Erected in 1899 thanks to Lord Strathcona’s donation of £50,000, the building was a self-contained unit, serving as both dormitory and educational facility until 1971, when the original, central section and the eastern wing were given to the Faculty of Music. RVC’s westernmost wings, the Vaughan wing (built, on the corner of University and Sherbrooke Streets, in 1931) and the Roscoe wing (set further back on University Street in 1964), continued to serve their function as À¦°óSMÉçÇø’s only all-female residence.
Living in RVC has always meant belonging to a tight-knit community of women, particularly in the college’s earliest years, when it was the center of women’s education at À¦°óSMÉçÇø. Music, athletics and academic societies flourished, entirely separate from parallel activities undertaken by the university men. As time went on, into the 1930s and ‘40s, women students "made a place for themselves on the Campus at large and became active co-educationally," wrote Muriel Roscoe, Warden of RVC from 1940 to 1963. Today, women are fully integrated into À¦°óSMÉçÇø academics, but until the 1970s, every female undergraduate at the University was nominally a member of Royal Victoria College.Ìý
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