Catalogue of the officers and students of Spiceland Academy : at Spiceland, Ind. for the year 1864-1900, Part 22

Author: Spiceland Academy
Publication date: 1864
Publisher: v. ;
Number of Pages: 718


USA > Indiana > Henry County > Spiceland > Catalogue of the officers and students of Spiceland Academy : at Spiceland, Ind. for the year 1864-1900 > Part 22


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1880.


J. Edgar Cloud, Richmond. William N. Lamb, Vacaville, California. Mattie Lamb (Outland), Amboy. Ada Grace Murphey, New Castle. Finma Belle Roberts, Arkansas City, Kan. Ida May Roberts, Arkansas City, Kan. Frank Symons, Lynn, Mass. Lamira Trueblood (Kellum), Friends- wood.


1881.


Oscar R. Baker Knightstown. Corrie Bogue. Minnie E. Benediet ( Blankenship), Para- gon.


Carrie M. Unthank, Indianapolis. #Jesse A. Strattan.


1882.


* Arthur H. Baily. J. Newton Barnard, Daleville. Harriet Bogue ( Newlin), Kokomo. Hattie E. Dickinson, Spiceland. Charles Newlin, Kokomo.


1883.


Anna Mary Hndelson (Foster) Amory, Missouri.


Ryland Ratliff, Fairmount. Julia Stafford (Shugart), Marion. Emily Weeks, Mechanicsburg.


-


20


SPICELAND ACADEMY AND PUBLIC SCHOOLS.


1884.


*Cora Kirk. Ella Strattan, Greensboro. Virginia Griffin (Cory), Mt. Summit. Isadore Hall, Spiceland. William Julian, Minden, Nebraska. Charles B. Newby, New Providence, Iowa.


1885.


Mary L. Brown (Pennington), Spiceland. Laura Benedict, Springport.


Alfred Y. King, Greenfield.


Oliver C. Steele, Spiceland.


1886.


L. Winnie Baily, Spiceland.


Mattie E. Brown, Spiceland.


Richard N. Broadbent, Elwood. Elbert S. Griffin, Elwood. Alonzo C. Hodson, Spiceland. John L. MeNew, Maple Valley. Russel Ratliff, Marion.


1887.


1 Herbert T. Baily, Philadelphia, Penn. Clarence II. Beard, Knightstown. Anna K. Bogue, Spieeland. Lindley M. Compton, Neah Bay, Wash. Lizzie S. Hiatt, Spiecland. Abram L. Miller, Kennard. Bert Smith, Monon.


1888.


Rhoda M. Ballenger, New Castle. Hannah E. Brown, Paton, Iowa. Orynthee L. Brown, Paton, Iowa. Jessie A. Butler, Lewisville. John C. Cook, Greensboro. Clara G. Edwards, Spiceland.


L. ; Elva Elliott (Compton), Neah Bay, I Washington. J. A. Greenstreet, Lewisville. Aelisah E. Rateliff, New Castle. HI. H. Rateliff; Ft. Calhoun, Neb.


H. II. Rayl, Spiceland. Charles L. Stubbs, Spiceland. .


---


Blanche Braddock, Willow Branch.


Frank Copeland, Dunreith.


Estella Deem, Spiceland.


Lawrence Gardner, Spiceland.


Gertrude Gordon (Genaux), Lima, Ohio. Sue Griffin, Dunreith.


Otis A. Stubbs, Lewisville.


Mary A. White, Spiceland.


1890.


L. Ettie Butler, Lewisville.


Eliner Deem, Spiceland. Edwin B. Rateliff, Spiceland.


Bennie Strattan, Greensboro. S. E. Stubbs, Spiceland.


1891.


Ethel M. Copeland, Chicago, Ill.


Lonie Edmundson, Spiceland, Maurine Gardner, Spiceland.


Charles N. Hardy, Markleville.


(). Alice Hiatt, Spiceland.


Ernest R. Sisson, Dunreith. Alfred II. Symons, Spiceland. Mary M. Teas, Irvington. Charles Titus, Wilkinson. Herbert Woodard, Fountain City.


