Spelman College


































































Spelman College
Spelman College seal.svg
Former names
Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary
Motto Our Whole School for Christ
Type
Private women's college
HBCU[1]
Established April 11, 1881 (1881-04-11)[2][3]
Endowment $367 million[4]
Budget $104.6 million[4]
President Mary Schmidt Campbell
Students 2,536 (Fall 2018)
Location
Atlanta
,
Georgia
,
U.S.


33°44′46″N 84°24′40″W / 33.746°N 84.411°W / 33.746; -84.411Coordinates: 33°44′46″N 84°24′40″W / 33.746°N 84.411°W / 33.746; -84.411
Colors Columbia Blue and White[5]
         
Athletics None[6]
Formerly NCAA Division III GSAC
Nickname
Jaguars, Spelmanites
Affiliations
Annapolis Group
ACS
Website www.spelman.edu
Spelman College logo.svg

Spelman College is a private, liberal arts, women's college in Atlanta, Georgia. The college is part of the Atlanta University Center academic consortium in Atlanta.[2] Founded in 1881 as the Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary, Spelman was the fourth historically black female institution of higher education to receive its collegiate charter in 1924. (Two schools were strictly seminaries and one was originally coeducational.) Therefore, Spelman College is America's oldest private historically black liberal arts college for women.[2]


Spelman is ranked among the nation's top liberal arts colleges and #1 among historically black colleges in the United States by U.S. News & World Report. The college is also ranked among the top 50 four-year colleges and universities for producing Fulbright and Truman Scholars, and was ranked the second largest producer of African-American college graduates who attend medical school. Spelman ranks #1 among baccalaureate origin institutions of African-American women who earned science, engineering, and mathematics doctoral degrees.[7][8]Forbes ranks Spelman among the nation's top ten women's colleges. The Princeton Review ranks Spelman among the Best 373 Colleges and Universities in America.[9][10]


Spelman is the alma mater of thousands of notable African descendant women including the first African-American COO of Starbucks and CEO of Sam's Club Rosalind Brewer, Pulitzer Prize winner Alice Walker, former Dean of Harvard College Evelynn M. Hammonds, activist and Children's Defense Fund founder Marian Wright Edelman, musician, activist & historian Bernice Johnson Reagon (who also founded Sweet Honey in the Rock), writer Pearl Cleage, TV personality Rolanda Watts, Opera star Mattiwilda Dobbs, actresses Cassi Davis, LaTanya Richardson, Adrienne-Joi Johnson, and Keshia Knight Pulliam, and many other luminaries in the arts, education, sciences, business, and the armed forces.


In 2013, Spelman College decided to drop varsity athletics and leave the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Using money originally budgeted to the sports programs, they created wellness programs available for all students.[11]




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Founding


    • 1.2 Growth


    • 1.3 Civil rights involvement


    • 1.4 1980–present


    • 1.5 List of presidents




  • 2 Museum of Fine Art


  • 3 Academics


    • 3.1 Honor societies




  • 4 Student body


  • 5 Student life


    • 5.1 New Student Orientation


    • 5.2 White Dress Tradition


    • 5.3 Student publications and media


    • 5.4 Religious organizations


    • 5.5 International student and social organizations


    • 5.6 Residential life




  • 6 Athletics


    • 6.1 End of athletics




  • 7 Notable alumnae


  • 8 Notable faculty


  • 9 See also


  • 10 References


  • 11 Further reading


  • 12 External links





History



Founding




Harriet E. Giles and Sophia B. Packard


The Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary was established on April 11, 1881 (1881-04-11) in the basement of Friendship Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia, by two teachers from the Oread Institute of Worcester, Massachusetts: Harriet E. Giles and Sophia B. Packard.[2][12] Giles and Packard had met while Giles was a student, and Packard the preceptress, of the New Salem Academy in New Salem, Massachusetts, and fostered a lifelong friendship there.[13] The two of them traveled to Atlanta specifically to found a school for black freedwomen, and found support from Frank Quarles, the pastor of Friendship Baptist Church.


