Chappell Hill Female College

Chappell Hill Female College is a former private college in Chappell Hill, Texas. It was founded in 1850 as a coeducational school, first chartered in 1852, and later in the same decade became a Methodist institution and was rechartered as a women's college. It was closed in 1912; the building became a public school. The site is now occupied by a replacement school building that preserves the college bell.

History

The college was founded in 1850 with five teachers and 100 students[1] as Chappell Hill Institute, a boarding school; the land was donated by Jacob and Mary Haller. It was chartered by the Texas Legislature on February 9, 1852 as Chappell Hill Male and Female Institute. A second building was added that year to separate the sexes. In fall 1852 it became Chappell Hill College and P. S. Ruter, who had taught at Transylvania University, became president. His sister Charlotte was head of the music department, and Elizabeth Knox headed the female division.[2][3] Tuition for a session of five months was advertised as ranging from $8 for "reading and spelling" to $20 for "Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, Astronomy, Physiology, Algebra, Geometry, Latin, Greek, or the higher branches of Mathematics" and $25 for music or piano "with use of instrument".[2]

In 1854 the college had 100 students, and was acquired by the Methodist Church as a replacement for Rutersville College. The male division became Soule University,[4] and the female division was rechartered on August 29, 1856, as Chappell Hill Female College.[3] Fires required replacing the building at least once, and the college was badly affected by the Civil War and by yellow fever epidemics, but it had paid off its debts by 1873. In 1878 the president was Epaminondas Dunn Pitts.[5] In 1880–1881 the president was I. M. Onins, a Civil War veteran.[6] A dormitory and a music hall were added in the 1880s, and the college played a prominent role in the culture of the area, particularly after Soule University closed in 1887;[3] the college's monthly literary magazine, the Philomathean, was active in raising money in the mid-1880s to establish a home for Confederate veterans.[6]

Enrollment had risen to 112 by 1885, but fell by half in the following ten years: the college took in 70 public school students, 50 of them boys, to raise money. The Methodist Texas Conference provided support, and the college was given the Soule University property to reduce its debt, but public schools in Texas were improving, women's colleges were less popular, and yellow fever continued to be a problem in the area. The curriculum was revised in 1900 to conform to the Methodist Church General Board of Education;[3] a study published in January 1912 assessed the college as offering primarily secondary-school level courses.[7] It was closed in 1912, at which time enrollment was 112. The building was used as a public school until 1926, when it was replaced by the building that now houses the museum of the Chappell Hill Historical Society. The college bell has been preserved there.[3]

Notable people

  • Lizzie Johnson Williams, cattlewoman: graduated 1859[8]

See also

References

  1. Macum Phelan, A History of Early Methodism in Texas, 1817–1866, Nashville, Tennessee: Richmond Cokesbury, 1924, OCLC 2479612, p. 331 (online at Archive.org).
  2. Phelan, p. 358.
  3. Carole E. Christian, "Chappell Hill Female College", Handbook of Texas online, June 12, 2010, retrieved March 4, 2017.
  4. Phelan, p. 404.
  5. "Chappell Hill Female College", Cyclopædia of Methodism, ed. Matthew Simpson, Philadelphia: Everts & Stewart, 1878, OCLC 317671080, p. 197.
  6. Stephen Chicoine, The Confederates of Chappell Hill, Texas: Prosperity, Civil War and Decline, Jefferson, North Carolina / London: McFarland, 2005, repr. 2011, ISBN 9780786464180, p. 194.
  7. Elizabeth A[very] Coulton, "Southern Colleges for Women", The North Carolina High School Bulletin 3.1 (January 1912) 3–19, p. 14; revised as "Standards of Southern Colleges for Women", The School Review 20.7 (September 1912) 458–75, p. 472 (misspelled as "Chapel Hill").
  8. Don Blevins, "Lizzie Johnson Williams: Educator, Trail Boss, Rancher, Miser", in A Priest, A Prostitute, and Some Other Early Texans: The Lives Of Fourteen Lone Star State Pioneers, Rowman & Littlefield, 2008; Guilford, Connecticut / Helena, Montana: Lone Star, 2016, ISBN 978-1-4930-2614-2, pp. 76–86, p. 80.

Further reading

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