Acadia Seminary - Wolfville, NS
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 45° 05.321 W 064° 21.992
20T E 392462 N 4993710
This building opened in 1878 as a ladies' residence known as the Acadia Ladies’ Seminary. It was later amalgamated into Acadia University.
Waymark Code: WMPGQC
Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
Date Posted: 08/29/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member enviroguy
Views: 5

Acadia Seminary is the oldest building on the campus of Acadia University, founded in 1838 by the Nova Scotia Baptist Education Society. Originally known as Queen's College, it became Acadia College in 1841 and Acadia University in 1891. It was not until 1881 that women were allowed to enter the university, yet their residence is the oldest building on campus.

The building, designed by Andrew Dewar, was originally a finishing school affiliated with the university, housing both women's residence and classrooms. In 1926, Seminary courses, and the building, were absorbed into the university. It remained a women's residence and academic building. In 1980 the residence became co-ed and today also houses Acadia’s School of Education.

The seminary has been designated a Municipal Heritage Property and a Canadian National Historic Site.
Acadia Seminary
DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE
Situated in the heart of the Acadia University campus, Acadia Seminary is an architecturally impressive landmark for both the university community and the town of Wolfville. It is a late nineteenth-century, four-storey, wooden structure with Second Empire architectural features. The building’s elevated front façade overlooks the university’s parkland setting that is dotted with several mature trees and paved walk-ways connecting to other campus buildings. Only the building and the land it occupies is included in the designation.

HERITAGE VALUE
The Acadia Seminary building is valued for its unique architecture, its association with the history of Acadia University, its association with the history of women’s education at Acadia, and as the oldest building in Canada used for women’s post-secondary education.

Designed by Andrew Dewar, the Seminary is the oldest building on the Acadia campus, and is architecturally unique to the university and displays many Second Empire features, including a Mansard roof with projecting dormers and moulded brackets, and a projecting frontispiece with a five-paned fan transom window over the main entrance. The first-floor windows on the front elevation are semi-circular with broken architraves.

Established by progressive Baptist leaders in order to give young women more educational opportunities, the Seminary is the oldest structure in Canada used to house women pursuing post-secondary education. When the residence opened in 1878, known at the time as the Acadia Ladies’ Seminary, it was a secondary or finishing school affiliated with the university to serve as residence and classrooms for female students who at the time were unable to enroll in academic classes at Acadia.

Many Seminary graduates went on to seek further education, and by 1881 women were finally permitted to enroll in classes at Acadia. Seminary student Clara Marshall was the first woman to earn a degree at Acadia in 1884, and she is also credited as one of the first women to receive a Bachelor of Arts degree in Canada. Alice Fitch, also a Seminary student, graduated the following year with a Masters of Arts degree, the first Masters degree awarded to a woman at Acadia. Fitch went on to become the first woman to sit on the university senate. In 1926, Seminary courses were amalgamated with regular university curriculum and the building became an academic building and residence of Acadia University. In the 1980s, it became a co-ed residence with its first floor functioning as classroom and office space. The Seminary is currently home to Acadia’s School of Education.

CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS
- large scale of the building, standing four storeys high;
- steep-pitched Mansard roof of the Second Empire style;
- clapboard siding with wide corner boards;
- projecting frontispiece;
- decorative, arched cornices;
- mix of gabled and flat dormer windows;
- classical-style mouldings and ornate brackets;
- semi-circular windows with broken architraves on front elevation.
From Historic Places Canada
URL of Page from Heritage Register: [Web Link]

Site's Own URL: [Web Link]

Address of site:
Acadia University
Wolfville, Nova Scotia
B4P 2P7


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