A Room of Their Own - University of Toronto Magazine
University of Toronto Magazine University of Toronto Magazine
Three students enjoy a cup of tea in their room in Edwardian Toronto.Photo from City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1244, Item 705A.
Photo from City of Toronto Archives

A Room of Their Own

U of T’s first women’s residences launched lively campus traditions Read More

A cup of tea and Varsity banners marked student life in Edwardian Toronto. This trio’s pennant, F.O.E. 10, marks them as belonging to the new Faculty of Education, founded in 1906. Then as now, students personalized posters and possessions.

Whether these women took a room in a $1- to $3-a-week boarding house – as about half of out-of-town students did at the time – or lived in one of the new residence buildings is not known. But they had options. In 1903, U of T welcomed 47 students to its first women’s residence, Victoria College’s Annesley Hall. When Trinity College joined the university in 1904, its existing St. Hilda’s residence became the second, and University College’s Queen’s Hall followed in 1905. All three boasted “steam heating, electric lighting, and all the modern conveniences,” as St. Hilda’s 1914 brochure put it. Room-and-board costs that year? $210 annually, with a $12 first-year surcharge for bedding and furniture.

Residence life was lively. Annesley Hall had a doctor who suggested a personalized exercise routine for each student at the beginning of the year. “Freshettes” bonded over an orientation week that included, per the Toronto Evening Telegram, “proposing to clothespins, singing lullabies to dolls, diving into flour for raisins and a cold duck to clean off.” And a “tango outburst” at student dances scandalized some Torontonians – but while Queen’s Hall’s straitlaced dean, Mrs. Campbell, swore to shut down dances after just one tango step, Annesley permitted the “gallivanting glide.”

Most Popular

Prof. Kristen Bos wearing a long-sleeved, black and white flower patterned dress and large purple clover-shaped earrings, facing off camera, with a glass and concrete building and a grassy hill in the background

Test title 3

Prof. Kristen Bos investigates how pollution has affected – and continues to affect – Indigenous communities Read More

Canadian Words test

Over the years, Canada’s vast geography and diverse communities have given rise to a variety of unique words and expressions. For more than 20 years, Sali Tagliamonte, a University of Toronto professor of linguistics, and her research team have been exploring Ontario’s linguistic diversity, from cities to smaller centres… Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *