What are the Seven Sisters schools?
anguilla Aug 16th, 2004 The Seven Sisters schools make up a group of American women’s colleges that was organized in 1927 to better promote female education. The members are: Barnard College (New York, New York) adjacent to Columbia University. Bryn Mawr College (Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania) Mount Holyoke College (South Hadley, Massachusetts) Radcliffe College (Cambridge, Massachusetts) Smith College (Northampton, Massachusetts) Vassar College (Poughkeepsie, New York) Wellesley College (Wellesley, Massachusetts) Two of the Seven Sisters, Mount Holyoke and Smith, are members of the “Five Colleges.”** 1978 marked a historic milestone, when all of the Seven Sisters schools finally had women presidents. Not all of the Seven Sisters remain all-female colleges; some have become coeducational. Vassar began accepting men in 1969. In 1963, Harvard College assumed joint responsibility with Radcliffe over Radcliffe undergraduates. In 1999 Radcliffe College was dissolved, and Harvard assumed full resp