USA > Indiana > Henry County > Spiceland > Catalogue of the officers and students of Spiceland Academy : at Spiceland, Ind. for the year, 1900-1920 > Part 1
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REYNOLDS HISTORICAL GENEALOGY COLLECTION
ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 01722 8468
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2014
http://archive.org/details/catalogueofoffic00spic_0
CATALOGUE
OF
Spiceland Academy,
FOR THE
.
ACADEMIC YEAR
.
1900 - 1920
1
NEW CASTLE, IND .: COURIER ATEAM PRINT. 1875. .
1
-
1879084
.. THIRTY-SECOND ..
CATALOGUE
OF SA
SPICELAND ACADEMY
AND 2
NORMAL SCHOOL.
FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 1900-1901
TRIBUNE PRINTING CO., NEW CASTLE' IND.
DesL- E-CI
---- . . . ---
- -
Officers and Faculty
Board of Trustees
ELISHA B. RATCLIFF, President.
HERBERT T. BAILY, Secretary.
MARTHA E. S. CHARLES, Treasurer. O. H. BOGUE. TERRELL WILSON. SAMUEL E. TEST.
Instructors
For the Academic Year 1900-1901
MURRAY, S. WILDMAN, Superintendent, Ph. B. Earlham College, 1893, Psychology and Science.
H. C. HENDERSON, A. M., University of New Brunswick, Canada, Psychology and Pedagogy.
WILLIAM M. TIMMONS, Indiana State Normal School, 1897. Mathematics and Pedagogy.
LAURA B. LAUGHMAN, Earlham College, A. B. 1889, Latin and Elocution.
BERTHA BUTLER, Librarian.
EMILY WEEKS, Music.
Calendar
1901 Fall Term begins Monday, September 2nd. Fall Term ends Friday, December 20th. Public Exercises of the First Year Class, De- cember 21st. Winter Term begins Monday December 30th. 1902 Spring Term begins Tuesday, April Ist. Field Day, June 13th. Commencement, June 20th.
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Spiceland Academy
History
PICELAND ACADEMY is the oldest Academy in charge of Friends in Indiana. It was char- tered as an Academy in 1870, but its history as a Friends' school extends over a period of more than sixty years. It is under the control of Spiceland Monthly Meeting, by which body the Board of Trustees is appointed. The teachers are selected by the Trustees. While the school is under denominational control, it is not sectarian in the least; its foundation rests upon Christian culture. The first class was graduated in 1870, and more than 3,000 students have received instruction in the school since its organization as an Academy.
Location
Spiceland Academy is located in the beautiful town of Spiceland, Indiana, in the Southern part of Henry County, on the Lake Erie and Western Railroad, two miles north of Dunreith, on the Pennsylvania Railroad. The buildings are situated in the midst of a beautiful grove, adjoining which is a large campus, well adapted to athletic sports.
Entrance
Students may enter at any time, but students coming from other schools are required to bring certificates stating their literary and moral standing. In the absence of approved certificate, examinations
will be held and students classified accordingly. Classes in Grammar School branches are maintain- ed as demand may justify, affording opportunity for preparatory work to students who may not be eli- gible to regular academic standing.
In general, graduates from the non-commission- ed high schools of this county can enter the Acad- emy with a credit of six terms' work. Three terms are usually required to complete the course.
The Course of Study
The conditions for admission to the First Year class are the same as for entrance to the public high schools of this state.
The work for the entire course is briefly out- lined as follows:
First Year Fall Term
1
LATIN-First Latin Book. (Collar and Daniel).
ALGEBRA-To Simple Equations, ( Wells).
ENGLISH HISTORY-(Montgomery).
*ENGLISH-Principles of Composition.
Winter Term
LATIN-(Continued). ALGEBRA-To Radicals.
HISTORY-Civil Government in the United States. (Fiske). ENGLISH-(Continued). Spring Term LATIN-Chiefly Grammar and Composition . ALGEBRA-To Progressions. ZOOLOGY-(Selected Text). ENGLISH-Interpretation.
