Pomona College
Liberal arts college in Claremont, California / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Pomona College (/pəˈmoʊnə/ ⓘ pə-MOH-nə[4]) is a private liberal arts college in Claremont, California. It was established in 1887 by a group of Congregationalists who wanted to recreate a "college of the New England type"[5] in Southern California. In 1925, it became the founding member of the Claremont Colleges consortium of adjacent, affiliated institutions.
Type | Private liberal arts college |
---|---|
Established | October 14, 1887 (1887-10-14) |
Academic affiliation | Claremont Colleges |
Endowment | $2.8 billion (2023) |
Budget | $259 million (2023) |
President | G. Gabrielle Starr |
Academic staff | 278 |
Total staff | 880 |
Undergraduates | 1,690 |
Location | , , United States 34°05′53″N 117°42′50″W |
Campus | Suburban, 140 acres (57 ha) |
Colors | Blue and white[1][lower-alpha 1] |
Nickname | Sagehens |
Sporting affiliations | NCAA Division III – SCIAC |
Mascot | Cecil the Sagehen |
Website | www |
Pomona is a four-year undergraduate institution that enrolls approximately 1,700 students. It offers 48 majors in liberal arts disciplines and roughly 650 courses, as well as access to more than 2,000 additional courses at the other Claremont Colleges. Its 140-acre (57 ha) campus is in a residential community 35 miles (56 km) east of downtown Los Angeles, near the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains.
Pomona has the lowest acceptance rate of any U.S. liberal arts college as of 2021[update] and is considered the most prestigious liberal arts college in the American West and one of the most prestigious in the country.[6] It has a $2.8 billion endowment as of June 2023[update], making it one of the 10 wealthiest schools in the U.S. on a per student basis. Nearly all students live on campus, and the student body is noted for its racial,[7][8][9] geographic,[10] and socioeconomic[8][11][9] diversity. The college's athletics teams, the Sagehens, compete jointly with Pitzer College in the SCIAC, a Division III conference.
Prominent alumni of Pomona include Oscar, Emmy, Grammy, and Tony award winners; U.S. Senators, ambassadors, and other federal officials; Pulitzer Prize recipients; billionaire executives; a Nobel Prize laureate; National Academies members; and Olympic athletes.[12] The college is a top producer of Fulbright scholars[13] and recipients of other fellowships.
Founding era
Pomona College was established as a coeducational and nonsectarian Christian institution on October 14, 1887, amidst a real estate boom and anticipated population influx precipitated by the arrival of a transcontinental railroad to Southern California.[15][16] Its founders, a regional group of Congregationalists, sought to create a "college of the New England type", emulating the institutions where many of them had been educated.[15][5][17] Classes first began at Ayer Cottage, a rental house in Pomona, California, on September 12, 1888, with a permanent campus planned at Piedmont Mesa four miles north of the city.[15][18] That year, as the real estate bubble burst, making the Piedmont campus financially untenable, the college was offered the site of an unfinished hotel (later renamed Sumner Hall[14]) in the nearby, recently founded town of Claremont. It moved there[18] but kept its name.[19][20][lower-alpha 2] Trustee Charles B. Sumner led the college during its first years, helping hire its first official president, Cyrus G. Baldwin, in 1890.[19][18][22] The first graduating class, in 1894, had 11 members.[23][24]
Pomona suffered through a severe financial crisis during its early years,[14][24][26] but raised enough money to add several buildings to its campus.[27][28] Although the first Asian and black students enrolled in 1897[29] and 1900,[30] respectively, the student body (like most others of the era) remained almost all white throughout this period.[24][31][32] In 1905, during president George A. Gates' tenure, the college acquired a 64-acre (26 ha) parcel of land to its east known as the Wash.[33][34] In 1911, as high schools became more common in the region, the college eliminated its preparatory department, which had taught pre-college level courses.[35][36] The following year, it committed to a liberal arts model,[37] soon after turning its previously separate schools of art and music into departments within the college.[38][39] In 1914, the Phi Beta Kappa honor society established a chapter at the college.[40][41] Daily attendance at chapel was mandated until 1921,[42][43] and student culture emphasized athletics[44][45] and academic class rivalries.[46][47] During World War I, male students were divided into three military companies and a Red Cross unit to assist in the war effort.[48][49][50]
