The Granite monthly, a New Hampshire magazine, devoted to literature, history, and state progress . Gi^l J. ^ail/tlt]9 be the only limits to her strides in the direction of thehigher and broader education of womenhave been made in the quarter of acentury since John Vassar founded onthe banks of the Hudson the noble col-lege for women that bears his name;and others have been found who havelent willing hands to making broad thehighway that leads to an ideal woman-hood. Wellesley and Smith, as well asVassar find their limits all too small forthe throngs of eager girlhood that are


The Granite monthly, a New Hampshire magazine, devoted to literature, history, and state progress . Gi^l J. ^ail/tlt]9 be the only limits to her strides in the direction of thehigher and broader education of womenhave been made in the quarter of acentury since John Vassar founded onthe banks of the Hudson the noble col-lege for women that bears his name;and others have been found who havelent willing hands to making broad thehighway that leads to an ideal woman-hood. Wellesley and Smith, as well asVassar find their limits all too small forthe throngs of eager girlhood that are pressing toward them. The BostonUniversity, honored in being first toopen professional courses to women,Michigan University, the New Eng-land Conservatory, the North WesternUniversity of Illinois, the WesleyanUniversities, both of Connecticut andOhio, with others of the colleges of thecountry, have opened their doors andwelcomed women to an equal sharewith men, in their advantages. And inthe shadow of Oxford, on the Thames,and of Harvard, on the Charles, worn- New England Conseivatory of Music. M5 1\j^


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectnewhamp, bookyear1884