Freshman Types
A picture on page 21 of the 1902 yearbook, representing three students from the class of 1902 who were apparently well-known enough that their silhouettes were expected to be recognized.
Bryn Mawr College Class of 1902
Bryn Mawr College Class of 1902 Yearbook
Bryn Mawr College
1902
PNG file
Applebee Quote book page
A page from a book on Bryn Mawr College with a quote from Constance Applebee: "I think she [M. Carey Thomas] felt women really have superior views and would be much more help to the nation than men. But they didn't have the chance. This is how I interested her in having physical education on a health basis: because it was important to have a woman strong enough to cope in a man's world."
Page 45.
Caroline S. Rittenhouse
Rittenhouse, Caroline S.,Bryn Mawr College. (Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania: Bryn Mawr College, 1985).
http://repository.brynmawr.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1001&context=bmc_books
1985
1914 College Conviction
A letter in the 'College Convictions' section of the February 15, 1914 issue of Tipyn O'Bob from a student identified only as E.G.A. '14. She uses the letter to describe her "meditation" in the "process of becoming a new woman"- one who appreciates both old-fashioned ideals and ideas about what is appropriate behavior for women, as well as new ideas about suffrage and studying science.
E.G.A., class of 1914
February 15, 1914 issue of Tipyn O'Bob, page 13-14.
February 15, 1914
Tea Pantry Editorial
An editorial praising Bryn Mawr's tea pantries. The editors connect interest in the tea pantries to feminism and support for suffrage, declaring: "some of the loudest praise and heartiest support of that threatened institution known as the tea-pantry comes from the feminists and suffragists in college." They describe three different groups of students who support the tea pantries: those who enjoy them for fun, those who appreciate that they provide cheaper dining options than tea houses, and those who appreciate the right to choose between getting food from the tea pantry or getting dressed to go to dinner in the dining hall.
Editors of the 1914 Tipyn O'Bob
April 1, 1914 issue of Tipyn O'Bob, page 3
March 1915 Editorial
the Bryn Mawr bubble
An editorial from the March 1, 1915 issue of Tipyn O'Bob. The editor suggests the addition of conversations about other women's colleges to morning chapel discussion because they believe that Bryn Mawr is cut off from everything but "local matters" and they think this should change.
Editors of the 1915 Tipyn O'Bob
March 1, 1915 issue of Tipyn O'Bob
March 1, 1915
1904 Dulci Fistula Poems and Drawings
A page from the October 1904 issue of Tipyn O'Bob with two poems that each have a corresponding drawing.
Eleanor Mason, Class of 1905
October 1904 Tipyn O'Bob, page 25
Tipyn O'Bob
October 1904
Dear Mabel Letter
A fictional letter from page 22 of the December 1918 issue of Tipyn O'Bob. The letter is written by a girl named Mabel to someone named Bill, describing her experiences at Bryn Mawr. Written and submitted to the Tip by someone in the class of 1921 with the initials F.R.
F.R. '21
Tipyn O'Bob December 1918
December 1918
Making the Case for Women's Colleges
This student went to Mt. Holyoke, but she speaks of the experience of women’s colleges in general and I think her opinions are very relevant to BMC too.
Glynis O'Leary
Off Our Backs, Vol. 33, No. 9/10 (September-October 2003), pp. 29-30
Stable url: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20837913
off our backs, inc.
2003
The 1902 Alphabet part 1
H. McC, Class of 1900, and G. L. J., Class of 1900
1902 Yearbook, page 58
1902
The 1902 Alphabet part 2
H. McC, Class of 1900, and G. L. J., Class of 1900
1902 Yearbook, page 59
1902