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・ The Collector's Series, Volume One
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・ The College at Southeastern
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The College Club of Boston
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・ The College Dropout
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・ The College Game
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・ The College Hill Independent
・ The College Kicked-Out
・ The College Kidnappers
・ The College of Allied Medical Science, Nagasaki University
・ The College of Haringey, Enfield and North East London
・ The College of Health Care Professions
・ The College of New Jersey
・ The College of Richard Collyer
・ The College Preparatory School


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The College Club of Boston : ウィキペディア英語版
The College Club of Boston

The College Club of Boston is a private membership organization founded in 1890 as the first women's college club in the United States. Located in the historic Back Bay of Boston, Massachusetts at 44 Commonwealth Avenue, the College Club was established by nineteen college educated women whose mission was to form a social club where they and other like-minded women could meet and share companionship. The College Club of Boston the oldest residential college club in the United States.
==History==
In December 1890, 76 Marlborough Street, also located in Boston's Back Bay, became the first home of The College Club. The building at 76 Marlborough was purchased by Club member Mabel Cummings in 1893.
In April 1905, the College Club acquired the clubhouse at 40 Commonwealth Avenue, which contained an Old English drawing room, a fine big cafe with a male chef, and seven bedrooms, each of which "were furnished and decorated in the colors of various women's colleges: crimson rambler wallpaper for Radcliffe, blue silk curtains for Wellesley, white (with brass beds) for Smith, dawn pink and gray for Vassar." At that time, the College Club served 600 members, which grew to 1,243 members by 1915.〔
In 1924 the Club purchased 44 Commonwealth Avenue, which was the family home of Royal E. Robbins, a major stockholder in the Waltham Watch Company, and once the home of American stage actress Maude Adams. The brownstone townhouse was built in 1864 and was designed in the High Victorian style.
From its earliest days, The College Club was host to literary luminaries such as Mark Twain, Vladimir Nabokov, poet Oliver Wendell Holmes, and novelist F. Marion Crawford. Other well-known visitors to the Club have included actress Sarah Bernhardt, social activist Julia Ward Howe, abolitionist and suffragist Lucy Stone, health care advocate Judy Norsigian and Senator Edward M. Kennedy.
Club members took up the cause of educational philanthropy in 1985 and established The College Club Scholarship Fund, Inc. as an IRS 501(c)(3) designated charitable organization. The endowed fund is administered by Club members. Each year since 1986, the Scholarship Fund has awarded college tuition assistance to deserving high school seniors from Boston Public Schools.
On May 20, 2002, the City of Boston certified the club's status as the oldest (i.e., first) women's college club in the United States.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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