John Elliot Drinkwater Bethune (1801–1851) was an English educator, mathematician and polyglot known for promoting women's education in India.[1] He was the founder of Calcutta Female School (now known as Bethune College) in Calcutta,[2] which is considered the oldest women's college in Asia.[3] He started his professional life as a lawyer in England and came to India by his appointment as a law member of the Governor General's Council of Ministers.[4] His efforts to further women's education were actively supported by Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar and other members of the Bengali Renaissance.[5]
Bethune was born in Ealing, England, the elder son of John Drinkwater Bethune.[6] He studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, after which he received employment as the Counsel of the Home Office. He drafted many essential reforms in this position, including the Municipal Reform Act, the Tithe Commutation Act and the County Courts Act. In 1848, he was appointed as a member of the Supreme Council of India and subsequently became the President of the Council of Education.[4]
The following year, enrollment rose to 80.[8] In November, on a plot on the west side of Cornwallis Square, the cornerstone for a permanent school building was laid. The name "Hindu Female School" was inscribed on the copper plate placed in the stone and on the ceremonial silver trowel made for the occasion.[4]: 15–16 Support for the school, however, waned after Bethune's death in August 1851.[8] The government took it over in 1856, renaming it Bethune School after its founder in 1862–63.[9] In 1879, it was developed into Bethune College, the first women's college in India.[10]
^Acharya, Poromesh (1990). "Education in Old Calcutta". In Chaudhuri, Sukanta (ed.). Calcutta: The Living City. Vol. I: The Past. Oxford University Press. p. 87. ISBN978-0-19-563696-3.
Hutchinson, John (1902). "Bethune, John Elliot Drinkwater" . A catalogue of notable Middle Templars, with brief biographical notices (1 ed.). Canterbury: the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple. p. 21.