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The Marlboro College campus is located on South Road in the town of Marlboro, Vermont, in the Green Mountains. In the early years of the college, students and faculty worked together to adapt the buildings of three farms on the site, [2] which became the main classroom building, the dining hall, and the admissions and administration buildings.
Walter F. Hendricks (1892 – September 29, 1979) was an educator and founder of three colleges in Vermont, all of which would later close. He founded Marlboro College (1946–2020), Windham College (1951–1978), and Mark Hopkins College (1964–1978).
Kevin Francis Flaherty Quigley was an American higher education leader and a non-profit executive. [citation needed] He was the ninth president of Marlboro College in Vermont.
East Central Ohio ESC Member of Education. Terry L. Miller: 104. Tri-County ESC Member of Board of Education, District 2. Nathan Stutz: 1. Alliance City Member Board of Education (elect 2) Suzie ...
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Ellen McCulloch-Lovell was the president of Marlboro College from 2004 until 2015. [1] [2] A 1969 graduate of Bennington College, McCullouch-Lovell was executive directior of the Vermont Arts Council from 1970 to 1983. She served as Chief of Staff to Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy from 1983 to 1994.
MARLBORO - The township planning board approved the second phase of an affordable housing development off Tennent Road on Wednesday night, adding 104 apartments across six buildings.
Marlboro was laid out in 1827, taking its name from Marlboro Township. [3] The community was originally built up chiefly by Quakers. [4] By 1833, Marlborough had about 50 inhabitants. [5] A post office called Marlborough was established in 1833, the name was changed to Marlboro in 1893, and the post office closed in 1906. [6]