Louisa Benson

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Mother Mary Hilda
Louisa Benson
Personal
Born12 May 1845
York, Yorkshire, England
Died2 August 1920 (aged 75)
Ballarat, Victoria, Australia
ReligionChristian
Alma materUniversity of Liverpool
Occupation
  • Catholic religious sister
  • educationist
  • school principal

Louisa Benson (1845–1920) was a religious Sister and educationist who was also known as Mother Mary Hilda.[1][2][3]

Early life and education[edit]

Louisa Benson was born on May 12, 1845, in York, England, as the daughter of Christopher and Mary (née Stein). She converted to Catholicism at a young age.[4]

Benson graduated in 1865 from the University of Liverpool at the Faculty of Education, graduating with honours, and went on to teach for a short time at the Hurst Green Grammar School in Liverpool.[5] On January 10, 1868, she entered the Dublin institute of the blessed mother of God, the Loreto. It was situated at the foot of the St. Patrick's Cathedral, in the Dublin archylefarnham area of the city.[6][7]

Life[edit]

Benson moved to Australia in 1876, joining the Irish-born Sisters of the Immaculate Conception who had established their Australian base at Ballarat the previous year under the direction of Father Marius Barry. In March 1877, she was appointed Principal of St Joseph's primary school at Dawson Street in Ballarat. Over the following years, she was regularly asked to open or staff new parish schools, including Redan in 1882, Portland in 1885 and South Melbourne in 1891, as well as taking over an existing school in Randwick in New South Wales in 1896. She was widely regarded as an excellent teacher and administrator, and St Joseph's Ballarat, designed along the same lines as the practising schools at Notre Dame, quickly became a model parochial school for the country.

In 1877, Benson introduced the first five-year pupil-teacher training programme at St. Joseph's. The following year, 1884, she and Father Marius established the ‘Dawson Street Training College’, one of Australia's first Catholic training colleges. Drawing on her memories of Notre ‘s.[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "BENSON, Mother Mary Hilda IBVM - Ballarat Cemeteries". www.ballaratcemeteries.com.au. Retrieved 2024-01-10.
  2. ^ "My Mysterious Mother: Beauty Queen, Rebel Leader, National Icon". Literary Hub. 2017-05-02. Retrieved 2024-01-10.
  3. ^ https://www.loreto.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/Mother-Hilda-Benson.pdf
  4. ^ Melbourne, The University of. "Resource Section - Benson, Louisa (1845 - 1920) - The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia". www.womenaustralia.info. Retrieved 2024-01-10.
  5. ^ https://www.plainfieldlibrary.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Benson.pdf
  6. ^ The Congregationalist and Christian World. Pilgrim Press. 1905.
  7. ^ Bailey, L. H.; Bebb, M. S.; Blaschka, Rudolf; Deane, Walter; Lloyd, C. G.; Morong, Thomas; Owen, Maria L.; Rose, J. N.; Allen, Glover M. (1845). "Walter Deane correspondence". Biodiversity Heritage Library. Retrieved 2024-01-10.
  8. ^ Soule Newsletter. Soule Kindred. 1983.

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