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  1. Garland Junior College (1872–1976) was a liberal arts women's college in Boston, Massachusetts. Mary Garland established the Garland Kindergarten Training School in 1872 on Chestnut Street in Boston's Beacon Hill.

    • Private women's junior college
  2. Simmons is a member of the Colleges of the Fenway consortium, which also includes Emmanuel College, Wentworth Institute of Technology, Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, and Massachusetts College of Art and Design. Simmons absorbed Garland Junior College in 1976.

    • 1899; 124 years ago
    • Urban, 12 acres (4.9 ha)
    • Lynn Perry Wooten
  3. This series contains class records, notes, and various publications from the first fifty years of the College. There is more early material scattered throughout the collection, but the bulk of it is in this series. Box 1. Class register, 1873-1874, 1903-1904.

  4. A lifelong resident of New England, Anne Harvey was born on Nov. 9, 1928, in Newton, Mass. She attended Garland Junior College for a year before her marriage in 1948 to Alfred M. Sexton II. She studied poetry under Robert Lowell at Boston University and also worked as a model and a librarian.

  5. Garland Junior College (1872–1976) was a liberal arts women's college in Boston, Massachusetts. Mary Garland established the Garland Kindergarten Training School in 1872 on Chestnut Street in Boston's Beacon Hill.

  6. These are institutions of higher education in the United States whose student populations are composed exclusively or almost exclusively of women. They are often liberal arts colleges. There are approximately sixty active women's colleges in the U.S. Currently active women's colleges are listed in bold text.

  7. Garland Junior College (GJC), a private urban college in Boston for women which offered Associate in Science Degrees in Homemaking and Art, had its beginnings in 1872 when Mary Garland established her.