Hollins University Explained

Hollins University
Former Names:Valley Union Seminary (1842–1852)
Roanoke Female Seminary (1852–1855)
Hollins Institute (1855–1911)
Hollins College (1911–1998)
Motto:Latin: Levavi Oculos[1]
Mottoeng:Lift thine eyes
Type:Private university
President:Mary Dana Hinton
City:Roanoke
State:Virginia
Country:United States
Undergrad:613
Postgrad:181
Faculty:105
Endowment:$174.6 million (2020)[2]
Mascot:None
Colors:Green and gold
Website:
Hollins College Quadrangle
Embed:yes
Designated Other1:Virginia Landmarks Register
Designated Other1 Date:May 21, 1974[3]
Designated Other1 Number:080-0055
Designated Other1 Num Position:bottom
Location:Hollins College Campus, Hollins, Virginia
Architect:Multiple
Architecture:Classical Revival, Greek Revival, Romanesque
Added:November 5, 1974
Refnum:74002145

Hollins University is a private university in Hollins, Virginia. Founded in 1842 as Valley Union Seminary in the historical settlement of Botetourt Springs, it is one of the oldest institutions of higher education for women in the United States.

Hollins enrolls about 800 undergraduate and graduate students. As Virginia's first chartered women's college, undergraduate programs are female-only. Men are admitted to the graduate-level programs.

Hollins is known for its undergraduate and graduate writing programs, which have produced Pulitzer Prize-winning authors Annie Dillard, former U.S. poet laureate Natasha Trethewey, and Henry S. Taylor. Other prominent alumnae include pioneering sportswriter Mary Garber,[4] 2006 Man Booker Prize winner Kiran Desai, UC-Berkeley's first tenured female physicist (and a principal contributor to theories for detecting the Higgs boson) Mary K. Gaillard, Goodnight Moon author Margaret Wise Brown, author Lee Smith, photographer Sally Mann, and Ellen Malcolm, founder of EMILY's List.

History

The area where Hollins College developed was the site of Botetourt Springs. The area developed as a resort which operated from 1820 to 1841. It then became the site of a short-lived seminary, whose property and buildings were acquired by Valley Union Seminary.

1842–1855: Valley Union Seminary and Charles Lewis Cocke

The institution of higher learning that would become Hollins was first established in 1842 by the Reverend Joshua Bradley as the coeducational Valley Union Seminary.[5] Bradley left in 1845 for Missouri, and in 1846, the seminary's trustees hired a 25-year-old math instructor from Richmond named Charles Lewis Cocke to direct the institution.[6]

Cocke arrived with his wife, Susanna, and 16 slaves.[7] The same year, Cocke established the first school for enslaved people in the Roanoke area; many students at the school worked at the seminary.[8] In 1851, Cocke abolished the men's department of the institution, and in 1852, the school became a women's college called the Roanoke Female Seminary.[9] [10] In 1855, Lynchburg residents John and Ann Halsey Hollins gave $5,000, and the school was renamed Hollins Institute. The Hollinses gave an additional $12,500 in gifts before their deaths in 1859 and 1864 respectively.[11]

Slaves and servants

Before the Civil War, Hollins used the labor of enslaved people to build and maintain the grounds. In addition, many students brought "servants" with them who were likely slaves. After slavery was abolished, Hollins employed many formerly enslaved people, mostly women whose names were not recorded. Students were encouraged to ignore these workers in the college handbook during this era, and employees were forbidden from developing friendly relationships with women studying at Hollins.[12]

1855–1870s: Family institution

As the head of Hollins, Cocke saw his students as a part of a family and himself as their father figure. His pedagogy was based upon the "southern sensibility that a lady was to be trained to submit to the order of men".[13] Though he thought women studying at Hollins were best confined to domestic duties, he still placed great value on intellectual excellence. Cocke considered the higher education of young women in the South to be his life's calling; in 1857, he wrote that "young women require the same thorough and rigid mental training as that afforded to young men". Hollins was known as a rigorous institution where degrees were not easily earned during Cocke's tenure. Students at the school during this period remember the "unbelieveably serious" instruction and "high standards". During this period, Hollins also pioneered several academic practices; it became the first school in the United States to begin a system of elective study, and it was the first to establish an English department under a full professor.[14]

1880s–1901

The Hollins of Cocke's ambitions was limited by region, as Cocke was interested in educating women only from Southern states.[15] Because of this limited scope, Hollins struggled to "professionalize" in the 1880s and beyond. Its remote location far from the better respected and funded men's institutions put Hollins in contrast with the Seven Sisters in the Northeast. Despite its academic rigor, Hollins and other southern women's colleges were smaller and poorer than women's college such as Smith College and Mount Holyoke in the north.[16] However, Hollins saw its enrollment rise in the last two decades of the 19th century.

