Hellmuth Ladies' College (founded September 1869; closed 1899) was a private college for women in London, Ontario. The college was founded by Reverend Isaac Hellmuth[1] and was inaugurated by Prince Arthur. The college had no official connection with a church; but under the patronage of its founder and namesake, it was thoroughly Anglican.[2]Princess Louise became its patroness on her visit in 1878.[3] The college was devoted to the study of arts and sciences. It was located on Richmond Street North, just south of Windermere Road on the hill overlooking the Thames River. Hellmuth Ladies' College was complemented by Hellmuth College — for young men, founded 1865 — also of London, Ontario.[4] Hellmuth Ladies' College closed sometime between 1899 and 1901. The properties were acquired by the Sisters of St. Joseph and transformed into Mount St. Joseph Orphanage.
Property
The land
In 1867, Isaac Hellmuth purchased 150 acres with a hill overlooking the Thames River, and commissioned the design and construction of Hellmuth Ladies’ College.[5]
The main building
The main building was designed by Gundry & Langley, a Toronto-based architectural firm headed by Thomas Gundry (1830–1869) and Henry Langley (1836–1907).[6][7] Since the closing of the college in 1899, the building served as a convent and orphanage. It stood until 1976, when it was demolished. Mount St. Joseph Academy for girls continued in that location until 1985. As of 2011, the building and its grounds are the official home of Windermere On The Mount, a retirement residence operated by Revera.
The main building took on a new role in 1899, when it was purchased by the Sisters of St. Joseph, a Roman Catholic order of sisters dedicated to caring for orphans and the elderly, educating young girls, and ministering to the poor. Under its new name, Mount St. Joseph Mother House, the building and property served as both an orphanage and a convent for the sisters.
The chapel
Isaac Hellmuth erected a small chapel, just a short walk from the main building, and named it St. Anne's Chapel, in honor of the then Lady Principal, Anne Mills.
Hellmuth Ladies' College conferred diplomas, certificates of standing, and medals. Silver medals were awarded for general proficiency; silver and gold medals were awarded for proficiency in special subjects, including divinity, mathematics, science, and languages.[8][9]
1870–188?: Lucy Hannah Clinton (1846–1932) – musical directress (1881), professor of piano,[e][11] Lady Superintendent in 1875, Music Directress in 1877
Miss Anna M. Diller (born 1868; married Edwin D. Starbuck)[17] – teacher of piano
Ida Louisa English (1869–1937),[f] 1900 marriage to Corvin Weld (1868–1942) – professor of piano, organ, and Italian
Miss M. Raymond – piano
1869: Frances Josephine Hatton (1840–1906), 1871 marriage to Charles Greenwood Moore, MD (1818–1886) – composer, professor of composition and singing (daughter of English composer John Liptrot Hatton)
Art Department
1883–1892: Julian Ruggles Seavey, Esq. (1857–1940) – director and professor of painting, modelling, carving, decorative art, and design
Miss E. Burwell – Drawing and Crayon
Miss L. A. M. Jones – Modelling, Carving, and Decorative Art
Martha Justina Hardwick (née Thomas; 1854–1917), 1874 marriage to William James Anderson (died 1887), 1887 marriage to John Wesley Hardwick (1855–1923)
Rev. Edward Noble English, M.A. (1851–1918) – Director
1889–1894: Elizabeth (Libby) Alberta Oakley, B.L. (1862–1961), 1903 marriage to Walter E. Chrysler[19]
Business Department
William Charles Coo (1861–1950) – professor of shorthand
Etiquette Department, Physical Culture, Hygiene, etc.
Mary Stoughton English (née Mulkins; born 1851), wife of Rev. Edward Noble English – Director
Friend Richard Eccles, M.D. (who lived from 1843–1924) – Sanitary Science[20]
Ladies' Drill, Department
C. Major Darnley – Department and Family
G. B. Dayton – Dancing
1884–1999: John Fulcher (born 1850) – Riding and Driving[21]
Miscellaneous faculty
Frances "Fanny" Barbara Moule (1850–1917), 1880 marriage to professor James Edward Wells, M.A., LL.D. (1838–1898); 1904 marriage to Rev. Oates Charles Symonds Wallace (1856–1947)
Edith Fitzgerald (née Edith Mary Jones; 1844–1928), 1864 marriage to Frederick Ardiel Fitzgerald (1840–1924)
"Our Summer In The Valley of the Moon," successive issues, beginning May 28, 1881; OCLC58856350
"The Lennox Library," April 2, 1881
"Unconscious Plagiarisms," June 18, 1881
Student organizations
Chi Omega, a U.S. based sorority, chartered its Phi chapter at Hellmuth Ladies' College in 1899. Its one-year presence at Hellmuth stands as Chi Omega's only international expansion in the sorority's one hundred and thirty-nine years of existence.[32] and Hellmuth's only Greek sorority.
^Ida Louisa English was a half-sister of Edward Noble English
^Dufferin Medals were the forerunner to Governor General's Awards. They were introduced in 1874 by the Earl of Dufferin, Canada's third Governor-General who served from 1872 to 1878, as an award to students for academic or athletic excellence ("The Dufferin Medal," by Stuart P. Kenning, The Canadian Numismatic Journal, Vol. 9, No. 7, July 1964, pps. 287–288; OCLC0008-4573)
^Reaney, James Stewart (2005). "Blackburn, Victoria Grace". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. University of Toronto/Université Laval. Archived from the original on 21 March 2014. Retrieved 29 March 2014.