its services. She retired
from Manhattanville in 1995.
Kathleen McGrory 1985-1990
When Savage
departed for Manhattanville Gail Champlin, director of the Career Counseling
Center, was appointed as Acting President of HCW for a year. Kathleen McGrory became the fourth and last
president of HCW on October 6, 1985.
McGrory held a PhD
from Colombia University. She came to HCW from Eastern Connecticut State
University where she had served four years as Vice President of Academic Affairs
(1981-1985) and three years as the first dean of the School of Arts and
Sciences (1978-1981). She had been a professor of English and Comparative Literature
at Western Connecticut State College in Danbury, Conn. and the College of White
Plains of Pace University in White Plains, NY. Her specialties included comparative medieval
literature and modern Irish literature and she had published Yeats, Joyce,
and Beckett: new Light on Three Modern Irish Writers (Bucknell University
Press, 1975).
During the second
half of the 1980s, HCWs accomplishments and those of its Career Counseling
Center included the upgrading of the legal assistant program from certificate
program into a baccalaureate, expansion of the computer education program, the
expansion of programs for women of color, and the development of programs for
women transitioning out of poverty or welfare into economic solvency. These
years were also marked by efforts resulting in the naming of five buildings to the
National Register of Historic Places in 1986.
Most alumnae and
former faculty and staff of HCW would probably agree that the campus,
consisting of gracious former homes, landscaped grounds, and an informal
arboretum of landmark trees contributed to the educational success of the
college. For students struggling with personal challenges, whether financial,
emotional, or vocational, the campus could seem like a haven of calm. Despite
continuing economic difficulties, the college attempted to maintain the
character of its buildings and grounds.
In 1986, Thomas G.
Gaines included HCW in a Washington Post
article, “Collecting Campuses in Connecticut.” He noted that “School campuses,
along with theme parks, world’s fairs and village greens, can be among the most
idyllic of man-made environments-places we enjoy visiting and returning to.” He
stated that HCW “has the best landscaping of any Connecticut School.” He
remarked that although the campus had grown by “serendipity” that “it was
knitted into a cohesive whole, combining function and taste.”
The distinctive
ambience of the HCW campus is one reason it continues to hold a place in the
regard of the greater Hartford community. By the 1990s, however, time was
catching up with the idyllic world of HCW. A later chapter of this blog will deal with
HCWs decision to affiliate with the University of Hartford. First, however,
this blog will feature a chapter about
the institution that would become today's Center for Professional
Development.
Sources
How Schools Shortchange Girls: The
Aauw Report: a Study of Major Findings on Girls and Education. Washington, DC: AAUW
Educational Foundation, 1992.
Pipher, Mary B. Reviving Ophelia:
Saving the Selves of Adolescent Girls. New York: Putnam, 1994.
Tidball, M E. Taking Women
Seriously: Lessons and Legacies for Educating the Majority. Phoenix, Ariz:
Oryx Press, 1999. Print.
Trudeau, G B. Quality Time on
Highway 1. Kansas City, Mo: Andrews and McMeel, 1993.
Hartford College
for Women archives
Gaines, Thomas A.
“Collecting Campuses in Connecticut,” The
Washington Post. October 26, 1986, E6.