Barleywood Female University was a short-lived women's college in Rochester , New York . It is notable for having been one of the first institutions of higher learning for women in the state and for its connection to the University of Rochester .
5-451: Following the 1850 establishment of the University of Rochester, then a men's college , local leaders decided a women's college was also necessary. In 1851, railroad investor Azariah Boody and anthropologist Lewis H. Morgan collaborated to found Barleywood Female University, also informally known as Rochester Female College . Local donors pledged $ 15,000 to open Barleywood, and land for
10-565: A men's college is an undergraduate , bachelor's degree -granting institution whose students are exclusively men. Many are liberal arts colleges . In the United States, co-education did not become prevalent until 1900. Prior to that, the majority of private colleges and universities were sex-segregated . There are few remaining men's colleges in the U.S. today. Many of these are religious, vocational institutions. United States v. Virginia , 518 U.S. 515 (1996) This article about
15-428: Is in our colleges ; or why female seminaries should not bear with them a favorable comparison. The only way to build up such institutions, and to make them instruments of widespread usefulness is to secure to them large, liberal, and permanent endowments . After a successful early start, however, Barleywood was quickly met with financial problems. The college sank into debt and was closed in 1853, with Boody donating
20-470: The campus was donated by Boody. With Boody as president and Morgan serving on the board of trustees , Barleywood opened in 1852 and quickly gained the support of many within the University of Rochester community, including several faculty members who chose to teach at the institution. A brochure circulated by Boody to promote the college stated: There is no good reason why female education should not be as thorough, as systematic, and also as cheap as it
25-459: The college's land to the University of Rochester. Subsequent attempts to revive the university or start another women's college in Rochester failed, and it was not until 1898 that the University of Rochester became fully coeducational , a development that took place largely thanks to lobbying from local women's rights activist Susan B. Anthony . Men%27s college In higher education ,
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