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  1. Radcliffe College was a women 's liberal arts college in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the female college attached to Harvard University. [1] It was also one of the Seven Sisters colleges. [1] It shared, with Bryn Mawr College, the popular reputation of students being both intellectually and independently minded. [2]

  2. Come and see us. Click here to find out more about the many different ways you can come and visit Ratcliffe College. We look forward to seeing you in the near future. Visit Us. Ratcliffe College is a Catholic independent school in Leicestershire. Providing a co-educational experience for ages 3-18, with boarding from age 11.

  3. This collection chronicles Radcliffe College from its beginning as the Harvard Annex, in 1879, through 1999, the year the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study was founded. The archives are a rich resource for the study of women in higher education, the Harvard-Radcliffe relationship, and the lives of the many remarkable women who attended or ...

  4. Margaret Atwood, 2018. Margaret Atwood (born November 18, 1939, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) is a Canadian writer best known for her prose fiction and for her feminist perspective. As an adolescent, Atwood divided her time between Toronto, her family’s primary residence, and the sparsely settled bush country in northern Canada, where her father ...

  5. The Radcliffe College Alumnae Oral History Project, launched by the Radcliffe Club of San Francisco in 2019, documents the oral histories of more than 100 Radcliffe College alumnae. The recordings and transcripts will be archived at the Schlesinger Library, where they will be accessible to researchers, students, and scholars.

  6. ラドクリフ・カレッジ (Radcliffe College)は、 マサチューセッツ州 ケンブリッジ市 に存在していた 女子大学 。. 1879年 に設立。. かつては ハーバード大学 と提携関係にあり、共同で ディプロマ を発行していたが、 1999年 10月1日をもって ハーバード大学 と ...

  7. 16. Feb. 2019 · Of the seven colleges, four still function as independent, private women's colleges. Radcliffe College no longer exists as a separate institution admitting students, dissolving in 1999 after a slow integration with Harvard beginning formally in 1963 with joint diplomas. Barnard College still exists as a separate legal entity, but is closely ...