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Arthur J. Horton Collection on Coeducation

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Held at: Princeton University Library: University Archives [Contact Us]

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Princeton University Library: University Archives. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.

Overview and metadata sections

Horton, Arthur J.

Like all early American colleges, the College of New Jersey educated only men; the first coeducational college was Oberlin, founded in 1833. On October 22, 1896, the name was changed to Princeton University. However, the men-only admission policy remained the same. Other than the female students at the short-lived Evelyn College, located at Nassau Street and Evelyn Place, and women attending well-chaperoned formal campus dances, Princeton was an all-male preserve for over two centuries. A modest extension of Princeton's educational opportunities for women came in World War II when twenty-three were admitted to a government-sponsored defense course in photogrammetry. More significant changes occurred in the 1960s with the admission of women graduate students (the first Ph.D. was awarded in 1964), and the admission each year of several dozen young women for a year of concentrated study in "critical languages.''

Following World War II, American education underwent significant changes in enrollment. Government funding and rising incomes allowed more people -- both men and women -- to pursue a college degree and to go on to graduate study. To meet the demand many colleges and universities grew enormously and aggressively competed with Ivy League schools for prominence in American higher education. Princeton's enrollment remained steady, but it did place increasing emphasis on engineering and the sciences in this new competitive environment.

Along with the American economic landscape, the American social climate was also changing. Students of the 1960s, seeking "relevance," had little time for Princeton's traditionalism, while the faculty -- many of them not Princeton alumni -- wanted to raise the intellectual level of the student body. Both groups wanted to change Princeton's "old boy" image, an image which they feared was keeping away the best and the brightest students. Women were also seeking to claim a larger piece of the economic pie that men had dominated for so long. The one sure way to establish a foothold was through a premiere education, and many women thought that it was high time that exclusively male schools opened their doors to women.

In response to both internal pressures and external competition, Princeton moved toward coeducation. In his 1967 commencement speech, president Robert Goheen suggested that Princeton should consider admitting women. That summer he appointed a faculty administration committee, chaired by economics professor Gardner Patterson, to investigate the issue. Among the members was Arthur J. (Jerry) Horton, an alumnus of the Class of 1942 and the university's director of development. The committee met throughout the year, consulting with a group of undergraduates and contacting alumni leaders. Its report, written by Patterson and supporting coeducation, appeared in the Princeton Alumni Weekly on 24 September 1968; it included a minority statement from Horton expressing grave doubts about the expense of coeducation and its affects on Princeton's fund-raising, which was largely dependent on alumni goodwill.

As Horton feared, the alumni reacted swiftly. While some, particularly younger graduates, supported the move toward coeducation, the majority were furious. The Princeton they had known and loved was dead or dying. Many threatened to stop their annual giving and still others wanted to write the University out of their wills. Coeducation was just one of many hot button issues that conservative alumni found objectionable. Others included student radicalism, the active recruitment of African-Americans and other minorities, the decreasing prominence of eating clubs and athletics, and the greater emphasis on academics (which conservatives blamed on the non-alumni among the faculty).

In January 1969 it was recommended to the board that Princeton undertake the education of women at the undergraduate level. It gave two reasons: first, that both Princeton faculty and Princeton alumni engaged in higher education elsewhere now believed that ``the educational experience is improved . . . when it is carried out in mixed, rather than single-sex, circumstances,'' and second, that the general shift toward a favorable view of coeducation among younger alumni and faculty, combined with the clear preference of today's students, seemed to them ``to have very important implications for Princeton's future.''

The trustees, by a vote of 24 to 8, approved coeducation in principle and instructed the administration to develop plans for its implementation. An ad hoc faculty-administration-student committee, appointed and presided over by the president, made an intensive study of all aspects of conversion, including the relative merits of coordinate versus coeducational arrangements; all of its members came to be convinced that if properly worked out, coeducational arrangements would be ``both better educationally and generally more economical.'' During the first weekend after Labor Day in 1969, a pioneering band of 171 women arrived in Princeton as candidates for bachelor degrees; among them were 101 members of the freshman class of 1973 looking forward to full Princeton careers along with their 820 male classmates. Four years later, in his concluding remarks at the 1973 Commencement, President Bowen declared that "the women among us have now added their gifts of fallibility to our own, and I think we are a far better university -- and a far richer community of people -- for them.''