Mid-20th century
Confronted with growing demand in the 1920s, Pomona's fourth president, James A. Blaisdell, considered whether to grow the college into a large university that could acquire additional resources or remain a small institution capable of providing a more intimate educational experience. Seeking both, he pursued an alternative path inspired by the collegiate university model he observed at Oxford, envisioning a group of independent colleges sharing centralized resources such as a library.[51][52] On October 14, 1925, Pomona's 38th anniversary, the college founded the Claremont Colleges consortium.[53][54] Construction of the Clark dormitories on North Campus (then the men's campus) began in 1929, a reflection of president Charles Edmunds' prioritization of the college's residential life.[55][56][57] Edmunds, who had previously served as president of Lingnan University in Guangzhou, China, inspired a growing interest in Asian culture at the college and established its Asian studies program.[58][56]
Pomona's enrollment declined during the Great Depression as students became unable to afford tuition, and its budget was slashed by a quarter.[59][60][61] The college reoriented itself toward wartime activities again during World War II,[62][63][64] hosting an Air Force military meteorology program[65] and Army Specialized Training Program courses in engineering and foreign languages.[66][67]
Postwar transformations
Pomona's longest-serving president, E. Wilson Lyon, guided the college through a transformational and turbulent period from 1941 to 1969.[62][68] The college's enrollment rose above 1,000 following the war,[46][69] leading to the construction of several residence halls and science facilities.[70][71] Its endowment grew steadily, due in part to the introduction in 1942 of a deferred giving fundraising scheme pioneered by Allen Hawley called the Pomona Plan, where participants receive a lifetime annuity in exchange for donating to the college upon their death.[64][72][73] The plan's model has since been adopted by many other colleges.[74][75][76]
Lyon made several progressive decisions relating to civil rights, including supporting Japanese-American students during internment[63][78][79] and establishing an exchange program in 1952 with Fisk University, a historically black university in Tennessee.[80][81][82] He and dean of women Jean Walton ended the gender segregation of Pomona's residential life, first with the opening of Frary Dining Hall (then part of the men's campus) to women beginning in 1957[77] and later with the elimination of parietal rules in the late 1960s[83] and the introduction of co-educational housing in 1968.[84][85] The student body, influenced by the countercultural revolution, became less socially conservative and more politically engaged in this era.[86][87][62] Protesters opposed to the Vietnam War occupied Sumner Hall to obstruct Air Force recruiters in 1968[88][89][90] and forced the cancellation of classes at the end of the spring 1970 semester.[91][92] The college's ethnic diversity also began to increase,[93][94][95] and activists successfully pushed the consortium to establish black and Latino studies programs in 1969.[31][95][96] A bomb exploded at the Carnegie Building that February, permanently injuring a secretary; no culprit was ever identified.[95][97][98][99]
During the tenure of president David Alexander from 1969 to 1991, Pomona gained increased prominence on the national stage.[100] The endowment increased ten-fold, enabling the construction and renovation of a number of buildings.[95] Several identity-based groups, such as the Pomona College Women's Union (founded in 1984),[101] were established.[102] In the mid-1980s, out-of-state students began to outnumber in-state students.[103]
In 1991, the college converted the dormitory basements used by fraternities into lounges, arguing that this created a more equitable distribution of campus space. The move lowered the profile of Greek life on campus.[104][105]
21st century
In the 2000s, under president David W. Oxtoby, Pomona began placing more emphasis on reducing its environmental impact,[109][110] committing in 2003 to obtaining LEED certifications for new buildings[111][112] and launching various sustainability initiatives.[109][111] The college also entered partnerships with several college access groups (including the Posse Foundation in 2004 and QuestBridge in 2005[113]) and committed to meeting the full demonstrated financial need of students through grants rather than loans in 2008.[114] These efforts, combined with Pomona's previously instituted[115] need-blind admission policy, resulted in increased enrollment of low-income and racial minority students.[116][117]
