From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Author: drobik.5@osu.edu (page 33 of 62)

Home a hard place to find for past OSU women undergrads

Oxley Hall residents, 1931

Oxley Hall residents, 1931

Women undergraduates who attend OSU today should be thankful for the times in which they live. If they had attended the University during its first 50 years, they would have had to work a lot harder to find a place to live here.

Though women attended OSU from the day it opened its doors in 1873, they did not have a dorm until 1908 when Oxley Hall opened. Even then, Oxley Hall housed only 60 women, and there were 600 women enrolled at that time. So until Oxley Hall, women had the options of living at home – if they were from Columbus – or living in area boardinghouses.

Part of the reason for the dearth of campus housing was financial: At the time Ohio State depended much more greatly on state funding, which was miniscule compared to other state universities. For instance, while the University of Michigan received $274,000, and the University of Wisconsin was given $92,736 from their respective state legislatures for the 1881-1882 academic year, Ohio State received $21,950.

It also was not a top priority for OSU’s first leaders; the university’s first president, Edward Orton Sr. never made such a funding request to state lawmakers, for example. (Granted, he had a lot of other things going on, like starting a university from scratch.)

Mack Hall residents, 1924

Mack Hall residents, 1924

It wasn’t until OSU’s fourth president, James Canfield, that there was a concerted effort to offer campus housing to women, which culminated in the construction of Oxley Hall. Slowly, the campus options increased with the construction of Mack Hall in 1921 and the purchase of Neil Hall in 1925. Women who lived in the dorms were supervised, and did most of the cleaning and other chores in the dorm. They had a curfew and were prohibited from having male visitors except for certain hours on Saturday and family visits on Sunday.

With very limited space at the University, sororities became a very popular choice: Ohio State had 25 sorority houses by 1925. These were considered the next best option for out-of-town students because like the dorms, they were socially acceptable to parents and the University, with each house having a “house mother” and sharing the University standards as to curfew, rules and living conditions. There were also houses supervised by religious entities, such as the Westminster Foundation, which housed a limited number of women students in an off-campus house.

Neil Hall women, 1929

Neil Hall women, 1929

If a student was unable to gain accommodation with family, or in a dorm or sorority, the student still needed a place to stay. Many girls opted to try to work for a family in exchange for room and board. This was not always the best solution; students sometimes would end up exhausted and unable to keep up with schoolwork.

After the appointment of the first Dean of Women in 1912, University staff inspected the rooms that girls rented in private homes to prevent unsafe living conditions. The Office then began keeping a list of boarding houses that could be recommended to students. To be on the list, the home had to pass the University’s inspection, there could be no male boarders in the boarding house and conditions had to be sanitary.

Apparently, some women students lived in conditions so poor that the University left certain campus buildings open, such as the Home Economics Building , so women students could use the bathrooms if their own rooms lacked suitable plumbing. And for all that, women paid as much as $5 a week, while male boarders usually paid $3-4.50 per week.

Filed by C.N.

Much of our information for this blog came from two dissertations on the early history of women at OSU, both of which are available at the Archives:

Sisters and Scholars: Women at the Ohio State University: 1912-1926, by Louise Ann Booth (1987)

Women at the Ohio State University in the First Four Decades: 1873-1912, by Pouneh M. Alcott (1979)

Obituary: Charles O. Ross

Charles Ross, 1970

Charles Ross, 1970

We are saddened to hear of the passing of longtime OSU Professor Charles O. Ross, who died last week at the age of 79. For decades, he was a constant champion of issues of racial equality, even when it cost him his job as director of the black studies department.

After the campus riots of 1970, the University approved a plan for a new Department of Black Studies. Ross, a professor of social work, was chosen as its first director. Immediately, Ross demanded more money for the program, and he pushed for substantive changes related to African-American involvement on campus, such as recruitment of much larger numbers of black students to the University.

Ross was also politically active and was involved in a movement to organize high school students. Racial disturbances subsequently occurred at area high schools, and the OSU Board of Trustees, displeased with Ross’ involvement, fired him from the directorship a year after he was hired.

Ross, 1988

Ross, 1988

Ross continued to be an outspoken figure throughout his tenure: In 1993, for instance, he briefly occupied the office of the then-new Dean of Social Work, Beverly Toomey, to protest then-Provost Jean Huber’s decision to hire Toomey over him. According to The Lantern, Toomey was named Dean, despite a faculty recommendation in favor of Ross, who called the Provost’s decision racist, but filed no legal action on the matter.

Despite his sometimes contentious relationship with the University, Ross remained at OSU for 35 years, and in 2006, the Board of Trustees awarded him the title of associate professor emeritus upon his retirement.

Read a Columbus Dispatch obituary here:

http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2013/02/19/longtime-osu-prof-known-for-activism.html

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With OSU medical degree, woman achieves many firsts in military career

Clotilde Bowen, 1947

Clotilde Bowen, 1947

Though three African-American men graduated shortly after OSU’s College of Medicine was established in 1914 (Clarence Alphonso Lindsay, Rudolph Finley and Charles Robert Lewis, all in 1916) it was roughly 30 years later that the College graduated its first African-American woman. She then took that degree and built an amazing military career with it.

The first African-American woman to receive her MD was Clotilde Dent Bowen, who completed her program in 1947. A graduate of Columbus’s East High School, Bowen completed her undergraduate degree at Ohio State in three years, and was accepted into medical school in January 1944. After her graduation, she completed her residency in New York City, and set up a private practice in Harlem.

Col. Bowen (left)

Col. Bowen (left)

Later, Dr. Bowen became U.S. Army Col. Bowen, the first African-American physician in the U.S. Army, as well as the first African-American woman Colonel. In 1967, during the height of the Vietnam war, she decided to return to active duty. She became the first African-American woman to direct a military hospital clinic.

Col. Bowen, 1975

Col. Bowen, 1975

Dr. Bowen later completed a second residency at a Veterans Administration hospital in Pennsylvania in psychiatry. Her other achievements include being the first African-American woman to be named chief of psychiatry in two Veterans Administration hospitals and two Army medical centers.

Dr. Bowen was honored with the Bronze Star and the Legion of Merit in 1971 for her work to set up drug treatment centers and her efforts to lessen racial conflicts during the Vietnam War. She was awarded the Meritorious Service Medal in 1974.

The College of Medicine annually holds the Clotilde D. Bowen, MD, Diversity Lecture Series in Bowen’s honor, and last year a need-based scholarship fund was set up in her honor.

 

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