Giles and Packard began the school with 11 African-American women and $100 given to them by the First Baptist Church in Medford, Massachusetts.,[2] and a promise of further support from the Women's American Baptist Home Missionary Society (WABHMS), a group with which they were both affiliated in Boston.[13] Although their first students were mostly illiterate, they envisioned their school to be a liberal arts institution - the first circular of the college stated that they planned to offer "algebra, physiology, essays, Latin, rhetoric, geometry, political economy, mental philosophy (psychology), chemistry, botany, Constitution of the United States, astronomy, zoology, geology, moral philosophy, and evidences of Christianity".[13] Over time, they attracted more students; by the time the first term ended, they had enrolled 80 students in the seminary.[13] The WABHMS made a down payment on a nine-acre (36,000 m²) site in Atlanta relatively close to the church they began in, which originally had five buildings left from a Union Civil War encampment, to support classroom and residence hall needs.[14]


In 1882 the two women returned to Massachusetts to bid for more money and were introduced to wealthy Northern Baptist businessman John D. Rockefeller at a church conference in Ohio.[2] Rockefeller was impressed by Packard's vision. In April 1884, Rockefeller visited the school. By this time, the seminary had 600 students and 16 faculty members. It was surviving on generous donations by the black community in Atlanta, the efforts of volunteer teachers, and gifts of supplies; many Atlanta black churches, philanthropists, and black community groups raised and donated money to settle the debt on the property that had been acquired.[13] Rockefeller was so impressed that he settled the debt on the property.[14] Rockefeller's wife, Laura Spelman Rockefeller; her sister, Lucy Spelman; and their parents, Harvey Buel and Lucy Henry Spelman, were also supportive of the school. The Spelmans were longtime activists in the abolitionist movement. Thus, in 1884 the name of the school was changed to the Spelman Seminary in honor of Laura Spelman, John D. Rockefeller's wife,[2] and her parents, who were longtime activists in the anti-slavery movement. Rockefeller also donated the funds for what is currently the oldest building on campus, Rockefeller Hall, which was constructed in 1886.


Packard was appointed as Spelman's first president in 1888, after the charter for the seminary was granted. Packard died in 1891, and Giles assumed the presidency until her death in 1909.



Growth




Spelman College campus


The years 1910 to 1953 saw great growth and transition for the seminary.[15] Upon Giles' death, Lucy Hale Tapley became president. Although the college was a stride in and of itself, at the time, neither the founders nor the current administration had interest in challenging the status quo of young women as primarily responsible for the family and the home.[13] Tapley declared: "Any course of study which fails to cultivate a taste and fitness for practical and efficient work in some part of the field of the world's needs is unpopular at Spelman and finds no place in our curriculum." [15] The nursing curriculum was strengthened; a teachers' dormitory and a home economics building were constructed, and Tapley Hall, the science building, was completed in 1925.[15] The Granddaughters' Club, a club for students whose mothers and aunts had attended Spelman was also created, and this club is still in existence today.


In 1927, Spelman Baptist Seminary officially became Spelman College. Florence Matilda Read assumed the presidency in 1927. Shortly thereafter, Spelman entered into an "agreement of affiliation" with nearby Morehouse College and Atlanta University by chartering the Atlanta University Center in 1929.[16] Atlanta University was to provide graduate education for students, whereas Morehouse and Spelman were responsible for the undergraduate education. At a time during which black students were often denied access to graduate studies at predominantly white southern research universities, access to Atlanta University allowed the undergraduate students at Morehouse and Spelman immediate access to graduate training.


In 1927, one of the most important buildings on campus, Sisters Chapel, was dedicated. The chapel was named for its primary benefactors, sisters Laura Spelman Rockefeller and Lucy Maria Spelman. The college had also begun to see an improvement in extracurricular investment in the arts, with the organization of the Spelman College Glee Club in 1925,[17] inauguration of the much-loved Atlanta tradition of the annual Spelman-Morehouse Christmas Carol Concert and smaller events such as the spring orchestra and chorus concert, the Atlanta University Summer Theater, and the University Players, a drama organization for AUC students. The school also began to see more of a focus on collegiate education, as it discontinued its elementary and high school divisions. In 1930 the Spelman Nursery School was created as a training center for mothers and a practice arena for students who planned careers in education and child development. Spelman celebrated its 50th anniversary in April 1931. This milestone as accompanied by the construction of a university library that was shared amongst the Atlanta University Center institutions, and the center continues to share a library to this day.




