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NGE >> Education >> Elementary, Middle, and Secondary >> Public Education >> Lucy Cobb Institute |
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Lucy Cobb Institute
Cobb had hoped that his young daughter Lucy would attend the new school,
Under the leadership of Rutherford and her sister Mary Ann Lipscomb, the curriculum became even more rigorous.
Along with academics, Rutherford and other faculty members emphasized the importance of a modest appearance and proper manners and etiquette.
Despite its success, the institute struggled to maintain high enrollment and keep its bills paid. The school faced acute financial difficulties in the 1920s, mostly because of the agricultural depression
In the 1970s a group of Athens preservationists, many of them children or grandchildren of alumnae, received a federal grant to renovate the exterior of the institute's Seney-Stovall Chapel. This renovation effort was led by historian Phinizy Spalding, the grandson of alumna Nellie Stovall, who was instrumental in the original construction of the chapel. In the early 1880s, while a student at the institute, Stovall appealed to New York philanthropist George I. Seney for building funds, and the chapel, which bears both of their names, was completed in 1885. The entire Lucy Cobb complex was renovated in the late 1980s and early 1990s, with two appropriations by the U.S. Congress of $3.5 million and $1 million, and contributions of another $1 million by public and private donors. The Lucy Cobb Institute's inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places was a major consideration in the appropriation of federal funds. In 1991 the institute became the central administrative home of the Carl Vinson Institute of Government at UGA. Suggested Reading Phinizy Spalding, ed. and comp., Higher Education for Women in the South: A History of Lucy Cobb Institute, 1858-1994 (Athens: Georgia Southern Press, 1994). Sarah H. Case, Santa Barbara, California Updated 3/27/2009 |
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