* Deceased.


-


-


1889.


·. CATALOGUE®®


-- OF THE-


OFFICERS AND STUDENTS --- OF --


1


SPICELAND ACADEMY


SPICELAND, HENRY CO., INDIANA.


FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR


1892-9383


:


1


Calendar 1893-94.


First Term opens Monday, September 4, 1893.


First Term ends Friday, December 22, 1893.


Second Term opens Monday, January 1, 1894. Second Term ends Friday, March 23, 1894. Third Term opens Tuesday, April 3, 1894. Third Terms ends Friday, June 22, 1894. Public meeting of the Almunni, 7:30 p. m., June 21, 1894. Commencement Exercises, 10 a. m., June 22, 1894.


-


ie


Instructors 1892-93.


.J. F. BROWN, SUPERINTENDENT, Mental Science, Pedagogy and Latin. JOHN E. PARKER, Natural Science and Mathematics. BERTHA M. BROWN,


History, Botany and Common Branches. W. H. SANDERS, Normal Department. ANNA L. DUNKEL, Elocution and Physical Culture.


Instructors for 1893-94. ARTHUR W. JONES, SUPERINTENDENT, Mental Science, Pedagogy and Latin. MURRAY S. WILDMAN, Natural Science and History. BERTHA M. BROWN, Mathematics, Botany and Common Branches.


SPIGELAND ACADEMY.


HISTORY.


Spiceland Academy is the oldest Academy in charge of Friends in Indiana. It was chartered as an Academy in 1872, but its his- tory as a Friends' school is much older than this, dating back more than sixty years. It is under the control of Spiceland Monthly Meeting, by which body, the Board of Trustees is ap- pointed. The teachers are selected by the Trustees. While the school is under denominational control, it is not sectarian; its foundation rests upon Christian culture. The first class was gradnated in 1870, and 136 have received diplomas from the Academy. 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 and flourishing town of Spiceland, Indiana, in the southern part of Henry county, on the L. E. & W. R. R., two miles north of Dunreith, on the Pennsylvania R. R. The buildings are situated in the midst of a beautiful grove, and adjoining is a large campus, well fitted for the various sports engaged in by students.


tion, and the practical work of school teaching.


Academic Course of Study.


FIRST YEAR


SECOND YEAR


THIRD YEAR


TERM


FIRST


SECOND


THIRD


FIRST


SECOND


THIRD


FIRST


SECOND


THIRD


Mathe- matics.


Algebra. Wells.


Algebra


Algebra.


Geometry Chan- venet.


Geometry


Trigo- nometry. Went- worth


Latin.


Easy latin method. Harkness.


Latin.


Latin.


Cæsar and Compo- sition. Harper & Tolman


Cæsar and Cesar and Compo- sition.


Sight Reading.


English


English.


Compo- sition.


Compo- sition.


Compo- sition.


Compo- sition.


Junior Oration.


Compo- sition.


Rhetoric. A. S. Hill.


Kellogg.


Political Economy. Gregory.


History.


English History. Mont- gomery


Civil Gov. ernment. Thorpe.


General llistory. Myers.


General History.


Chem'stry William's Psychol- ogy. Sully.


Geology Dana. Botany. Wood.


SPICELAND ACADEMY.


ENTRANCE.


CATALOGUE OF


.


6


Science.


Zoology. Orton.


Pysles. Gage's In - trodue- tion.


students to do good permanent work.


it is not intended to conduct a scheme of cramming for examina- tion, but it is our intention to help teachers in their schools, quite as much as to aid them to get good licenses. In this course a series of talks will be given on school management, methods of mstruc-


In the Normal Course


special classes, much of the High School course is of particular value to teachers. Students can enter any classes for which they are prepared, and other classes not named will be formed if there is a sufficient demand. The term is of sufficient length to enable


Much care and attention are paid to the Normal teaching. Besides these More than seventy-five per cent of our graduates have followed teaching for a longer or shorter period. A great many of the teachers of Henry county have been students at the Academy. Those who desire to become teachers will find classes to snit every term, but during the Spring term special efforts are made for Nor- mal work. In this term Review classes will be formed in all the legal branches, in which instruction will be given in methods of teaching, as well as a thorough review of all the principles of these studies. Daily recitations are offered in Pedagogy, Men- tal Science, Physical Geography and Rhetoric.


