In 1783, female student Lucinda Foote undertook the entrance exams for Yale College (now University), at the age of 12 years old.
[1] Based on the results of the exams, in both Latin and Greek, she met the required standard to study at the university.
However, she was rejected on the basis of her gender by the President of the University, Ezra Stiles.
[2] Stiles wrote of Foote's application:[2][3] Let it be known unto you, that I have tested Miss Lucinda Foote, aged 12, by way of examination, proving that she has made laudable progress in the languages of the learned, viz, the Latin and the Greek; to such an extent that I found her translating and expouding with perfick (sic) ease, both words and sentences in the whole of Vergil's Aeneid, in selected orations of Cicero, and in the Greek testament.
I testify that were it not for her sex, she would be considered fit to be admitted as a student of Yale.When the subject of the admission of women to Yale University was raised in 1963, the student demonstrators referred to themselves as the Lucinda Foote Committee.