St. Mary's Hall, Shanghai

St. Mary's Hall (Chinese: 聖瑪利亞女中) was a Christian school that existed in Shanghai, China, established by the Episcopal Church of the United States.

St. Mary's Hall, Shanghai
Traditional Chinese聖瑪利亞女中
Simplified Chinese圣玛利亚女中

History

General Plan of St. Mary's Hall

The history of St. Mary's Hall, Shanghai goes back to a training school that was started in 1851 near the Episcopal Cathedral in Shanghai. This school was officially named as St. Mary's Hall in 1881 and was located next to St. John's College. In 1923, it moved to Brenan Road (currently No. 1187 Changning Road) of Shanghai International Settlement. Because of high tuition, St. Mary's and McTyeire School for Girls of the Methodist Church were called the "Christian Schools for Wealthy/Noble Maidens". English Literatures, Home Economics, and Music/Dancing subjects there were famous.

After the establishment of the People's Republic of China, St. Mary's Hall was merged with McTyeire School to become No. 3 Middle School of Shanghai City, located at No. 155 Jiangsu Road in 1952. The site of St. Mary's Hall was used by the Shanghai Spinning Industry College, and then, in 1999, became the Chang'an Branch of Donghua University's Spinning Industry Department.[1][2]

After the Kuomintang government moved to Taiwan, the alumni and other people related to St. Mary's Hall and St. John's University established a school which later became St. John's University (Taiwan)[3].

Noted alumna

gollark: Still don't know how that actually works though.
gollark: Well, that seems overly centralized.
gollark: I don't think that's relevant. AES requires both ends to have the same key, so I don't see how that works.
gollark: Um.
gollark: Er, AES isn't asymmetric, do you mean RSA or something?

See also

References

  • "St. Mary's, Once a Top School for Chinese Girls". Shanghai Star at China Daily. 2001-04-26. Archived from the original on 2013-07-04.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.