The Women’s Table at Yale was designed by Maya Lin, the famous alumni best known for designing the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington in 1982, and is the most visible sign of the commemoration of women at Yale. The Women’s Table was commissioned in 1989 by Yale President Benno Schmidt for the 20th anniversary of the coeducation of Yale College, and Lin took the opportunity to mark the female students registered each year since the inception of Yale in 1701.

The granite blocks of the Women’s Table form a tribute to the women that have made the university what it is today. A string of slowly growing numbers denote the female students if Yale; as the numbers grow from a string of zeros deep in the dark center of the monument, they spiral out with the passing of each year till the reach the edge of the table filled with babbling water. Lin’s Women’s Table resides in front of the Sterling Memorial Library, which is considered to be the centerpiece of the Gothic Revival campus. With such a prominent place for her monument, Lin has left a note etched in stone of not just how far the women of Yale have come, but how far they have to go.

The Women’s Table is more than a simple sculpture for many of the women of Yale. It in many ways represents not the 20 years of co-education for which it was designed, but the inequality of the previous 280 before women were allowed to find their education within the famed halls. When Lin was asked about the Women’s Table for the PBS special “Becoming American: The Chinese Experience” she said “the Women’s Table at Yale was even a trickier one because it’s not a memorial. The then-President Benno Schmidt called up and said, “Could you do a sculpture at Yale commemorating women at Yale?” What does that mean? I had no idea. That one, I sat on for over a year, reading about co-education at Yale, women at Yale, the history of gender at Yale. And all I remember having gone there for seven years is that every little stained-glass image, every sculpture, every statue was a man.”

Women’s Table Facts