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The first female students were admitted in 1900, the result of an effort led by Susan B. Anthony and Helen Barrett Montgomery.
During the 1890s, a number of women took classes and labs at the university as " visitors " but were not officially enrolled nor were their records included in the college register.
President David Jayne Hill allowed the first woman, Helen E. Wilkinson, to enroll as a normal student, although she was not allowed to matriculate or to pursue a degree.
Thirty-three women enrolled among the first class in 1900, and Ella S. Wilcoxen was the first to receive a degree, in 1901.
When the River Campus was completed in 1930, male students moved there while the female students remained on the University Avenue campus until 1955.

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