Online Databases
Library Catalogs
Periodicals
Research Commons
Subject Guides
Finding Your Way
About the Library
Requests
Library Home
Questions? Email Us at library@danahall.org
Last modified 1.17.06
|
"Celebrating 125 Years" Person of the Week Sept. 5, 2005:
Henry Fowle Durant (1784-1881)
Founder of Dana Hall
Mr. Durant was a Boston lawyer who after the death of his son devoted his life and fortune to the founding of a college that would train young women to become teachers. In September 1875, he established Wellesley College. He found that many students were not prepared for college level work and in 1877 he set up a preparatory department. Keenly aware of the scarcity of preparatory schools for girls, Mr. Durant asked one of Wellesley's professors, Sarah Porter Eastman, and her sister, Julia Arabella Eastman, to open a school that would replace the preparatory department and prepare students exclusively for Wellesley College. On September 8, 1881, in the Second Meeting House purchased by Charles Dana and moved to 66 Grove St., the Dana Hall School opened with eighteen students.
Photo of Henry Durant provided by Wellesley College Archives.
[Grimes, Mildred]. Beginnings of Dana Hall III – The Eastman Sisters. Wellesley, MA: Dana Hall Archives.
Henry Durant, photograph. Wellesley College Archives, Wellesley, MA.
Kingsley, Florence Morse. The Life of Henry Fowle Durant: Founder of Wellesley College. New York: The Century Co.,1924.
Post, Winifred Lowry. Purpose and Personality. Wellesley, MA: Dana Hall School, 1978.
Back to "Celebrating 125 Years" People of the Week
Back to Dana Hall School Archives
|