*Students regularly classified for English and Literature will be given class instruction in Elocution at least once a week through two terms. No extra charge will be made for this work,
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Second Year
Fall Term
LATIN-Caesar's Commentaries.
¿GEOMETRY-Two books, (Wentworth's).
A PHYSICS-General Principles.
*ENGLISH-Original Composition.
Winter Term
1. LATIN-Cæsar's Commentaries.
GEOMETRY-Three books.
HISTORY -- Greece and Rome, (Myers)
ENGLISH-Composition.
Spring Term
LATIN-Cæsar, with sight reading.
GEOMETRY-Solid Geometry, (Wentworth).
HISTORY-Mediaval and Modern, (Myers).
ENGLISH-Composition and interpretation.
Third Year Fall Term
LATIN-Cicero's Orations.
CHEMISTRY-(Cooley ).
GEOLOGY-(Le Conte).
*RHETORIC-(Genung).
Winter Term
LATIN-Virgil's Aeneid.
ASTRONOMY-(Todd).
POLITICAL ECONOMY-(Walker's Elementary Course).
LITERATURE-Study of English Classics.
Spring Term
LATIN-Virgil continued. PSYCHOLOGY-(Halleck). BOTANY-( Wood).
LITERATURE-History of English literary periods and writers.
Higher classes in any of the work will be formed whenever there is sufficient demand, and tuition will be charged at the same rate as for a third year study.
Satisfactory work in these studies may be substituted for work in the regular course at the discretion of the Superintendent.
The above course of study has been prepared with reference to the needs of those students who do not expect to pursue a college course, but desire to acquire a knowledge of those branches which will fit them for active life. SPECIAL ATTENTION, HOWEVER, IS GIVEN TO PREPARING STUDENTS FOR COLLEGE, and additional work in Latin, Mathematics and other subjects will be given when a sufficient number of pupils desire it. Graduates are urged to take a college course, and they will be admitted to any of the leading colleges in Indiana without examination.
At the close of the winter term the members of the Second Year class hold an exhibition, for which each member prepares an essay or oration, and the public speakers are chosen from the number.
Public exercises in declamation will be given by the First Year class at the end of the fall term.
English
Besides the usual work in English Grammar, special attention is paid to English Composition, which is preparatory to the work in Rhetoric. This consists of a study of grammatical purity, choice and use of words, and kinds of composition, with practical exercises. English and American Litera- ture receive careful attention.
Latin
In order to receive a diploma a student must have done three years' work in Latin, or, in special cases, equivalents may be taken to fit the student for
*Students regularly classified for English and Literature will be given class instruction in Elocution at least once a week through two terms. No extra charge will be made for this work.
9
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college. Thorough drill on the declension of nouns, adjectives and the conjugation of verbs is given, also on the application of the rules of construction and the acquiring of a vocabulary. The derivation of English words is studied, and in the advanced work exercises in sight reading and Latin composition are given. It is the purpose to invest all the work in Latin with a living spirit that it may be a means of genuine literary culture as well as mental discipline.
The "First Latin Book," by Collar & Daniel, is used as a text in the First Year class. Any of the standard editions of the Latin classics may be used in the subsequent work.
History
A thorough foundation is laid in General His- tory, English History, Civil Government and Political Economy. It is the purpose of this course to reveal the various steps by which the great insti- tutions have developed and grown from early times until the present.
Science
The Academy is supplied with sufficient appara- tus to be a valuable aid in the study of the natural sciences. In Natural Philosophy the subject is illus- trated by many simple pieces of apparatus, besides the air pump, electrical machine, batteries, etc. In chemistry students do practical work in the labora- tory, which is supplied with necessary chemicals and apparatus. Geology and Mineralogy are illus- trated by a collection of more than twelve hundred specimens, presented to the Academy by the Alumni. In Zoology and Botany, animals and plants are studied from nature, and systems of classifications
are made prominent. In all the sciences objects are used as much as possible.
