Located in Sackville, New Brunswick, Canada, Mount Allison University is noted for being the first in the entire British Empire to award a baccalaureate to a woman. It also noted for the high number of graduates who went on to become Rhodes scholars.
In June 1839, Mr Allison proposed to the Wesleyan Methodists that a school of elementary and higher learning be built. His offer to purchase a site in Sackville, to erect a suitable building for an academy, and to contribute operating funds of £100 a year for 10 years was accepted, and the Wesleyan Academy for boys opened in 1843. In 1854, a girls' institution, (later known as the "Ladies College"), opened to complement the boys' academy. In July 1862, the degree-granting Mount Allison College was organised. The first two students, Howard Sprague and Josiah Wood, graduated in May 1863. In 1875, Mount Allison awarded a baccalaureate Grace Annie Lockhart, a first in the British Empire.
For nearly a century, Mount Allison functioned as three distinct, mutually enriching parts: the College proper, the Boys' Academy and the Ladies College.
The closure of the School for Girls in 1946, and the Academy in 1953, coincided with a period of expansion and provided much-needed space. In 1958, the beginning of a period of construction and acquisition of buildings eased the strain of overcrowding. At this time, it was decided to reaffirm the traditional aim of providing a high-quality undergraduate liberal arts education, along with continuing to offer professional programmes in already-established fields.
Mount Allison was the first university in the British Empire to confer a Bachelor's degree to a woman; Grace Annie Lockhart received a Bachelor of Science in 1875. It was also the first university in Canada to grant a Bachelor of Arts to a woman, Harriet Starr Stewart. Mount Allison boasts the oldest university art gallery in Canada; it was the first to wire all of campus to the information highway; it was the first to offer a Canadian Studies programme; and it is a pioneer in the establishment of services for students with learning disabilities.
Mount Allison University has routinely ranked near the top of the Maclean's Magazine Annual Survey of Canadian Universities. In the first survey, it ranked third over-all out of all universities in the country. Since then, the Maclean's rankings have been broken down by the size of institution and Mount Allison has consistently ranked among the top two universities in the primarily undergraduate category.
Mount Allison students socialize at places like Ducky's, the Tantramarsh Club ("The Pub"), Joey's, Mel's Tea Room, and the Bridge Street Café.
Mount Allison's campus paper, The Argosy, is produced weekly by Argosy Publications Inc., an independent organization funded by the students through an annual fee. The publication dates from 1875, making it one of the oldest continuous publications in Atlantic Canada.
Mount Allison's community radio station, CHMA 106.9 FM, is owned and operated by the members of Attic Broadcasting Company Ltd., a non-profit organization with its offices on the university campus.
Universities and colleges in New Brunswick | Liberal arts colleges
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