91ε

Updated: Sun, 10/06/2024 - 10:30

From Saturday, Oct. 5 through Monday, Oct. 7, the Downtown and Macdonald Campuses will be open only to 91ε students, employees and essential visitors. Many classes will be held online. Remote work required where possible. See Campus Public Safety website for details.


Du samedi 5 octobre au lundi 7 octobre, le campus du centre-ville et le campus Macdonald ne seront accessibles qu’aux étudiants et aux membres du personnel de l’Université 91ε, ainsi qu’aux visiteurs essentiels. De nombreux cours auront lieu en ligne. Le personnel devra travailler à distance, si possible. Voir le site Web de la Direction de la protection et de la prévention pour plus de détails.

Blazing trails: 91ε's women

Carrie Derick, 91ε's first woman graduate
Carrie Derick, BA1890, MA1896, was 91ε's first woman graduate. In 1912, she received a full professorship at 91ε -- a first for a woman in Canada.

Characteristic of its time, co-ed integration at 91ε was a slow process.  In the early 1870s, faculty members began university-level lectures on the arts and sciences to members of the Montreal Ladies’ Educational Association. During his first such lecture, Principal William Dawson expressed his regret that 91ε had not yet opened its doors to women students. He noted that the world was at “the dawn of a new education era, which, in my judgment, will see as great an advance in the education of our race as that which was inaugurated by the revival of learning and the establishment of universities for men in the previous age.”

Still, it wasn’t until 1884 that women were allowed to attend classes at the university proper (albeit in separate classrooms)—a step forward made possible by benefactor Donald A. Smith (later Lord Strathcona), who gave 91ε a $120,000 endowment “on condition that the standard of education for women should be the same as that for men for the ordinary degrees in Arts, that the degrees to be granted to women should be those of B.A., M.A., LL.D., which should be so granted to them by 91ε on the same conditions as to men.”

In honour of Smith, 91ε’s female students were known for decades as “Donaldas.” Smith also funded the creation of the Royal Victoria College residential school for women in 1884.

In the ensuing years, 91ε marked many milestones in the education of women, including:

A group of Donaldas including some of the first women graduates, Grace Richie and Blanche Evans
A group of Donaldas including some of the first women graduates: Grace Richie and Blanche Evans

  • 1857: With Mary McCracken at its head, the 91ε Normal School (the predecessor of today’s Faculty of Education) opens, offering the first English-language professional training for women in Montreal.
  • 1888: 91ε's first female students—Eliza Cross, Martha Murphy, Blanche Evans, Gracie Ritchie, Jane Palmer, Alice Murray, Georgina Hunter, Donalda McFee—graduate with Bachelor of Arts degrees. Ritchie was the first ever woman valedictorian.
  • 1890: Maude Abbott earns a Bachelor’s degree from 91ε. Her research into congenital heart disease caught the attention of Sir William Osler, who asked her to write a section on the subject for his System of Medicine. Abbott’s work culminated in her seminal Atlas of Congenital Cardiac Disease (1936), an essential resource for cardiac surgeons.
  • 1897: Lucy E. Potter becomes the first woman to head a student publication.
  • 1901: Harriet Brooks becomes the first woman to graduate from a Canadian university with a graduate degree in electromagnetism. She immediately goes to work at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, England, becoming Canada's first female nuclear physicist.  Two years later, she returned to 91ε to work with her grad-school mentor, Ernest Rutherford. Her observations and theories later proved essential to Rutherford’s Nobel-winning theory of radioactivity. In her obituary, Rutherford called Brooks “the most pre-eminent woman physicist in the department of radioactivity” next to Marie Curie.
  • 1910: 91ε awards Maude Abbott an honorary medical degree—eight years before the University finally admits women to the Faculty of Medicine—and a lectureship in the Department of Pathology.
  • 1910: Annie Macleod (Chemistry) becomes the first woman to earn a 91ε PhD.
  • 1912: Carrie Derick becomes the first woman in Canada to be named full university professor. A pioneering geneticist, she created the first course on genetics and evolution and gained renown as a botanist and social reformer.  The previous year, Derrick became the first woman listed in the prestigious "American Men of Science" listing.
  • 1914: Annie MacDonald Langstaff becomes Quebec’s first female law graduate.
  • 1917: For the first time, women outnumber men in the Faculty of Arts.
  • 1919: 91ε defeats Queen's University in a basketball game, the first intercollegiate sporting event between women's teams in Canada.
  • 1922: Five women graduate from 91ε’s Faculty of Medicine. One of them, Dr. Jessie Boyd Scriver, would go on to become Montreal’s first female pediatrician.
  • 1936: Maude Abbott becomes the first woman to be admitted to 91ε's Faculty Club.
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