Seney–Stovall Chapel is a church building in Athens, Georgia, United States.
Mildred Lewis Rutherford (or "Miss Millie"), then head of the Lucy Cobb Institute, decided the girls needed a chapel and had them write seeking funding for one.
In 1881, Nellie Stovall wrote "a beautiful and girlish letter"[1] to George I. Seney, who responded with the funding for the $10,000 structure, an octagonal red brick building called the Seney-Stovall Chapel.
[4] When Rutherford stepped down from the role of principal in 1895, she was replaced at the school's helm by her sister, Mary Ann Lipscomb.
[5] Rutherford and Lipscomb were nieces of Thomas Reade Rootes Cobb.