Susan Walker Fitzgerald speaking to crowd

In the Beginning

Higher education's first self-governance association was born right here in 1892.

In the beginning, there were no rules. For the first few years, according to Annie Crosby Emery Allinson (Class of 1892), when the College was tiny and the students 鈥渘earer the gods,鈥 problems of noise and quiet settled themselves. But as the student body grew, more wills came into conflict, and the Golden Age came to a close. So no one was surprised when Dean M. Carey Thomas announced, just before Commencement in 1891, that 鈥ㄢ渢he social life of the College 鈥╟ould no longer be conducted without 鈥榬ules.鈥 鈥

The assumption of everyone, including Thomas, was that 鈥╰hose rules would come from 鈥╰he dean herself.

鈥淏ut after the meeting,鈥 Allinson wrote, 鈥淢iss Susan Walker (Fitzgerald) of 1893, and a few others, asking themselves whether law and liberty could not be combined, arrived at the idea of the students framing their own social code. Miss Walker, as spokesman for this self-appointed committee, went to the Dean and gained 鈥╤er willing consent to the 鈥╪ew experiment.鈥

That experiment led to the establishment in 1892 of the nation鈥檚 first student Self-Government Association in higher education. Today that association, of which all undergraduates are members, informs virtually every aspect of academic and social life at Bryn Mawr. Through collaboration with the administration and faculty, Bryn Mawr students have a voice in everything from mundane rules about noise, pets, and posters to policies governing academic integrity, faculty appointments, and curriculum. The 厂骋础鈥檚 authority rests formally on two living documents: the Constitution and the Honor Code, which together outline a system of rules and principles that seek to create 鈥╝nd guide a community built 鈥╫n personal integrity and 鈥╩utual respect.

What is remarkable about Allinson鈥檚 account of the 厂骋础鈥檚 genesis, chronicled for the Alumnae Quarterly in 1909, is both how quickly the students moved to take the project of governance into their own hands and how readily Thomas signed on to it. That initial interaction鈥攚hen the students鈥 expectation of self-determination met with the administration鈥檚 willingness to support it鈥攕et in motion a dynamic that continues to underlie self-governance at Bryn Mawr 125 years later.

After Thomas鈥檚 buy-in, an executive board was empowered to create a set of resolutions, and by the fall of 1891, what Allinson called 鈥渢he age of oratory鈥 was underway. 鈥淭he students of Merion Hall,鈥 she wrote, 鈥渦sed to say that they had never been disturbed by noise until the Executive Board held midnight sessions in my room to discuss the necessity of 鈥榪uiet hours.鈥欌 Community discussions were marked by spirited debate and an occasional relish for shock that would feel familiar to anyone who has lived through Bryn Mawr鈥檚 particular brand of impassioned dorm and dining hall conversations. In one stormy meeting, a student argued that 鈥渓aw-making should be left to Thomas鈥 and 鈥渟hocked our less daring intelligences by announcing, 鈥業 prefer monarchy to democracy鈥攏or need it be a constitutional monarchy.鈥 Against philosophy 鈥╨ike this, our only weapons were an unbewildered piety and a militant faith.鈥

Although the student body was perhaps fatigued by the process鈥擜llinson noted the 鈥淕orgon face鈥 of skepticism at a meeting held to ratify the SGA charter in the winter of 1892鈥攃lever problem-solving saved the day when a supporter leapt to her feet with a motion that self-government be abandoned. When the chair 鈥減ut the question with assumed indifference,鈥 there was silence in the chapel. But to the request for opposing votes came a fervent 鈥淣o鈥 that resounded on the campus and officially established self-governance at Bryn Mawr. 鈥淚 doubt if any Bryn Mawr undergraduates,鈥 wrote Allinson, 鈥渉ave ever been more gallantly serious than we were when, with chivalric seriousness, we pledged ourselves to an ideal.鈥

Athens and Hegel

Allinson told the story, in language permeated with classical references, as Bryn Mawr鈥檚 own version of the birth of Athenian democracy. In the end, for Bryn Mawr as for the ancient Greeks, the fall from the gods led ultimately to progress through the establishment of a rule of law based on democratic principles. At a time when Greek and Latin were prerequisites of admission and classical studies remained the foundation of the liberal arts curriculum, the allusions were 鈥渨ithin a frame of reference she knew her audience would understand,鈥 says Grace Ledbetter 鈥87, chair of Classics at Swarthmore College. What鈥檚 striking about the story, Ledbetter goes on to say, is that Allinson and her fellow students were using that frame of reference as a means to realize a radically democratic vision within their own community. 鈥淭hey are taking the framework of their classical education, the most classical model of government, 鈥╝nd applying it in a way that鈥檚 radical within their own contemporary context.鈥

