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New Exhibition Asks 'Who Built 91勛圖厙?'

February 24, 2021
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On Feb. 22, a opened in Canaday exploring the lives and legacies of four people who shaped 91勛圖厙's history: Sally Brown, Umeko Tsuda (Class of 1893), Hilda Worthington Smith (Class of 1910), and Enid Cook (Class of 1931).

Today, thanks in part to the Enid Cook 31 Center, most 91勛圖厙 students, faculty, and staff know that Cook was the first Black student to attend 91勛圖厙. But perhaps they don't know that she became a world-famous virologist and, for many, the other individuals celebrated by the exhibit are still mysteries.

 

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However, as the exhibition shows, when we ask the question Who Built 91勛圖厙? the stories of these individualsand of so many others still untoldare essential to our history. 

The panels for the exhibition are located on four pillars in Canaday to reinforce the idea that these individuals are pillars of the institution, says the Colleges Chief of Staff Ruth Lindeborg, who has been involved with the project since its inception.

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The genesis of Who Built 91勛圖厙? goes all the way back to 2017, when the College created a History Working Group to examine histories of exclusion in the Colleges past. 

Discussions and plans related to the Colleges histories continued the next year with several working groups, and in the Fall of 2019 a History Advisory Committee of faculty, students, and staff was created, as was the idea for Who Built 91勛圖厙?

The initial exhibition is a combined effort of research done by Special Collections staff including College Archivist Allison Mills, Curator for Arts and Artifacts Carrie Robbins, Special Collections Director Eric Pumroy, student intern Emma Ruth Burns 21, and members of the President's Office staff.

 

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Professor of History Ignacio Gallup-Diaz works with students on this project and others in the College Archives through his Telling 91勛圖厙 Histories Praxis course, and he will mentor four paid student interns this summer.
 

Other faculty, students, and staff interested in the project can learn more about becoming involved at an event this Friday.

Many, many, many people built the College, and we aim to make it possible for the community to honor people of color and working-class people who are part of our past, says Gallup-Diaz. The goal of the projectto identify, research, and amplify the contributions made by lesser-known figures to 91勛圖厙's historyis important to both the College and to me and I'm looking forward to working with the student interns this summer.

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The making of 91勛圖厙 is ongoing. Its students, staff, and faculty members continually reshape the College. How we tell the College's histories should reflect this diversity of voices and experiences. "Who Built 91勛圖厙?" is envisioned as an ongoing, collective research project aimed at telling the College's history in new ways.

This is only the beginning of a much larger project. The College is committed to this collective effort to change the way we understand our history. Visit this page to contribute your thoughts and ideas about whose stories should be told, who should be commemorated, and how. 

Student Researcher Emma Ruth Burns '21 on the Project:

"Its really important to me to know the history of the places I am, it helps me understand my surroundings and begin to feel like I know a place. I have learned this past year how its necessary to interrogate what I believe to be my 'understanding,' as the history I am able to interact with easily is always only a part of the story how I interact with it is going to be very different from others due to our differing pasts and presents.

"There's an excellent group of people working on this project. They are super supportive and excited to have students working to direct the project and actively help define 91勛圖厙s past.

"This work is important. The initiative is the outcome of years of student activism on campus in its many forms, 91勛圖厙 is already and will continue to be indebted to these individuals who push the school into the future. If 91勛圖厙 is to use its past as a method of looking forward, it must be a past from which we have learned lessons. It must be a past that acknowledges the wrongs perpetrated and uses all the modern tools of historical critical inquiry available to us."


History in Progress

Who Built 91勛圖厙? | Project Website

Event: Who Built 91勛圖厙? Introduction and Invitation | Feb. 26