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  1. Nov 5, 2014 · In September 1969, 101 female freshman and 70 female transfer students joined the ranks of the Princeton student body. In 1973, the New York Times highlighted some of the achievements of the women in Princetons first four-year coeducational class.

  2. Princeton is a borough in Mercer County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It was established on January 1, 2013, through the consolidation of the Borough of Princeton and Princeton Township, both of which are now defunct.

    • Sylvia Beach
    • Margaret Breckinridge
    • Silvia Dubois
    • Emma Epps
    • Evelyn College For Women
    • Beatrix Farrand
    • May Margaret Fine
    • Eleanor Flexner
    • Margaret Matthews Flinsch
    • Nancy Kate Greene

    Sylvia Beachwas a bookseller, writer, and publisher. Born Nancy Woodbridge Beach on March 14, 1887 in Baltimore, Maryland, she also lived in Bridgeton, NJ and Paris, France before moving to Princeton in 1906, when her father was called to become Minister of the First Presbyterian Church of Princeton (today Nassau Presbyterian Church). On November 1...

    Margaret Elizabeth Breckinridge, a Civil War nurse, was born in Philadelphia on March 24, 1832. Breckinridge (along with her sister Mary) moved to Princeton to live with her maternal grandparents after the death of her mother in 1838. Her grandfather, Samuel Miller, was a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary. When Mary married Peter A. Porte...

    Silvia Dubois was the subject of an 1883 biography by Dr. C.W. Larison, “Silvia Dubois (Now 116 Yers Old) A Biografy of the Slav who Whipt Her Mistres and Gand Her Fredom,” based on a series of interviews. Dubois was born into slavery in the Sourland Mountains; her father, Cuffy Baird, was a fifer in the Battles of Trenton and Princeton. When Duboi...

    Emma Epps, a lifelong Princeton resident, was born in 1902. Epps was the daughter of Mrs. Joseph Greene, founder of the African-American branch of the Princeton YWCA. Epps became a self-employed caterer and followed in her mother’s footsteps as a stalwart volunteer in her community. Outspoken and deeply dedicated, she volunteered for various organi...

    Evelyn College for Women was the first women’s college in New Jersey. Founded in 1887 by Joshua Hall McIlvaine, it was named for Sir John Evelyn, an English lawyer and scientist. Though not legally tied to Princeton University, many Princeton professors taught there and served on its board. Evelyn College’s admission requirements and curriculum wer...

    Beatrix Farrandwas a renowned landscape architect. Born in 1872 to Mary Cadwalader Rawle and Frederic Rhinelander Jones, Beatrix, inspired by summers spent at the family’s Bar Harbor cottage, Reef Point Estate, decided to pursue a career in landscape architecture. After studying landscape gardening, botany, and land planning under Charles Sprague S...

    May Margaret Fine had a major influence on hundreds of Princeton’s children. Fine came from a family of educators: her brother John founded Princeton Preparatory School, and her other brother, Henry, was Dean of the Departments of Science at Princeton University. In 1899, at age 30, May founded Miss Fine’s School, which offered a college-preparator...

    Eleanor Flexner was an activist and writer considered a pioneer in the field of women’s studies. Born in Kentucky, but raised in New York City, Flexner’s mother was a successful playwright and children’s author; her father was the founder and first director of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Both parents supported passage of the 19th...

    Margaret Matthews Flinsch founded Princeton Nursery School to help working mothers in need of care for their young children. PNS executive director Rosanda Wong told the Town Topics in 2018, “She was moved to start the school when she found that her laundress was locking her child in the servants’ quarters while she worked. She saw there was a need...

    Nancy Kate Greene, born in 1875, was one of thirteen children – ten girls and three boys. She married Joseph H. Greene and raised two daughters, Elsie (Phox) and Emma (Epps), in Princeton. In the early 1900s, Nancy founded the Witherspoon branch of the YWCA (Young Women’s Christian Association). Offering educational programs, job registries, and ho...

  3. Princeton University is a private Ivy League research university in Princeton, New Jersey. Founded in 1746 in Elizabeth as the College of New Jersey, Princeton is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and one of the nine colonial colleges chartered before the American Revolution.

  4. The Princeton experience for women — for students, professors, administrators — began as one of struggling to find a place in a traditionally all-male university. For more than 150 years, women were welcome only as faculty wives and as dates for weekend parties.

  5. 1970. Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC), a deliberative body of faculty, students, staff and alumni, is established. Members of the Class of 1970 are the first women to receive undergraduate degrees from Princeton (alumnae shown at 2015 Reunions); women also matriculate as members of the Classes of 1971, ’72 and ’73.

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  7. The Historical Society of Princeton provides access to nearly 4,000 photographs from its Photo Archives collection. This online database allows for keyword and advanced searching of the collection. Users will find photographs of Princeton landmarks, people, institutions, and events.

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