In 2008, it was discovered that Pomona's alma mater may have been originally written to be sung as the ensemble finale to a student-produced blackface minstrel show performed on campus in 1910. The college stopped singing it at convocation and commencement, alienating some alumni.[110][118][119]
Pomona requested proof of legal residency from employees amid a unionization drive by dining hall workers in 2011.[120][121] Seventeen workers who were unable to provide documentation were fired, drawing national media attention and sparking criticism from activists;[120][122] the dining hall staff voted to unionize in 2013.[123][124][125] A rebranding initiative that year sought to emphasize students' passion and drive, angering students who thought it would lead to a more stressful culture.[126] Several protests in the 2010s criticized the college's handling of sexual assault,[127][128] leading to various reforms.[129][130]
In 2017,[131] G. Gabrielle Starr became Pomona's tenth president; she is the first woman and first African American to hold the office.[132][133] From March 2020 through the spring 2021 semester, the college switched to online instruction in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.[134][135]
Pomona's 140-acre (57 ha) campus is in Claremont, California, an affluent suburban residential community[137] 35 miles (56 km) east of downtown Los Angeles.[54] It is directly northwest of the Claremont Village (the city's downtown commercial district) and directly south of the other contiguous Claremont Colleges.[138] The area has a Mediterranean climate[139] and consists of a gentle slope from the alluvial fan of San Antonio Creek in the San Gabriel Mountains to the north.[140][136]
In its early years, Pomona quickly expanded from its initial home in Sumner Hall, constructing several buildings to accommodate its growing enrollment and ambitions.[141][28] After 1908, development of the campus was guided by master plans from architect Myron Hunt, who envisioned a central quadrangle flanked by buildings connected via visual axes.[136] In 1923, landscape architect Ralph Cornell expanded on Hunt's plans, envisioning a "college in a garden" defined by native Southern California vegetation[136] but incorporating global influences in the tradition of the acclimatization movement.[142][143] President James Blaisdell's decision to purchase undeveloped land around Pomona while it was still available later gave the college room to grow and found the consortium.[144] Many of the earlier buildings were constructed in the Mission Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival styles, with stucco walls and red terracotta tile roofs.[49] Other and later construction incorporated elements of neoclassical, Victorian, Italian Romanesque, modern, and postmodern styles.[136] As a result, the present campus features a blend of architectural styles.[145] Most buildings are three or fewer stories in height,[146] and are designed to facilitate both indoor and outdoor use.[145]
The campus consists of 88 facilities as of 2023[update],[149] including 70 addressed buildings.[150] It is bounded by First Street on the south, Mills and Amherst Avenues on the east, Eighth Street on the north, and Harvard Avenue on the west.[146] It is informally divided into North Campus and South Campus by Sixth Street,[151] with most academic buildings in the western half and a naturalistic area known as the Wash in the east.[146] It has been featured in numerous films and television shows, often standing in for other schools.[152][153]
Pomona has undertaken initiatives to make its campus more sustainable, including requiring that all new construction be built to LEED Gold standards,[154] replacing turf with drought-tolerant landscaping,[155] and committing to achieving carbon neutrality without the aid of purchased carbon credits by 2030.[156] The Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education gave the college a gold rating in its 2018 Sustainable Campus Index.[157]
South Campus
South Campus consists of mostly first-year and second-year housing and academic buildings for the social sciences, arts, and humanities.[146]
A row of four residence halls is south of Bonita Avenue, with Frank Dining Hall at the eastern end.[146] Sumner Hall, the home of admissions and several other administrative departments, is to the north of the dormitories.[146] Oldenborg Center, a foreign-language housing option that includes a foreign-language dining hall, is across from Sumner.[158]
