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  1. May 15, 2021 · Because of this, parents who did wish their daughters to attend boarding school put a great deal of time and effort into choosing the right one. Most girls, however, were taught either in a schoolroom at home, at day schools, or later in the century by governesses.

  2. They lived at home or attended boarding schools where they came home only on holidays. The girls on the other hand received their education from governesses or went to day- and boarding schools that were not as prominent as those of boys.

  3. She was sent to a different school not long after, and then brought home and never sent away again. Her father also took in young boys as boarders and educated them. Boarding schools for girls were called Ladies' Seminaries. They were usually run by single women.

    • Sally Britton
  4. This group of newly settled Ohio Quakers, most of whom migrated north in protest of the institution of slavery in the South, began plans for a boarding school for both boys and girls as early as 1814, to be modeled on Quaker boarding schools in Philadelphia.

  5. Jan 3, 2020 · Since 1870, girls have been outperforming boys in school. So how did they get there? From false claims that algebra damages their ovaries, to outperforming boys, it's been a long journey for girls to achieve education equality.

  6. Boarding schools had long been available to teach the boys whose parents could afford them, while girls were given a less academic education at other schools or at home; now, girls’ equivalents of those schools began opening, such as Cheltenham Ladies’ College in 1853, and Roedean School in 1885.

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  8. May 9, 2016 · Girls disappearing overnight from boarding schools, especially young heiresses fleeing with unsuitable men, became an easily understood trope in the public imagination. There were regular newspaper reports of elopements from boarding schools but, in truth, many were not what they seemed.

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