NORMAL DEPARTMENT.


Students can 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 certificates, exami- nations will be held and students will be classified accordingly.


Astrono- my. Newcomb Moral Sci- & Holden. ence. Peabody.


English Literature Literature Oration.


x


CATALOGUE OF


9


Remarks on Course of Study.


Classes in Book KEEPING, Single and Double entry, 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 this subject 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 pursne a col- lege course, but who 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 third-year work in Latin, Mathematics and other subjects will be given whenever a sufficient number of students desire it. Students are urged to take a college course, and they will be admitted to any of the leading colleges of Indiana without examination.


The course of study in the Grammar School is in harmony with that adopted throughout the State.


At the close of the Winter term the members of the second. year High School class hold an exhibition, for which each mem- ber prepares an essay, oration or declamation, and the public speakers are chosen from the number.


ENGLISHI.


Besides the usual work in English Grammar, special attention is paid to English Composition, which is preparatory to the work


SPICELAND ACADEMY.


in Rhetoric. This consists of a study of Grammatical parity, Choice and Use of words, and kinds of composition, with practi- cal exercises in each. English and American Literatures receive careful attention. The work consists of a brief history of the rise and growth of the English language, a history of the livesand time of the leading authors and a critical study of selections from their writings. The aim is to create a taste for good literature.


LATIN.


In order to receive a diploma a student must have two years' work in Latin, or in special cases equivalents may be taken to fit the student for college. Thorough drill on the declension of nouns, adjectives and the conjugation of verbs is given, also on the appli- cation of the rules of construction and the acquiring of a consider- able vocabulary. The derivation of English words is studied, and in the advanced work exercises in sight-reading and Latin Composi- tion 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 of mental discipline.


HISTORY.


Besides the work in United States History in the Grammar School, a thorough foundation is laid in General History, English History, Civil Government and Political Economy. This course will open up to the student the deeds of mankind in all ages in their struggle for rational freedom. The course includes three full years of historical study.


SCIENCE.


The Academy is supplied with snthicient apparatus to be a valuable aid in the study of the Natural Sciences. In Natural Philos- ophy the subject is illustrated by many simple pieces of appara- tux, besides an air pump, electrical machine, batteries, etc. In Chem- istry, students,do practical work in the Laboratory, which is well supplied with chemicals and apparatus for the analysis of unknown substances. Geology and Mineralogy are illustrated by a collee- tion 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 classification are made prominent. In all the sciences, objects are studied as much as possible.


10


CATALOGUE OF


SPICELAND ACADEMY.


MATHEMATICS.


In this study, practical problems are given as much as possible and especially is this done in Geometry. The students have the use of a surveyor's compass and chain, and learn their practical use. Book-keeping and the practical phases of business paper and all commercial forms, are taught, and a student is prepared to take charge of a set of books for a bisiness firm. In the High School, one year is spent on Algebra and one year on Geometry and Trigonometry.


RATES OF TUITION.


Per Week.


Grammar School 75


Iligh School-First Year 80


High School-Second Year 90


High School-Third Year 1 00


Normal and Review Classes 90


Commercial Department. 1 00


Special Review classes will be considered as belonging to the Second Year High School and will be charged accordingly.


No deduction will be made for absence after enrollment, ex. cept in cases of protracted ill health. In event of sickness, notice must, in all cases, be given of the withdrawal of the pupil, as no deduction will be made until this is done.


LITERARY EXERCISES.


Besides the work of the Literary Society connected with the school, literary exercises will be expected of students in all graden both in class work and before the whole school. Care is used that students may learn the art of composition and public delivery. To this end, public exercises are occasionally held to commemo- rate some anthor or well-known historical event. Essays and de- clamations are a part of the regular school work.


