Jump to content

Moulton College (Toronto)

Coordinates: 43°40′15″N 79°23′07″W / 43.6708°N 79.3852°W / 43.6708; -79.3852
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moulton College
Moulton College, Toronto, Ontario, approximately 1909
Moulton College, Toronto, Ontario, approximately 1909
Address
Map
88 Bloor Street East

Toronto
,
Ontario

Canada
Coordinates43°40′15″N 79°23′07″W / 43.6708°N 79.3852°W / 43.6708; -79.3852
Information
Funding typePrivate
Religious affiliation(s)Baptist Convention of Ontario and Quebec
DenominationBaptist
Established1888
FounderSusan Moulton McMaster
StatusClosed
Sister schoolWoodstock College

Moulton College was a private girls' school in Toronto, Canada which was part of McMaster University.[1][2][3] The school's curriculum was designed to prepare young women for their lives as wives and mothers, although it also offered a matriculation course for women who wanted to attend the University of Toronto or McMaster University.[4]

Founded in 1888, Moulton College was located in the former home of Senator William McMaster and Susan Moulton McMaster on Bloor Street East. The school was affiliated with the Baptist Convention of Ontario and Quebec.

After decades of financial difficulty, McMaster University closed the school in 1954 and sold the buildings.[5]

History

[edit]

Moulton College began its life as part of Woodstock College, a Baptist college in Woodstock, Ontario. Woodstock, originally known as the Canadian Literary Institute, began to allow women to study in 1860. In 1887, with an endowment from William McMaster, the theology department of Woodstock College and Toronto Baptist College merged to create McMaster University. Woodstock College continued to operate as a college until McMaster closed the school in July 1926.[6] McMaster died in September 1887, one month prior to the McMaster University's charter becoming active.

McMaster's widow, Susan Moulton McMaster, shared her husband's passion for education, particularly for the education of young women. In his will, McMaster provided not only a handsome sum for McMaster University, but also for his wife and provided her exclusive use of the couple's Bloor Street Mansion for the remainder of her life. After several unsuccessful attempts to sell the mansion, Susan conveyed the residence to McMaster University for the purpose of establishing a preparatory school for girls. The Ladies' Department of Woodstock College transferred control of its Ladies' Department to McMaster, and the mansion was reopened as Moulton Ladies' College in 1888. [7]

In 1954, McMaster University closed the school and sold the buildings.[5] The buildings were demolished in 1958.[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Moulton College (plaque)". Ontario Heritage Trust. 2016-12-08. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  2. ^ Hall, Alfreda (1987). Per ardua: the story of Moulton College, Toronto, 1888-1954. Toronto: Moulton College Alumnae Association. ISBN 0-921963-00-9. OCLC 17863752.,OCLC 978127298
  3. ^ Hopkins, John Castell (1898). Academia for Young Women. Linscott Publishing Company. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Legendre, Anne Carmelle (September 1981). The Baptist Contribution to Nineteenth Century Education for Women: An Examination of Moulton College and McMaster University (MA thesis). McMaster University. pp. 111–114. Retrieved 2024-08-21.
  5. ^ a b "Arbitrary, Undemocratic, Not Christian, Cameron Says of Moulton Closing". Toronto Daily Star. Toronto, Ontario. June 16, 1954. p. 1. ProQuest 1434482823.
  6. ^ Hall, Alfreda (1987). Per Ardua: The Story of Moulton College, Toronto, 1888-1954. Toronto: Moulton College Alumnae Association. p. 13. ISBN 0921963009.
  7. ^ Alfreda, Hall (1987). Per Ardua: The Story of Moulton College, Toronto, 1888-1954. Toronto: Moulton College Alumni Association. pp. 11, 16. ISBN 0921963009.
  8. ^ "Moulton College". Ontario Heritage Trust. Retrieved 2024-08-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
[edit]