In 1865, William E. Ward and his wife, Eliza Hudson Ward, opened the Ward Seminary for Young Ladies in Nashville, Tennessee. The Education Bureau in Washington, DC, ranked Ward Seminary among the top three educational institutions for women in the nation. The school also emphasized athletics, organizing the first girls' varsity basketball team in the South and one of the first in the nation. Belmont College for Young Women, founded by Susan L. Heron and Ida E. Hood, opened on September 4, 1890. Modeled on the women’s colleges of the Northeast, the school was established on a site centered on Belmont, the former home of Adelicia Hayes Franklin Acklen Cheatham, which was built in 1850. Ward Seminary and Belmont College for Young Women merged in 1913 to form Ward-Belmont, the first
junior college in the South to receive full
accreditation by the
Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Dr. John Diell Blanton was the first president of Ward-Belmont; he was previously the president of Ward Seminary since 1883. These dormitories are still in use at
Belmont University. In 1951, under financial constraints, Ward-Belmont's campus was sold to the
Tennessee Baptist Convention. The campus was used to establish Belmont College (now
Belmont University). A new, modern, nonresidential girls'
high school,
Harpeth Hall School, was established on the Estes estate in the affluent
Green Hills section of Nashville to take the place of Ward-Belmont. The original campus remained under the aegis of the Tennessee Baptist Convention until 2007 when Belmont University became independent of its control. == Social activities ==