- Source: Norfolk College for Young Ladies
The Norfolk College for Young Ladies was a finishing school in Downtown Norfolk, Virginia that operated from 1880 to 1899.
The college was chartered on Feb. 20, 1880 and opened with 125 students. John L. Roper was president of the college's board. The school was founded to reduce the flow of young women leaving Norfolk for their education. It was located at the northwest corner of Granby and Washington Streets; in 1887 Washington Street was renamed "College Place". In 1899, Mary Washington College took over the building for a few years.
In 1905 the building reopened as the Algonquin Hotel, one of several downtown hotels newly built or converted to accommodate the crowds of visitors expected for the Jamestown Exposition in 1907. Over the years, the building operated as a hotel under various names. In 1918, it became the Hotel Edward, and in 1936 the Hotel Lee. Until the 1960s, the ground floor was the location of various retail stores on Granby St., including a People's Drug Store. After a 1983 fire, the building was demolished.
The school's former location on "College Place" is now part of the Norfolk campus of Tidewater Community College.
Alumna
Kate Langley Bosher (1882), best-selling novelist
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Inggris
- Penobatan Charles III dan Camilla
- Norfolk College for Young Ladies
- Timeline of Norfolk, Virginia
- Jenny Eakin Delony
- Kate Langley Bosher
- Henry Cromwell, 2nd Baron Cromwell
- Gregory Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell
- Colleen McCullough
- Cromer
- The Trees They Grow So High
- Elizabeth Seymour, Lady Cromwell