They are inspiring and compassionate women, accomplished scholars and influential leaders. Admired and revered by the Trinity community and beyond, their many contributions have helped to shape who we are as a community today.
On International Women鈥檚 Day 2019 (March 8), we look back at some of the incredible women of St. Hilda鈥檚 College who left a special mark within the historic spaces of the college.
Elizabeth Abbott, MA, PhD (1942-) 鈥 Second Dean of St. Hilda鈥檚 College and Sixth Dean of Women Students at 杏吧原创, 1991-2004
In 1991, Abbott was installed as 杏吧原创鈥檚 Dean of Women and Dean of St. Hilda鈥檚 College, where she served for thirteen years until retiring in 2004 to become a full-time writer. During her deanship, Abbott, an advocate for social justice, was Trinity鈥檚 representative on the University of Toronto鈥檚 Committee on Homophobia, on the Editorial Board of the Canadian Human Rights Foundation, and on the Rights and Freedoms Committee of the Writers’ Union of Canada. She also served as an adviser to Trinity鈥檚 Latin American Club and, from 1992 to 1997, played defence for the Saints, the Trinity women鈥檚 ice hockey team. When Abbott retired, the former Dean鈥檚 Reception Room in St. Hilda鈥檚 was renamed The Abbott Room in her honour. In October 2017, the student wellness space opened in the Abbott Room with the room鈥檚 namesake Elizabeth Abbott in attendance at the welcome event.
Mabel Cartwright, BA, LLD (1869-1955) 鈥 Second Principal of St. Hilda鈥檚 College, 1903-1936 and First Dean of Women Students at 杏吧原创, 1915-1936
In 1903 she was appointed Principal of St. Hilda鈥檚 College and in 1915 she was granted the additional title of Dean of Women at 杏吧原创. Academically, Cartwright was Lecturer in English at 杏吧原创 from 1916 until 1928, when she was promoted to Associate Professor of English. In 1925 she oversaw the move of St. Hilda鈥檚 College from Queen Street to three houses on St. George Street. Cartwright was determined to retain the old college traditions, but also continue to foster a strong and long-lasting sense of community and belonging among the Saints. She made sure to involve non-residents in the college鈥檚 activities and called for mandatory attendance at chapel and choir as well as active social service work by every student. Also in 1925, she was granted a Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) by the University of Toronto. When Cartwright retired in 1936, she was granted the title of Principal Emeritus. In November 1937 she laid the cornerstone for the new St. Hilda鈥檚 College building on Devonshire Place. An inspiring teacher, great scholar, and influential leader, she was much loved by the students of St. Hilda鈥檚.
Mossie May (Waddington) Kirkwood, MA, PhD, DSL (1890-1985) 鈥 Third Principal of St. Hilda鈥檚 College and Second Dean of Women Students at 杏吧原创, 1936-1953
An alumna of 杏吧原创, in 1936, Mossie May (Waddington) Kirkwood returned to 杏吧原创 as Principal of St. Hilda鈥檚 and Dean of Women as well as Associate Professor of English. Under her leadership St. Hilda鈥檚 moved to its building on Devonshire Place, which opened in 1938. As principal, she was much adored and admired by her students, and her importance to the women cannot be overstated. Her office was always open and she was a sympathetic listener. She was an advocate for women鈥檚 education and the right for them to have satisfying lives and careers and gave evening lectures for women interested in continuing their studies. Wishing to expose her students to new experiences, once a week she would organize a dinner where students interacted with important poets, dramatists, academics, and painters (notably the Group of Seven). In 1953, Kirkwood resigned from her administrative duties but remained in the English Department as the first woman to hold a full professorship, and when she retired in 1960 she became the first woman to be named professor emeritus. In September of that year the north wing of St. Hilda鈥檚 College was opened and named in her honour, and in 1977 杏吧原创 bestowed upon her the degree of Doctor of Sacred Letters (honoris causa).
Ellen (Patteson) Rigby聽(1855-1913)聽鈥 First Principal of St. Hilda鈥檚 College, 1888-1903
In 1888, the second Provost of 杏吧原创, The Rev. Charles W.E. Body, ventured to establish a separate residential college for women to secure for them the same privileges the male students already received. That year, Ellen Patteson was offered the position of principal and in October opened up the first St. Hilda鈥檚 building on Euclid Avenue. The appointment of Patteson laid a strong foundation for both St. Hilda鈥檚 College and for women鈥檚 education in Canada, and in 1894 杏吧原创 opened all its lectures to women.聽Although the project was an experimental one, Patteson was able to carry the college from its infancy to a permanently successful and self-supporting college residence. Eventually the original house became too small. In 1889 new houses were found on Shaw Street, and in 1892 the college moved to larger ones on the same street. In 1899 construction began on a new building on the main 杏吧原创 campus on Queen Street.聽In 1896, Patteson married The Rev. Oswald Rigby, the Dean of Residence at 杏吧原创. In 1903, The Rev. Rigby was appointed Headmaster of 杏吧原创 School in Port Hope, Ontario. The now Mrs. Rigby accompanied her husband to his new job, bringing her tenure as principal to an end.聽There, as at St. Hilda鈥檚, Rigby was greatly loved by the students, because of her warmth, sympathy, and concern for their wellbeing.