South Campus has several arts buildings and performance venues. Bridges Auditorium ("Big Bridges") is used for concerts and speakers and has a capacity of 2,500.[159][160] Bridges Hall of Music ("Little Bridges") is a concert hall with seating for 550.[161] On the western edge of campus is the Benton Museum of Art, which has a collection of approximately 19,000 items,[162] including Italian Renaissance panel paintings, indigenous American art and artifacts, and American and European prints, drawings, and photographs.[163][164] The Seaver Theatre Complex has a 335-seat thrust stage theater and 125-seat black box theater, among other facilities.[165] The Studio Art Hall garnered national recognition for its steel-frame design when it was completed in 2014.[106][107][108]
Pomona's main social science and humanities buildings are located west of College Avenue. They include the Carnegie Building, a neoclassical structure built in 1908 as a Carnegie library.[146][166] Several historic Victorian houses line the southern portion of the avenue, including the Queen Anne–style Renwick House, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.[167][168]
Marston Quadrangle, a 5-acre (2 ha) lawn framed by California sycamore and coastal redwood trees, serves as a central artery for the campus, anchored by Carnegie on the west and Bridges Auditorium on the east.[136] To its north is Alexander Hall, the college's central administration building,[146] and the Smith Campus Center (SCC), home to many student services and communal spaces.[169] East of the SCC is the Center for Athletics, Recreation and Wellness (Pomona's primary indoor athletics and recreation facility) and Smiley Hall dormitory, built in 1908.[146]
At the intersection of Sixth Street and College Avenue are the college gates, built in 1914, which mark the historical northern edge of the campus. They bear two quotes from President Blaisdell. On the north is "let only the eager, thoughtful and reverent enter here", and on the south is "They only are loyal to this college who departing bear their added riches in trust for mankind". Per campus tradition, enrolling students walk south through the gates during orientation and seniors walk north through them shortly before graduation.[170][171]
The less-developed 40-acre (16 ha)[136] eastern portion of the campus is known as the Wash (formally Blanchard Park[149]),[34] and contains a large grove of coast live oak trees,[142] as well as many of the college's athletics facilities,[172] an outdoor amphitheater, an astronomical observatory, and the Pomona College Organic Farm, an experiment in sustainable agriculture.[146]
- Harwood Court
(view as a 360° interactive panorama) - The Carnegie Building
- The Wash
- Path to Marston Quad
- Mason Hall
- Lebus Court
- Crookshank Hall
North Campus
North Campus was designed by architect Sumner Spaulding, and its initial phase was completed in 1930.[173] It consists primarily of residential buildings for third- and fourth-year students and academic buildings for the natural sciences.[146]
The academic buildings are located to the west of North College Way. This area includes Dividing the Light (2007), a skyspace by Light and Space artist and alumnus James Turrell.[174][175]
The residence halls include the Clark halls (I, III, and V[lower-alpha 3]) and several more recent constructions.[146] The North Campus dining hall, Frary Dining Hall, features a vaulted ceiling and is the location of the murals Prometheus (1930) by José Clemente Orozco, the first Mexican fresco in the U.S.,[176] and Genesis (1960) by Rico Lebrun.[177]
- Walker Hall
- Norton-Clark III courtyard
- Dividing the Light skyspace
- Walker Beach, looking north
Other facilities
The college owns the 53-acre (21 ha) Trails Ends Ranch (a wilderness area in the Webb Canyon north of campus),[178][179] the 320-acre (130 ha) Mildred Pitt Ranch in southeastern Monterey County,[180] and the Halona Lodge retreat center in Idyllwild, California.[181] The astronomy department built and operates a telescope at the Table Mountain Observatory in Big Pines, California.[182]
Along the north side of campus are several joint buildings maintained by The Claremont Colleges Services. The Claremont Colleges Library (also known as Honnold/Mudd Library) holds more than 2.7 million items as of 2020[update], of which 1.1 million are physical and 1.7 million are digital.[183] The consortium also owns the Robert J. Bernard Field Station north of Foothill Boulevard.[184]