.


LIBRARIES.


Four sets of Encyclopedias are in the school rooms, and these with the Dictionaries and numerous reference books are for the free use of all. There are three libraries in connection with the school, which contain about two thousand volumes; two of them be- longing to the Literary Societies and the other to the Academy Association. Additions are made each year.


BOARDING.


The citizens of Spiceland have always given the students a hearty welcome by receiving them into their homes. It is the intention to offer students the advantage of a thorough education for a small ontlay of money. The cost of boarding when every- thing is furnished is $3 per week. Rooms either furnished or mi" furnished can be rented by those who board themselves, and the cost of living reduced to a very small sum.


LECTURES.


Students have the opportunity to hear good lectures at a very small expense. The following course of lectures by Prof. James A. Woodburn, of the Indiana State University, was delivered before the Spiceland University Extension Association during the season of 1892-93. Students were admitted to these lectures at the nom- inal fee of fifty cents for the course: "Slavery in the Colonies and the Constitution,""The Missouri Struggle,""The Abolition Agita- tion," "The Texas Controversy," "The Compromise of 1850," .. The Fugitive Slave Law."


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 thoroughness of in- strnetion and accuracy of knowledge than upon rapidity of ad- vancement.


A daily class record of the work of each pupil is kept. This record and the final examination determine the recorded grade. Students whose daily class record is 95 per cent. with attendance, application and deportment equally good, may be exensed from examination. Those who satisfactorily complete the Gram- mar School course are given certificates to that effect.


For many years the health of the students has been uniformly good. There is probably no healthier locality in the state.


The Friends and Methodists both hold religious services on the Sabbath, and each maintains a Sabbath school. A society of Y. P. S. C. E. meets each Sabbath evening, and students are welcomed to its meetings.


12


CATALOGUE OF


A sufficient number of teachers is constantly employed, so that large classes may be avoided, and students may receive per- sonal attention during the recitation.


Expenses are as low as at any other school affording equal ad- vantages.


The managers of the school are very careful to make this an institution in which students who are away from home and its re- straints will be surrounded 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 corrupt ten- deney will be retained in the school.


DIPLOMA.


Students whose condnet is exemplary, and who complete the course of study and prepare and deliver a suitable literary pro- dnetion, will be furnished with a Diploma, signed by the instruc- tors and the president of the Board of Trustees.


LIST OF PUPILS.


ACADEMY.


SENIORS.


Spiceland.


~. Oscar Bogne.


. Spiceland.


Estella Charles


Spiceland.


Floy Hill.


Arthur Holloway Spiceland.


Westland.


Leora JJessup


Spiceland.


John Miller


Spiceland.


Olen Payne.


.


Lena Rayle.


. Greensboro.


George Smith


Spiceland.


- Orville White.


JUNIORS.


Spiceland.


Morris Coffin


Bizzell, N. C.


Edgar Cox ..


Charles Griffin Dunreith.


Gurney Gilbert. Lewisville.


Arlie llood.


Spiceland.


1:3


1


SPICELAND ACADEMY.


Spiceland.


14


CATALOGUE OF


. Elsie Hndelson Ogden.


- Ida Holloway . Spiceland.


-. Clarence Hall . Spiceland.


Bertha Jessup. Clay Center, Neb.


Elma Lawrence Spiceland.


Frank Pitts. Spiceland.


Clarence Painter. Spiceland.


- Oscar Symons Spiceland.


Arthur Symons Spiceland.


gu . Maude Shaffer New Castle.


FIRST YEAR.


- Roscoe Edwards Spiceland.


.. Fred Hudelson. Ogden.


- Frank Hndelson Spiceland.


- Horace Hardy . Markleville.


Harry Nugent . Snyder.


- Mabel Newby


Spiceland.


- Wallace Newby Spiceland.


Michael Painter Middletown.


- Anna Rateliff Spiceland.


. Fred Sisson Dunreith.


Mabel Wright Lewisville.


Irregular Academic Students.


-- Howard Bundy. Spiceland.


- Willie Carson . Spiceland.


