Gordon Gibbs began the Bermuda program in the winter of 1935. Students lived at the “picturesque estate Rosedon” on Pitts Bay Boulevard directly opposite the Princess Hotel in Hamilton. Students in good standing carried on “their usual technical and secretarial courses for five weeks during the winter season.” They traveled to Bermuda on the “finest liners” with a staff supervisor to join the typewriters that had been shipped earlier. All classes were at Rosedon, and meals were at reserved tables across the street at the Princess Hotel. Rosedon had a tennis court; the Princess Hotel had a swimming pool; bicycles were provided by Gibbs. The promotional material boasted that smaller class groups equaled personal attention and that scheduled events included “teas, picnics, and sightseeing trips.” Katharine Gibbs: Beyond White Gloves, Page 71.