From 1846 until his death, Cocke did not take a stipulated salary from the institution so that the trustees could instead put the school's income toward paying faculty and improving the grounds. In 1900, the board of trustees found themselves so thoroughly in debt to Cocke that the school was deeded to him and his family.

1901–1932: Matty Cocke and accreditation

Charles Lewis Cocke's death in 1901 at the age of eighty-one was a grave moment for the Hollins Institute, but the transition to the leadership of his forty-five-year-old daughter Matty Cocke was smooth.[17] "Miss Matty," as she preferred to be called, was intent on preserving the "genteel" atmosphere her father had cultivated at Hollins.[18] Though she was a "charismatic leader" and the first woman to head a college in Virginia,[19] Miss Cocke was not interested in waging any battles for women's education; indeed, she let her nephews, Joseph Turner and M. Estes Cocke, handle the school's financial dealings entirely. Miss Cocke shared the opinion of President John McBryde of Sweet Briar Women's College, who in 1907 decried the "independence" sought by Vassar and other members of the Seven Sisters and suggested instead that women's education focus on "grace [and] refinement".[20] In 1911, the school was renamed Hollins College.Because the Cocke family owned Hollins, the school could not raise an endowment through alumnae donations.[21] Further stalling Hollins' prosperity was President Matty Cocke's distaste for fundraising. Due to their financial limitations, Hollins was not able to hire high-quality faculty or assemble an up-to-date library or laboratory, making accreditation hard to achieve. This was not unusual for the time; as of 1916, only seven southern women's college were certified by professional organizations as "standard," while both Hollins and Sweet Briar were designated as "approximate".[22] The Cocke family agreed to turn over ownership if sufficient funds were raised in 1925, but the Depression slowed their efforts. A scathing 1930 letter from alumna Eudora Ramsay Richardson in the South Atlantic Quarterly indicted the American Association of University Women for regional bias. Richardson's letter and prompting from the presidents of Mount Holyoke and Bryn Mawr sped up the accreditation process. The Cocke family turned the school over to a board of trustees and President Cocke tendered her resignation in 1932, as the school finally gained accreditation.[23]

1933–present

Hollins was home to the first exhibition gallery in the Roanoke region in 1948. In 1950 when he was 31 years of age John R. Everett was elected President of Hollins College, a position he held until he resigned in 1960.[24] One of the first writer-in-residence programs in America began at Hollins in 1959. Hollins was home to the first graduate program focusing on the writing and study of children's literature, established in 1993. Hollins University Quadrangle is on the National Register of Historic Places.The institution was renamed Hollins College in 1911, and in 1998 it became Hollins University.[5] Nancy Oliver Gray led Hollins from 2005 until she retired in 2017; that same year, Pareena Gupta Lawrence, an economist and an Asian-American immigrant, became Hollins's twelfth president.[25] [26] In April 2019, the president directed the temporary removal of four volumes of the university yearbook from the library's digital commons after the 2019 blackface controversy involving Virginia Governor Ralph Northam. The four volumes (1915, 1950, 1969, 1985) contained photographs of students wearing blackface. The university issued a statement saying access to the digitized yearbooks would be restored as soon as the university developed accompanying "educational information regarding the history and practice of blackface to help all of us understand why it is a racist and prejudicial practice."[27] [28] [29] [30] The removal was criticized by the Society of American Archivists, the American Library Association's Office of Intellectual Freedom, and the Virginia Library Association.[31] [32] [33] The digitized volumes were still available on the Internet Archive, and all physical copies of the yearbooks were also available in the library. The Wyndham Robertson Library and the Working Group on Slavery issued a statement in response objecting to the decision, stating that, "we cannot and do not support any erasure of institutional history, even if only temporarily" and recommended that the affected yearbooks be made electronically accessible again along with a statement on the content.[34] [35] [36] Access to the four digitized volumes was restored on April 9, less than one week after their removal along with the added educational content.[37]

Mary Dana Hinton became the thirteenth president of Hollins University on August 1, 2020. She is the first African American president in the university's history. An active and respected proponent of the liberal arts and inclusion, her leadership reflects a deep and abiding commitment to educational equity (as opposed to equality) and the education of women.[38]

Architectural history

The Hollins College Quadrangle consists of six contributing buildings. The earliest buildings were built for the Botetourt Springs resort which operated from 1820 to 1841 and then became a seminary. When it failed the property and buildings were acquired for Valley Union Seminary.

