Oak Ridge Seminary
The Oak Ridge Seminary was an antebellum school for "young ladies" west of the borough of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. One of 2 girls schools used as an American Civil War hospital for Battle of Gettysburg casualties, the female seminary had also been used as a prison, and General Lee's "Headquarters and tents pitched in the space adjoining Oak Ridge Seminary"
Background
The first school in the area that would become Gettysburg was at the Mummasburg Road and Carlisle Street intersection on the south side of Stevens Run and by 1835, Gettysburg had five common schools. Earlier girls' schools in the Gettysburg borough included one for which Deacon James H. Marsden "took charge" after teacher applications were requested on June 23, 1829. Marsden held classes "from Sept. 25th, 1829, to April 1st, 1830, in the room, later occupied by the late Judge Wills' law office";"Building for a Female School": Miss Mary McClellan's "private school" in the borough was located in a "small brick building on East High street" land donated by Mary and Catherine Leckey adjoining* the jail near Stratton Street An 1830 meeting was held for the bidding contractors and to elect trustees, and incorporation was on April 10, under the name Gettysburg Female Academy. The Principal in 1840 was Henry W. Thorp; prices per session ranged from $5 to $11 ; and classes included "Latin; French; History, Ancient, Ecclesiastical, American, and English; Botany, Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, Geology, &c. &c." The Gettysburg Female Seminary was incorporated on April 14, 1835; in 1842 the "Winter Session" commenced on October 17, and the 1852 teacher was Miss Darling. After the battle, "Miss Mary D. McClellan" resumed "the exercises of her School on the 10th of August", and in 1883, the brick school on High Street was sold.
By the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg, Rebecca Eyster's Young Ladies Seminary was on the "corner of Washington and High streets" at the "Old Academy Building" built 1813-5 for boys.