Mathematics
The aim in this study is to introduce the stu- dent to mathematical methods and to develop in him the power to reason clearly and accurately on any given problem. Algebra is studied throughout the first year of the High School, Geometry during the second year. A great deal of supplementary work is given in Algebra and original exercises are introduced as much as possible in Geometry. As- tronomy is studied during the winter terin of the third year. In this subject the work is largely de- scriptive. A good six-inch telescope belongs to the Academy.
Literary Exercises
Literary exercises are required of students in all grades, both in class work and before the pub- lic. Care is used that students may learn the art of composition and public delivery. Essays and dec- lamations are a part of the regular school work.
Oratory and Elocution
There is a regular organized Oratorical Asso- ciation which is associated with similar organiza- tions of students of Fairmount, Central and West- field Academies in the Inter-Academic Oratorical Association of Indiana. In each school a contest is held in oratory and declamation. The successful contestant in each department represents his school in an Inter-Academic contest held in April.
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Libraries
Four sets of Encyclopedias are in the school- rooms, and these, with the dictionaries and numer- ous reference books, are for the free use of all. There are three libraries in connection with the school, which comprise about three thousand vol- umes, two of them belonging to the Literary So- ciety, and the other to the Academy Association. Additions are made each year.
Normal Department
For several years past special arrangements have been made to give those students desiring to teach, the opportunity of normal instruction during the spring term. A special normal instructor has been employed and many students of this and ad- joining counties have availed themselves of this op- portunity.
The increasing demand for normal work and for a more extended course than can be given dur- ing the spring termin, has induced the board to add a normal department that provides for a full year's work of three terms as follows:
FallTerm ..
;Ist Gramm'riIst Arithmetic Ist U.S. History]
Physiology
Winter T'rm 2d Grammar 2d Arithmetic 2d U.S. History Ist Geography
Spring Term. Method
Reading
Psychology
2d Geography
In the fall term classes will be organized with the view of continuing the work throughout the
year. During the winter term those having started in the fall will advance to the next work in the course.
In the spring term classes will be provided for those beginning the normal work, and for those who have done one termin's work. It is thus seen that all the legal branches, Psychology and Method may be had in the spring term.
It is not the purpose of high schools to give students a teacher's knowledge of the legal branches. However, it is known that many high school gradu- ates desire to teach. This course of normal work is especially fitted for this class of students, and for students having graduated from common schools, who wish to get a more comprehensive knowledge of the legal branches, and learn correct methods of teaching thein. Psychology, Pedagogy and Method will be given to make work characteristically pro- fessional.
.
In the normal course it is not intended to con- duct a scheme of cramming for examination, but it is our intention to help teachers in their schools quite as much as to aid them to get licenses.
Work will be so arranged that students who desire to take part academic work and part normal work will be accommodated.
General Items
The government of the school is based upon the idea that manhood is more than scholarship; that self-respect and self-control on the part of the student are important factors in the formation of character. Greater stress is laid upon the thorough-
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ness of instruction and accuracy of knowledge than upon rapidity of advancement.
A daily class record of the work of each pupil is kept. This record and the final examination de- termine the recorded grade.
For many years the health of students has been uniformly good. There is probably no better loca- tion in the state in this respect.
The Friends and Methodists both hold religious services on the Sabbath and each maintains a Sab- bath-school. Meetings of the Young People's So- ciety of Christian Endeavor and the Epworth League are held every Sabbath evening, and stu- . dents are welcomed to their meetings and member- ship.
A sufficient number of teachers is constantly employed, so that large classes may be avoided, and students may receive personal attention during the recitation.
Expenses are as low as at any other school affording equal advantages.
The managers of the school are very careful to inake this an institution in which students who are away from home and its restraints, will be sur- rounded by good, moral influences, and in this they have the co-operation of the citizens of the village.
There are no beer, liquor or billiard saloons in the village.
No student whose influence is known to have a corrupting tendency will be retained in the school.
