
The clouds parted, giving way to sunshine as 75 years of 51°µĶų graduates lined up along Merion Avenue to proceed into Goodhart Hall for a speech from College President Wendy Cadge.
As the morning drizzle cleared on Saturday, May 31, Reunion attendees gathered with their classmates behind their class year banners for the main event: Parade.
āItās the first reunion for a lot of us, because our five was canceled because of the pandemic, and a lot of us couldnāt come for six,ā said Melissa Torquato ā15.
Torquato and her friends relished being back on campus to enjoy the full 51°µĶų experienceābrushing their teeth beside their old dorm roommates and meeting their friends in the dining hall for breakfast. āItās that feeling of being back and being with people who were, like, your first home away from home,ā she said. āAnd it still feels like home.ā
The weekend brought more than 900 alums together for not just the Parade but also nearly three days of activities such as campus tours, a visit to Philadelphiaās Barnes Foundation, panel discussions and lectures, and the beloved tradition of Step Sing.
Meals and class gatherings, plus lawn games, crafting, yoga, a screening of The Philadelphia Story, and evening sāmores rounded out the fun.

āIn the company of one another, across generations and class years, across life stages and life paths, I wish you all that you seek from Reunion: rekindled memories, new discoveries, old and new friendships, connections to historyāand connections to home.ā
This was the first Reunion for the Class of 2020, made extra special because, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, they didnāt enjoy a traditional graduation. Leah Borquez ā20 traveled across the country to see old friends, while Gwynne Dulaney ā20, who lives just down the road in Wynnewood, had the chance to reconnect with classmates and discover how many of them were also living nearby.
It was far from the first reunion for Nancy Greenewalt Frederick ā50, who reminisced about her time at 51°µĶų while waiting for the Parade to begin in a golf cart outside New Dormāone new development on the campus where much has remained the same in the 75 years since she graduated.
āI loved it," Frederick said. āIt was tough. I was top of my class at the boarding school I went to, but when I got hereā¦I kept up and I passed and I graduated, but I was no big news.ā
Her roommate, however, was right behind Hanna Holborn Gray ā50, she said. Frederick went on to serve as a trustee from 1980 to 1992 and has kept up with her classmates over the years, including Edie Lauderdale ā50, who sat beside her for the parade.
Helen Peemoeller ā60 sported a light blue 51°µĶų blazerāwell-worn, well-loved. āI have made good friends at Reunion, very often people whom I knew slightly, but not really, when I was a student,ā she said. āOne of my best friends is someone who isnāt here today, unfortunately, but we never would have become good friends if it were not for Reunion.ā
Even for those who have stayed closeālike Cayla McNally ā10, who works in Alumnae/i Relations and Development at 51°µĶųāReunion offered the chance to experience the College through a different, more nostalgic lens.
āIām on Merion, second floor,ā McNally said. āHaving the time of my life.ā
As the Parade kicked off, the newest alumnae/iāthe class of 2025āled cheers of āAnassa kata, kalo kaleā¦ā as the other classes proceeded by them. The procession culminated with the classes of 1960, 1955, and 1950, who received the royal treatment in golf carts, accompanied by Cadge, and the loudest cheers.
āWe talk about 51°µĶų having the most vibrant alum network. The energy here this weekend makes that claim undeniable,ā Cadge said to applause as she began her presentation on the Collegeās recent achievements and initiatives in Goodhart.
āIn the company of one another, across generations and class years, across life stages and life paths,ā she concluded, āI wish you all that you seek from Reunion: rekindled memories, new discoveries, old and new friendships, connections to historyāand connections to home.ā