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Convent of Jesus and Mary, Shimla

Convent school in Himachal Pradesh, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Convent of Jesus and Mary, Shimla
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The Convent of Jesus and Mary, Chelsea, Shimla is a private English medium school, founded by a French nun, Marie Claudine Thevenet of the Religious of Jesus and Mary and run by the nuns situated in the hills of the Himalayas ranges.[1][2] It started as an orphanage for the children of the British soldiers and established as one of the elite educational institutions in post colonial India.[3][4] It is an all-girls elementary and secondary school, now affiliated with the CBSE board,[5][6][7][8] established in Shimla[9] in 1864. Its boarding school operated for over one hundred and thirty five years, until its decision in 2000 to close the boarding section and transition to a day school.[10][11] As a day school, it expanded with new buildings to educate children from the stages of nursery, kindergarten, to higher classes of grades XI and XII.[12][13] The Convent of Jesus and Mary School, Shimla,[14] is favorably referred to as Chelsea'. Its students wear a red uniform and are called 'Chelseaites'.[15][16]

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Founder

Marie Claudine Thevenet founded the Congregation of Jesus and Mary.[17][18][19][20] She was born in Lyon, France, on 30 March 1774, the second of seven children. She founded the religious order in 1818 and became known as Mary of St. Ignatius.[21] She died on 3 February 1837, at the age of 63.[17] After her death, six Irish nuns of the order set out for colonial India, in 1842 and one of the convents established there was Chelsea in 1864.[22][17][23] Pope John Paul II, canonized her a saint on 21 March 1993.[24][25]

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Early history (1864–1940)

Chelsea is 2206 meters above sea level in the inner compound of St. Bede's College[26] through a shared entrance. On recommendation from the Governor General of India at the time, Charles Canning, the CJM nuns moved from their work from Agra to the hills of Shimla in 1864.[27][28][29] Mother St. Lewis Gonzaga was the first supervisor, the orphans of the British soldiers were cared for and received education from the nuns until 1940, when it was no longer an orphanage. In 1873, a chapel was built adjoining the school.

In 1946 a fire burned two-thirds of the school building; the church, the rectory, and the Victorian-style main building survived. The main building has the principal office, the administrative office, and the library. Its upper floor was used as elementary students' dormitories and an infirmary, another building on the south side was the senior boarders dormitories. In 1947 India became independent, and the school began accepting students from well-off families, mostly from the North India and some from overseas of Indian expatriates.[30][31]

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Chelsea chapel 1873

The British built the Chelsea chapel. A statue of the sacred heart of Jesus stands outside the front compound and a grotto of Mary behind the church, jointly shared by St. Bede's.[32] The priests of the diocese pray and attend school ceremonies.[33]

Boarding school (1940–2000)

Boarders

As a boarding school, there were no more than 300 students in Chelsea. As a day school the enrollment was 1900 students in 2016.[34] The boarder students predominantly came from the northern states of India. A few came from UK, North America, Africa, and Thailand, from Indian families. Some of these students were from families of the elites of Indian society.[31][35] The school year lasted from March to December.[36]

Dormitories

In the 21st century the building that housed the senior dormitories was replaced with a new multi-purpose building named Claudine Thevenet Hall.[37][38][39]

Infirmary

Like its other CJM boarding schools, Chelsea had an infirmary.[40]

Curriculum

The school belonged to the ICSE board and then affiliated to the CBSE board in the 21st century.[41][42]

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Alumni

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References

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