Diploma
Students whose conduct is exemplary, and who complete the course of study and prepare and de-
13
liver a suitable literary production, will be furnished a diploma, signed by the instructors and the Presi- dent of the Board of Trustees.
Lectures
Students have the opportunity to hear good lectures at small expense. Addresses on various subjects are given during the year by able speakers.
Expenses
Rates of Tuition
Grammar School, . four studies, 75 cts per week First Year Academic, for each study, 20 "
Second Year Academic, 2212
Third Year Academic,
25 "
Normal Classes, 25
66
.
Students who enter at irregular times will be charged full tuition for the term in case they com- plete the term's work in such manner as to receive credit toward the diploma.
Normal students and others who may not ex- pect to earn credit in the regular course will be charged only for the time of actual enrollment in classes.
Occasionally those who are especially strong are permitted to earn credits by outside study un- der the supervision of the teachers. For such credits as these one-half the regular tuition will be charged.
Tuition is due at the opening of each term and settlement should be made with the Superintend- ent or the Treasurer of the Board of Trustees.
15
14
Boarding
The citizens of Spiceland have always given the students a hearty welcome by receiving them in- to their homes. The cost of boarding and rooms in private families where everything is furnished can be had for $2.50 to $3.00 a week. Rooms both fur- nished and unfurnished can be had for from 25 to 50 cents a week, and table board of excellent quality at the rate of $1. 50 to $2.00 for the full week.
Thus persons who may live near enough to go home at the end of each week and who wish to economize may reduce the cost of living to a very small sum.
LIST OF STUDENTS.
SENIOR CLASS.
Bell, Ira E.
Millikan, Georgia
Butler, Bertha E.
Millikan, Jennie E.
Byrket, Raymond
Nugen, Homer E.
Compton, Jennie
Risk, Cora E.
Cope, Everett
Roberts, Robert A.
Edwards, Deborah
Smith, Manning J.
Edwards, Ethel
Stewart, Grace E.
Hayes, Lillian O.
Wright, Russell L.
Harvey, Walter B.
Wilson, Walter C.
Hinshaw, John R.
*Ward. Clara
Macy, Everett
JUNIOR CLASS.
Anderson, Harley
Harrold, Ethel M.
Baily, Jessie
Johnson, Arthur
Beckett, Nellie
Kirk, Jennie
Beeson, Josephine
Lane, Eva
Black, Alnetta
Lindamood, Harry
Butler, Mary
Newby, Paul
Byers, Walter Nugen, Linnie
Edwards, Flora M. Seaford, Howard
Gilbreath, Maud
Seaford, Herbert
Griffin, Horace C.
Wilson, Russell
Gordon, Jessie L.
Yost. India Anna
Haisley, Fred
FIRST YEAR CLASS.
Adams, Goldie Munden, Belva
Baldwin, Clarence
Newby, Carl
Baldwin, Howard
Painter, Anna M.
Bell, Elsie Painter, Floyd
Brewer, Karl Redin, Rupert B.
Burt, William
Rifner, Etta M.
Bucy, Netta
Shepherd, Frank
English, Ratie
Shepherd, Nellie
Harrold, Blanch
Strattan, Anna M.
*Deceased.
16
Hoover, Claire
Stubbs, Ralph
1871.
Walter D. Jones
Dayton, Ohio.
*Alvin H. Jenkins.
*I. Macy Good
C. R. Dixon
Lawrence, Kan,
R. G. Boone.
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Dallas Sisson
Spiceland.
Mary Ballenger (Barnard) New Castle.
Louisa Wickershamn. Lewisville.
Lida Edwards (Saint) New Castle.
1872.
Lindley H. Johnson Dunreith.
David Henley
Spiceland.
"Jacob Hill .
Henry W. Painter Spiceland.
Robert G. Mitchell Pacific Grove, Cal
1873.
'Sadie D. Talbert (Wright)
Aaron B. Bell. . Springtown, Kan.
*J. Tilman Hutchins
John Pennington
Providence, R. I.
Mary Stubbs ( Painter) Spiceland.