The first built specifically for the new college is East Building, erected 1856–58 opposite the hotel building. The Main building was built in 1861 at the north end of the quadrangle, Bradley Chapel was erected in 1883 between the East and Main Buildings, the octagonal Botetourt Hall was built in 1890, and the Charles Cocke Memorial Library was built in 1908 at the south end of the quadrangle.[39]

The main dorm of Hollins University was decorated and improved in the 19th century by local carpenter and woodworker Gustave A. Sedon.[40]

Hollins College Quadrangle was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

Traditions and folklore

Hollins University has a number of beloved traditions, many of which have been observed for more than 100 years.[41] Tinker Day is one of them, dating back to the 1880s. One day in October, after the first frost, classes are cancelled so that students, faculty, and staff can climb nearby Tinker Mountain while wearing colorful and silly costumes. After a lunch of fried chicken and Tinker Cake, the students and new faculty perform skits and sing songs before returning to campus. The exact date of the celebration is a closely held secret.[42]

Academics

Hollins offers small classes with a 9:1 student-teacher ratio in a variety of majors. The most popular majors are English, psychology, studio art, business, and biology. Currently Hollins offers graduate programs in dance (M.F.A.), creative writing (M.F.A.), children's literature (M.A., M.F.A.), liberal studies (M.A.L.S.), playwriting (M.F.A.), screenwriting and film studies (M.A., M.F.A.), and teaching (M.A.T.)., Hollins offers a graduate-level certificate in Children's Book Illustration.

Hollins was one of the first colleges in the nation to establish a study abroad program, launching Hollins Abroad-Paris in 1955. Approximately half of Hollins students have an international learning experience. Hollins runs its own programs in London and Paris; non-Hollins students are free to apply to the Hollins Abroad-London and-Paris programs. Hollins students can also study through Hollins-sponsored programs in Argentina, Germany, Ghana, Ireland, Italy, Greece, Japan, Mexico, Spain, South Africa, and in various other countries through the School for Field Studies. Hollins also sponsors an annual service-learning project in Lucea, Jamaica.

Curriculum

A liberal arts school, Hollins has designed its own Education through Skills and Perspectives (ESP) general education requirement program. Rather than focusing on the usual math, science, English, and history booklist of required courses, Hollins requires each student to take a variety of skills classes (writing, oral communication, applied quantitative reasoning, and applied research techniques) and perspectives classes (aesthetic analysis, creative expression, ancient and/or medieval worlds, modern and/or contemporary worlds, social and cultural diversities, scientific inquiry, and global systems and languages). These requirements can be completed in as few as 8 courses but aim to help the students explore other fields of study while rounding out their basic understanding of the world.[43]

Hollins offers majors in the fields of studio art, art history, biology, business, chemistry, classical studies, communication studies, dance, economics, English, environmental studies, film, French, gender and women's studies, history, interdisciplinary studies, international studies, mathematics, music, philosophy, political science, psychology, public health, religious studies, sociology, Spanish, and theatre.

Other academic offerings include: arts management certificate, the Batten certificate in leadership studies, Hollins Outdoor Leadership certificate, education, first-year seminars, three-year accelerated degree program, pre-law, pre-med, pre-nursing, pre-vet, short term, and Horizon program for adult women.

Writing program

The graduate program in creative writing was founded by Louis D. Rubin, Jr., in 1960, but Hollins has offered classes in creative writing for even longer. In 2008 the Jackson Center for Creative Writing was established through a private donation from Susan Gager Jackson '68 and her husband, John Jackson, of Far Hills, New Jersey.

The Jackson Center for Creative Writing is home to Hollins' esteemed undergraduate and graduate writing programs, which have produced dozens of writers of national and international acclaim, including Lee Smith '67 and Pulitzer Prize winners Annie Dillard '67, M.A. '68; Henry S. Taylor M.A. '66; and Natasha Trethewey M.A. '91. Kiran Desai M.A. '94 won both the Man Booker Prize for Fiction and the National Book Critics Circle Award. The fiction of Madison Smartt Bell M.A. '81 has been recognized by a Strauss Living Award, and numerous other Hollins writers have received NEA, Guggenheim, and countless other grants and awards for their poetry, fiction, and nonfiction, contributing to the cultural life of the nation that is disproportionate to the program's size. In fact, Hollins's creative writing program has been called "the most productive writing program in America" by Creative Writing in America.[44]

The campus has three literary magazines. Cargoes, which won the Undergraduate Literary Prize for content by the Association of Writers and Writing Programs in 2005,[45] The Album, which is offered as a more alternative campus periodical, and Gravel, which focuses on student work centered around multicultural and diverse identities. R. H. W. Dillard, Cathryn Hankla, and Jeanne Larsen are among the writers who teach at Hollins.

