1837 |
Oberlin College (women were admitted to the "preparatory department" in 1833)[1][dead link][2][3]
|
1844 |
Hillsdale College[3][4][5]
|
1845 |
Franklin College (co-ed secondary-level classes began in 1842 at "Indiana Baptist Manual Labor Institute"; chartered as Franklin College in 1845)[6][7][3]
|
1847 |
Lawrence University
Baylor College (until 1851 Baylor offered "coeducation" in the same building, although in separate classes; after 1851 the school fully segregated the sexes until 1887)[3][8][9][10][unreliable source?][11]
|
1847 |
Earlham College[12]
|
1849 |
New-York Central College (disestablished 1860)[13] Otterbein University[3][14]
|
1851 |
Waynesburg College[15]
|
1852 |
Westminster College[16]
|
1853 |
Antioch College[17] Cornell College (originally Iowa Conference Seminary, co-ed classes start with founding 1853)[18] Lawrence University (co-ed secondary classes began in 1849)[19] Willamette University (co-ed secondary classes began in 1842)[20]
|
1854 |
Muskingum University[21] Pacific University (co-ed secondary classes began in 1849)[22] Urbana University (co-ed secondary classes began in 1850)[23][24]
|
1855 |
Eureka College (First school in Illinois and third in the nation to admit women on an equal basis with men at its founding) [25]
Bates College[26][27] University of Iowa (first coeducational public or state university in the United States)[1][2]
|
1856 |
Baldwin University (now Baldwin Wallace University) (co-ed secondary classes began in 1845)[28] St. Lawrence University[29] Wilberforce University (first coeducational HBCU in the United States)[citation needed]
|
1857 |
Alfred University (co-ed secondary classes began in 1836; it received its university charter in 1857)[30][31] Hamline University (co-ed secondary classes began in 1854)[32]
|
1858 |
University of Mount Union (co-ed classes began in 1846; chartered as college in 1858)[33]
|
1859 |
Cooper Union (free college; enrollment open to all genders, races, religions, economic classes) [34][35] Olivet College (co-ed secondary classes began in 1844; chartered as college in 1859)[36]
|
1860
|
Wheaton College (Illinois)[37]
|
1861
|
North Central College (as Plainfield College)[38]Grinnell College[39]
|
1862 |
Baker University (co-ed secondary classes began in 1858)[citation needed]
|
1863 |
Kansas State University[40][41]
|
1864 |
Swarthmore College[42]
|
1866 |
University of Wisconsin–Madison (women admitted to classes in the "Normal Department" in 1863 and all college classes about 1866, although separate Female College and separate graduation existed until 1874)[43][44]
|
1867 |
Carleton College[45] DePauw University[46] Hiram College (co-ed secondary classes began in 1850)[citation needed] Indiana University[47][48] Lebanon Valley College[49] McDaniel College[50]
|
1868 |
University of Missouri[51] Oregon State University (co-ed secondary classes began about 1858; chartered as college in 1868)[citation needed]
Wells College (Coeducational in 2005)
|
1869 |
Berea College[52] Boston University[53] Iowa State University[54][55] University of Kansas (co-ed secondary classes began in 1866)[56] University of Minnesota Northwestern University[57] Ohio University[58] Washington University in St. Louis[17]
|
1870 |
Allegheny College[59] University of California, Berkeley[48][60] Carthage College[61] Cornell University[62][63] University of Illinois[48] University of Iowa Medical School[64] Knox College[65] Michigan State University[66] College of Wooster[67]
|
1871 |
California Wesleyan College Colby College[68] (until 1890, when women were resegregated into separate classes)[48] University of Michigan[69] University of Nebraska-Lincoln[48] Pennsylvania State University[70] Syracuse University[2] University of Vermont
|
1872 |
Tusculum College[71] University of Akron (at that time "Buchtel College")[citation needed] University of Maine[48] University of Washington (co-ed secondary classes began in 1861; the school was closed at various times between 1862 and 1869) Wesleyan University (until 1912, when it became all male once again)[72]
|
1873 |
North Georgia College & State University (then North Georgia Agricultural College; since 2013 merged into the University of North Georgia)[citation needed] Ohio State University[48] Susquehanna University[73] Texas Christian University[citation needed]
|
1875 |
Purdue University[74] St. Olaf College[75]
|
1876 |
University of Oregon[48]
|
1877 |
University of Colorado at Boulder[48] Ohio Wesleyan University[76]
|
1878 |
Hope College[citation needed]
|
1880 |
Bridgewater College (the first private liberal arts college in Virginia to be co-ed, and one of the first of its kind in the south)[citation needed] Emerson College[citation needed] University of Pennsylvania (women previously admitted to non-degree-granting programs in 1876)[77] University of Southern California[citation needed] Ursinus College[78]
|
1881 |
Coe College[citation needed] Hendrix College[citation needed]
|
1882 |
University of South Dakota[citation needed]
|
1883 |
Bucknell University[63] Florida State University (The school was a coeducational seminary beginning in 1851, and was chartered as a coeducational university in 1883. However, in 1905, a reorganization of the state's higher education system converted what was then Florida State College to a women's school, Florida State College for Women. It returned to coeducation in 1947, adopting its current name at that time.)[79] Middlebury College[citation needed] University of Texas[citation needed]
|
1884 |
University of North Dakota[48]
|
1885 |
University of Mississippi[citation needed]
|
1886 |
University of Nevada, Reno[48]
|
1887 |
Baylor University[citation needed] Gallaudet University (at the time "National Deaf-Mute College)[80] Occidental College Pomona College[citation needed] Stetson University (co-ed secondary classes began in 1883) University of Wyoming[48]
|
1888 |
George Washington University Guilford College (co-ed secondary classes began in 1837; it became a college in 1888)[81] University of Kentucky Tulane University Pharmaceutical School
|
1889 |
Elon University[82] West Virginia University[83]
|
1891 |
University of Arizona[48] George Fox University (at the time "Pacific College") College of Idaho Stanford University
|
1892 |
Auburn University University of Chicago (women resegregated into separate classes in 1902 for their first two years)[48] University of New Mexico[48] University of Oklahoma[48]American International College[84]
|
1893 |
University of Alabama[48] University of Connecticut Johns Hopkins University Graduate School Macalester College[85] University of Tennessee
|
1894 |
Boalt Hall[86]
|
1895 |
Beloit College University of Montana[48] University of Pittsburgh University of South Carolina
|
1897 |
University at Buffalo Law School University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (graduate students)
|
1899 |
Eastern Michigan University (co-ed classes in the "Normal school" began 1852; chartered as college in 1899)
|