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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Harvard Memorial Biographies 69 1 Browse Search
Cambridge sketches (ed. Estelle M. H. Merrill) 10 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: April 11, 1863., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Cambridge sketches (ed. Estelle M. H. Merrill). You can also browse the collection for William W. Goodwin or search for William W. Goodwin in all documents.

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Cambridge sketches (ed. Estelle M. H. Merrill), A chapter of Radcliffe College. (search)
desired for others. The young woman was Miss Abby Leach, who had come to Cambridge that autumn to be instructed by Professors Goodwin, Child and Greenough. Others had done the same thing before, and it is true that Miss Leach had not made any plan fded to the circular letter were, in their order, Professors William E. Byerly, Benjamin Peirce, Frederick H. Hedge, William W. Goodwin and William James. Professors Norton, Peabody, Hill, Palmer, Gurney, Shaler, Briggs, Goodale, Emerton, White, Paing an advisory board which was to have authority in all matters pertaining to instruction. This body, consisting of Professors Goodwin, Gurney, J. M. Peirce, Greenough and Goodale, representing different departments of instruction, was unanimously elwere added at the time who greatly increased the strength of the body. These were Professor Charles Eliot Norton, Professor Goodwin, Professor Smith, at the time Dean of Harvard College, Professor Child, Professor Byerly, Professor James Mills Pei
Cambridge sketches (ed. Estelle M. H. Merrill), Student life at Radcliffe. (search)
ich have been in that auditorium. Before the guest appears a crowd of youths and maidens. Tables are spread, music sounds. But all this reveals not at all the scene of many a Friday afternoon when the Idler Club meets and the little stage of the auditorium, with its walls of soft green and pillars of cream white, becomes the stage for a play. And only with vivid imagination, brought into most active service, can our guests picture to themselves the auditorium when Professor Norton, Professor Goodwin, Mrs. Laura Ormiston Chant, Major Brewer of the Salvation Army, or Miss Helena Dudley, of Denison House, the Boston college settlement, have stood before the Radcliffe students and spoken on some subject which interested all. Though Fay House at an Idler tea has proved a pleasant place to many, did I wish to made Fay House dear to a friend. I should lead her blindfold over the wide stairways to the library above, late on some sunny afternoon. I should draw one of the great chairs