If Ledbetter sees 厂骋础鈥檚 origin story in terms of classical ideals, radically applied, Charlie Bruce 鈥16, last year鈥檚 SGA president, responds to it through a different interpretive lens鈥攖hat of Hegelian dialectics. As a comparative literature major, Bruce was inspired by the work of Grace Lee Boggs, M.A. 鈥37, Ph.D. 鈥40, a human rights advocate who wrote about the Hegelian principle of dialectical change and used her own work in philosophy as a basis for lifelong activism. Bruce sees the principles of dialectical change at work in the origins of the SGA in that 鈥渋t鈥檚 all about taking a given circumstance, having some kind of constructive dialogue about it, and finding a way to make it into the best possible shape that it can be.鈥 The story 鈥渢otally embodies Boggs鈥檚 ideas of how institutions change, how people change, how cultures change.鈥

鈥淗istorically Bryn Mawr students have been agents of social change,鈥 Bruce goes on to say. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 surprise me that that spirit has been around from the inception of the institution until the present day.鈥

Particulars and Principles

The history of the SGA is the history of the issues that have engaged the Bryn Mawr community and so is predictably bound up with the larger social currents of any given moment. In 1925, at a time when women were claiming greater social freedoms, the student leadership succeeded in lifting an increasingly unenforceable ban on smoking. In 1929, as the era of Prohibition dawned, the Association sought fiercely to preserve alcohol use as an area of individual privilege. And in 1976, at the height of the campus housing exchange with Haverford, the Equal Rights Amendment to the Bryn Mawr Constitution passed, allowing resident Haverford men to hold SGA office.

But despite the historical particulars that make archival snippets feel dated and sometimes quaint, the constant that resonates is the insistence by the students that practice meet theory, that the mundane realities of student life remain tangibly anchored to higher principles.

For students who tangled with Thomas in 1921 over how many weekends they were allowed off campus, the question was not just about weekends away. Rather, the president of the Association wrote in the College News, 鈥渢he very principles of self-government are at stake.鈥

While acknowledging that Thomas saw 鈥渃ontinuity of residence鈥 as affecting academic work and therefore within the administration鈥檚 purview, 鈥淲e, on the other hand,鈥 wrote Katharine Gardner 鈥22, 鈥渇eel that as a self-governing body, we should have a part in making as well as in 鈥╟arrying out all policies regulating College life.鈥

Current Conversations

On campus today, the SGA continues actively to seek consistency between the College鈥檚 principles and its practices and to navigate the balance between individual freedoms and restrictions meant to serve the good of the community鈥攁lbeit through very different conversations. Among the predominant recent issues, according to Bruce, have been 鈥渉ard conversations about community, about who feels included, and who doesn鈥檛, and why.鈥 As SGA president, Bruce took a leading role in facilitating these critical dialogues. 鈥淚 tried to make clear while I was in office,鈥 says Bruce, 鈥渢hat this was a space where anyone could start a conversation.鈥

If the Victorian Mawrters hashing out the foundations of self-governance in Merion Hall in 1892 had a crystal ball allowing them a glimpse of the conversations Bruce describes, they might be flummoxed by the cultural complexities of the defining issues for Bryn Mawr鈥檚 far more diverse community of the early 21st century. But they surely would recognize in them the same core qualities that we see in them looking back鈥攁n impassioned insistence that the community live up to its own ideals, the belief that dialogue is the first step toward institutional and social change, and a commitment to the practical work of community building.

Is the Association that was radical 125 years ago still remarkable today? 鈥淵es, always,鈥 says Bruce emphatically. 鈥淚 have never been in a place where there are so many people who are devoted to not being complacent and to asking and thinking critically about how their world could be better for them and for the people around them.鈥

Crime and Punishment

31-day Suspension (1912): Bringing a Yalie, dressed in women鈥檚 clothes, into the Merion sitting room, the gym, and the running track. 

Expulsion (1916): Sleeping outside near the Kennedy鈥檚 stable and lying to the Board.

Expulsion (1922): Drinking too much wine from her escort鈥檚 flask (The defense: 鈥淵ou鈥檙e punishing me for getting caught.鈥)

The Past Is a Foreign Country

1922 No men鈥檚 clothing or bathing caps shall be worn by the students on campus or in public parts of the halls without being covered鈥. Stockings may not be worn rolled down鈥. Students must not lie on the upper campus.

1930 Riding habits must not be worn at dinner week-days, nor at dinner or supper on Sundays.

1960 Resident students may not wear pants or shorts in the surrounding communities, on well-traveled roads, or on public transportation, or in places of public entertainment.

Published on: 03/10/2017