- Edua Edwards Spiceland.


Ileber Hndelson Dunreith.


Noah Hamilton Maple Valley ..


-- Cora Hodson . Spiceland.


- Howard Henley Spiceland.


- Carl Hinelnnan Spiceland.


J. E. Iliatt


Lincolnville.


- Nellie Hodson Spiceland.


Pearl James . Lincolnville.


Gertrude Kirk Spiceland.


À( - Bessie Kirk Bogue Spiceland.


Fred Myer Bently.


Everett McFarland. Dunreith.


Herbert McFarland. Dumreith.


c( Frank Moore.


Spiceland.


2: Ella Moore


- Pearl Moffitt.


Effa Moffitt


Spiceland.


7 ._ Elton Newby


Rose Randall


Spiceland.


Nellie Ratliff .


Spiceland.


- Robbie Symons . Ogden.


- Mamie Stafford.


Spiceland.


.- Dora Stafford Spiceland.


Marcus Sawyer Modoc.


-- William Templeton.


Spiceland.


Harry Thomas Dubreith.


Francis White.


Raysville.


Clara A. White.


Raysville.


Lonie Wickersham Spiceland.


... Florence Wilson Spiceland.


Lulu Welch


Spiceland.


Normal Department.


Ray Beck Millville.


Thomas Ball Lewisville.


Etta Ball


Lewisville.


Alice Brenneman New Castle.


Charles Collier


Milner's Corner.


Jennie Copeland


Greensboro.


Porter Cook Milner's Corner.


Louie Edmundson. Spiceland.


Thomas Hamilton Greensboro.


Emma Julian . Lewisville.


Albert Harvey New Castle


Alfred King Greenfield.


Jessie Leakey.


New Lisbon.


William Mundell Mechanicsburg.


Gertrude Meredith


Lewisville.


Ward Marshall


Now Burlington.


15


SPICELAND ACADEMY.


Spiceland.


Spiceland.


. Ogden.


17


--- Addie Noland. Markleville.


George Stinson New Castle.


- Estella Symons . Spiceland.


Charles Tully . Mechanicsburg.


Ida Trees .. Greenfield.


Claude Wright. Lewisville.


Charles Wilt


Middletown.


- Emma Walker Willow Branch.


- Clara Walker. Willow Branch.


Grammar School .- Spring Term.


Julia Allison . Greensboro.


Pearl Beam . . Spiceland.


Herbert Brown . Greensboro.


~ Charles Carlton . Milner's Corner.


llowe Davis .Middletown.


Lenora Griffin Spiccland.


Walter Ilayes. Cadiz.


- Mary Lawrence . Spiceland.


Pearl Milikan Spiceland.


-- Hattie Poer Spiceland.


- Ethel Rifner . Spiceland.


Rosa Strattar Lewisville.


Nora Stinson


New Castle.


Charles Christie Danville.


Clyde Sisson Spiceland.


- John Young. Spiceland.


SUMMARY. ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT.


Seniors


Juniors 15


First Year 11


Irregular 34-70


NORMAL DEPARTMENT 25


GRAMMAR DEPARTMENT


16


Total Enrollment. 111


GRADUATES.


1870.


Muscatine, lowa


Eli U. Cook


Omaha, Neb.


John J. Stubbs.


1871. Dayton, Ohio


Walter D. Jones


" Alvin HI. Jenkins


+1. Macy Good


·Carlisle, l'a.


C. R. Dixon.


. Bloomington, Ind.


- R. G. Boone.


.Spiceland


. Dallas Sisson ..


. New Castle


Mary V. Ballenger ( Barnard). . New Castle


New Castle


- Lindley H. Johnson. . Spiceland


David II. Henley


Jacob Hill. .


Henry W. Painter. Pacific Grove, Cal.


Robert G. Mitchell. 1873.


#Sadie D. Talbert ( Wright) Red Oak, Iowa


Aaron B. Bell.


$J. Tilman Hutchins Stuart, Iowa


John Pennington .... .Spiceland


Mary Stubbs ( Painter) Oswego, Kan.


