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Page 18 text:
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to the Christian Guardian that 10 gentlemen assumed the financial responsibility and paid the $20, 000 to meet the urgent claim. How the Grey Nuns became involved in the negotiations is not known, but the quick action of Mr. Sanderson and Sheriff Reynolds saved the Ontario Ladies ' College and assured its future. Work went ahead to organize a joint stock company, with expectations of raising $20, 000 to $25, 000 in communities from Kingston to Owen Sound. In June, 1874, the provisional directors and the Whitby District representatives of the Methodist Church sent reports to the Toronto Conference asking its support for the Ontario Ladies ' College. The conference, the govern- ing body for the Toronto area, appointed a 10- man committee, including Dr. Egerton Ryerson, a leading Methodist and Superinten- dent of Education for Ontario, to examine the reports. Following a study of the requests, the committee recommended that the Confer- ence accept the college as a connexional in- stitution, extending to it the patronage of the Conference without assuming any financial responsibility. Secondly, it recommended that the college be placed under the supervision and patronage of the Toronto Conference, with authority to appoint officers and visitors as may be granted from time to time by the General Conference in accordance with the bylaws of the institution. Upon receiving the committee ' s report, the Toronto Conference accepted the recommen- dations and appointed Revs. Dr. Nelles, E. H. Dewart, and W. H. Withrow as visitors to re- port on the progress of the college to the-Con- ference. On a recommendation from the directors, the conference appointed Rev. Mr. Sanderson as principal and chief resident officer responsible for the moral and domestic government of the college, as well as its educational work. Rev. James Roy was appointed as the college ' s first professor. Throughout the summer of 1874, Rev. Mr. Sanderson made regular reports to the Guardian on the progress of raising the stock. In the issue of July 8, he reported that about $2,000 was subscribed at the Toronto Confer- ence and another $3, 000 collected by Methodist ministers in the Toronto area. Two ministers canvassed Toronto where they obtained $500 each from two prominent citizens. One minister covered the area to the north, one to the east, and one to the west of the city. Another took Belleville, Cobourg and Picton, while Mr. Sanderson himself visited Brampton, Streetsville and Barrie. Everywhere he went, he invited all to visit Whitby to see Trafalgar Castle, and reported a man from Montreal had assured him that residents of that city would invest in such a grand under- taking. In the issue of July 22, Mr. Sanderson re- ported on his travels to the north and westo In Barrie, with the aid of Rev. D. C. McDowell, he obtained $600, and Orillia citi- zens, despite a depression in the lumber trade, pledged $300. One pledge of $200 and another of $100 came from Brampton, but as most of couple of hours. By July 22 the total stock raised amounted to about $28, 000, and a week later stood at $32, 500. Rev. Mr. McDowell ' s beginning of $600 had run to $2, 200, with Prince Albert, near Port Perry, taking $900, Darlington $500 and Belleville $900. On Aug. 26, the first general meeting of the stockholders of the Ontario Ladies ' College was held in the office of the Port Whitby and Port Perry Railway Company. Mr. Sanderson announced that $35, 000 of stock had been taken and the balance of the $50, 000 required would be forthcoming once the remaining circuits had been visited. Election of the first board of di- rectors followed with those chosen being: James Holden, N. G. Reynolds, G. Y. Smith, Walter Coulthard, Joshua Richardson, and J. L. Smith, Whitby; Aaron Ross, Prince Albert; Thomas McClung, Bowmanville; and W. D. Matthews, Toronto. Provision was made for the Toronto Conference to also elect members to the board. The directors at a sub sequent meeting elected Mr. Holden, managing director of the Port Whitby and Port Perry Railway, as president, and Mr. Coulthard, vice-president. F. H. Torrington, a promi- nent Toronto musician, was chosen to teach vocal and instrumental music at the college, and J. Hock as teacher of drawing and painting September 15, 1874, was set by the direc- tors as the opening date for the Ontario Ladies College, climaxing nearly a year of hard work and planning to bring the college into being. G.Y. Smith
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Page 17 text:
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$4,000 in profits. Dr. Rice outlined how stock was raised for the college, pointing out that the establishment for which the stockholders had paid $24, 000 was now worth over $100, 000, and dividends on stock amounted to six per cent. He estimated that the college spent $20, 000 a year in Hamilton, and no pecuniary value could be placed on the moral benefit which it brought to the community. The next question was: Will it succeed? The Hon. R. Read of Belleville answered that it would if the church extended its patronage as proposed. The rapid growth of the country and the increase in wealth and population make a greater number of colleges necessary, he said. To back up his convictions, he moved that a provisional board of directors be appointed immediately, a charter obtained, the neces- sary amount of stock raised, and negotiations begin with Sheriff Reynolds for the purchase of Trafalgar Castle on as favorable terms as possible. This was carried unanimously. Ac- cordingly, the following were appointed pro- visional directors: John McDonald, Rev. Dr. Woodward, Hon J. C. Atkins, Toronto; Rev. D. C. McDowell, Barrie; Rev. J. E. Sanderson, James Holden, Chester Draper, Dr. Ro J. Gunn, Judge Burnham, J. B. Powell, J. Hamer Greenwood, Joshua Richardson, H. B. Taylor, and Richard