Meet Spelman College’s new president, Dr. Mary Campbell (exclusive photos)

Dr. Mary Schmidt Campbell is formally installed as the 10th president of Spelman College (Photo Credit: Spelman College)
Dr. Mary Schmidt Campbell is formally installed as the 10th president of Spelman College (Photo Credit: Spelman College)

Spelman College has begun a new chapter in its 135-year history when Mary Schmidt Campbell, Ph.D., was inaugurated 10th president during a formal investiture ceremony on Saturday, April 9, at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta. The inauguration theme of equality was interwoven into four days of inaugural events, which involved a Founders Day convocation, campus celebration, faculty symposia, arts celebration, a Spike Lee retrospective (WAKE UP. WAKE UP. UP YOU WAKE), investiture and interfaith service.

Rosalind Gates Brewer, C’84, chair of the Spelman College Board of Trustees and Board Executive Committee, and president and CEO, Sam’s Club, conducted the presidential inauguration.


“Dr. Mary Schmidt Campbell is a visionary and an accomplished leader who is well prepared to move the mission of Spelman forward from a very broad global perspective,” said Brewer. “We are pleased and excited she accepted the call to serve the College, which prepares women of the African Diaspora to excel academically and make a positive difference as agents of change around the world.”

Dr. Campbell assumed the helm of Spelman August 1, 2015, following an extensive national search led by the Board of Trustees. She succeeded Dr. Beverly Tatum, who was president from 2002-2015.


By focusing on equality as an inauguration theme, Dr. Campbell acknowledges its crucial role in today’s society. “For the past 135 years, Spelman has created a space where women could acquire the tools, skills and wisdom to close our country’s equality gap,” she said. “Spelman has come through those years strong and healthy, and now leads the country in producing outstanding Black women in the fields of science, medicine, law, business, the arts and public service.”

Prior to her appointment as president, Dr. Campbell was dean emerita of Tisch School of the Arts at New York University and University Professor in the Department of Art and Public Policy. She also served as New York City’s cultural affairs commissioner under two mayors. Dr. Campbell was appointed by President Barack Obama as the vice chair of the U.S. President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities, a non-partisan advisory committee to the president of the United States on cultural matters. Early in her career, she led the Studio Museum in Harlem.

Dr. Campbell holds a bachelor’s degree in English literature from Swarthmore College, a master’s degree in art history from Syracuse University, and a doctorate in humanities, also from Syracuse. She has received honorary degrees from The College of New Rochelle, Colgate University, City University of New York, Pace University, Maryland Institute College of Art and Swarthmore College and is the recipient of numerous awards and honors. She is currently a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and sits on the board of The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

Guest speakers slated for the inauguration included Thelma Golden, director and chief curator, Studio Museum in Harlem; Freeman Hrabowski, president, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Alfre Woodard, award-winning actress, and member of the U.S. President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities; and Beverly Daniel Tatum, Ph.D., president emeritus, Spelman College.

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