Nathan Williams Oswego, Kan.
Carrie Talbert (Newby) Wichita, Kan.
1874.
Alice Coffin (Russell).
St. Louis, Mo.
Elvira Spencer (Harrold)
Indianapolis.
J. P. Edwards
Spiceland.
William S. Moffit Kennard.
Edwin O. Kennard. Pasadena, Cal.
1
Nathan Rosenberger Muscatine, Iowa.
W. E. Jackson
Knightstown.
D. C. Mitchell Spiceland.
1875
W. W. Gregg
Chicago, Ill.
*Deceased.
*Deceased.
17
NORMAL STUDENTS.
Anderson, Pearl
Lawrence, Bertha O.
Burt, Irene
Mills, Carroll J.
Conwell, James C.
Pearson, Bertha
Carter, Benjamin
Rifner, Jeanette
Davis, Edgar N.
Rifner, Ethel
Griffin, Pearl D.
Stafford, Mayme
Griffin, Connie
Trees, George H.
Haynes, Clyde
Walker, Owen M.
Healton, Alonzo V.
Wilkinson, Tweeda
Kerr, Tilman W.
IRREGULAR.
Anderson, Elsie Painter, Myron
Bazzle, Everett
Poarch, Fay
Beckett, Clare
Randall, Orlando
Bowles, Raymond
Reeves, Paul
Bower, Chester
Stewart, Clayton
Denner, Grace
Smalley Gertrude
Hoover, Clifford
Stafford, W. Merritt
Hodson, Arlie E.
Stevenson, Frank
Hinshaw, Evert M.
Thompson, John R.
Lane, Nellie
ALUMNI.
1870.
*Eli U. Cook John J. Stubbs Omaha, Neb.
Taylor, Jesse
Jones, Barton E.
Wood, Minnie B.
Lane, Alvia
Meredith, Joie
Yockey, Harrold.
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Wm. Pidgeon.
Richland, Iowa.
Irvin Stanley
Westfield.
1877
Milton Roberts
Lynnville, Iowa.
1878
S. Ella Bogue (Dogget)
Danville, Va.
Belle Chambers (Estes)
New Castle
J Pinkney Mitchell
. Fresno, Cal.
Thomas Mitchell . .
Knightstown.
Flora Moore ( Brady ) Indianapolis.
John O. Reed.
E. Saginaw, Mich
William S. Seaford . Spiceland.
Fannie Thornburg (Parsons) . Oak Park, Ill.
1879.
J. A. Buck.
Muncie.
Carrie Goodwin (Jeffrey )
. New Castle.
Thomas Newlin Wilmington, O.
ISSO.
J. Edgar Cloud
Chicago, III.
Wm. N. Lamb San Francisco.
Mattie Lamb Outland. Amboy.
Ada Grace Murphey
New Castle.
Ida May Roberts .
Irvington.
Emma Belle Roberts . Sun River, Mont.
Frank Symons
Portland, Me.
Lamira Trueblood ( Kellum ) Friendswood.
ISSI
Oscar R. Baker
Winchester.
*Corrie Bogue Minnie Benedict ( Blankenship) .. Paragon. Carrie Unthank ( Kellum) Indianapolis.
*Jesse -Strattan
ISS2.
Arthur H. Baily
Deceased.
19
J. Newton Barnard.
Middletown.
Harriet Bogue (Newlin)
Irvington.
Hattie E. Dickinson .
Spiceland.
Charles Newlin. Irvington.
1883
Anna Hudelson ( Foster)
Wash'ton, D.C.
Ryland Ratliff .
Fairmount.
Julia Stafford (Newby) . Greensboro.
Emily Weeks Mechanicsburg.
ISS4
'Cora Kirk
Ella Strattan [Hodson]
Spiceland.
Virginia Griffin [Cory]
Dunreith.
Isadore Hall [Wilson] Spiceland.
William Julian
Juniata, Neb.
Charles Newby Chicago, Ill.
ISS 5
Mary L. Brown [Pennington]
. Spiceland.
