Isabella Binney Cogswell is commemorated with a plaque in St. Paul’s Church in Halifax, Nova Scotia but evidence of her work still abounds. An early Nova Scotia philanthropist, she was one of Canada’s earliest influences and most enduring. For example, located in Middle Sackville, Nova Scotia, Cogswell House is licensed as a four bed male residential facility for youth under 18 years of age. Formally known as Brenton House, the facility opened after the Garfat/Mitchell Review was completed in 2000. The mandate was developed separately in consultation with the Department of Community Services. Brenton House operated on Oxford Street in Halifax until October 2002, when the program was moved to Lower Sackville and renamed Cogswell House after Isabella’s work as one of the founding members of St. Paul’s Home.

Isabella was born on 6 July 1819 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, the ninth child of Henry Hezekiah Cogswell and Isabella Ellis. She died on 6 Dec. 1874 in Halifax. Isabella Cogswell’s parents were born in the Nova Scotia outports; the Cogswells had emigrated from New England in the 1760s and the Ellis family were immigrants from Ireland. When her father’s death left her free of family responsibilities, Isabella, who never married, devoted the rest of her life to bettering the educational and living conditions of the Halifax poor.

Henry Cogswell, an attorney, was first president of the Halifax Banking Company, an MLA, and member of the provincial Legislative Council. Isabella inherited her father’s business instincts and carried on numerous property transactions in Halifax after his death. She also inherited his broad humanitarianism which was reinforced by the evangelical influence of her brother William Cogswell, curate of St Paul’s Church.

In the 1850s Isabella began assisting at Sabbath services at the Ragged School for pauper children. In the early 1860s she organized a ladies’ committee to revive the faltering school; from it emerged, in 1863, the Halifax Protestant Industrial School, a home “for the reclamation of boys to the paths of industry and virtue.” She headed a group of women who provided religious instruction at the school, entertained the teachers and boys at her residence, “Jubilee,” and contributed financial aid, particularly for steam power in the workshop and for an endowment. She was also a founder and committee member of St Paul’s Alms House of Industry for Girls, to which she granted a bequest for the carrying on of its work. To aid Christian women of inadequate means, Isabella participated in the founding, operation, and endowment of a home for the aged. Tirelessly, she laboured for St Paul’s Parochial District Visiting Society and the Halifax branch of the Colonial Church Society which established Anglican schoolmasters and missionaries in Nova Scotia. With a bequest to Trinity, the free-pew church, and her assistance to interdenominational missions, she encouraged religious instruction for the poor. To aid them further, she endowed an orphans’ home and served as first president of the Women’s Christian Association.

Cogswell’s wealth encouraged not only philanthropic activity but also commercial transactions. Property was the principal field of her investment, and in 20 years of substantial purchases and sales she demonstrated the same good business sense as her competitors. Her mortgage holdings, the customary instruments of her purchases, were valued in excess of $95,000 at the time of her death. But the main directing force in her life was her belief that the body was the home of the soul. Her most consuming efforts were devoted to the moral improvement of her fellow citizens — never ostentatiously, never condescendingly, but always persistently.

Previous post

Minister St-Onge highlights funding to organizations in Prince Edward Island

Next post

Canada Life announces first-of-its-kind charitable giving product, empowers Canadians to leave a legacy

The Editor

The Editor