Nathan Williams ..


S. Carrie Taibert ( Newby) Wichita, Kan.


16


CATALOGUE OF


SPICELAND ACADEMY.


Louisa Wickersham. Lida Edwards (Saint) 1872.


Dunreith


19


SPICELAND ACADEMY.


CATALOGUE OF


18


1874.


Alice Carey Coffin (Russell). St. Louis, Mo.


Elvira Spencer ( Harold). Richmond, Ind. J. P. Edwards. . . . .Tacoma, Wash.


-. William S. Moffitt. Edwin O. Kennard.


.Greensboro, Ind.


Pasadena, Cal.


Nathan Rosenberger Muscatine, Ia.


W. E. Jackson .. Knightstown


~ D. C. Mitchell .San Jose, Cal.


1875.


W. W. Gregg Chicago, Il1.


William Pidgeon. Washington, Kan.


Irvin Stanley Beloit, Kan.


Milton Roberts


Ottumwa, Ia.


1878.


- S. Ella Bogne ( Doggett). Danville, Va.


M . Belle Chambers ( Estes) .Grand Forks, Dakota


- J. Pinkney Mitchell. . Fresno, California


-Thomas Mitchell .. .Spiceland


Flora Moore (Brady) Lincolnville


John O. Reed. East Saginaw, Mich,


--. William S. Seaford .. Spiceland


Fannie P. Thornburg (Parsins) . Oak Park, Ill.


1879.


-Jay A. Buck. Muncie, Ind.


Carrie M. Goodwin (Jeffrey). New Castle


-. Thomas Newlin Newberg, Oregon


1880.


J. Edgar Clond. Richmond, Ind.


William N. Lamb Vacaville, Cal.


Mattie Lamb (Ontland). Amboy


Ada Grace Murphy . New Castle


Enuna Belle Roberts.


.Sun River, Montana


Ida May Roberts.


- Frank Symons. Portland, Me.


Lamira Trueblood ( Kellum). Friendswood


1881.


Oscar R. Baker. Winchester


#Corrie Bogne


Minnie E. Benedict (Blankenship). Paragon


- Carrie M. Unthank.


Indianapolis


#Jesse A. Strattan


1882.


*Arthur H. Bailey


J. Newton Barnard .. Middletown


- Harriet Bogue (Newlin) Indianapolis


Hattie E. Diekinson. .. Spiceland


-Charles Newlin. Indianapolis


1883.


Anna Mary Iludelson ( Foster) .. Washington, D. C.


Ryland Ratliff. . Fairmount


Julia Stanford (Shugart). . Marion


Emily Weeks Mechanicsburg


1884.


#Cora Kirk .Spiceland


- Ella Strattan (Hodson)


. Mt. Summitt


-Virginia Griffin (Cory) .Spiceland


Isadore Hall ( Wilson).


. Minden, Neb.


-William Julian. . Chicago


Charles B. Newby 1885.


- Mary L. Brown ( Pennington). Spiceland


Alfred Y. King


Spiccland


Oliver C. Steele. 1886.


1. Winnie Bailey


Spiceland


Mattie E. Brown.


Elwood


Richard N. Broadbent.


Elbert S. Griffin.


Spiceland


Alonzo C. Hodson


.Greenfield


John L. MeNew


Marion


Russel Ratliff.


1887.


-


Herbert T. Bailey Spiceland


Clarence HI. Beard. . Knightstown


Anna K. Bogue .. .Spiceland


Lindley M. Compton Harlem, Mon.


Lizzie S. Iliatt .. .. Spiceland


Kennard


Abram L. Miller.


.Zionsville


Bert Smith.


1888. New Castle


Rhoda M. Ballenger


Paton, lowa


Hannah E. Brown.


Oryutha L. Brown. Lewisville


Jessie Butler. Greensboro


John C. Cook .Spiceland


Clara G. Edwards. Harlem, Mon.


1. Elva Elliott (Compton).


New Castle


Achsah E. Rateliff.


11. 11. Rateliff .Ft. Calhoun, Neb.


