Breaking the Mold: How 麻豆破解版 Class of 1974 Changed the University Forever

When Gail Burrell Gerry applied to the University of Virginia in 1969, she had no idea they could not accept her.

Instead, her application to the University 鈥 the last all-male public flagship university in the country 鈥 was forwarded to Mary Washington College (now University of Mary Washington), which was, at the time, 麻豆破解版 women鈥檚 college. She received an offer of admission, which confused her. She went to her guidance counselor鈥檚 office in Ypsilanti, Michigan, to find out what happened and, after reading the 鈥渢eeny tiny print,鈥 they realized the University only accepted men.

Gail Burrell Gerry and friends

Gail Burrell Gerry poses with friends at UVA. In the early 1970s, most women at UVA did not have cars, so they traveled almost entirely on foot. (Contributed photo)

鈥淚t never occurred to me that a state school would be all male,鈥 Gerry said.

Then, just a few weeks later, she was admitted to UVA.

Gerry became a trailblazer. Before 1970, the University did not accept undergraduate women as a matter of course. The School of Education and Human Development, then known as the Curry Memorial School of Education, began admitting women in 1920, and the student population there became majority female in 1922, according to Virginia Magazine. The School of Nursing was women-only until 1952, and some women were admitted as rare exceptions. Before coeducation, more than 30,000 women earned degrees or certificates from UVA. 

John Lowe, a UVA School of Law graduate, initiated a lawsuit with the ACLU on behalf of four women in 1969 to get the University to coeducate. The Board of Visitors at first agreed to gradually increase the number of undergraduate women over a 10-year period, before relenting and voluntarily accepting full coeducation within three years on the terms Lowe鈥檚 lawsuit proposed. The women who enrolled in 1970, , formed 麻豆破解版 first coeducational Class of 1974.

Gerry recently published a book, 鈥溾 with the University of Virginia Press, chronicling her and her female classmates鈥 experiences.

Receiving admission to the University was only the first hurdle for Gerry and her classmates. Many UVA alumni were upset over the decision to admit women and threatened to withhold financial contributions. Many senior professors felt likewise. Gerry said she was advised to avoid taking classes with more longstanding professors, who felt women didn鈥檛 have a place at UVA. The male student body was split on the issue. Some men even refused to sit next to their female classmates.

women of the UVA class of 1974

Members of the Class of 1974 say they remember their friendships with each other more than anything else about their college experience. (UVA Library photo)

Gerry took a public speaking class with her roommate. The two were the only women in the room when a classmate decided to give a speech arguing against women鈥檚 admission. He even wore a button reading 鈥淏BTOU,鈥 or 鈥淏ring Back the Old University.鈥

鈥淗e gave this speech about how devastating this was for the University, how the only reason women wanted to be there was to find a husband,鈥 Gerry said.

The men in the room smiled and cheered, she recalled. She went back to her dorm room, angry and embarrassed, and decided she had to give her own speech in response. With her roommate鈥檚 help, she concocted a plan to parody the man鈥檚 ideas.

鈥淚 came in with my glasses and my hair up and a trench coat on over some hot pants,鈥 Gerry said. 鈥淚 had undergarments that were my roommate鈥檚, and I got up on the desk and started crawling around, saying, 鈥榃hy would we be here if we weren鈥檛 looking for a man?鈥 I think the humor worked.鈥

Gerry, for her part, dreamed of going to college at UVA while she was still dating her hometown boyfriend, poking a hole in her former classmate鈥檚 theory. But homesickness almost drove her to consider not returning for her second semester.

鈥淭here was very little privacy, and I was initially pretty overwhelmed with the coursework,鈥 she said.

The first and second classes of women were accepted in addition to the slots already reserved for a full entering class of men; consequently, dorm space was tight and very few second-year women found on-Grounds housing. 

With the undergraduate population being only about 13% female, many women formed close friendships with their male classmates.

male and female students reading from a textbook

Many male students refused to even sit next to women, Gerry says, but the proportion of women was so small many of them befriended the men who were more accepting. (UVA Library photo)

鈥淭here were more men than this group (who opposed coeducation) who were very willing to accept us, to be study partners with us, to engage with us intellectually,鈥 Gerry said.

One male student鈥檚 kindness when Gerry visited UVA before enrolling even helped her fall in love with the University.

鈥淚 met somebody on the steps of the Rotunda who was as excited about me being accepted as I was and volunteered to drive my sister and me around Grounds. 鈥 It was one of those wonderful, serendipitous events,鈥 Gerry said.

That interaction, meeting her now-husband of 51 years, and many other friendships Gerry formed 鈥 some of them lifelong 鈥 are what she remembers most about her time at UVA. Many of the women she interviewed for her book said the same.

鈥淚 think that鈥檚 an important part of the outcome of being such a small number in a sea of men,鈥 she said.

Media Contacts

Alice Berry

University News Associate Office of University Communications