Spelman College sign outside campus gates


The school continued to expand, building and acquiring more property to accommodate the growing student body. IN 1947, Spelman joined the list of "approved institutions" of the Association of American Universities.[18] In 1953, Florence Read retired, and Albert E. Manley became the first black and first male president of college. Under his presidency and the presidency of his successor, Donald Stewart, Spelman saw significant growth. The college established its study abroad program, the Merrill Foreign Travel-Study Program.[16] Stewart's administration tripled the college's endowment and oversaw the establishment of the Comprehensive Writing Program, an across-the-curriculum writing program that requires students to submit portfolios of their written work; the Ethel Waddell Githii College Honors Program; and the Women's Research and Resource Center.[16] In 1958, the college received accreditation from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.



Civil rights involvement


Going into the 1960s, the Spelman College students became involved in the heated civil rights actions going on in Atlanta. In 1962, the first Spelman students were arrested for participating in sit-ins in the Atlanta community. Noted American historian Howard Zinn was a professor of history at Spelman during this era, and served as an adviser to the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee chapter at the college. Zinn mentored many of Spelman's students fighting for civil rights at the time, including Alice Walker and Marian Wright Edelman[19] Zinn was dismissed from the college in 1963 for supporting Spelman students in their efforts to fight segregation; at the time, Spelman was focused on turning out "refined young ladies." Edelman herself writes that Spelman had a reputation as "a tea-pouring, very strict school designed to turn black girls into refined ladies and teachers."[20]



1980–present


Stewart retired in 1986, and the following year, Johnnetta Betsch Cole became the first black female president of Spelman College. During this time, the college became noted for its commitment to community service and its ties to the local community. Cole also led the college's most successful capital campaign; between 1986 and 1996, the college raised $113.8 million, including a $20 million gift from Bill Cosby and his wife, Camille Hanks Cosby, whose daughter graduated from Spelman.[16] In honor of this gift, the Cosby Academic Center was constructed.[21] In July 2015 the remainder of the funds were returned and an endowed professorship named for the Cosby couple discontinued as allegations of sexual assault by Bill Cosby grew more prominent.[22][23]


In 1997, Cole stepped down and Audrey Forbes Manley became Spelman's first alumna president. After her retirement, in 2002, Beverly Daniel Tatum, the college's president until 2015, took the post. The campus now comprises 26 buildings on 39 acres (160,000 m2) in Atlanta.[3]


In 2011, First Lady Michelle Obama served as the keynote commencement speaker.[24]


In 2012, media mogul, philanthropist, and billionaire Oprah Winfrey served as the keynote commencement speaker.[24]


In March 2015, Mary Schmidt Campbell was named the 10th president of Spelman College.[25] She began her presidency August 2015.



List of presidents


Since its inception Spelman has had ten presidents:



  • Sophia B. Packard, (1888) founded women's seminary with Giles in a basement of an historic African-American church and cultivated Rockefeller support for the school

  • Harriet E. Giles, (1891) under whom the school granted its first college degrees

  • Lucy Hale Tapley, (1910) under whom the school decided to focus on higher education, the school officially became Spelman College (1927), and Sisters Chapel, one of the main buildings on campus, was erected.


  • Florence M. Read, (1927) a Mount Holyoke College graduate, under whom the school established an endowment fund of over $3 million, the school came into agreement with Atlanta University and Morehouse College to form the Atlanta University Center (later Clark-Atlanta University, Morris Brown College, Morehouse School of Medicine, and the Interdenominational Theological Center were added), the Arnett Library was built, and Spelman earned approval from the American Association of Universities;

  • Albert E. Manley (1953) (the first black and first male president of Spelman), under whom study abroad programs were established, the fine arts center was built, and three new residence halls and several classroom buildings were renovated. According to Howard Zinn, Manley tried to suppress the student civil rights movement that was taking place on campus during his tenure.