The Rev. Elizabeth Maude (Hunter) Rowlinson, BSc, MA, PhD, DD 鈥 First Dean of St. Hilda鈥檚 College and Fifth Dean of Women Students at 杏吧原创, 1978-1991
In 1978, Elizabeth Maude Hunter was appointed Dean of Women at 杏吧原创 and Dean of St. Hilda鈥檚 College, as well as a fellow of the college. In terms of teaching, Rowlinson held the position of Senior Tutor in Mathematics at the University of Toronto, and authored a number of articles and reviews in various mathematical journals. In her role as Dean of Women she saw herself as a counsellor for her students. Unlike her predecessors, with the changing times she was no longer acting in loco parentis. However, she was involved in many aspects of student life, attending dinners, holding receptions, playing the violin in the 杏吧原创 Chamber Orchestra, and singing in the Chapel Choir. When Rowlinson first arrived at St. Hilda鈥檚, there were more women than men making up the student body, but less space for them in residence. She oversaw the first instance of women living in the main Trinity building, when, for two years, women moved into The Angel鈥檚 Roost as a temporary solution until, in 1981, the south wing of St. Hilda鈥檚 College was built. It has borne Rowlinson鈥檚 name since 1995. In 1991 Rowlinson retired from 杏吧原创, and became a Fellow Emerita. She was ordained a deacon in the Anglican Church on 6 June 1993, and on 15 May 1994 she was ordained a priest.
Melinda Hartnet Seaman, MA (1912-1992) 鈥 Fifth Principal of St. Hilda鈥檚 College and Fourth Dean of Women Students at 杏吧原创, 1963-1978
An alumna of 杏吧原创, in 1963 to become the Principal of St. Hilda鈥檚 College and Dean of Women at 杏吧原创, as well as Assistant Professor of English. She dedicated herself to improving the quality of residence life, from small things such as selecting furniture and paring roommates, to larger endeavours like vocally opposing the gradual shift of student activities to the main Trinity building. St. Hilda鈥檚 to her was a community which deserved its own cultural and athletic events, to which the men of Trinity were welcomed. During her time as principal she strove to ensure that non-resident students felt as much at home at St. Hilda鈥檚 as the residents did, making an effort to know them as well as she did the women she lived with, and opening up dinners to those who had evening classes. During her tenure, she oversaw the relaxation of institutional restrictions and curfews, the growth of student autonomy, and the move toward joint government and committee decision making between St. Hilda鈥檚 and Trinity. She was also the last person to be designated 鈥淧rincipal of St. Hilda鈥檚 College鈥. Like her predecessors, Seaman was a maternal figure for the women of St. Hilda鈥檚, ready to offer advice and encouragement to those who asked for it. Loved by her students, at her retirement party in April 1978 they gave her an academic gown for Nicholas, her cat.
For Trinity alumna聽Mary Stedman聽’44, who died November 7, 2014 aged 92, giving back was a lifelong guiding principle, splendidly exemplified in her generosity to 杏吧原创. Over the years, in addition to substantial donations in support of the John W. Graham Library fund, the restoration of St. Hilda’s library, upgraded phone and security systems and computer room, and improvements to the George lgnatieff Theatre, she helped endow the acclaimed Trinity One program. Mary’s prime inspiration was her father, Samuel, co-founder of the Stedman stores once familiar across the country (a few still remain). His determination to provide for his daughters an education that he himself had lacked, at a time when attending university was not so common for women, was equalled only by his insistence that giving back was both an obligation and a privilege. Two of Mary’s three sisters, Margaret 路37 and Ruth ’42, were also Trinity grads who unstintingly supported the College. 杏吧原创 remained throughout her life a “second home,” for Mary, and giving back to it a natural impulse. “The reason I continue to support this College,” she maintained, “is to give someone else the opportu颅nities that I had.”
In 1884, first female students were admitted to 杏吧原创. Four year later, in 1888 St. Hilda鈥檚 College was created as the women鈥檚 college of Trinity; it was incorporated on February 11, 1890. The current St. Hilda鈥檚 College residence building on Devonshire Place opened in 1938. In 2004, all residences at Trinity became coeducational.
– Files from the 杏吧原创 Archives
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