Spiceland


II. II. Rayl. .


Charles L. Stubbs


1889.


Laura Benedict.


Springport, Ind. Willow Branch


Blanche Braddock


Danreith


Frank Copeland.


Estella Deem. Spiceland


Lawrence Garduer


Gertrude Gordon (Genaux). . Lima, O.


Mt. Summitt


Otis Stubbs.


Mary A. White. Spiceland


1890.


I. Ettie Butler


Elmer Deem. .Spiceland


Edwin B. Rateliff.


Bennie Strattan Greensboro


S. E. Stubby . Spiceland


Lewisville


Sue Griffin ( Evans) Lewisville


. Weaver


Spiceland


1876.


20


CATALOGUE OF


1891.


Ethel M. Copeland:


. Chicago, Ill.


Maurine Gardner.


.Spiceland


Charles N. Hardy


Markleville


O. Alice Iliatt.


Elwood


Ernest Sisson.


Dunreith


Alfred H. Symons


Hagerstown


Mary M. Teas.


. Irvington


Charles Titus


. Warrington


Herbert Woodard.


. Fountain City


1892.


Jesse S. Bailey


Poplar Bluff, Mo.


Clara Brown.


.Spiceland


Warren T. Evans.


Minneapolis, Minn.


John B. Greenstreet. Lewisville


Winnie Hinshaw.


. . Lynn


David N. Kemp.


. Kempton


Alice C. Lawrence


.Spiceland


Alvin Ulrich.


. Greensboro


#Deceased.


1


... Lonie Edmundson


Estella Symons.


CATALOGUE


-- OF THE-


i


OFFICERS AND STUDENTS


SPICELAND ACADEMY


'SPICELAND, HENRY CO., INDIANA.


FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR


1893-942


BEARD BROS., Printers, Knightstown, Indiana.


-


i


Board of Trustees of Spiceland Academy.


This School has been legally incorporated by the Society of Friends, and is under the care of the following Board of Trustees: EDWIN HALL, Pres. SAMANTHA HENLEY. Sec WM. II. COFFIN. MATTIE S. CHARERS, Treas,


DANIEL LAWRENCE.


TERRELL WILSON.


Calendar 1894-95.


First Term opens Monday, September 3, 1894. First Term ends Friday, December 21, 1891.


Second Term opens Monday, December 81, 1891. Second Term ends Friday, March 22, 1895. Third Term opens Tuesday, April 2, 1895. Third Term ends Friday, June 21, 1895.


Publie meeting of the Alumni, 8:30 p.n., June 21, 1895. Alumni business meeting 3:30 p. m., June 21, 1895. Commencement Exercises, 10 a. m., June 21, 1895.


' Organization.


Walter D. Jones, '71


Earnest R. Sisson, '91


Orator


Historian. David N. Kemp, '92


Estella Symons, '92


President.


Vice President 1 .. Winnie Bailey, '86 Secretary Alice C. Lawrence, '92


Treasurer.


Edwin B. Rateliff. '90


('lara Brown, '92


Executive Committee | Lizzie Iliatt, 87


1


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Instructors, 1893-94.


ARTHUR W. JONES, Superintendent, Mental Science, Pedagogy and Latin. MURRAY S, WILDMAN, Natural Science and History. BERTHA M. BROWN, Mathematics, Botany and Literature. G. W. NEET, Normal Department. EMILY L. PARKER, Eloention and Physical Culture.


Instructors, 1891-95. G. W. NEET, Superintendent. Mental Science, Pedagogy and Latin. MURRAY S. WILDMAN, Natural Science and History. CLARABELL GARDNER, Mathematics, Botany and Literature,


SPIGELAND AGADEMY.


HISTORY.


Spiceland Academy is the oldest Academy in charge of Friends in Indiana. It was chartered as an Academy in 1872, but its history as a Friends' school is much older than this, dating back for 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 founda- tion rests upon christian culture. The first class was graduated in 1870, and 146 have received diplomas from the Academy. More than 3,000 students have received instruction in the school since its organization as an Academy.




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