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Jaffna Hindu Ladies' College

Coordinates: 9°40′46.70″N 80°01′06.90″E / 9.6796389°N 80.0185833°E / 9.6796389; 80.0185833
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jaffna Hindu Ladies' College
Address
Map
Arasady Road, Kantharmadam

,
Coordinates9°40′46.70″N 80°01′06.90″E / 9.6796389°N 80.0185833°E / 9.6796389; 80.0185833
Information
School typePublic provincial 1AB
Motto"It ought to be beautiful, I live here" [1]
Founded1943
FounderVisaladchy Ammal Sivagurunathar
School districtJaffna Education Zone
AuthorityNorthern Provincial Council
School number1002003
PrincipalV. Perinpanathan
Teaching staff84
Grades1-13
GenderGirls
Age range5-18
School roll2,229
LanguageTamil, English
Websitejhlc.mysch.lk

Jaffna Hindu Ladies' College (abbreviated as JHLC) is a provincial school in Jaffna, Sri Lanka.[2][3]

History

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The school today

In 1935 the Jaffna Hindu College started admitting girls.[4] On 10 September 1943 the Board of Management of Jaffna Hindu College and Affiliated Schools established a separate girls school - Jaffna Hindu Ladies College.[4] This was the first girls "Hindu" school. JHLC was initially located at "Ponnalayam", the home of Sivagurunathar Ponnusamy.[4] JHLC's growth necessitated larger premises and on 27 February 1944 JHLC moved to buildings at Jaffna Hindu College's playgrounds.[4]

In 1941 Visaladchy Ammal Sivagurunathar, the founder of JHLC, donated land at "Naduththoddam", Arasady Road to the college.[4] The founders husband Ramalingam Sivagurunathar and his niece Mrs. Valliammal Sivaguru also donated land to JHLC, including the Rajavarothaya Pillaiyar Temple.[4] On 7 September 1945 JHLC moved to the Arasady Road site.[4] In 1978 a new school, Jaffna Hindu Ladies' Primary School, catering for grades 1 to 5 was established next to JHLC.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Miranda, Sujitha (14 September 2014). "Jaffna Hindu Ladies' College continues to stand fresh and firm in providing best education". Sunday Times (Sri Lanka).
  2. ^ Schools Basic Data as at 01.10.2010. Northern Provincial Council. 2010. Archived from the original on 2011-07-22.
  3. ^ "Province - Northern" (PDF). Schools Having Bilingual Education Programme. Ministry of Education. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-12-03.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "History of the College". Jaffna Hindu Ladies' College. Archived from the original on 2011-07-22. Retrieved 2011-03-13.
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