Quick Facts
Born:
May 30, 1794, Norfolk, Conn., U.S.
Died:
Dec. 3, 1874, Newburyport, Mass. (aged 80)

Zilpah Polly Grant (born May 30, 1794, Norfolk, Conn., U.S.—died Dec. 3, 1874, Newburyport, Mass.) was a 19th-century American educator who, through her teaching and administrative efforts, was instrumental in promoting advanced educational opportunities for women.

Grant attended local schools and, to the extent her frail health allowed, worked to help her widowed mother keep the family farm. From age 15 she taught in a variety of schools in nearby towns. In 1820 she seized an opportunity to further her own education and entered the Female Seminary of Byfield, Massachusetts, operated by Joseph Emerson. A year later she became a teacher in the school. In 1824 she accepted the position of “preceptress” of the newly endowed Adams Female Academy in what is now East Derry, New Hampshire. She was accompanied there by Mary Lyon, a younger colleague from Emerson’s school. There she established a rigorous three-year course with examinations required for promotion from one grade to the next, a diploma being awarded for successful completion of the course.

The academy flourished and gained a considerable reputation. The intrusion of the trustees, however, prompted Grant to leave in 1828, taking Lyon and a number of pupils with her, and to establish the Ipswich (Massachusetts) Female Seminary. The school prospered, and with Lyon, Grant began to plan a New England Female Seminary for Teachers. But Lyon left in 1835 to begin the work that would lead to the founding of Mount Holyoke Female Seminary (later Mount Holyoke College), South Hadley, Massachusetts, and four years later the Ipswich Female Seminary closed. Grant moved to Dedham, Massachusetts, and in 1841 she married. In 1852 she became a member of the board of managers of the American Woman’s Educational Association, founded by Catharine Beecher, and was active in the program to recruit and train teachers for schools in the West, making a tour of colleges and seminaries for that purpose in 1855–56. In the latter year she published a pamphlet of Hints on Education. Grant devoted her last years increasingly to religion.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Mount Holyoke College

college, South Hadley, Massachusetts, United States
Also known as: Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, Mount Holyoke Seminary and College
Quick Facts
Date:
1837 - present
Areas Of Involvement:
liberal arts

Mount Holyoke College, private institution of higher education for women that began admitting transgender and nonbinary students in 2014. Situated in South Hadley, Massachusetts, U.S., it is one of the Seven Sisters schools. Mount Holyoke’s curriculum is based on the liberal arts and sciences, and baccalaureate courses are taught in the humanities, science and mathematics, and the social sciences; a Master of Arts degree is granted in teaching, teacher leadership, and teaching mathematics. Campus facilities include the Ciruti Language Center, the Gorse Children’s Center, the Fimbel Maker & Innovation Lab, and the Joseph Allen Skinner Museum (a part of the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum). The Frances Perkins Scholars program, named for a Mount Holyoke alumna who was the first woman to hold a U.S. cabinet post, provides financial support for students restarting their studies after taking an academic break. Mount Holyoke is part of the Five Colleges consortium—an educational cooperative with Amherst, Hampshire, and Smith colleges and the University of Massachusetts Amherst. It also belongs to the Twelve College Exchange Program, a cooperative academic exchange program that includes 12 New England colleges and universities. Approximately 2,200 female, transgender, and nonbinary undergraduates are enrolled in the college.

Mount Holyoke College was one of the first institutions of higher education for women in the United States. Educator Mary Lyon founded it as Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in 1837 and served as its first principal until her death in 1849. Though it was never owned by a religious group, the school was early associated with New England Congregationalism. The seminary curriculum was phased out and the school’s name changed to Mount Holyoke College in 1893. The Mount Holyoke College Art Museum, founded in 1876, is one of the oldest collegiate art museums in the country.

In addition to the U.S. secretary of labor Frances Perkins, former students of note include the poet Emily Dickinson (who attended the Mount Holyoke Female Seminary from 1847 to 1848), the astronomer Helen Battles Sawyer Hogg-Priestly, playwrights Suzan-Lori Parks and Wendy Wasserstein, and filmmaker Chloé Zhao.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Mindy Johnston.