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NGE >> Features >> Education >> Colleges and Universities >> Private Higher Education >> Universities >> Oglethorpe University |
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Oglethorpe University Oglethorpe University, known for its Gothic revival architecture
Old Oglethorpe University In 1835 the state of Georgia chartered Oglethorpe University as a Presbyterian institution named after James Edward Oglethorpe, the founder of the colony. Before that, Georgia Presbyterian families sent their sons to the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University). Oglethorpe University was one of the earliest denominational institutions in the region. The antebellum college began with four faculty members and about twenty-five students, and was originally located on a hill at Midway, a small community in Baldwin County near Milledgeville, then the capital of Georgia. The original Oglethorpe curriculum consisted of courses in Greek, Latin, mathematics, theology, and the natural sciences.
Oglethorpe University ceased to exist during the Civil War (1861-65). Nearly all of its students fought for the South, the endowment was lost in Confederate bonds, and the buildings were used for barracks and hospitals. The school closed in 1862, and in 1870 it was briefly relocated to the Neal House in Atlanta, at the present site of Atlanta's city hall. Oglethorpe at this time produced several educational innovations, expanding its curriculum to business courses and offering the first evening college classes in Georgia. The dislocations of the Reconstruction era proved insurmountable, however, and in 1872 Oglethorpe closed its doors for a second time. Oglethorpe Refounded In 1912 a Presbyterian minister named Thornwell Jacobs began campaigns
Jacobs intended the university to be a "living memorial" to James Oglethorpe. The institution holds the finest portrait of Oglethorpe and the only painting of his wife, Elizabeth. The collegiate coat of arms, emblazoned with three boars' heads and the inscription Nescit cedere ("He does not know how to give up"), replicates the Oglethorpe family standard. For the college athletic teams, Jacobs chose an unusual mascot, the petrel (pronounced "pea-trel")—a small, persistent seabird that, according to legend, inspired Oglethorpe while on board the ship Anne on the way to Georgia. The university's Gothic revival architecture was inspired by James Oglethorpe's honorary alma mater, Corpus Christi College at Oxford University in England.
The
Under President Thornwell Jacobs (1916-43) Oglethorpe University fostered many innovations. These included perhaps the first summer school in Georgia (1919); some of the earliest celebrity-laden commencement ceremonies (Franklin D. Roosevelt and Martha Berry have been among the more than 150 notables to receive honorary degrees); one of the earliest collegiate presses in the South and an extensive teacher training program, both established in the 1920s; the "University of the Air" experiment, which broadcast college courses by radio in the 1930s; and the Crypt of Civilization, a multimillennial time capsule sealed in 1940. Oglethorpe University since 1945 In 1950 Oglethorpe,
Since the 1980s Oglethorpe University has been consistently recognized for academic excellence in such publications as the Fiske Guide to Colleges.
Suggested Reading Paul Stephen Hudson, "'Flight of the Stormy Petrel': The Glory Years of Oglethorpe University Athletics," Atlanta History: A Journal of Georgia and the South 36 (summer 1992). Paul Stephen Hudson, "'In Service to Humanity for the Good of the World': Thornwell Jacobs and the Awarding of Oglethorpe University Honorary Doctorates," Atlanta History: A Journal of Georgia and the South 44 (spring 2000). Thornwell Jacobs, Step Down, Dr. Jacobs: The Autobiography of an Autocrat (Atlanta: Westminster, 1945). Elizabeth A. Lyon, Atlanta Architecture: The Victorian Heritage, 1837-1918, 2d ed. (Atlanta: Atlanta Historical Society, 1986). Allen P. Tankersley, College Life at Old Oglethorpe (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1951). Paul Stephen Hudson, Georgia Perimeter College Published 8/24/2004 |
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