The Cincinnati Female Seminary was a seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio. The seminary was located at the southwest corner of W Seventh and Mound Streets.[1] In 1843, Margaret Coxe founded the Cincinnati Female Seminary. In 1850, John Zachos, became Coxe's co-owner and its principal. The school had ten teachers, with a 1 to 12 ratio of teachers to students.[2] (It is also reported that the school started as a private seminary c. 1849 and run by T. A. Burrowes. By the fifth year there were 136 pupils.[3])
Funds were raised in 1854 for a public seminary of the same name, with a target of $35,000. The board of trustees was interdenominational.[4] The inaugural principal was to be Burrowes. "By an arrangement entered into by the proprietors of the Cincinnati Female Seminary and the Mount Auburn Young Ladies’ Institute, the former was transferred to Mount Auburn, and the two schools consolidated into one in September, 1861."[5]
Notable alumni
- Susan Fessenden, (1840–1932), temperance activist
Notable staff
- Rachel Littler Bodley, teacher of natural sciences (1862-5)
References
- ↑ Cincinnati: A Guide to the Queen City and its Neighbors. US History Publishers. 1943. p. 235.
- ↑ Topping, Eva Catafygiotu. John Zachos: Cincinnatian from Constantinople. pp. 55–57.
- ↑ "Notices of Colleges, Schools, etc". Ohio Educational Monthly. Ohio State Teacher's Association. iii: 251. August 1854.
- ↑ "Editors Portfolio". Ohio Educational Monthly. Ohio State Teacher's Association. iii: 94. March 1854.
- ↑ Twelfth annual catalogue of the Mount Auburn Young Ladies' Institute, A.D. 1867-1868. p. 16.
39°06′07″N 84°31′28″W / 39.10194°N 84.52444°W