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  1. Nicknamed Minnie soon after birth, Martha Carey Thomas was born into a prominent family in Baltimore, Maryland, on January 2, 1857. Her father was a doctor and Quaker preacher, and her mother was a member of the Whitall family, well known for its strong Quaker women. Since Mary Whitall Thomas had suffered an earlier miscarriage, both parents ...

  2. One example from an 1899 letter to Mary allows a fleeting glimpse into Carey's consciousness, kept shielded by her public persona. M. Carey Thomas, now a college president and a leading spokes ...

  3. M. Carey Thomas. Martha Carey Thomas (1857–1935) (Figure. . 3) was the eldest of ten children of Dr. James Carey Thomas, a respected Quaker physician in Baltimore and one of the original Johns Hopkins trustees. He was also a member of the board of trustees of the new women's college in Philadelphia, Bryn Mawr.

  4. The Old Library is a college library at Bryn Mawr College in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. Previously named the M. Carey Thomas Library after Bryn Mawr's first dean and second president, it was formally renamed in 2018 as a result of controversy surrounding Thomas's history of racism and anti-Semitism. [3] The building was in use as a library until ...

  5. Thomas, M. Carey. “In Memory of Walter Cope, Architect of Bryn Mawr College.” Address Delivered by President M. Carey Thomas at a Memorial Service held at Bryn Mawr College, November 4, 1902. Published in the Bryn Mawr College Lantern, February 1905. Reprinted by request, June 1908.

  6. M. Carey Thomas November 5-9, 1907 — Quarter-Centennial Meeting of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae, Boston MA Anniversaries like this, which compel us to pause for a moment and review our progress, come with a peculiar significance to women of my generation.

  7. Martha Carey Thomas was born on Jan. 2, 1857, in Baltimore, Md. She attended Quaker schools in Baltimore and in Ithaca, N.Y., before graduating from Cornell University in 1877. She did graduate work first at Johns Hopkins University and then in Germany at the University of Leipzig. After three years at the latter institution, she was refused a ...