  • Donald M. Stewart (1976) under whom the departments of women's studies and chemistry were founded, and three strategic programs were formed: the Comprehensive Writing Program, the Women's Research and Resource Center, and the Ethel Waddell Githii Honors Program, and a continuing education department and a computer literacy program were established;


  • Johnnetta B. Cole (1987) (the first African-American female president of Spelman), under whom the college received $20 million from Drs. William and Camille Cosby for the construction of the Cosby Academic Center and instituted the Cole Institute for Community Service;


  • Audrey F. Manley (1997) (the first alumna president of Spelman), under which Spelman gained a Phi Beta Kappa chapter, Spelman was accepted as a provisional member of NCAA Division III athletics, a Science Center was finished;


  • Beverly Daniel Tatum, (2002) who was appointed in 2002 after teaching and serving as an administrator for a number of years at Mount Holyoke College, and under whom the renovation of Sisters Chapel was begun. Also during her tenure, she established the Wellness Revolution which is a holistic initiative to empower and educate Spelman women;


  • Mary Schmidt Campbell, (2015) a President Obama appointee that serves as vice chair of the President's committee on the Arts and Humanities, also formerly served as dean emeritus of the Tisch School of the Arts and Associate Provost for the Arts at New York University;



Museum of Fine Art



The Spelman College Museum of Fine Art is the only museum in the nation that emphasizes art by and about women of the African Diaspora.


In 2016, the museum in collaboration with Spelman's Department of Art and Art History launched a two-year curatorial studies program to increase diversity in the museum industry. The curatorial studies program is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.



Academics



















University rankings
National

Forbes[26]
238

Liberal arts colleges

U.S. News & World Report[27]
51

Washington Monthly[28]
41

The 2019 US News rankings placed Spelman 1st among Historically Black Colleges and/or Universities and its 2016 rankings placed Spelman 10th for most innovative among U.S. liberal art colleges.[29]


Spelman is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). Spelman is a member of the Coalition of Women's Colleges, National Association of Schools of Music (NASM), National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE), Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, The College Fund/UNCF, National Association for College Admissions Counseling, and State of Georgia Professional Standards Commission (PSC).[3]


Spelman offers a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Bachelor of Science degree. It also offers a dual-degree nursing program with Emory University; students that successfully complete the program will receive a bachelor's degree from Spelman and a Bachelor of Science degree in Nursing from Emory in five or less years.[30]


The Ethel Waddell Githii Honors Program is a four-year comprehensive academic program available to select students who satisfy the highly competitive performance criteria.[31]


Spelman houses several pre-professional and research programs primarily designed to make students more competitive for admissions into highly selective academic fellowship and graduate school programs.[32] Approximately two-thirds of Spelman graduates have earned advanced degrees.[33]


Spelman has the highest graduation rate among HBCUs.[34] It also has a student:faculty ratio of 9:1.[35]


Spelman is a highly selective institution annually offering admissions to between 30 and 40 percent of the 9,000+ applicants.[36] Spelman evaluates all applicants holistically which includes vetting their community service involvement, recommendation letters, personal statement, extracurricular activities, academic transcripts, and standardized test scores.[37]



Honor societies


Registered academic honor societies include Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Alpha Lambda Delta, Alpha Sigma Lambda, Beta Kappa Chi, Golden Key International Honour Society, Kappa Delta Epsilon, Mortar Board Senior Honor Society, National Society of Collegiate Scholars, Pi Sigma Alpha, Psi Chi, Sigma Tau Delta, and the Upsilon Pi Epsilon.[38]



Student body


Students are all women and predominantly African-American.[3] Thirty percent come from Georgia, 69% from the rest of the United States, and 1% are international. Of the incoming class, 99% applied for need-based financial aid, and such aid was awarded to 97% of the first-year class.[3] In 2007-08, a total of $44,399,221 in financial aid was awarded.[3]



Student life


Spelman offers organized and informal activities. The college's over 80 student organizations include community service organizations, special interest groups, Morehouse cheerleaders, choral groups, music ensembles, dance groups, drama/theater groups, a jazz band, club, intramural sports, and student government.[38]


Spelman's gated campus near downtown Atlanta consists of over 25 buildings on 39 acres.



