• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Schools
  • Government/Politics
  • Food/Restaurant
  • Arts/Entertainment/Media
  • History
  • Health and Fitness
  • Sports
  • Kobe At Lower Merion
  • 21st Century On The Main Line

This Is Lower Merion And Narberth

Serving the Main Line Community

  • Ardmore
  • Bala Cynwyd
  • Belmont Hills
  • Bryn Mawr
  • Gladwyne
  • Haverford
  • Merion
  • Narberth
  • Penn Valley
  • Penn Wynne
  • Rosemont
  • Villanova
  • Wynnewood

100 Years Ago, A Whiskey Magnate’s Mansion Became Rosemont College

by Gerry July 29, 2021

Rosemont Hall Purchased from Sinnott

Philadelphia Inquirer – August 8, 1921

Just about 100 years ago, as reported by Inquirer, The Sisters of the Holy Child of Jesus purchased “Rathalla,” the estate of the late Joseph Sinnott. At the time, the Sisters announced that they were going to open a new college preparatory school for Catholic girls in the fall of 1921. The new school was to be known as Rosemont Hall.

Joseph Sinnott Rathalla

From the Lower Merion Historical Society

In 1889, Joseph Sinnott, owner of the Philadelphia distillery, Moore and Sinnott, purchased 40 acres in Rosemont…land once part of the Ashbridge estate called Rosemont Farm. By summer of 1891, a 32-room house designed by Philadelphia architects, Hazlehurst and Huckel, was ready for occupancy. The house was named Rathalla which in Gaelic means “home of the chieftain upon the highest hill.”

Joseph Francis Sinnott had come a long way from his arrival in 1854 as a 17-year-old immigrant. He had been born in County Donegal, Ireland to a family that could trace its roots back for 700 years…when the first “Synnots” arrived with the Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland in the 12th century (during the reign of Henry II). One descendent, Susan Synnot, came to America in the 17th century and married George Nixon. Their grandson, John Nixon, gave the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence at the State House on July 8, 1776.

Sinnott joined the distillery firm of John Gibson’s Son as a 20-year old bookkeeper. After a brief stint as a private in the Civil War, he began to move up in the business. In 1884, Gibson retired and Sinnott and Andrew Moore took over. With Moore’s death in 1888, Sinnott became the owner of one of the largest distilleries in the country.

When Sinnott and his wife moved into Rathalla, they had six boys and three girls ranging in age from 27 to 13. In addition, there were seven servants in residence: cook, assistant cook, two chambermaids, seamstress, laundress, and groom. Mr. Sinnott died in 1906, his wife in 1918. The house stood empty until its purchase by the Sisters of the Holy Child in 1921.

In 1980, the property was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In 1922 Rosemont Hall became known as Rosemont College

In June of 1922, the Pennsylvania State Council of Education granted a charter to Rosemont College

 

June 3, 2008 Click here to read the full article.

 

August, 2009 Rosemont College welcomes first coed classes 

Rosemont College Centennial Run/Walk for Service

Grab your running (or walking) shoes! As part of our ongoing Centennial celebration, we will be hosting a Run/Walk For Service on campus Saturday, September 18, at 10 a.m. As part of this event, we are asking all who attend to consider donating non-perishable food items in honor of Rosemont’s mission of service to the Providence Center, which will have staff and children onsite to accept the donations..

Register

Filed Under: History

Primary Sidebar

Sports

Family Learning To Luge

Want to Try Luge? From Lower Merion, It Starts With a Drive to Lake Placid

I was watching the Luge on NBC over the weekend. I thought it was boring, especially when juxtaposed against the more dramatic events, like curling.  The color commentator kept explaining how each “slider” was doing something slightly better or worse than the others, but to my untrained eye, they all looked the same: feet first, […]

Arts and Entertainment

These Garments Have Been Politically Maligned

Most non-Arabs who wear the keffiyeh do not intend it to be Anti-Semitic in any way. They wear it as an expression of sympathy for Palestinian civilians, support for human rights, concern about war, or identification with a broader cause of national identity and self-determination. In their minds, it is directed toward Palestinians, not against […]

What Does My Fountain Pen Have In Common With The Former Lord & Taylor In Bala Cynwyd?

Both come out of the work of Raymond Loewy and his design firm. Raymond Loewy (1893–1986) helped define what modern America looked like in the mid-20th century. Through his design firm, he worked across an unusually wide range of industries—transportation, consumer products, branding, and architecture—often simultaneously. No one in history is more closely associated with […]

January 16-18: The Philly Pen Show — A Delightfully Analog Experience

f you’re looking for a break from screens, alerts, and endless scrolling, the Philly Pen Show might be the cure—at least temporarily. It’s an unapologetically analog event: pens, paper, ink, and the people who still care deeply about them. Whether you’re a serious collector, someone who misses the feel of writing by hand, or just […]

More Posts from this Category

© 2019–2026