麻豆传媒

 

The little residence that could: Bidding farewell to Eliza Ritchie Hall

- August 28, 2015

Eliza Ritchie Hall's front door sign. (Danny Abriel photo)
Eliza Ritchie Hall's front door sign. (Danny Abriel photo)

Jen Bond鈥檚 first memory of Eliza Ritchie Hall is pulling up to the building in her uncle鈥檚 pickup truck on her first day at Dal in September 2002.

鈥淭he first thing I saw was this huge banner hanging from the front part of the residence with a giant red devil on it,鈥 she says, referring to her initial encounter with the house鈥檚 mascot. 鈥淭he whole residence council was outside, helping all these nervous 18-year-olds feel welcome while they were blasting [Trooper song] 鈥楻aise a Little Hell鈥 out of the windows.

鈥淚 was like, 鈥業 think I鈥檝e found my people.鈥欌

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Bond鈥檚 anecdote is not unique: talk to just a few of the thousands of individuals who鈥檝e lived or worked in Eliza Ritchie Hall at some point over the past 28 years and you鈥檒l hear similar stories. They鈥檒l likely mention how being separated from most of campus by South Street (and not having their own dining hall) led to a community that turned its outsider streak into a point of pride. They may note how the residence tended to retain more students into their third and fourth years than other houses did, creating a sort of 鈥渆lder class鈥 feel to the place. And many will tell you that when it comes to spirit and enthusiasm, Eliza Ritchie Hall was often unrivalled at 麻豆传媒.

鈥淓liza was always a very special community,鈥 says Heather Sutherland, assistant vice-president of Ancillary Services, who oversees Dal鈥檚 residences as part of her portfolio. She also worked for several years in the 鈥渇armhouse鈥 around which the residence was built, first as director of alumni affairs and subsequently with the university鈥檚 residence office when it was located there.

鈥淓liza students looked at themselves as family,鈥 adds Sutherland, saying its occupants always were 鈥渁 tight-knit group known for their spirit and participation.鈥

That Eliza spirit lives on in its alumni, but the rooms and hallways of the building have seen its last occupants. Earlier this month, Eliza Ritchie Hall鈥檚 final summer residents moved out. In a few weeks, the building itself will be torn down.

As outlined in the university鈥檚 , the Eliza Ritchie site has been flagged as the future home of 麻豆传媒鈥檚 new fitness centre for some time now 鈥 an addition long-needed to address the fitness and recreation demands of a Dal community more than double the size it was when Dalplex opened in 1979. And so as other residences have seen major renovations in recent years, and new housing offerings like LeMarchant Place have been added, Eliza Ritchie has been marching towards the end of its noble service to the Dal community.

鈥淭he aesthetics might not have been the best [in its final years], but the community always won out,鈥 says Nicole Cross, who served as the residence life manager for Eliza Ritchie from 2007 until this past year. 鈥淚t was a community where everyone knew everyone.鈥

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Eliza Ritchie Hall was conceived in the midst of a Halifax housing crunch in the mid-eighties. As outlined in a September 1985 Dal News article, students faced many challenges finding housing in a city with a vacancy rate below the national average for nearly a decade. While the vacancy in on-campus housing did improve somewhat the following year, the university had already committed to doing its part to improve matters by moving quickly to increase capacity with a new residence complex.

Designed by architects Preston and Associates to blend in with the surrounding neighbourhood, the new residence was built around an existing 鈥渇armhouse鈥 on the site. (Initially used as Dal office space, the interior of the house eventually became part of the residence proper, thereafter earning the nickname 鈥淭he Hive.鈥) The total cost for the construction was $1.4 million, with $485,000 coming from the Province of Nova Scotia as a donation through the university鈥檚 capital campaign underway at the time. The residence welcomed its first 84 residents in the fall of 1987, with an official opening ceremony on October 20 of that year featuring Premier John Buchanan and Dal President Howard Clark.

To name the new residence, 麻豆传媒 looked to its past, and to one of its most noteworthy 19th-century alumni. Eliza Ritchie (b. 1856, d. 1933) earned her a Bachelor of Letters with first-class honours in Philosophy in 1887, just four years after women were first admitted to the university. She completed her doctorate at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York shortly thereafter, making her one of the first Canadian women to receive a PhD.

