Women's Independent Living Group

Summary

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The Women's Independent Living Group (WILG) is one of five independent living groups at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It is situated along Massachusetts Avenue in Central Square, Cambridge and consists of five floors of residential areas, kitchens, and student lounges. It houses about 45 female students.

Women's Independent Living Group (WILG)
MIT Independent Living Group
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
WILG Logo
Location355 Massachusetts Ave
Full nameWomen's Independent Living Group
Established1976
Websitewilg.mit.edu

Structure edit

 
Women's Independent Living Group (WILG) second floor lounge

The house consists of 2 entryways leading to five floors of single and double bedrooms for approximately 45 students. The house also hosts a main dining room, four lounges on various floors, a music room, an exercise room, a library, a Graduate Resident Assistant (GRA) suite, two kitchens, a computer room, a guest room, and other common spaces.[1]

The basement houses laundry machines, storage space, and machinery for renovations. Additionally, the back entryway leads to a parking space and areas for bike racks. The building itself is connected structurally to the MIT Alpha Delta Phi (ADP) fraternity, which shares a balcony with the house. The house is run by an executive government, with advisory from the WILG Alumnae Corporation.

History edit

The Women's Independent Living Group (WILG) was founded in 1976 by Kate Hendricks '71, Dorothy L. Bowe '84, Marjorie Pierce, Elisabeth Drake ’58, former Assistant Dean for Student Affairs Nancy Wheatley ’71, Zaurie Zimmerman ’77, and former Dean Ken Wadleigh.

 
Women's Independent Living Group (WILG) first floor kitchen

the 1960s, several sororities at MIT approached coed living groups about starting a chapter on campus. A small group of students approached the Association of MIT Alumnae (AMITA) about the possibility of an all-women's living group. At the time, while there were places for women to live on and off campus, including McCormick, a female-only dorm, and several co-ed fraternities and dorms, there was no cooperative living group for females.

The population of female students on campus was also beginning to overcrowd McCormick, so the Dean of the Graduate School Ken Wadleigh proposed using a building at 351-355 Massachusetts Avenue as the location for the new living group. The building was MIT controlled, although owned independently by Northgate Corporation and being used as an apartment providing off-campus housing to MIT affiliates. Because the building was deemed too large for one living group, half was allotted to Alpha Delta Phi (ADP), then a new fraternity forming on campus.

While 355 Massachusetts Avenue was being renovated, both the women's living group and the fraternity shared the living space in 351. The first floor was built with a ramp instead of stairs for the back door to ensure at least one handicapped-accessible floor. In 1976, the independent living group had its first entry in the Undergraduate Residence Book, distributed to incoming freshmen to help them choose their living arrangement for the year. In the 1976-1977 school year, ten women and six freshman joined the house, alongside four transfer students.[2]

Several of the founders, Dorothy Lowe, Elisabeth Drake, Marjorie Pierce, and Kate Hendricks, formed the WILG Alumnae Corporation as its first members in order to advise the house.

People edit

Notable alumni of WILG include:

WILG symbols edit

The WILG logo was redesigned in 2009 by Clare Bayley '11, consisting of a large ornamental "W" used as an identifier. The font choice was inspired by serif font faces, with purple curlicues wrapped around the outer edge of the dark bronze letter.[10]

See also edit

External links edit

  • MIT Independent Living Groups (ILGs)
  • WILG official site

References edit

  1. ^ MIT Wiki. "WILG". MIT. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  2. ^ Sharon Cooper. "Dotty Bowe and Her Legacy" (PDF). Association of MIT Alumnae (AMITA). Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  3. ^ Brad Feld. "Startups at 351 Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge, MA". FeldThoughts. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  4. ^ Association of Independent Living Groups - Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "IRDF Donor Recognition". Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  5. ^ New York Times. "Campus Life: M.I.T.; Salute to Women At a School Once 99.6% Male". New York Times. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  6. ^ Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper ‘84, Astronaut. "Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper '84, Astronaut". MIT Admissions. Retrieved 28 April 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ NASA Science. "Farah Alibay Systems Engineer". NASA. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  8. ^ Yale University. "Alexandra Piotrowski-Daspit, Ph.D." Yale University. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  9. ^ Association of Independent Living Groups. "Prominent FSILG Alumni/ae". Association of Independent Living Groups. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  10. ^ Clare Bayley. "WILG Logo". Clare Bayley. Retrieved 28 April 2018.