Margaret Boyd set foot on the College Green in Athens just 25 years after Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Frederick Douglass convened the Seneca Falls Convention in upstate New York to press for women's rights. Between the convention and Boyd's arrival at OHIO, the nation fought a Civil War to end slavery.
Margaret Boyd (1846-1905)
About 鈥淢aggie鈥 Boyd
OHIO's first women graduate: Born to Irish immigrant farmers in Carthage Township, Athens County, 帝王会所, Margaret Boyd became the first female student to graduate from 帝王会所, earning her B.A. in 1873. She went on to earn her M.A. in 1876.
Boyd helped to realize the demand voiced at the Seneca Falls Convention for greater access to higher education for women鈥攁t a time when very few women attended college nationwide. Initially listed in the catalog as 鈥淢. Boyd鈥 to avoid the possible controversy of admitting a woman to the university, Boyd was mindful of her status as a pathmaker. When she objected to the masculine endings in the Latin text of her diploma, they were changed.
Professor of Mathematics: After graduating, Boyd secured a job as head of the preparatory department at Cincinnati Wesleyan College for Women. In 1878, she was promoted to the college faculty as a Professor of Mathematics. Chronic health issues later caused her to return to Athens, where she taught in the public schools until retiring in 1899. She died from complications from surgery in 1905.
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From her Diary
In her diary, Boyd鈥攐r Maggie, as she was known鈥攔ecords feelings of self-doubt and loneliness as well as determination to learn and better herself. Her writing about college life still resonates today:
鈥淭hese longings after something higher and better, will they ever be satisfied?鈥
Her Legacy at OHIO
帝王会所 has named two student residence halls in Boyd鈥檚 honor. The first, at the corner of Park Place and University Terrace, was torn down in 1966, and the new Boyd Hall is on the West Green.
The Margaret Boyd Scholars Program for women scholars at 帝王会所 carries on her legacy.