Though Ritchie was a teacher for a decade or so, she focused much of her life on research and community activism. She was a staunch feminist, heavily involved in the women鈥檚 suffrage movement, and considered education and the arts her great passions. She believed the Maritimes should be to Canada what she felt New England was to the United States at the time: 鈥渁 centre for high thinking and for the fostering of art.鈥

Ritchie volunteered for Halifax鈥檚 Victoria School of Art (which would later become NSCAD University), was a charter member of the forerunner of the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, and made many notable donations to 麻豆传媒鈥檚 art collection. She was the first woman to serve on Dal鈥檚 Board of Governors, was on the founding editorial board of the 麻豆传媒 Review, and was the first woman to receive an honorary degree from the university. When she became president of the 麻豆传媒 Alumnae Association in 1911, she spearheaded the establishment of Forrest Hall, the university鈥檚 first residence for women 鈥 an accomplishment that helped make her an ideal choice for the name of a new women鈥檚 residence more than 75 years later.

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That Eliza Ritchie Hall was a women鈥檚 residence when it first opened isn鈥檛 surprising, and not just because of the legacy suggested by its name. In the 1980s, single-gender residences were the norm at 麻豆传媒. The university even had separate administrators (dean of men and dean of women) to oversee student life on campus.

But times were changing, and Dal was increasingly behind them: by this point most Canadian universities had at least one co-ed residence environment, but 麻豆传媒 had none. After consultation with students, the DSU, administrators and alumni, the Board of Governors approved a pilot project for two co-ed spaces on campus in 1990. The first was Howe Hall鈥檚 Bronson House, and the second was Eliza Ritchie Hall.

Eliza made sense for the pilot, given its small size, but it meant a massive change to the residence鈥檚 character, almost overnight. Nick Pearce, an English student entering his second year of studies at Dal at the time (and a future Eliza Ritchie house president) was one of the first male students to move in.

鈥淵ou had these women who had lived in this residence for a year or more, and all of a sudden all these boys were moving in,鈥 says Pearce, who today is a staff photographer with 麻豆传媒 Communications and Marketing. 鈥淏ut it was pretty relaxed. Guys behaved differently in Eliza Ritchie. It was really respectful.鈥

Those sentiments were echoed in a March 1991 麻豆传媒 Gazette article looking back at the first year of co-ed residence life at Dal. The article noted a jump in the number of applications for co-ed spaces for the upcoming year and quoted Eliza residence assistant (RA) Pam Trueman saying the year-end tensions she鈥檇 seen in the past had dissipated. 鈥淚t鈥檚 much more relaxed,鈥 she said. Fellow RA Kevin MacIntosh said male residents were learning to look at themselves differently: 鈥淚t鈥檚 so much better than a single-sex residence鈥 it鈥檚 the one real-life scenario.鈥 (Today, while there are select wings or houses that are reserved for male or female students, all of Dal鈥檚 residence buildings are co-ed.)

Eliza Ritchie Hall鈥檚 character would take shape from there. It eventually adopted its defining 鈥渄evil鈥 mascot, which replaced an initial penguin mascot. Over the years some of the residence鈥檚 popular traditions included an annual BBQ, a community banquet and outdoor movie screenings on the back of the building. As an example of how tight-knit a community it was, from the very beginning Eliza鈥檚 residence council leaders would pool their individual honorariums together towards a fund to support additional programming or purchase new equipment for the lounge or kitchens.

And the fact that Eliza Ritchie was ever-so-slightly separated from the rest of campus, along with its smaller population, continued to define its character 鈥 best embodied by the solidarity its students showed in always sitting together in the Shirreff dining hall.

鈥淚t was an incredible community,鈥 says Anne Bartlett, who was residence coordinator/residence life manager for Eliza from 1994 until 2001. 鈥淭here was something unique about being a smaller building on its own鈥 Everybody respected one another.鈥

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(Click image to enlarge)

While Eliza Ritchie always hosted a vibrant group of students, one of its more famous features through the years was decidedly black and white.

For the past two decades, the residence鈥檚 downstairs lounge has featured a two-toned, wall-length mural full of iconic individuals and characters 鈥 everyone from well-established 鈥渓egends鈥 like Michael Jordan and John Lennon to of-their-time personalities like Olympic rower Silken Laumann and Brandon Lee as 鈥淭he Crow.鈥 It even includes one Dal legend: Harold Weston, the card-checker at the Shirreff dining hall who has been with Food Services for nearly all of Eliza Ritchie鈥檚 lifespan.

