Lucy Cobb Institute Explained

Lucy Cobb Institute
Location:200 Block, North Milledge Avenue
City:Athens
State:Georgia
Country:United States
Established:1859
Founder:Thomas R.R. Cobb
Closed:1931
Lucy Cobb Institute Campus
Embed:yes
Nrhp Type:hd
Nocat:yes
Location:200 N. Milledge Ave., University of Georgia campus, Athens, Georgia
Coordinates:33.9561°N -83.3897°W
Built:1858
Architect:W.W. Thomas
Architecture:Early Republic, Octagon Mode, Regency
Added:March 16, 1972
Refnum:72000377

The Lucy Cobb Institute was a girls' school on Milledge Avenue in Athens, Georgia, United States. It was founded by Thomas R.R. Cobb, and named in honor of his daughter, who had died of scarlet fever[1] at age 14,[2] shortly before construction was completed and doors opened;[3] it was incorporated in 1859.[4] The cornerstone for the Seney-Stovall Chapel was laid in May 1882,[5] and the octagonal building was dedicated in 1885. The school closed in 1931.

The campus of the Lucy Cobb Institute was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 16, 1972. Today, the Carl Vinson Institute of Government of the University of Georgia is housed in the former Lucy Cobb Institute.

History

Background

In 1854, a piece called "The Education of Our Girls" ran in a local paper, the Athens Watchman.[6] The letter was written by Laura Cobb (Mrs. Williams) Rutherford,[7] who was "writing from a ladylike modesty" about the poor state of education for women in the South.[8] It was signed "Mother" and argued, "girls have the same intellectual constitution as men and have the same right as men to intellectual cultural development".[9] One of the letter's readers was Mrs. Rutherford's brother, Thomas R.R. Cobb, the father of several daughters. Cobb, a lawyer,[10] was completely unaware of the author's identity and after reading the editorial began raising funds for a girls' school.

School opens

The trustees purchased eight acres of land on what is now known as Milledge Avenue. When the school opened on January 10, 1859, its first principal was R. M. Wright. (It was in April of this same year the Watkinsville Road acquired its present name of Milledge Avenue.)[11] The school was later headed by Madame Sosnowski (who organized the Home School after leaving the Lucy Cobb Institute).

Mildred Lewis Rutherford, or "Miss Millie", a graduate herself of Lucy Cobb Institute,[12] took over leadership of the school in 1880. The Georgia Writers' Project, in a 1940 publication on the state published in the American Guide Series, characterized her thusly:

'Miss Millie,' always a champion of southern traditions, was a woman of powerful personality, commanding presence, and fearlessly outspoken opinions; she was known widely for the speeches she delivered in hoop skirts.

Seney-Stovall Chapel

See main article: Seney–Stovall Chapel. It was Miss Millie who decided the girls needed a chapel and had them write seeking funding for one. In 1881, Nellie Stovall wrote "a beautiful and girlish letter" to George I. Seney, who responded with the funding for the $10,000 structure, an octagonal red brick building called the Seney-Stovall Chapel. It was designed by a local architect William Winstead Thomas.[13]

When Miss Millie stepped down from the role of principal in 1895, she was replaced at the school's helm by her sister, Mrs. M.A. Lipscomb. Rutherford and Lipscomb were nieces of T.R.R. Cobb.[14]

In 1986, R.E.M. recorded two songs in the chapel for the documentary .

The end

Although the institute "became a well-known girls' preparatory school", "praised throughout the South for its emphasis on gentle manners and old-fashioned accomplishments", it "did not survive the depression", and closed its doors in 1931. At that point, the University of Georgia took over its campus, and used the main building as a women's dormitory and eventually storage.

A restoration effort to save the complex was completed in 1997 with the renovation of Seney-Stovall Chapel.[15] The former Lucy Cobb Institute became the home of the Carl Vinson Institute of Government.

Notable alumnae

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Boney, F.N.. A Walking Tour of the University of Georgia. 12 February 2011. 1989. University of Georgia Press. 0-8203-1081-6. 88–89.
  2. Book: Adams, Herbert Baxter. Education in Georgia. 1889. Government Printing Office. Washington, DC. 110–12. Miscalleneous Institutions.
  3. Book: Jones, Charles Edgeworth. Herbert Baxter Adams. Herbert Baxter Adams. Education in Georgia. Contributions to American educational history. 5. 1889. 110–112.
  4. Book: Acts Passed by the General Assembly of Georgia. https://books.google.com/books?id=QRc4AAAAIAAJ&q=Lucy+Cobb+Institute&pg=PA83. 12 February 2011. Act to incorporate the Lucy Cobb Institute for the education of ladies in the town of Athens . Georgia. 1860.
  5. Web site: Seney-Stovall Chapel History. Carl Vinson Institute of Government, University of Georgia. 11 February 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110720084901/http://www.cviog.uga.edu/about/chapel/history.php. 20 July 2011.
  6. Book: Knight, Lucian Lamar. Georgia's Landmarks Memorials and Legends: Landmarks and memorials. 12 February 2011. 1. 1913. Printed for the author by The Byrd Printing Company, State Printers. Atlanta. 437–438. 1333051.
  7. Book: Case, Sarah. Ann Short Chirhart & Betty Wood. Georgia Women: Their Lives and Times. https://books.google.com/books?id=VqU2PsmlYpMC&q=%22Mildred+Lewis+Rutherford%22&pg=PA272. 2009. University of Georgia Press. Athens, Georgia. 978-0-8203-3900-9. 272–296. Mildred Lewis Rutherford (1851-1928) The redefinition of New South White Womanhood.
  8. Book: Georgia Writers' Project. Federal Writers' Project. Georgia: a Guide to Its Towns and Countryside. 12 February 2011. 1940. University of Georgia Press. 155. 9781603540100.
  9. Book: Marsh. Kenneth Frederick. Marsh. Blanche. Athens: Georgia's Columned City. 1979. Cherokee Publishing Company. Atlanta. 0-87797-048-3. 58–59.
  10. Book: McCash, William B.. Thomas R.R. Cobb (1823–1862): The Making of a Southern Nationalist . 12 February 2011. 2004. Mercer University Press. Macon, Georgia. 0-86554-858-7. 101–106.
  11. Book: Hynds, Ernest. Antebellum Athens and Clarke County Georgia. 1974. University of Georgia Press. Athens, Georgia. 0-8203-0341-0. 48.
  12. Book: Rutherford, Mildred Lewis. Unknown. History of Athens & Clarke County, Georgia. 1923. 2000. H.J. Rowe (original), Southern Historical Press, Inc. (reprint with new material). Athens, Georgia; Greenville, South Carolina. 0-89308-412-3. 105–107. Life Sketch of Miss Mildred Rutherford.
  13. Book: Thomas. Frances Taliaferro. Koch. Mary Levin. A Portrait of Historic Athens and Clarke County, Second edition. 2009. University of Georgia Press. 978-0-8203-1356-6.
  14. Book: Blandin, Isabella Margaret Elizabeth . I. M. E. Blandin . History of Higher Education of Women in the South Prior to 1860. seney-stovall chapel.. 1909. 12 February 2011. The Neale Publishing Company. New York and Washington. 149–152.
  15. Book: Boney. F.N.. Adams. Michael. Michael F. Adams. A pictorial history of the University of Georgia. 12 February 2011. 2000. University of Georgia Press. 91. 9780820321981.