Hatch, Whitby; J. B. Bickell, Brooklin; Aaron Ross, Prince Albert; Rev. W. Scott, chairman of the Whitby District; Hon. T. N. Gibbs, Major Grierson, and James Luke, Oshawa; Rev. John Bredin and Thomas McClung, Bowman- ville; Asa E. Wallbridge, Newcastle; Rev. S. S. Nelles, Cobourg; and Hon. R. Read and Esia Holton, Belleville. These men were chosen to represent the communities which would be served by the new college. Rev. Mr. Sanderson was appointed convener of the board, and a vote of thanks was tendered to Dr. Rice for the information he presented to the conven- tion which convinced its members to proceed with the college project. The provisional directors met for the first time Feb. 17 at the town hall. After a full consideration of the proposal, it was moved by Rev. Mr. Scott, seconded by Aaron Ross and unanimously resolved That in the judgement of this meeting that the scheme of founding ' The Ontario Ladies ' College ' in the Town of Whitby is deserving of public support; and providing the Town of Whitby shall liberally sustain the effort by subscribing stock to the amount of $15, 000 inclusive, if necessary, of a portable bonus from the municipal council; the meeting is of the opinion that the claims of the institution can be presented to the outside committees as to receive the balance of the requisite, providing the premises can be pur- chased as a reasonable price. This was the first time the name ' Ontario Ladies ' College ' was used. It is not known how the name was selected, but it may have had some relation to Lake Ontario which could be seen from Trafalgar Castle, or Ontario County of which Whitby was the county town . A public meeting followed in the town hall James Holden the same evening at which the resplution was presented. Following appeals from Rev. Mr. Sanderson and other directors, it passed unan- imously, and the matter was left in the hands of the people of Whitby. In a letter to the Christian Guardian in Toronto, the weekly newspaper of the Methodist Church of Canada, Rev. Mr. Sanderson out- lined the progress of the movement to found the college. He explained how the Methodist church had been quietly assessing the possi- bilities of obtaining Trafalgar Castle since it came on the market early in 1873. When brought up at the Toronto Conference, the sub- ject was received favorably and the president had advised Mr. Sanderson to obtain it if the price was reasonable. The general feeling of the directors by April, 1874, was that the building and the property could be obtained for about $35, 000 with $15, 000 coming from the people of Whitby. With some $12, 000 sub- scribed, a crisis developed and a bargain was closed with Sheriff Reynolds for the building and nine acres of land for $35, 000, with the sheriff taking $5, 000 stock himself. The ori- ginal price was to have been $45, 000 for the building and eight acres. Although Mr. Sanderson did not elaborate on the cause of the crisis, his son explained it in a letter many years later. I remember while sitting at dinner in the old parsonage at Whitby a wire came for my father from Toronto saying that twenty thou- sand dollars must be secured before the open- ing of the Bank the next morning or the proper- ty would pass into the hands of the Grey Nuns. My father did not finish his dinner, but rushed off to raise the money, he said. Rev. Mr. Sanderson reported in his letter
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Page 19 text:
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A view of the college in 1874 at the time of the official opening. Chapter Five The Gala Opening Even before its official opening the Ontario Ladies ' College was attracting attention across the province. For beauty, and healthfulness of location, for comfort and pleasure of pupils these premises are without rival in the Domin- ion, and we predict for them an honored and durable fame, said the Mail, a Toronto daily newspaper. The Christian Guardian also paid glowing tributes to the college and those who had worked so hard to secure it. Sept. 3, 1874 was set as the date of the official opening by the Governor-General of Canada, Lord Dufferin. The day dawned dark and gloomy, but the town was gayly decorated with flags and bunting for the auspicious occa- sion. About 11:30 a.m. the train bearing the Vice-Regal party arrived at the Grand Trunk station and was switched north to the Port Whitby and Port Perry line. His Excellency was met at the uptown station on Dundas Street by Mayor Greenwood, Malcolm Cameron M. P. and a host of other local dignitaries, as the rain came pouring down. Four soldiers from the 34th Battalion of local militia came to their rescue with a tarpaulin stretched over the bayonets of their rifles, thus allowing the cere- mony to proceed. Following introduction of the town council, members of parliament and prominent citizens, the Mayor read an address of welcome to the Governor-General, referring to the advan- tages of Whitby and Ontario County and express- ing the town ' s loyalty to the Mother Country and Queen Victoria. Lord Dufferin replied briefly and inspected the guard of honor. A parade of carriages then proceeded through the main streets of Whitby to the new college. The lead carriage stopped briefly at an arch erected at the gates of the college grounds on which stood 12 little girls in red, white and blue dresses, each of whom waved small Union Jacks and bowed their welcome. On arrival at the Ontario Ladies ' College, Lord Dufferin and the Countess of Dufferin were presented with an address by Judge Burnham on behalf of the Board of Directors. He explained that the Ontario Ladies ' College had been chartered under the General Act of the Ontario Legislature and was under the supervision and patronage of the Wesley an Methodist Conference. The college, he said, would offer a thoroughly sound practical edu- cation which would provide instruction in re- fined manners, domestic habits and religiou s
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