Ohio Wesleyan Female College Explained

Ohio Wesleyan Female College was a women's college, operating for two-and-a-half decades, until it merged into Ohio Wesleyan University in 1877. After starting as a Delaware, Ohio academy for women in 1850, equivalent to a high school, it expanded its program in 1853 to begin service as a college.[1] In 1877, the Ohio Wesleyan Female College merged with Ohio Wesleyan University. It had been a Coordinate College in relationship with that nearby men's school since 1853.

History

It is one of the oldest institutions of higher education for women in the United States, which provided general educational opportunities to women in an era when co-educational institutions of higher learning were only sporadically open to students of both sexes. In 1855, funds for the school's first and only institutional building were obtained from Mary Monnett, a student who attended the school. The trustees named the main building Monnett Hall in her honor.

The main Wesleyan Female College Hall in Delaware, Ohio was razed in the late 1970s and the site is now occupied by Monnett Gardens. Wesleyan's annual celebration of spring, Monnett Weekend, is held each April.

Alumnae

See also

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Notes and References

  1. Latta . Brett C. . 2008 . Focus on the Survival of Ohio Wesleyan University: An Antebellum Institution of Higher Education . Christian Higher Education . 7 . 4 . 279–197 . 10.1080/15363750801949347 . EBSCOHost.
  2. Hobbs . Stuart D. . Fall 2020 . Painting the Past: History, Memory, and Community in Modern Ohio . Ohio History . 127 . 2 . 47–91 . 10.1353/ohh.2020.0014 . EBSCOHost.