From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Month: March 2014

OSU’s 1996 South Africa trip included Mandela speech

President Gordon Gee holds a Mandela jersey during his trip to South Africa, 1996

President Gordon Gee holds a Mandela jersey during his trip to South Africa, 1996

In early June 1996, President E. Gordon Gee, along with 36 Ohio State faculty members and the OSU men’s basketball team, embarked on a two-week trip to South Africa, with the faculty going on to visit Uganda as the basketball team took a detour to Zimbabwe. The timing of the trip was particularly significant: Only two years earlier, South Africa’s apartheid system had been brought down by free elections following violent protests.

The primary purpose of the tour was to foster ties between Ohio State and African universities and to show how Ohio State can make a difference around the globe. One major area of shared interest: agriculture. For years South African students had come to Ohio State to study agriculture before bringing these lessons back to their home country. Some of these students had gone on to become faculty members at the University of Natal in South Africa. Makerere University in Uganda, likewise, had a strong relationship with Ohio State; OSU worked with the Ugandan university to set up a Cooperative Extension Service in Uganda, with the aid of $20 million from the World Bank. In addition to furthering the agricultural relationship, faculty members hoped the 1996 trip would help build collaboration in law, education, nursing and humanities programs with South African universities.

Nelson Mandela speaking during event, 1996

Nelson Mandela speaking during event, 1996

Meanwhile, the men’s basketball team hosted basketball clinics and demonstrations for local residents, both in the major cities and in the countryside. Basketball was seen as a way to bring people across South Africa together and integrate traditionally rugby-playing whites and soccer-playing blacks. At the same time, OSU basketball players learned about the history of modern South Africa and the role that students played in the protests that eventually brought an end to the apartheid regime. At one point, basketball team members attended a Youth Day celebration where they heard then-South Africa President Nelson Mandela speak.

The members of the OSU delegation were thrilled by the success of the trip, Gee said after the return. “We really met and exceeded our expectations,” he said. Gee and others spoke positively of South Africa as a nation, remarking on its determination to become a diverse, integrated country and its optimism and hope for the future. The Ohio State visit also was apparently the first visit by a foreign university’s representatives to the South African countryside.

For information on today’s memorial event for Nelson Mandela in Hale Hall, visit http://aaas.osu.edu/news/%E2%80%9Cnelson-mandela-his-life-times-and-legacy%E2%80%9D

Members of the trip, including athletes from the basketball team, pose for a portrait in S. Africa, 1996

Members of the trip, including athletes from the basketball team, pose for a portrait, 1996

Women’s History Month: 90 years ago, first woman appointed as Trustee

Alma Paterson, n.d.

Alma Paterson, n.d.

It was 90 years ago today that the first woman was named to Ohio State’s Board of Trustees. Alma W. Paterson was a member of Ohio State’s class of 1904; as an undergraduate, Paterson had been a member of the Browning Dramatic Society and studied science and physical education. She received her bachelor of arts degree in 1904 and went on to serve as an assistant director of physical education for women for three years. In 1910, she married Robert G. Paterson, a 1905 OSU graduate, who was then executive secretary of the Ohio Public Health Association. 

Alma Paterson was appointed to the Board on March 27, 1924, to succeed the late OSU Prof. Thomas Mendenhall. Then-Ohio Gov. A. Victor Donahey had already indicated that the next appointment to the board would be a woman since “the large number of women registered at the University warrants the selection,” according to a Lantern article about her appointment. Paterson was on the board until 1933, serving as vice chairman twice during that time.

1926 board of trustees at conference table, including Alma Wacker Paterson

Paterson with the Board of Trustees, 1926

In 1954, the Board of Trustees named Paterson Hall, then a brand-new dorm for women, after her.

Paterson’s daughter, Ann, followed in her mother’s footsteps, first as a student (BS in Education in 1937 and MS in Education in 1939) and then as a professor of women’s physical education. After 19 years of teaching at OSU, she left the University in 1956 to teach at San Francisco State College.

– Filed by C.N.

First women students were a surprise show but made mark on OSU

The Townshend family, 1884

The Townshend family, 1884

In 1873, when two dozen young people showed up at University Hall to enroll in the then-new Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, two were women – in fact, they were the daughters of the first Professor of Agriculture.

Alice and Harriet Townshend were the youngest children of OSU Professor Norton Strange Townshend, who had stepped down from the College’s first Board of Trustees to teach agriculture classes at the new school. He was an advocate for women’s rights, and believed in higher education for all.

The former Townshend home, 1902

The former Townshend home in 1902. The family resided here from 1873 to 1895.

So, on the morning of September 17, 1873, Alice and Harriet, and their older brother, Arthur, walked from their home near 15th Avenue and High Street to sign up for classes, according to an interview with Harriet Townshend published in the October 1948 issue of The Alumni Monthly. In the interview, Harriet Townshend said that College President Edward Orton Sr. “almost fainted” when the two sisters showed up because he was not expecting women to enroll in the new school. He left it to the Trustees to decide, and upon reading the legislative bill passed to establish the College, they determined that women, as well as men, could attend.

While Arthur graduated with the first class in 1878, it took two more years for Alice Townshend to earn her degree; however, Alice was one of the three students on the committee in 1878 who purchased the ribbons that adorned the first diplomas. The colors of those ribbons were scarlet and gray, and Alice helped pick them.

Harriet Townshend from when she was an assistant librarian at OSU in 1900

Harriet Townshend as an assistant librarian at OSU in 1900

Shortly after graduation, Alice married Charles Mayhew Wing; little else is written about her, except for her death on December 1, 1925.

Though Harriet Townshend never graduated, she worked as an OSU Library staff member for more than 30 years, making sure all of the materials had proper binding. Townshend never lived far from the University; her last residence was listed as 53 W. 11th Avenue, which today is across the street from the Moritz College of Law. And she continued to be an advocate of higher education for women until her death at age 92 on April 29, 1950.

– Filed by C.N.

Alice Townshend-Wing (front row, second from left), and Hariett Townshend (front row, second from right), at a class reunion party in 1923

Alice Townshend-Wing (front row, second from left), and Harriet Townshend (front row, second from right), at a class reunion party in 1923