
Donna McDaniel and Vanessa Julye, Fit for Freedom, Not for Friendship: Quakers, African Americans, and the Myth of Racial Justice įor further reading on the topics of race and higher education, we suggest the following:.Barbara Alyce Farrow, The History of Bryn Mawr, 1683-1900[ link to Bryn Mawr College repository.“ The African American Female Elite: The Early History of African American Women in the Seven Sister Colleges, 1880-1960.” Harvard Educational Review 67.4 (1997): 718-756 and “ The Racial Integration of the Seven Sister Colleges” The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 19 (Spring 1998): 104-108. Carey Thomas (Knopf, 1994) and Alma Mater: Design and Experience in the Women’s Colleges from Their Nineteenth-Century Beginnings to the 1930s (Knopf, 1985 University of Massachusetts Press second edition, 1993) Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz, The Power and Passion of M.Other sources of interest on the history of the College and its environs include: The Black at Bryn Mawr blog cites a number of archival holdings located at Bryn Mawr Special Collections. Richard Handler and Eric Gable, The New History in an Old Museum: Creating the Past at Colonial Williamsburg (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1997).Freeman, Nienass, and Daniell (New York: Berghahn, 2014), 137-62. McMillan, “ Remembering Forgetting: A Monument to Erasure at the University of North Carolina,” in Silence, Screen, and Spectacle: Rethinking Social Memory in the Age of Information, eds. Tim McMillan, who provided us with the following resources to get started:

This project was initiated by Emma Kioko, Bryn Mawr Class of 2015, in part inspired by UNC Chapel Hill’s “Black and Blue” College Tour designed by Dr.