New Student Orientation


All new Spelman students are required to attend a six-day New Student Orientation (NSO) in August immediately before the fall semester begins. The Spelman NSO is a host of events, workshops, and sessions designed to teach new Spelmanites about the mission, history, culture, traditions, and sisterhood of Spelman College; students are also given information on how to be a successful college student, such as registration, advisement, placement, and planning class schedules. NSO is led by student leaders who apply for the positions and Spelman alumnae. During NSO, new students are required to remain on campus at all times; any leave must be approved by NSO leaders.[39]



White Dress Tradition


One of Spelman's oldest traditions are students wearing "respectable and conservative" white dresses to designated formal events on campus. The tradition began in the early 1900s when it was customary for women to wear such dresses when attending formal events. White dresses are worn to the annual NSO induction ceremony, Founders Day Convocation, Alumnae March, and graduating seniors wear white dresses underneath their black graduation gowns for Class Day and Commencement.[40]



Student publications and media


Spelman offers a literary magazine (Aunt Chloe: A Journal of Candor), a student newspaper, The BluePrint, and student government association newsletter (Jaguar Print).[38] The yearbook is called Reflections.



Religious organizations


Religious organizations currently registered on campus include: Baha'i Club, Al-Nissa, Alabaster Box, Atlanta Adventist Collegiate Society, Campus Crusade for Christ, Crossfire International Campus Ministry, Happiness In Praise for His Overflowing Presence, InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, Movements of Praise Dance Team, The Newman Organization, The Outlet and The Pre-Theology Society Minority.[38]



International student and social organizations


NAACP and Sister Steps are registered campus organizations.[38] Spelman also has chapters of Colleges Against Cancer, Circle K, Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance, Habitat for Humanity, National Council of Negro Women, National Society of Black Engineers, Operation Smile, United Way, and Young Democrats of America. Spelman is also the first HBCU to charter a chapter of Amnesty International on its campus.


Spelman has all four National Pan-Hellenic Council sororities on campus: Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta, Zeta Phi Beta, and Sigma Gamma Rho. In addition, Spelman has a chapter of the Tau Beta Sigma National Honorary Band Sorority and a chapter of Gamma Sigma Sigma, a national service sorority. Spelman students may also join the AUC-wide chapter of Alpha Phi Omega housed at Clark Atlanta University.



Residential life


Spelman College has 11 residence halls on campus with approximately 1,400 students occupying them.[41] Each one has unique features and identities. There are three first-year students only residence halls, an honors residence hall (mixed with first-year students and upperclassmen), and seven upperclassmen only residence halls.[42] All first-year students are required to live on campus and it is a Spelman tradition for them to engage in friendly residence hall competitions (i.e. stroll-offs, chant-offs, pranks, fundraising, etc.) throughout their first school year.



Athletics


From 2003 to 2013 the Spelman Jaguars were a member of the Great South Athletic Conference (GSAC) of NCAA's Division III. The school sponsored seven varsity sports: basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, tennis, volleyball.



End of athletics


On November 1, 2012, Spelman College announced that it would be dropping all intercollegiate sports at the end of the 2012-13 academic year to promote healthy lifestyles amongst students. The vision is that with this change, students will implement these healthy practices in their home life outside of college.[6]



Notable alumnae






Selena Sloan Butler





Marian Wright Edelman Founder, Children's Defense Fund, MacArthur Fellow




U.S. Air Force photo of Marcelite J. Harris




Author Alice Walker





Audrey F. Manley, former Surgeon General of the USA





Bernice Johnson Reagon





Dovey Johnson Roundtree





Rolonda Watts





Stacey Abrams





Tia Fuller













































































































































































































































































































































Name
Class year
Notability
Reference(s)

Stacey Abrams
1995
Politician, House Minority Leader for the Georgia General Assembly and State Representative for the 89th House District. First African-American woman in the U.S. to win a major party's nomination for governor.


