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Musaeus College

Musaeus College
Musaeus College logo.jpg
Location
Cinnamon Gardens, Colombo 7
Sri Lanka
Information
Type Private (English medium sinhala medium and International education)
Motto Follow The Light
Religious affiliation(s) Buddhist
Established 1891
Founder Marie Musaeus Higgins
Principal S. Dandeniya
Gender Girls
Age 3 to 18
Enrollment 6700+
Colour(s)

Gold & Blue

        
Website

Gold & Blue

Musaeus College is a Private girls' school in Colombo, Sri Lanka, and was named for Marie Musaeus Higgins (1855 – 10 July 1926) from Wismar in Germany, its Principal from 1891 to 1926. Musaeus College is now an academic institution with more than 6700 girls from ages 3 to 18, and managed by a board of trustees. The school's motto is "Follow the Light".

The origin of the school can be traced to the Women's Education Society of Ceylon, whose mission was to improve educational opportunities for girls, with instruction in English along Buddhist principles. It had the backing of the Buddhist Theosophical Society, which previously founded the Ananda College for boys along similar lines. With help and guidance from Peter De Abrew and Colonel Henry Steel Olcott, they founded the Sangamitta Girls' School at Tichborne Place, Maradana, around 1890, and wanted a European lady as its Principal. Colonel Olcott found a suitable candidate in Kate F. Pickett, the daughter of Elise Pickett, President of the Melbourne Theosophical Society. Miss Pickett arrived in Colombo on 10 June 1891 and had apparently settled into life in the school's boarding house when she was found on the morning of 24 June 1891 drowned in a well in the school grounds.

Marie Musaeus Higgins, after whom the College was subsequently named, was the daughter of Theodor Musaeus, Chief Justice of Wismar in Mecklenburg, Germany. After having graduated and obtaining the title of Frau Professor, she proceeded to the United States of America and was engaged in educational work there. She married Anton Higgins, an engineer in the US army and a Theosophist. He died less than four years later. Following an advertisement by Col. Olcott in The Path (the magazine of the Buddhist Theosophical Society), she left for Ceylon, arriving on 15 November 1891.

The Musaeus Buddhist Girls' School started in a very simple and modest ‘mud hut’ which served both as living and teaching quarters with 12 students. The ‘hut’ was replaced by a brick building in the year 1895 as a result of a donation from Mr. Wilton Hack. He was a recent convert to Theosophy and around 1892, while in Colombo on his way home to Australia, Hack observed the work being carried out by Higgins ("Sudu Amma" to her students), and decided to become involved in its development. He was to remain on the board of trustees until his death in 1923.


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