Simmons University
Simmons University is a private women focused undergraduate university and private co-educational graduate school in Boston, Massachusetts. It was established in 1899.
History
Simmons was founded in 1899 with a bequest by John Simmons, a wealthy clothing manufacturer in Boston. Simmons founded the college based on the belief that women ought to live independently by offering a Liberal Arts education for undergraduate women to integrate into professional work experience. Simmons is a member of the Colleges of the Fenway consortium, which also includes Emmanuel College, Wentworth Institute of Technology, Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, and Massachusetts College of Art and Design. Simmons absorbed Garland Junior College in 1976. Wheelock College, a former member, merged with Boston University to become the Boston University Wheelock College of Education & Human Development.Simmons graduated its first African American student in 1914. Furthermore, Simmons was one of the few private colleges not to impose admission quotas on Jewish students for the first half of the 1900s.
The undergraduate program is women-centered, with approximately 1800 students enrolled in the 2012–2013 academic year. The graduate schools are coed, and have about 3,000 students. The school's MBA program is the first in the world designed specifically for women. The co-ed online MBA program, MBA@Simmons, was founded in 2016.
In November 2014, the institution released an explicit policy on the acceptance of transgender students, claiming a strong tradition of empowering women and challenging traditional gender roles and a "rich history of inclusion." Its undergraduate program accepts applicants who are assigned female at birth as well as those who self-identify as women, making Simmons the third women-centered college in the United States to accept transgender women. Government documentation of gender is not required. Graduate programs are co-educational, so gender identity is not of concern.
The original site of the Simmons College Graduate School of Social Work is featured on the Boston Women's Heritage Trail.
In 2018 Simmons College decided to change their name to Simmons University after reorganizing the structure of the school.
Campus
Simmons University currently consists of two separate campuses located near the Back Bay Fens in Boston:Academic Campus
The Academic Campus is located at 300 The Fenway in the Longwood Medical Area. It is immediately adjacent to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and the Boston Latin School. This campus currently consists of five buildings:- One Palace Road
- Main College Building
- Beatley Library/Lefavour Hall
- Park Science Center
- School of Management Building
Residential Campus
- Simmons Hall
- Dix Hall
- Smith Hall
- Arnold Hall
- North Hall
- Health Center and Residence Life Offices
- Holmes Sports Center
- South Hall
- Alumnae Hall
- Bartol Dining Hall
- Evans Hall
- Mesick Hall
- Morse Hall
The residence campus is separated from the main campus by Emmanuel College and Merck Research Laboratories Boston.
Academics
Simmons University reorganized its academic structure in 2018 to foster interdisciplinary learning and cross-departmental collaboration. Students now explore new inter-professional opportunities and create their own pathways to meaningful work.- College of Natural, Behavioral, and Health Sciences
- *School of Nursing
- College of Organizational, Computational, and Information Sciences
- *School of Library and Information Science, est. 1902
- *School of Business
- College of Social Sciences, Policy, and Practice
- *School of Social Work
- The Gwen Ifill College of Media, Arts, and Humanities
COVID Pandemic
Athletics
Simmons University sponsors athletics teams in a variety of sports including crew, cross country, field hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, and volleyball. The mascot is the Sharks and the colors are blue and yellow. They compete as members of the NCAA Division III in the Great Northeast Athletic Conference,the New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference and the Eastern College Athletic Conference.Sustainability
Simmons has made several significant sustainability efforts. Former President Susan Scrimshaw signed the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment as a formal commitment to eliminate campus greenhouse gas emissions over time. Furthermore, the School of Management is addressing sustainability in its curriculum as well as in building and resource-management programs.Simmons' environmental efforts earned the school a "C" on the College Sustainability Report Card 2010, published in Fall 2009 by the Sustainable Endowments Institute.
Notable alumni
Simmons alumni include- Julie Berry, children's author
- Lenore Blum, computer scientist and mathematician
- Kristin Cashore, author
- Denise Di Novi, film producer
- Rehema Ellis, NBC News correspondent
- Dorothy Celeste Boulding Ferebee, class of 1920, African-American physician and activist
- David S. Ferriero Tenth Archivist of the United States
- Nnenna Freelon, jazz singer
- Ann M. Fudge, businesswoman, former CEO of Young & Rubicam
- Eolyn Klugh Guy, social worker associated with YWCA
- Christine Heppermann, author and poet
- Theodora Kimball Hubbard, landscape architect, librarian
- Marjorie Hulsizer Copher, dietitian who served in World War I
- Gwen Ifill, class of 1977, journalist, television newscaster and author
- Louise Andrews Kent, author
- Mackenzi Lee, author
- Gail Levin, class of 1969, art historian
- Elinor Lipman, novelist
- Bertha Mahony, founder of The Horn Book Magazine
- Barbara Margolis, prisoners' rights advocate who served as the official greeter of New York City.
- Hannah M. McCarthy, college administrator and businessperson
- Eleanor Milleville, American sculptor
- Catherine N. Norton, American librarian
- Bertha Reynolds, American social worker
- Srinagarindra, Princess Mother of Thailand
- Mabel Leilani Smyth, Director of the Public Nursing Service for the Territory of Hawaii
- Susan Traverso, President of Thiel College, former Provost of Elizabethtown College
- Suzyn Waldman, color commentator for the New York Yankees
- Allyson Schwartz, class of 1970, U.S. Representative Pennsylvania's 13th congressional district 2004–
- Anne Williams Wheaton, class of 1912, publicist and first White House Associate Press Secretary
- Esther M. Wilkins, class of 1938, pioneer in the field of dental hygiene, teacher, and author of Clinical Practice of the Dental Hygienist
- Mary Elizabeth Wood, 1861–1931, librarian and lay missionary who actively promoted Chinese early education and librarianship
- Alex Wright, American writer and information architect
Notable faculty
- William M. Bellamy, former U.S. ambassador to Kenya from 2003-2006
- Harry C. Bentley, founder and namesake of Bentley College served as professor of accounting.
- Nancy Bond, winner of a Newbery Honor, taught at the Simmons College Center for the Study of Children's Literature from 1979 to 2001.
- Dana Chandler, artist and activist.
- Gregory Maguire, author, professor and co-director at the Simmons College Center for the Study of Children's Literature from 1979–1985.
- Isadore Gilbert Mudge, librarian, part-time lecturer
- Emily Hale, speech and drama teacher, and muse of T.S. Eliot