Athletics

Hollins University athletics is a member of the Division III level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), primarily competing throughout Virginia in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC) since the 1981–82 academic year.

Hollins competes in eight intercollegiate varsity sports: basketball, cross country, riding, soccer, swimming, tennis, track & field (indoor and outdoor) and volleyball. In the past Hollins has had programs in golf, fencing, and field hockey.[46] The last year that the university had a golf program was in the 2017–18 academic year.[47] The school also had a lacrosse program, but it was discontinued in 2023.[48]

Hollins does not have a mascot, and the sports teams do not have an official nickname. In 1989, students voted against 100 mascot ideas.[49] [50]

As part of its Education through Skills and Perspectives (ESP) general education requirement program, two regular terms of physical education course work are required for graduation.

Housing

There are nine residence halls on campus. Most first-years live in Tinker and Randolph in doubles. Sophomores and juniors generally live in West or in singles in Tinker and Randolph, and primarily seniors (with a few exceptions) live in Main, or the university apartments on campus. Housing choices are determined by a lottery number given after the housing deposit is paid in the spring; the lottery numbers are assigned randomly from within a preset range determined by class year.[51]

All undergraduates are required to live on campus. The exceptions to this rule are Horizon (nontraditional) students, married students or those with children, those over the age of 23, or those whose official residence with parents or guardians is in the Roanoke Valley area.

Student body

In October 2019, Hollins released a new policy regarding applicants and students who may identify as transgender.[52] The new policy states "Hollins accepts applications from individuals who consistently live and identify as women." Students who begin to transition from female to male while at Hollins are still eligible to earn their degree.

Clubs and organizations

Hollins has a number of organizations that are open to all students.[53]

The university has a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.[54]

Freya walks take place on nights of special events or issues. Members of this secret society walk at night to call attention to or celebrate current events. They wear black-hooded robes to protect their anonymity and carry candles to symbolize hope. Since 1903 Freya has sought to emphasize the notion that "concern for the community is a creative and active force."[55]

Eleanor D. Wilson Museum

Founded in 2004, the Eleanor D. Wilson Museum, an art museum, is housed at the university.[56]