Tina McElroy Ansa
1971
Author, Baby of the Family, Ugly Ways, The Hand I Fan With, and You Know Better
[2]

Blanche Armwood
1906
Educator, activist; the first African-American woman in the state of Florida to graduate from an accredited law school; Armwood High School in Tampa, FL is named in her honor


Mary Barksdale
1942
Past President, Jack and Jill (organization)


Loretta Copeland Biggs
1976
Judge of the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina


Janet Bragg
1931
Aviation pioneer; first African-American female to obtain a commercial pilot license


Rosalind G. Brewer
1984
Executive Vice President, Walmart Stores, Inc. and President Walmart Stores South, USA; Board of Directors, Lockheed Martin


Linda Goode Bryant
1981
Documentary filmmaker, Flag Wars; Peabody Award winner and 2004 Guggenheim Fellow


Selena Sloan Butler
1888
Founder first black Parent-Teacher organization, the National Congress for Colored Parents & Teachers; co-founder the National Parent-Teacher Association


Pearl Cleage
1971
Novelist, playwright, poet, essayist, and journalist
[2]

Cassi Davis
1988
actress House of Payne


Ruth A. Davis
1966
24th Director General of the United States Foreign Service; Director, Foreign Service Institute and two-time recipient of the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service


Phire Dawson
2008
"Barker's Beauty" on The Price Is Right


Mattiwilda Dobbs
1937
Opera singer; served on the Board of Directors for the Metropolitan Opera and the National Endowment for the Arts
[2]

Marian Wright Edelman
1960
Founder of the Children's Defense Fund; MacArthur Fellow; Heinz Award; Presidential Medal of Freedom
[2]

Christine King Farris
1948
Public speaker and educator who teaches at Spelman College, she is the eldest and only living sibling of the late Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.


Tia Fuller
1998
Saxophonist, composer, and educator


Nora A. Gordon
1888
Began the tradition of Spelman missionary work to Africa[43]


Beverly Guy-Sheftall

Author, feminist scholar, founder of Women's Research and Resource Center at Spelman College


Evelynn M. Hammonds
1976
Dean of Harvard College, Professor of the History of Science and of African and African American Studies at Harvard University


Marcelite J. Harris
1964
First African-American female to obtain the rank of General in the United States Air Force


Paula Hicks-Hudson
1973
First African-American female mayor of Toledo, Ohio


Varnette Honeywood
1972
Creator of the Little Bill character
[2]

Clara Ann Howard
1887
Baptist missionary in Africa, longtime Spelman staff


Alexine Clement Jackson
1956
Chair, Susan G. Komen for the Cure and former National President of the YWCA


Adrienne-Joi Johnson
1988
Actress "House Party", "Baby Boy"


Bernette Joshua Johnson
1964
First African-American and second female Chief Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court
[44]

Clara Stanton Jones
1934
First African-American President of the American Library Association


Tayari Jones
1991
Author of Leaving Atlanta and The Untelling


Bettina Judd
2005
Artist and poet
[45]

Alberta Williams King
(high school)
Mother of Martin Luther King, Jr.


Bernice King
1986
President, SCLC, daughter of Martin Luther King, Jr.


Audrey F. Manley
1955
President Emerita of Spelman College, former Assistant Surgeon General of the United States, former Acting Surgeon General of the United States


Harriet Mitchell Murphy
1949
First African-American female judge in Texas
[46]

Tanya Walton Pratt
1981
Judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana


Deborah Prothrow-Stith
1975
First female Commissioner of Public Health for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts; Associate Dean for Faculty Development and Professor at Harvard School of Public Health
[2]

Keshia Knight Pulliam
2001

Actress The Cosby Show, House of Payne


Tanika Ray
1994
Actress and television personality


Bernice Johnson Reagon
1970
Founder of Sweet Honey in the Rock; MacArthur Fellow; Professor Emeritus American University Curator Emeritus, Smithsonian Institution National Museum American History; National Humanities Medal; Heinz Award
[2]

LaTanya Richardson
1971
Actress (The Fighting Temptations, Losing Isaiah, Malcolm X) and wife of actor Samuel L. Jackson
[2]