Horton continued to work at University in various capacities until his death in 1980.

Since these are the records of one member of the committee–a member with a particular perspective–this collection will not give an unbiased view of the coeducation debate at Princeton. Since Horton wrote many letters and saved them all, the collection clearly presents his participation in the committee's work and his opposition to coeducation.

Organized into the following series:

Series 1, 2, and 4 material is arranged hierarchically or by topic. Series 3 is arranged chronologically.

For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.

This collection was processed by Daniel Sack and Christina Aragon in 1995. Finding aid written by Daniel Sack and Christina Aragon in 1995.

Publisher
University Archives
Finding Aid Author
Daniel Sack; Christina Aragon
Finding Aid Date
1997
Access Restrictions

Collection is open for research use.

Use Restrictions

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Collection Inventory

Arrangement

No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.

Scope and Contents

Series 1, Official Papers, 1967-1969, contains Horton's copy of the Patterson report–with copious marginal notes–as well as his minority statement which appeared in an appendix and memoranda between Patterson and the committee. Records in this series also reflect how the university sought to explain its decision to alumni and the public and its concerns about implementing coeducation.

Physical Description

2 boxes

Appendix A of Patterson Report, circa 1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

The Education of Women at Princeton, 1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Patterson Committee materials, circa 1967. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Study on Education of Women, 1967-1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Memoranda between Horton and Patterson, 1967-1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

General Correspondence, 1967-1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

General Correspondence and Memoranda, 1967-1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Press Releases, 1967-1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Letters to Alumni, 1968-1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Alumni Meetings, 1968-1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Implementation, 1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Arrangement

No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.

Scope and Contents

Series 2, Clippings, 1967-1980, reflect Horton's concerns with coeducation. He clipped and kept stories about coeducation at Princeton and elsewhere; the bulk are from the Daily Princetonian, with others from papers across the country. Reflecting his general displeasure with life at Princeton in the late 1960s, the files also contain clippings about student activism.

Physical Description

1 box

Coeducation at Princeton & elsewhere, 1967-1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Coeducation Week, 1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Coeducation at Princeton (from the Daily Princetonian), 1967-1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Coeducation at Princeton (from PAW), 1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Co-education (General), 1967-1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Activism at Princeton University, 1968-1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Arrangement

No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.

Scope and Contents

Series 3, Alumni Letters, 1968-1969, contains the reactions of Princeton alumni to the coeducation decision in particular and modern Princeton in general. Some support the administration's decisions, but most are strongly critical. As these letters were most often in response to the University's fund-raising appeals, many came through Horton's office; he sent them in batches to the president's office, with covering memoranda pointing out how negative they were. While most of these letters went to alumni annual giving representatives, many came directly to Horton, widely perceived as the only administrator supporting the traditionalist cause.

Physical Description

2 boxes

Alumni Response, 1968 September-1969 January. 8 folders.
Physical Description

8 folders

Materials Viewable Online
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Alumni Response, 1969 February-1969 April. 4 folders.
Physical Description

4 folders

Materials Viewable Online
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Arrangement

No arrangement action taken or arrangement information not recorded at the time of processing.

Scope and Contents

Series 4, Horton's Papers, 1967-1969, consists of Horton's internal memoranda, some to himself and many to Patterson (by his own estimate, Horton sent Patterson close to 100 memoranda), and external letters regarding coeducation, as well as friends' comment on drafts of his dissenting statement.

Physical Description

1 box

Horton Dissent, 1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Materials Viewable Online
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Horton: Internal Memoranda, 1968-1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Materials Viewable Online
  1. View digital content
Horton Correspondence, 1968-1969. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Co-education: other institutions, 1967-1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

Miscellaneous, 1966-1968. 1 folder.
Physical Description

1 folder

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