Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Elizabeth Ziegler (Waterloo 150 Profile)

Description
Creator
Gallagher, Beth, Author
Media Type
Text
Image
Description
To celebrate Waterloo's 150th anniversary, the Waterloo Public Library published a book called "Profiles from the Past, Faces of the Future." This book featured 150 profiles of people who helped make Waterloo what it is today. This is the digitized profile for Elizabeth Ziegler.
Notes
Please visit the Waterloo Public Library to enquire about physical copies of "Profiles from the Past, Faces of the Future."

The Waterloo 150 project was funded by a grant from the Waterloo Regional Heritage Foundation. Beth Gallagher wrote the profiles with the assistance of many research volunteers. Information for the profiles was gathered from a variety of sources from the community and the Ellis Little Local History Room. Notable sources include the Ellis Little Papers, newspaper clippings, local magazines and books.
Place of Publication
Waterloo, Ontario
Date of Publication
2007
Subject(s)
Personal Name(s)
Ziegler, Elizabeth ; Devitt, Elizabeth ; Ziegler, Enoch ; Hallman, Hannah ; Ryerson, Egerton
Language of Item
English
Geographic Coverage
  • Ontario, Canada
    Latitude: 43.4668 Longitude: -80.51639
Copyright Statement
Uses other than research or private study require the permission of the rightsholder(s). Responsibility for obtaining permissions and for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Contact
Waterloo Public Library
Email:askus@wpl.ca
Website:
Agency street/mail address:

35 Albert Street, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, N2L 5E2

Full Text
Elizabeth Ziegler

Elizabeth Ziegler was a small woman with a large heart who touched the lives of more than 1,500 students during fifty-eight years as an educator. The career of this woman, who was the first female principal in Waterloo County, was so long that three generations of some families were taught by her. When she died, her gravestone was inscribed simply: “Elizabeth Ziegler. She loved children.”

“She was our idol when we were young. She did so much for other people. She was the most unselfish woman I ever knew,” said Elizabeth Devitt, a great-niece.

Ziegler was the daughter of Waterloo County pioneers Enoch Ziegler and Hannah Hallman. She grew up in Berlin, attending local schools before completing her teaching certificate at the Toronto Normal School when she was just 16. She was the youngest student to receive a certificate, which was signed by Ontario’s first education minister, Dr. Egerton Ryerson.

It is a great irony that Ziegler received only a four - on a scale of one to six, with one being the highest - for her “aptitude to teach.”

After teaching for one year in Breslau and two years in Bloomingdale she moved to Central School in Waterloo where she taught primary students.

She was remembered as a modest woman “slight in stature and possessed of a sunny disposition.” Ziegler employed amusing teaching methods that included asking her pupils to keep their hands above their heads to avoid using their fingers during arithmetic lessons. Her appreciation for how children are inspired was in evidence during a Teachers’ Association meeting in 1912. While some teachers wanted a clearly defined nature curriculum for each grade, Ziegler argued that children should be taught to observe and love all of nature at every grade level, and not be restricted to particular themes each year.

She taught at Central and Alexandra schools in Waterloo and served as the first woman principal at Alexandra school when it was a four-room school. Many years after they graduated, students would return to speak to their former teacher.

Ziegler retired in 1930 at the age of seventy-four. That same year the Premier of Ontario George S. Henry opened the new Elizabeth Ziegler School on Moore Avenue in Waterloo. At the time, the chairperson of the Waterloo Public School Board said that it was only after much persuasion that Ziegler permitted the board to use her name for the new school.

At the grand opening Henry said: “As to this splendid new building, it is a monument to the purpose, integrity and inspiration of a woman in this community who has helped to fashion the lives of its citizens.”

Photo courtesy of Elizabeth Ziegler Public School.
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