Notable alumnae

See main article: List of Hollins University people.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www1.hollins.edu/docs/gvcalendar/GVArchive/gvfeb28.htm W:\Docs\GVCalendar\gvtemplate.htm
  2. As of June 30, 2020. U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2020 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY19 to FY20 . . February 19, 2021 . February 20, 2021.
  3. Web site: Virginia Landmarks Register. Virginia Department of Historic Resources. 5 June 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130921053819/http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/register_counties_cities.htm. 2013-09-21. dead.
  4. The New York Times, obituary, September 22, 2008.
  5. Web site: History and Mission. Hollins University. June 27, 2012. July 20, 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140720124635/http://www.hollins.edu/about/history_mission.shtml. dead.
  6. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 23.
  7. Book: Smith, Ethel Morgan. From Whence Cometh My Help: The African American Community at Hollins College. 1999. University of Missouri. 978-0826212603. back cover.
  8. Book: Smith, Ethel Morgan. From Whence Cometh My Help: The African American Community at Hollins College. 1999. University of Missouri. 978-0826212603. 5.
  9. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 25–26.
  10. News: Angleberger. Tom. Readers fill in the gaps to answer questions. 3 July 2012. . 22 March 2010. dead. https://archive.today/20130201110624/http://www.roanoke.com/columnists/angleberger/wb/240724. 1 February 2013.
  11. Book: Smith, W.R.L.. Charles Lewis Cocke. 1921. The Gorham Press. Boston, MA.
  12. Book: Smith, Ethel Morgan. From Whence Cometh My Help: The African American Community at Hollins College. 1999. University of Missouri. 978-0826212603. 12–17.
  13. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 24.
  14. Hollins Freed. . 15 August 1932. 20. 7. 18.
  15. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 16.
  16. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 15.
  17. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 26–27.
  18. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 27.
  19. Web site: Traditions. List of traditions at Hollins University. Hollins University. 4 July 2012. 25 November 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141125015645/http://www.hollins.edu/studentlife/traditions/index.shtml. dead.
  20. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 27–28.
  21. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 14.
  22. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 17.
  23. Book: Parrish, Nancy. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. 1998. Louisiana State University Press. 978-0807124345. 18.
  24. Web site: Everett, John R. (1918–1992). www.encyclopediavirginia.org.
  25. News: Nancy Gray hands over the reins at Hollins. Petska. Alicia. July 2, 2017. The Roanoke Times. March 28, 2018.
  26. News: Hollins University's new President is learning, looking ahead after six months on the job.. Dashiell. Joe. December 26, 2017. WDBJ7.com. March 28, 2018.
  27. Web site: Hollins University Removes Access to Yearbooks With Racist Images. April 3, 2019. U.S. News & World Report.
  28. Web site: Hollins Debates What to Do About Racist Yearbook Images Inside Higher Ed. www.insidehighered.com. en. 2019-04-03.
  29. Web site: Hollins pulls racist photos from online yearbook archives . Petska . Alicia . Korth . Robby . The Roanoke Times. 2 April 2019 . en. 2019-04-03.
  30. Web site: Hollins University responds to recently surfaced blackface photos. Whitehurst. Kelvin. www.wdbj7.com. 3 April 2019 . en. 2019-04-03.
  31. Web site: SAA Response to Hollins University Removal of Yearbooks Society of American Archivists. www2.archivists.org. 2019-04-08.
  32. Web site: Steering Committee Statement on Hollins University Yearbooks. themaracblog. 2019-04-05. The MARAC Blog. en. 2019-04-08.
  33. Web site: OIF, ODLOS, and VLA Respond to Hollins University's Removal of Yearbooks. 2019-04-08. Intellectual Freedom Blog. en-US. 2019-04-08.
  34. Web site: Hollins University Working Group on Slavery and its Contemporary Legacie & Wyndham Robertson Library Statement. Wyndham Robertson Library. en-US. 2019-04-03.
  35. Web site: Hollins University Working Group on Slavery and its Contemporary Legacies.
  36. Web site: Growing support for librarians caught in Hollins yearbook debate. WFXR. 2019-04-04. VIRGINIAFIRST. en-US. 2019-04-08.
  37. Web site: Hollins restores online yearbooks after images of blackface prompted removal. alicia.petska@roanoke.com 981-3319. Alicia Petska. The Roanoke Times. 10 April 2019 . en. 2019-04-10.
  38. Web site: Mary Dana Hinton, President, Hollins University. 2020-07-30. Hollins. en.
  39. Web site: National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Hollins College Quadrangle. Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff. April 1974. Virginia Department of Historic Resources. and Accompanying photo
  40. Whitwell, W. L. 1989. "Overlooked Buildings by the Side of the Road". Journal of the Roanoke Valley Historical Society. 13, no. 1: page 46.
  41. Web site: Traditions. Hollins University. 2020-06-08. 2022-03-22. https://web.archive.org/web/20220322190745/https://www.hollins.edu/on-campus/student-life/traditions/. dead.
  42. News: Hutkin. Erinn. Tinker Day has arrived. June 27, 2012. The Roanoke Times. October 26, 2006. dead. https://archive.today/20130208180739/http://www.roanoke.com/news/roanoke/wb/88673. February 8, 2013.
  43. Web site: Hollins University: Academics . Hollins.edu . 2011-02-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110515024258/http://www.hollins.edu/academics/esp/esp.htm . 2011-05-15 .
  44. Web site: Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing – MFA – Graduate Degree Program at Hollins University . Hollins.edu . 2011-02-20.
  45. Web site: AWP: National Program Directors' Prize Winners. www.awpwriter.org. 2018-03-30.
  46. News: At Hollins, Nickname Search Begins. 22 November 1988. The Washington Post. 19 March 2019.
  47. Web site: Women's Golf. Hollinssports.com. 19 March 2019.
  48. Web site: 2023-02-02 . Hollins to Discontinue Lacrosse at End of 2023 Season . hollinssports.com.
  49. Brown, Marquita Brown (April 26, 2008). "Roanoke College seeks symbol". The Roanoke Times.
  50. Kinzie, Susan (January 12, 2008). "It's Not Easy Being Green (and Gold)". The Washington Post.
  51. http://www.hollins.edu/campuslife/residencelife/index.htm
  52. Web site: Policy On Transgender Issues Hollins University. Hollins. en. 2020-02-13.
  53. Web site: Clubs & Organizations. Hollins. 27 May 2015.
  54. http://www.hollins.edu/campuslife/clubs/elective.htm
  55. Web site: Traditions. Hollins. 27 May 2015. 25 November 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141125015645/http://www.hollins.edu/studentlife/traditions/index.shtml. dead.
  56. Web site: The Eleanor D. Wilson Museum – Hollins University. hollins.edu. 27 May 2015.