Montgomery County PA Archives Biographies.....Bonney, Miss Mary L. June 8, 1816 - July 24, 1900
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Source: Biographical Annals of Montgomery County Pennsylvania, T. S. Benham & Company and the Lewis Publishing Company, 1904
Author: Ellwood Roberts, Editor

THE OGONTZ SCHOOL for Young Ladies was founded in 1850 by 
Miss Mary L. Bonney and Miss Harriette L. Dillaye. It was 
then known as the Chestnut Street Seminary, and was 
conducted in Philadelphia, until 1883, when Miss Frances E. 
Bennett and Miss Silvia J. Eastman were admitted to 
partnership, and the school was removed to the suburban home 
of Jay Cooke, Esq., at Ogontz. Later Misses Bonney and 
Dillaye retired from the management of the school, and in 
1900 Miss Bennett also retired owing to ill health, and 
since that date it has been entirely under the control of 
Miss Eastman, who is assisted by a large corps of the most 
competent teachers.

The school at the present time has one hundred and ten 
boarding pupils, and twenty-five day pupils. A paper, "The 
Ogontz Mosaic," is published monthly by the pupils of the 
school for eight months of the year. To many of her old 
pupils and others the name of Miss Bonney will awaken 
familiar recollections. She was born in Hamilton, New York, 
June 8, 1816. Her grandfathers, Benjamin Bonney and Abel 
Wilder, of Chesterfield, Massachusetts, were in the 
Revolutionary war, the last named being a soldier serving by 
the side of the lamented General Warren when he fell at 
Bunker Hill.

The parents of Miss Bonney were Benjamin and Lucinda 
(Wilder) Bonney. Her father served in the war of 1812, and 
later as colonel of the One Hundred and Sixty-fifth Regiment 
New York State Militia. Miss Bonney was educated in the 
schools of her native state, graduating from the Troy Female 
Seminary in 1835. She made teaching her lifework, holding 
positions in Jersey City, New York City, DeRuyter, New York, 
and Troy Female Seminary, the Beaufort (South Carolina) 
School, and in Philadelphia. Deciding to establish a school 
of her own in 1850, she opened the Chestnut Street Female 
Seminary in Philadelphia, as already stated, which later 
developed into the Ogontz School for Young Ladies. To join 
her in founding the institution, she invited Miss Harriette 
A. Dillaye, a teacher in Troy Seminary. For a period of 
thirty-three years the Chestnut Street Seminary enjoyed 
great popularity and a large patronage, and in 1883 the two 
teachers, Miss Bennett and Miss Eastman, were admitted as 
associate principals, the school being continued at Ogontz 
under its present name.

Miss Bonney's devotion to duty, her uprightness, her strong 
will, kind heart, quick sympathies and deep and 
conscientious interest in all her pupils, left a lasting 
impress upon thousands with whom she came in contact, and 
especially the younger minds who are most susceptible to 
intellectual and moral influences. Some time after severing 
her connections with the Ogontz school, she married a Rev. 
Mr. Rainbaut. She died at Hamilton, New York, on July 24, 
1900.

Miss Harriette A. Dillaye, after severing her connection 
with the Ogontz School, still continued to reside there, 
remaining until her death, which occurred on June 1, 1897, 
she then being in her eightieth year. Her character might be 
said to resemble a well finished picture about which there 
is little to say, there being no necessity for mere words of 
praise, and it being above criticism. Notwithstanding her 
preference for those she loved, she was equally the friend 
of every one who needed a friend. In her early life she was 
associated both as pupil and teacher with Frances Willard, 
the pioneer in the higher education of women. In founding a 
school of her own, Miss Dillaye proved by her success her 
peculiar fitness for the work. When advancing age made it 
expedient for her to lay aside her work, she chose her 
successor with an unerring instinct. As generous to proclaim 
as she was quick to discern, when she placed her portion of 
the burden of the school upon Miss Bennett, she stepped 
graciously aside, and with her latest breath rejoiced in the 
recital of another's triumph.
 
The Ogontz School for Young Ladies is situated a few miles 
north of Philadelphia, with which it is connected by many 
trains. The location is in a beautiful section of country, 
dotted with the handsome residences of business men of 
Philadelphia and others. The buildings afford ample 
accommodations, all the surroundings are of the most 
attractive character, and the arrangements for the welfare 
of the pupils are all that could be desired. All the 
advantages of the city are there attained, together with the 
beauty, freedom, and healthfulness of rural life. The course 
of instruction includes the best musical talent that can be 
procured from New York or Philadelphia. Lectures on subjects 
connected with different departments of instruction are 
delivered from time to time by distinguished scholars. The 
social and family life is a special feature of the school. 
Only such restrictions are thrown around pupils as are found 
necessary for their safety, health and mental and moral 
improvement. The more than twenty years of the school at 
Ogontz have passed with but one serious case of illness, 
which is certainly a remarkable testimonial to the salubrity 
of the section in which it is situated, due very largely to 
the elevated location and the absolute freedom from malaria. 
The opportunities for physical culture are all that could be 
desired. The gymnasium is fitted up with apparatus adapted 
to the Sargent and Swedish methods; outdoor games are 
encouraged; and in stormy weather the gymnasium, 
conservatory, and spacious verandas amply provide for 
needful exercise. There is no school in the vicinity of 
Philadelphia that is more thoroughly adapted to educational 
purposes, nor any where the pupil will receive better 
attention.

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