A Long and Winding Road Brings 麻豆破解版 Trailblazing Coeds Back to Grounds

September 27, 2024 By Alice Berry, aberry@virginia.edu Alice Berry, aberry@virginia.edu

Patty Kyle had a date one memorable Friday night in 1970.

An older male student at the University of Virginia had asked her to accompany him to a meeting of the Jefferson Literary and Debating Society, which met every Thursday at precisely 7:29 p.m. Kyle, who was one of the 350 women admitted to the University as first-year students in 1970, agreed. If nothing else, she thought, the society had a keg of free beer for those who attended.

鈥淭hat night, the debate was about coeducation,鈥 Kyle, now known by her married name, Patty Kyle Epps, said.

Her date made a speech against it.

Discovery and Innovation: Daily research. Life-changing results.
Discovery and Innovation: Daily research. Life-changing results.

鈥淗e turned to me, then said to the other guys, 鈥業f you want a female companion, you can always ask a date,鈥欌 Kyle Epps recalled.

Kyle Epps shared her story with a full crowd gathered in the Dome Room of the Rotunda Wednesday as part of the Spirit of 1974 symposium.

That fateful Friday night, she recalled marching out of the meeting. But she stuck around the University, even returning to Grounds to earn her master鈥檚 and law degrees before becoming a lawyer.

Attendees to the symposium came to hear from the women of 麻豆破解版 historic Class of 1974, the first fully coeducational class to graduate from the University. Kyle Epps and her classmates shared stories about their time at UVA 鈥 from celebrating their achievements to expressing gratitude for those who helped them succeed, including each other. Those in the Dome Room also witnessed the unveiling of a recent photo of the class, which is part of the President鈥檚 Portrait Series honoring UVA community members who have shaped the institution.

Students, faculty, staff and alumni gather in the Dome Room

Students, faculty, staff and alumni gather in the Dome Room to hear stories from members of 麻豆破解版 first fully coeducational class. (Photo by Kelly West, University Communications)

Although 350 women had been admitted as first-year students, and 100 more accepted as transfer students, not all parts of the University welcomed the new arrivals. The Jefferson Literary and Debating Society was one such group, until Barbara Golden Lynn came along.

The man who would become her husband also invited her to go to one of the society鈥檚 meetings. Given the free beer, it was a way for him to afford to take her on a date every week.

鈥淚 said to him, 鈥業鈥檇 like to be in that group,鈥欌 Golden Lynn said. Though the group did not admit women, Golden Lynn interviewed to join twice a year for 2 1/2 years. Each time, her interviewers would ask her questions she said she could not repeat. And each time, she had a response prepared.

鈥淚s that the best you got? The questions were much worse last semester,鈥 Golden Lynn remembered saying.

Golden Lynn became the first woman to join the organization, after her future husband held a vote when more conservative members of the group were celebrating Mardi Gras in New Orleans. Golden Lynn would later become the first woman to be named chief judge in the Northern District of Texas.

For a group of women granted admission specifically because they were 鈥渏oiners and doers,鈥 being denied access to activities was a blow. But the women created their own opportunities, forming swimming, tennis and field hockey clubs.

Ann Brown, left, and Betty Shotton unveil the portrait

Ann Brown, left, and Betty Shotton unveil the portrait of the Class of 1974. (Photo by Kelly West, University Communications)

Other student organizations were not only open to women, but they also explicitly invited them to join, like the Cavalier Daily and 麻豆破解版 radio station, WTJU. It was through these groups, each other and supportive faculty and staff the women found their footing. 

Annette Gibbs, then an associate dean of student affairs, approached members of the Class of 1974 about the possibility of a national sorority starting a chapter at UVA.

鈥淚 said, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e looking at our sorority,鈥欌 Dickie McMullan, now a physician, said. 鈥淎ny troubles we had, we went to our peers.鈥

The women asserted their right to attend the University and determined to excel there. They took up space 鈥 even putting flowerpots in the urinals that had not been removed from what were now women鈥檚 bathrooms.

Now, the undergraduate population at UVA is more than half women, and women lead in all corners of the University, from athletics to academics, students to administrators.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to think of yourself as a physician or an engineer or an architect when you don鈥檛 see women doing those things. The young women here have role models that we didn鈥檛,鈥 Roseann Romito, a physician, said.