Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1915

Page 5 of 46

 

Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 5 of 46
Page 5 of 46



Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 4
Previous Page

Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 6
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 5 text:

vox COLLEGII 3 the College they will become a power for uplift and improvement along all the best lines. I wish also, on behalf of Mrs. Hare and myself, to thank the students of 1915 for the very comfortable chair so kindly do- nated. It will always be a reminder of the genuine good- will which was so man- ifestly shown during the year in word, act, and even song. The time has passed when it was neces- sary to argue in behalf of the solidity and thoroughness of an education to be ob- tained in our College, and yet the guar- antee of efficient instruction does not ad- equately express the real worth and ad- vantage of our courses of study. There is a larger view of education than simply the acquisition of know- ledge or the passing of examinations. If we look intelligently into this many sided subject we shall have to reckon with the thousand and one influences that go to form character that are to be found in a Christian home school where young wo- men at a susceptible period of life are brought under the influence of consecrat- ed men and women who will lift them a- bove their lower selves, inspire them with high ideals, and at the same time shield them from many temptations to which they are likely to be exposed in a prom- iscuous or co-educational school. Our age demands that woman should be edu- cated. Avenues of usefuln ess are open- ing to her on every hand by means of which she can not only make an honest and honorable livelihood, but initiate or direct movements tending to the ma- terial, social and spiritual well-being of her fellow-men, and I am expecting that the strong, cultured and Christian young women that have already gone out from our college halls, and those that will go out in the years to come, will take their full share of resp-onsibility in helping forward every good work in the commu- nity in which they may reside. Mrs. Hare and I expect to reside in Whitby in close proximity to the College, and we shall always be pleased to see any old students that may make us a call. We hope to see a large, number of the stu- dents of this year at the time of re-open- ing, September 8th, and trust that those that cannot return will do all in their power to encourage others to attend. Message from Incoming Principal Eev. F. L. Farewell, B. A. The Rev. Dr. Hare has kindly asked me to write a short message for the Vox. In doing so I am deeply conscious of the high honor the College Board has con- ferred on me in ehosing me as its Prin- cipal for the ensuing year, and also of the heavy responsibility that honor car- ries with it — a responsilDility which I feel all the more keenly because of the great and permanent work done by Dr. Hare in a long and successful leadership of over forty years. It is my desire and hope that the work which he so splendid- ly inaugurated and developed shall con- tinue to grow and enlarge, and that the College more and more shall be a potent force for the cultural training of young women. The education of girlhood and of young womanhood is of growing import- ance. Many see it in a partial solution at least of some of the problems that now confront us. Certainly no one is more worthy of sympathetic understanding and leadership than the adolescent girl. In entering upon this most attractive ser- vice I shall try to bring to it prayer, study, sjT ' mpathy, and wise direction to the end that in some small way at least the young womanhood of Canada may be inspired and blessed. May I ask and hope for the prayerful sympathy and friendly co-operation of the friends and students, the Trafalgar Daughters, and all those who believe in the infinite possibilities of girlhood and womanhood.

Page 4 text:

vox COLLEGII Message from the Retiring Principal, Dr. Hare To be known as Principal Emeritus This is not to be considered a farewell message. Whilst retiring from the duties and responsibilities of Principalship, it is not my intention to cut loose from the College altogether. The new Principal, the Rev. F. L. Farewell, B.A., is a warm personal friend, in whose ability and fit- ness for the position I have the fullest confidence. At his request I have decid- ed to teach a couple of subjects in the College this coming year, so that I expect to be in the College building nearly every day. Whilst I shall miss several mem- bers of the staff with whom I have been so pleasantly associated for several years, , I am pleased to be able to assure all in- coming students that no pains or expense have been spared in filling all vacancies Avith teachers of the highest academic standing, social culture and personal magnetism that will carry the College forward to still greater efficiency and success. I believe that what has been accomplished during my administration of forty-one years is but the beginning of still greater things. There are to-day forces behind and within the College that must bring it still more prominently to the front, and keep it in the white light of public approval and confidence. Be- sides its own real merits in staff, equip- ment, courses of study and palatial build- ings, which must always remain the chief source of its strength, it is worthy of notice that the Trafalgar Daughters, dur- ing the past year, have made themselves felt in the life and working power of the College in a way that was not thought of previously. The banquet that was given in the College a few weeks ago, and that was so largely attended by Trafalgar Daughters, gives some idea of the hearty and loyal support which the College is receiving and will continue to receive from this noble band of students. As I listened to the exceptionally able and elo- quent addresses given by them in re- sponse to the toasts Woman in Liter- ature, Woman in Scientific Research, Woman in Music, Woman in Art, Woman in Oratory, Woman in Politics, Woman in Social Service, and Woman in the Home, and saw one of their number so capably presiding over this interesting function, I felt that a new power had arisen that will play an important part in determining the future developments of the College. Now that the Societies or Chapters have been or- ganized under the control of a central governing Board, and they are about to obtain legal status and representation on REV. J. J. HARE, PH. D. Principal Emeritus. the College Board of Directors, it will be difficult to overestimate what their added influence and help will mean in the life of the school. Their presence at the Com- mencement Exercises and their kind re- membrance of Mrs. Hare and myself in a beautiful case of sterling silver cutlery, besides their gifts for other members of the staff, afford sufficient proof that they recall with pleasure their school days and their teachers, and that when they come to take part in the actual management of



Page 6 text:

4 VOX COLLEGII I am very grateful for the kindly and earnest words of the Principal Emeritus elect, and in heartily reciprocating his friendship and good will, I cordially join F. L, FAREWELL, B. A. his host of friends in wishing him and Mrs. Hare, whose very life is interwoven with the history of the College, many, many years of continued joy and useful- ness. Miss Taylor ' s Message to the Girls of 1915. My Dear Grirls: This year as I am leaving 0. L. C. I want my message to be not only to the graduates, but to all the girls of 1915. There are very many things that might be said, but I am going to limit my re- marks to the subject of good manners, in itself so wide a subject that whole reams could be written on it without exhausting it. The question I want you to ask your- selves is Are the girls of to-day as well- mannered as their mothers or their grandmothers? Are we training to-day ladies of that beautiful old-fashioned courtesy that we seem to associate with lavender and old lace. In this rush and hurry of to-day are we not losing much that has kept life sweet and beautiful ? You know well that not for one minute would I wish to put you back into the en- vironment of your grandmothers. I would not deprive you of your right to come out into the world, and take your place with your brothers in the great battles of life; I would not take from you the great oportunities of higher edu- cation and a broader outlook on life. In- deed I hope you may have the right to Parliamentary Franchise before you die. But remember that loud voiced aggress- iveness is not going to advance the real cause of womanhood in the world. Now good manne rs seem to me to include two distinct ideas — there is something we must acquire to more comfortably and creditably in our own circle. We must eat and dress accordingly to the fixed usages of our particular Society; we must learn to conform to certain rules of etiquette. These, of course, vary with different countries and nationalities. For instance the American custom of using the fork almost entirely at lunch and dinner seems very strange to us EngHsh people who are trained to use knife and fork together. But I want you to go much deeper than mere social usages in your ideas of manners — necessary as a knowledge of these is — I want no mere surface manners only, but I want you to agree with Tennyson that ' ' Manners are not idle, but the fruit of noble natures. ' ' It is the good manners based on a real consideration for the feelings of others that I want you always to cultivate. Re- member all selfish people are really bad- mannered, however much social veneer they may acquire. If you study the feel- ings of others you must learn to lower your voices, to close doors quietly, to move quietly. Shakespeare, in painting one of his most perfect woman charac- ters, Cordelia, says: — Her voice was ever soft, gentle and low, an excel- lent thing in a woman. George Eliot gives us what she considers the essential attributes of a lady in describing Nancy

Suggestions in the Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) collection:

Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.