Alfred Y. King
Weaver.
Oliver C. Steele.
Spiceland.
1886
L Winnie [Baily] Clement
Haddonfield, N. J
Mattie E. Brown.
Daytona, Fla.
Richard Broadbent Elwood.
Elbert Griffin
. Elwood.
Alonzo C. Hodson
Spiceland.
*John L. McNew
Russell Ratliff Marion.
1887
Herbert T. Bailey
Spiceland.
Clarence H. Beard.
New Castle
Anna K. Bogue [Shaffer]
B. Harbor, Mich
Lindley Compton
Tomah, Wis.
*Deceased.
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20
Lizzie S. Hiatt Omaha, Neb.
Abram Miller Kennard. Zionville. Bert Smith
1888
Rhoda Ballenger [Cunningham] . . Indianapolis.
Hannah Brown [Stribbing]
Dexter, Iowa.
Oryntha Brown, [Jester] Payton, Iowa.
Jessie Butler Lewisville.
Clara G. Edwards [Knight] .St. Louis, Mo.
John C. Cook Greensboro.
Elva Elliott [Compton] Tomah, Wis.
Achsah E. Ratctiff
. New Castle.
H. H. Ratcliff
Spiceland.
H. H. Rayl.
Muncie.
Charles Stubbs. Spiceland.
J. A. Greenstreet New Castle.
1889
Laura Benedict
Springport.
Blanch Braddock [McNew] Greenfield.
Frank Copeland Dunreith.
Estella Deem
Spiceland.
Lawrence Gardner
Spiceland.
Gertrude Gordon [Genaux]
Wilkinson.
Sue Griffin [ Evans ]
Spiceland.
Otis Stubbs. Lewisville.
Mary White Pasadena, Cal.
1 890
L 'Etta Butler Lewisville
Elmer Deem.
Spiceland
Edwin B. Ratcliff
Spiceland
Bennie Strattan Spiceland
S. E. Stubbs Wilkinson
1891
Ethel M. Copeland.
Chicago, Ill
Louie Edmundson [Poe ]
Knightstown
Maurine Gardner
Spiceland
21
Charles N. Hardy Markleville
O. Alice Hiatt [Barrett ]
Ernest Sisson. Knightstown
Maxwell
Alfred H. Symons
Mary M .. Teas Spiceland
Irvington
Charles Titus
Warrington
Herbert D. Woodard
Fountain City
1892
Jesse S. Baily
Denver, Col
Clara Brown.
Spiceland
Warren T. Evans
Minn'polis, Minn
John B. Greenstreet
Lewisville
Windie Hinshaw [ Milligan ]
Winchester
David M. Kemp
Kempton
Alice C. Lawrence Cleveland, O
Estella Symons Pasadena, Cal
Alvin Ulrich
Greensboro
1893
Oscar Bogue . Spiceland
Estella Charles
Floy Hill Spiceland
Pasadena, Cal
Arthur Holloway
Leora Jessup Oskaloosa, Ia.
John Miller
. Westland
Spiceland
Olen Payne
New Castle
Lena Rayl
Spiceland
George Smith
. Greensboro
Orville White
Galena, Ill
1 894
Minnie Black [Moore ]
Chicago, Ill
Bessie I. Brown
Clarence V. Hall Spiceland
Spiceland
Horace Hardy
Ida Holloway
Markleville
. Spiceland
Arlie Hood ..
. New Castle
Bertha Jessup
Elma Lawrence Clay Center, Neb
Spiceland
22
Frank Pitts. Carthage
Mande M. Shaffer [ Payne ]. New Castle
Oscar F. Symons Knightstown
1895
Clarence Painter Spiceland
Mabel Wright
New Lisbon
Edgar Cox.
Spiceland
*Nellie Ratliff .