The sketches for the mural were hand-drawn by Gord Hannah, an RA in Eliza for three years in the mid-鈥90s. The drawings were then painted on the wall by a team of students during Study Break 1996.

鈥淲e worked day and night,鈥 says Hannah, 鈥淲e really wanted to do something special.鈥 聽

Hannah credits then-house president Mike Webster (better known by his frosh name 鈥淓lvis鈥) with suggesting the mural, part of a major revamp of the lounge made possible through some highly successful fundraising efforts by house council. All students who lived in Eliza Ritchie that year were invited to submit their ideas for who should be included in the mural via a sign-up sheet in the building鈥檚 main lobby. Nearly all their suggestions were incorporated.

The creators鈥 original thinking was that the mural would be updated each year with new personalities, but that didn鈥檛 happen. Instead, it lived on as a unique time capsule into the popular iconography of the 1990s.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 believe it鈥檚 still there after all this time,鈥 says Hannah with an enthusiastic laugh.

* * *

Like some of the mural鈥檚 figures, Eliza Ritchie Hall began to show its age in recent years. Given the haste at which it was built, many saw the residence as a 鈥渢emporary鈥 addition to Dal鈥檚 housing offerings, but as the years went by it continued to support students through rain, snow, sleet, hail鈥 and hurricanes.

Bond, who is now a lawyer based in Ottawa, remembers how students in Eliza pulled together when Hurricane Juan hit Halifax in the fall of 2003. Without power, and with a small section of the roof torn off in the storm, students made sure to check up on their fellow housemates and worked to limit the potential damage to personal belongings.

鈥淔or years, we kept a piece of the roof hanging in the front lobby, with the signatures of all of us who lived in Eliza and were there during the hurricane,鈥 says Bond, who would serve as house president the following year.

She also recalls how dozens of Eliza students spent part of that week helping out at Fenwick Tower, then a Dal residence, forming a human chain down the building鈥檚 many flights of stairs to help occupants cart out storm debris. It was a shining example of the spirited volunteerism and support that seemed to define Eliza鈥檚 residents. 聽

鈥淭he community was so strong,鈥 says Christine Squire, who was residence life manager for the building from 2001-2007. 鈥淚t was a place where people could be who they wanted to be. Because it was so small, they felt comfortable to be who they were.鈥

She says the fact the building lasted as long as it did is 鈥渁 true testament to people treating the building with respect鈥 so many great students came out of that building.鈥

* * *

A few weeks from now, that building will be no more.

The Eliza Ritchie name will live on in the , an award for outstanding female students entering their PhD studies first created in 1985 to mark the centennial anniversary of Dal鈥檚 first female graduates. As well, the university is considering how best it can re-purpose the Eliza Ritchie name on campus and continue to celebrate her legacy.

As for the impact of the residence itself, it continues in the success of its alumni, in those individuals who鈥檝e been inspired by its community spirit and gone on to do great things in their lives and careers.

Brandy Morrow gets to claim being one of the last of those Eliza Ritchie alumni, having served as an RA in the building for the past two years. (She also lived there in her first year on campus.) She says she鈥檚 sad to see the residence go, but that it will be nice to see the additional fitness facilities available to students.

鈥淥f the 92 students in Eliza, I was friends with almost every single one of them,鈥 she says.

Despite being separated by more than two decades from some of the residence鈥檚 earliest occupants, Morrow鈥檚 description of Eliza Ritchie鈥檚 character is remarkably similar to her predecessors. She mentions the house鈥檚 tight-knit community, incredible spirit 鈥 winning the inter-house O-Week competition last fall 鈥 and that students who lived there learned to embrace their self-image as 鈥渢he underdogs鈥 on campus.

鈥淚 think that鈥檚 what created such a great community atmosphere,鈥 says Morrow. 鈥淲e were a wonderful residence to be reckoned with.鈥

Photos:
Eliza Ritchie Hall present-day photos: Danny Abriel
Eliza Ritchie portrait: Library and Archives Canada
Mural landscape photo: Nick Pearce
Mural under construction: Ginette Pitcher
Eliza Ritchie Hall under construction: 麻豆传媒 Archives