Browse Exhibits (7 total)

Play Like a Girl: Basketball at Misericordia, 1950-1959

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The sport of basketball emerged in the United States during the country’s pre-occupation with sports and health toward the end of the nineteenth century. Industrialization led to more leisure time for the growing middle class, and physical fitness took on a greater role in the Victorian conception of moral and mental well-being.

Women’s sports developed at this time too, but they were set around rules that aimed to protect female fragility and gentility. In the nineteenth century and well into the twentieth, societal conceptions about women as frail and reliant on men for protection affected all aspects of women’s lives. Couched inexorably in sexism, the rules of women’s basketball before Title IX were designed to protect women from injury and the physical and mental demands of competition, which was considered unfeminine and unattractive. Basketball was popular among college women who were already progressive and steadily moving toward more modern notions of gender in the United States.

Pre-Title IX rules in basketball, restrictive as they were, did demand that women learn and develop strategy through cooperation and teamwork. Despite rigid rules and societal misconceptions about female biology in the interest of keeping the game "dainty," the women who played basketball at this time sweated, got injured, and competed. They defied convention and broke gender norms. 


College Misericordia had a well-appointed athletics program during this time, under the auspices of Director of Athletics Marie Morris (Class of 1944), who expected her athletes to embody the spirit of Mulier Fortis (“valiant women”) through sportsmanship, teamwork, and effort. Early physical educators like Morris and her predecessors played a significant role in bolstering young women’s self-esteem in the face of societal pressures and expectations.

Archives Month 2017: Architectural Design

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American Archives Month celebrates the work happening in archives to preserve and make accessible our shared history. This Archives Month, we take a look at architectural design in the archives. The Sister Mary Carmel McGarigle University Archives holds blueprints, architectural plans, contracts, correspondence, and photographs documenting the design of our campus. 

Misericordia Spaces: The First 30 Years

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College Misericordia began with the purchase of 99 and 2/3 acres of land in Dallas, Pennsylvania, in 1914. The campus underwent a number of changes from its opening in 1924 to the opening of the cutting-edge science facility in 1957. This exhibition examines some familiar spaces on campus. 

Picturing Misericordia: The Meanings Behind Our Seals and Symbols

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We live in an increasingly visual culture, but organizations have long used a variety of symbols such as coats of arms and seals in building their unique identities. Colleges and universities draw on centuries of tradition when they employ symbolic imagery coats of arms and seals to convey their values and mission. This exhibit explores Misericordia’s seals and symbols and the meanings behind them.

Life and Legacy: Sister Miriam Gallagher, RSM

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Sister Miriam Gallagher, RSM (1887-1966) was a dedicated professor of literature, creative writing, library science, and romance languages at College Misericordia. With over 60 years of service with the Sisters of Mercy, Sister Miriam Gallagher is remembered as a devoted professor, mentor, and writer.

100 Years of Breaking Ground at Misericordia

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June 3, 2021, marks one hundred years of breaking ground at Misericordia. In 1921, the Sisters of Mercy finally turned over the first shovel-full of dirt on the new site of their long-awaited motherhouse. After securing the property in 1914, the Sisters faced multiple setbacks: supply and manpower shortages due to World War I and the devastating fire that destroyed St. Mary's Convent in Wilkes-Barre, injured many Sisters, and claimed the life of Mother Mary Teresa Walsh (1864-1920), who was the assistant Mother Superior of the entire Order and the primary agent in obtaining the Dallas property. 

That summer day in 1921 brought a renewed sense of purpose and was the beginning of Misericordia. Another groundbreaking took place on July 18, 1922, in which the ceremonial shovel was first used.  That shovel has been used in every groundbreaking at Misericordia since 1922. 

Resolved: Forty Years of Debate at College Misericordia

From 1924 until the mid 1960's, College Misericordia students weighed relevant social and political issues in the form of debate in student clubs on campus, and against other college and university teams, and in tournaments.