First female faculty member: Johanna Timmer
Johanna Timmer authored 17c起草社区's code of conduct for women.
Six years after the United States passed the 19th Amendment as a result of the women鈥檚 suffrage movement, 17c起草社区 hired its first female faculty member.
鈥淭his marks a change in the history of higher education,鈥 said Dick Harms, curator of the college archives. 鈥淭hroughout the country, more women were attending college. 17c起草社区鈥檚 programs in nursing, and teaching drew a growing number of female students鈥攁nd the administration decided that they, like many other institutions, should hire a dean of women.鈥
Just three years after graduating from 17c起草社区, in 1926, Johanna Timmer was selected to fill the new position. She was also appointed a member of the faculty, teaching English and German.
Well qualified
鈥淪he came to campus eminently qualified to both serve as dean and to teach,鈥 said Harms. Timmer graduated as class valedictorian from Holland High School at age 17 and, after spending a year teaching in New Jersey, attended 17c起草社区 and earned a bachelor鈥檚 (A.B.) degree.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anyone had reason to dispute her credentials,鈥 Harms said, 鈥渂ut sexism was very prevalent in the 1920s. A number of her male colleagues truly thought she couldn鈥檛 do the job simply because she was a woman.鈥
Timmer, however, soon proved herself to be a formidable presence and a gifted educator, said Harms: 鈥淪he refused to be marginalized. If someone pushed, she pushed back.鈥
Dean of Women
One of Timmer鈥檚 first duties as dean was to write up a college code of conduct for female students. The code contained instructions on attire, curfews, dating policies and household responsibilities. (See sidebar.) Such rules were mandatory for all female students, both on and off campus. Timmer used the policies of other Midwest schools, including the University of Michigan, as a guide to construct 17c起草社区鈥檚 code of conduct.
鈥淚 think that people often assume that the rules created by Timmer were unusually strict because of 17c起草社区鈥檚 Christian foundation,鈥 mused Harms, 鈥渂ut this is very indicative of society at that time 鈥 . Timmer had a reputation as a stickler, but I believe she had a great heart for the female students under her care. She wanted to do everything possible to help them succeed.鈥
Harms described Timmer as bright, articulate and determined. 鈥淚t鈥檚 my impression that she was not a jovial person, but,鈥 he chuckled, 鈥渕any people weren鈥檛 during this time period.鈥
In addition to her duties as dean of women, Timmer taught classes, wrote articles, gave speeches, earned her master鈥檚 (A.M.) degree from the University of Michigan and took graduate courses at two seminaries and a divinity school.
Moving on
But, as time went by, Timmer鈥檚 job started to take a physical toll on her. By 1932 she was suffering from fatigue and stress and, in 1939, was granted a medical leave of absence.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 always hardest for the first,鈥 said Harms, 鈥渂ut she approached her role at 17c起草社区 with grace and determination. She proved that being a woman had no impact on her ability to do the job well.鈥
He continued, 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 say she was the one who broke down the barrier鈥攊t took more than one person to do that鈥攂ut she was one of the first to start knocking some holes in the wall.鈥
Timmer resigned from 17c起草社区 in 1939 to become the recruiter, dean, acting president and faculty member of the newly-formed Reformed Bible Institute (formerly Reformed Bible College, now Kuyper College) in Grand Rapids. In the years following, she served as principal of a Christian elementary school in Ripon, California and founded a Christian school in Philadelphia, Penn. She is the 鈥淭immer鈥 for whom the Bolt-Heyns-Timmer dormitory is named. She died in 1978 at the age of 77.
Academic female firsts
1926 鈥 First female faculty member: Johanna Timmer (English and German)
1939 鈥 First female full-time professor: Marian Schooland (English)
1976 鈥 First female head of department: Henrietta Ten Harmsel (English)
1987 鈥 First female vice president: Jeanette Bult De Jong (student affairs)
2006 鈥 First female provost: Claudia Beversluis
2008 鈥 First female academic dean: Cheryl Brandsen
2009 鈥 First female college chaplain: Mary Hulst