Howard Henley
New Castle
Maude Wildman
Philadelphia, Pa
Frank Hudelson Mays
Pearl Moffett Greensboro
1896
Cora Hudson Spiceland
Clara White Raysville
Elsie Hudelson
Greenfield
Anna Morris Lincolnville
Pearl M. James
Shelbyville
Mabel Newby [ Hood ] New Castle
W. J. Carson
Chicago
Nora Griffin Spiceland
Theresa Wildman Richmond
Roscoe Edwards Snyder
1897
Leoti Applegate [Coffin] Spiceland
Elva M. Hudson Spiceland
Lois M. Henley
. Spiceland
. Fanny Hayes
Dunreith
Floy Hudelson
. Greenfield
Josie B. Harlan
Dana
Jessie Leaky New Lisbon
Pearl Millikan Spiceland
Ethel Rifner Spiceland
Mayme Stafford
.Spiceland
Clyde Sisson Spicelan.1
*Deceased.
23
Minnie Stratton [Stafford ] Spiceland Charlie White Mt. Summit
Irving White Lewisville
1 898
Clifford Applegate Spiceland
James Holtsclaw
Spiceland
Bavis Nay
Springport
Emory Ratcliff .
Cadiz
Gertrude Seaford Spiceland
Pearl Symons Spiceland
Lelia Smith. Springport
Charles A. Beard . Oxford, England
Merritt Stafford. Greensboro
Cora Smith Springport
Walter Painter
. Spiceland
Bertha Charles
Spiceland
Ernest V. Shockley Straughn
Elsie L. Shockley .Straughn
Bessie Haisley Spiceland
Bertha O. Lawrence
Spiceland
Florence O. Macy
Lewisville
Earl Moffett Greensboro
Walter D. Pearce New Castle
Orabell Shaffer New Castle.
1 900
Ethel Applegate Spiceland.
Edgar Bazzle
Springport.
Susan Benedict
Springport.
Cora Charles (Carson)
Upland
Connie Griffin . . Ogden.
David W. Gordon Raysville.
Guy R. Hall, New Lisbon.
Clyde Kennedy Mauzy
Clarence Macy
Lewisville.
Everett Macy Lewisville.
Carroll Mills. Straughns.
Cecil Newby, Spiceland.
Jeanette Rifner Spiceland .
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Pernía Thornburg Spiceland. John R. Thompson Sulphur Springs.
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+ On page 15, First Year Class, the name Rupert B. Redin should read Rupert B. Redic.
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SPICELAND ACADEMY
AND NORMAL SCHOOL
1901-1902 SPICELAND, IND ..
TRIBUNE PTG CO .. NEW CASTLE, IND.
Officers and Faculty.
Board of Trustees. SAMUEL E. TEST, President. HERBERT T. BAILY, Secretary. OSCAR H. BOGUE, Treasurer. MARTHA E. S. CHARLES. TERRELL WILSON. JASON W. NEWBY.
Instructors For the Academic Year, 1901-1902.
M. S. WOODS, Superintendent, Indiana State Normal, 1889,-Indiana University, A. B. 1900, Mathematics und Science. . HOMER H. COOPER, Indiana University, A. B. 1890. History and Science. ANNA M. MOORE, Earlham, Ph. B. 1894. English and Latin. D. H. WEIR, Northern Indiana Normal School, 1899. Psychology and Pedagogy.
Calendar
1902
Fall Term begins Monday, September I. Fall Term ends Friday, December 19. Winter Term begins Monday, January 5, 1903 .- Winter Term ends March 27, 1903. Spring Term begins Monday, April 6, 1903. Field Day, June 19. Commencement, June 26.
5
Spiceland Academy.
History
PICELAND ACADEMY is the oldest Academy in charge of Friends in Indiana. It was char- tered as an Academy in 1870, but its history as a Friends' school extends over a period of more than sixty years. It is under the control of Spiceland Monthly Meeting, by which body the Board of Trustees is appointed. The teachers are selected by the Trustees. While the school is under denominational control, it is not sectarian in the least; its foundation 'rests upon Christian culture. The first class was graduated in 1870, and more than 3,000 students have received instruction in the school since its organization as an Academy.
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