Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH)

 - Class of 1952

Page 9 of 104

 

Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 9 of 104
Page 9 of 104



Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 8
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Page 9 text:

THE 1952 TQPKNGT 59 us, MFE -v Q

Page 8 text:

of little ones and Miss Scott with her admiring older girls looked forward with eagerness to the adventure of each opening day. Most schools which have survived over decades have been founded by experienced teachers having educational theories and moral or religious purpose, financially supported by friends with faith in their views. Miss Scott and Miss Kelley had only their youth and enthusiasm to guide them. They had no financial backer, no bank accountg only so many dol- lars and cents could go out as had first come in from tuition fees. Yet from the start, the School was a good school, with sound teaching, high stand- ards. and serious work. At the end of the first year Miss Kelley's ambition to prepare girls for eastern col- leges was realized when one hundred per cent of the graduating class received cards stating that they had been accepted by Wellesley! There were just two of them-Bernice Davis fScarlettJ and Eleanor Kurtz fBeatonj. After three years Miss Kelley and Miss Scott, ac- companied by Mrs. Kelley, moved their school into a large house in the neighborhood. Discarding its former name of Elmhurst, they called it Parsons Place. because from the time it had been built in 1840, it had been in the possession of the Parsons family. The School continued to grow and prosper. At the end of six years there were ninety pupils, forty-live in the high school, forty-five in lower grades. In 1904, however, Miss Kelley and Miss Scott left the school they had established, to pursue their separate ways. Neither had any further professional connec- tion with education. Miss Kelley married a pros- perous young business man, John Clifford Whitridge, president of the Buckeye Steel Castings Company. Miss Scott said she was tired of teaching and sailed off to Europe, chaperoning a group of young women. Miss Kelley found as her successor Miss Alice Gladden, part-time English teacher for the two years previous, a woman of character and educational ex- perience, who was a real asset to the young School. Miss Scott's successor was Miss Grace Latimer jones, an aluma of Bryn Mawr, with some slight teaching experience. Hitherto generally known by its nickname, the Scott-Kelley School now assumed what had from the beginning been its official title- Columbus School for Girls. As Mrs. john C. Whitridge, Miss Kelley now re- turned to the life for which Miss Phelps School for Young Ladies had prepared her, becoming one of the popular young matrons of Columbus. At that time there was in the city but one recognized social set, which continued to maintain traditions of the previous century, derived largely from the south. Though for a time she lived not far from Parsons Place, for thirteen years she never set foot inside the door she had left on the day of her marriage. The new owners had come in to find faded flowers amid the wedding decorations left behind in the old blue drawing room where she had been married. She came at last about 1917 to enter her daughter, Betty Steele, in the First Form. Her elder child had been a boy, John C. Whitridge, Jr. Until 1936 Mrs. Whitridge lived a pleasant social life, busy with clubs and charities, in daily contact with friends of her girlhood days. That year came the crushing blow of her husband's death. In 1939 she' left Columbus to make her home in New Canaan, to be near her two children, both married and living nearby. Here with her gift for making friends, she was soon one of a congenial circle. Sorrows and changes came fast upon her. Her daughter's husband died, leaving one small daughter, Betty Steele's second happy marriage, however, soon gave her another granddaughter. An overwhelming sorrow came again in 1946 when, in a yachting accident on the Sound, her son was lost, leaving four small children. To all associated with the School, it was a great joy when she came to Columbus to walk in the Fiftieth Anniversary Commencement procession and to address the alumnae at the annual June sup- per, telling them about early events in the School. of which no record existed. It must have been a great satisfaction to her, on that soft june evening, to sit with the two members of her first graduating class, and under the rising moon, to look out over representatives of fifty classes grouped on the lawn and round the swimming pool in the garden of Eleanor Kurtz Beaton, one of the two who had first iustified her idea of founding a college preparatory school for girls. No one present that evening will ever forget the beauty of the scene. The young alumnae looked with wonder and admiration on this youthful-appearing, slender woman, with the winning manner and the sweet voice, who founded their School so long before-at a time when many of their mothers had not been born! During her remaining years, Mrs. Whitridge showed renewed interest in the School. She was in frequent communication with her former pupils in an attempt to gather facts and to restore records which she had long forgotten and which had been lost. Her former colleague had died long since. There were so few left to ask, so few who remem- bered. Many were slow to answer her letters- and typing what came was growing difficult for her. The facts she so painstakingly collected, she put into the hands of a former head of the School, Grace Latimer Jones McClure, to use as occasion might arise. On March 18, 1952, she was buried in Columbus. During the brief service at her grave, with her daughter and her Columbus friends, stood the present headmistress of the School, and ten representatives of the Class of 1952, wearing dark blue blazers with the insignia of the Columbus School for Girls. -Grace Latimer jones McClure.



Page 10 text:

EDICATIO We, the Class of 1952, affectionately dedicate our Topknot,' to one who has won the hearts of everyone because of her capable guidance and real friendship for forty-two years-- MISS MARION B. HATHEWAY L41

Suggestions in the Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) collection:

Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

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Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Columbus School for Girls - Topknot Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951


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