Rubye Robinson
1963
Civil Rights activist, Executive Secretary of SNCC


Shaun Robinson
1984
Co-anchor, Access Hollywood; former host, TV One Access


Esther Rolle
attended
Actress, Good Times


Dovey Johnson Roundtree
1937
Trial attorney, military veteran and civil rights pioneer; landmark case: Sarah Keys v. Carolina Coach Company


Eva Rutland
1937
Author, When We Were Colored: A Mother's Story; Winner of the 2000 Golden Pen Lifetime Achievement Award, and author of more than 20 Romance novels


Brenda V. Smith
1980
Law professor, American University; appointed by Nancy Pelosi to the National Prison Rape Elimination Commission


Maxine Smith
1949
Academic, civil rights activist, and school board official
[47]

Sharmell Sullivan
1990

Miss Black America 1991, "TNA Knockout", and wife of professional wrestler Booker T


Sue Bailey Thurman
1920
Founder and first chairperson, National Council of Negro Women's National Library


Alice Walker
attended

Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist, The Color Purple
[2]

Talitha Washington
1996
African-American mathematician and STEM activist


Rolonda Watts
1980
Journalist, actor, writer, former talk show host


Denise Nicole White known as "AverySunshine"
1998
Singer and pianist


Ella Gaines Yates
1949
First African-American director of the Atlanta-Fulton Public Library System



Notable faculty





  • Alma Jean Billingslea (born 1946), civil rights activist and author


  • Pearl Cleage (born 1948), author


  • Shirley Franklin (born 1945), former Atlanta mayor


  • Sophia B. Jones (1857–1932), first African-American faculty member, organized nursing program


  • Colm Mulcahy (born 1958), Irish mathematician, academic, columnist and book author


  • Howard Zinn (1922–2010), historian



See also


  • Women's colleges in the Southern United States


References





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  2. ^ abcdefghijklmnop "Spelman College". The New Georgia Encyclopedia. Georgia Humanities Council and the University of Georgia Press. Retrieved January 30, 2008.


  3. ^ abcdef "Fact Book: Spelman College" (PDF). 2008-11-30. Retrieved 2009-11-28.


  4. ^ ab "Spelman At a Glance - Spelman College". Spelman.edu. Retrieved 11 July 2018.


  5. ^ Spelman College Visual Identity Standards (PDF). Retrieved March 8, 2018.


  6. ^ ab "Spelman eliminates athletics in favor of campus-wide wellness initiative". Inside Higher Ed. November 1, 2012. Retrieved November 4, 2012.


  7. ^ "Robust 2016 Funding Fuels Spelman's Rigorous Research, Programs, and Initiatives Focused on STEM". Spelman.edu. Retrieved 11 July 2018.


  8. ^ "Mathematics - Spelman College". Spelman.edu. Retrieved 11 July 2018.


  9. ^ "Learn about the Top Women's Colleges in the U.S." Collegeapps.about.com. Retrieved 11 July 2018.


  10. ^ Brown, Heidi. "Top Ten: Best Of The All-Women's Colleges". Forbes.com. Retrieved 11 July 2018.


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Further reading



  • Atlanta Regional Council for Higher Education. "Giving Voice to a New Generation: Metro Atlanta's three women's colleges are going strong, even while the number of women's colleges nationwide has declined."

  • Guy-Sheftall, Beverly. "Black Women and Higher Education: Spelman and Bennett Colleges Revisited." The Journal of Negro Education, Vol. 51, No. 3, The Impact of Black Women in Education: An Historical Overview (Summer, 1982), pp. 278–287.

  • Johnetta Cross-Brazzell, "Brick without Straw: Missionary-Sponsored Black Higher Education in the Post-Emancipation Era," Journal of Higher Education 63 (January/February 1992).

  • Beverly Guy-Sheftall and Jo Moore Stewart, Spelman: A Centennial Celebration, 1881-1981 (Atlanta: Spelman College, 1981).

  • Albert E. Manley, A Legacy Continues: The Manley Years at Spelman College, 1953-1976 (Lanham, Md.: University Press of America, 1995).

  • Florence M. Read, The Story of Spelman College (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1961).


  • Spelman College Aiming for New Heights - Atlanta Journal-Constitution article

  • The New Georgia Encyclopedia



External links








  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

  • Official museum website










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