Elk County Forum

General Category => The Good Old Days => Topic started by: ddurbin on October 11, 2008, 07:23:43 AM

Title: Moline College
Post by: ddurbin on October 11, 2008, 07:23:43 AM
Attention all you Moline folks and Elk County historians.  I need your help on this one.  What do you know about Moline College?  I recently ran across a Commencement invitation to Moline College from 1903.  Its list of graduates (6-7) all appeared to be Elk County residents, mostly from the Moline area.  Several appear to be earlier graduates of Moline High School.  Was there a college in Moline for a period of time, and if so, when and how long?  Where was it?  Can anyone help on this one? 
Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: Clubine Ranch on October 11, 2008, 02:24:33 PM
No one around to ask. That age of person is long gone. Might check the records at the Courthouse in Howard. Never heard anyone talk about this. That is very interesting.
Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: Marcia Moore on October 12, 2008, 06:43:33 AM

     I am pretty sure I saw that same commencement invitation on ebay recently.  Because the invitation has a date, you should be able to look at microfilm from an old Moline newspaper, and hopefully it will say whether the class is the first, second, third, etc. to graduate from the college.  That will give you an idea how far to look back for information on the college's beginning.  The college may not have had its own building - it may have used part of the high school building for its classes.  It is safe to say, though, that the college was not in operation long.  Back then it was not uncommon for a college student to board a train every day to go to school.  I know the college students from Severy would jump on the train to go to college at Eureka every day.
Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: ddurbin on October 14, 2008, 11:39:00 AM
Here is the list of graduates included with the Commencement Announcement of Moline College 1903:
Mary Letitia Sturges
Otis Benton Durbin
Merton John Silger
Walter Bennett Monroe
Frank Ray Harris
Edward Lawrence Dillon
George Groah Broughton
Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: Flintauqua on February 24, 2009, 08:08:35 PM
Brother Dan,

Have you figured this out yet.  Have you come across this at the KSHS archives:

________. "No Ghostly Pallor in Moline's 79--Year History." Independence Daily Reporter. Apr. 27, 1958. [1 p.]. (Reel: I557).

I haven't seen this, if you have it or obtain it, I would like a copy.

Oh, welcome back from Disneyworld!!!

Brother Charles

Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: W. Gray on March 15, 2009, 05:14:43 PM
Here is my take on this subject.

When I first read this thread about a Moline College several months ago, I was reminded that I had previously came across something about a Longton College in the local newspapers of the late 1870s or early 1880s. The article grabbed my eye and I was thinking "wow" a college in Longton.

I have not been able to again find that article or other information. From what I can recall, though, the college was a two or three week refresher training session for county teachers prior to school starting.

The Howard City Elk County Ledger, August 4, 1877, has information published by its Boston (Kansas) correspondent saying that "Our county normal institute commenced Monday."

Under another story titled "Normal Institute Notes" the same newspaper says "The Normal Institute began its first session at this place on Monday," referring to Elk Falls.

A Professor Greenwood, who the newspaper called the best normal instructor in the West, taught classes in grammar, reading, history, arithmetic and theory and practice.

A Professor Dewy conducted classes in Geography and a Professor Prentiss taught Phonic Analysis.

Forty-one students were listed in attendance from Boston, Howard City, Elk Falls, Longton, Bloomfield, Greenfield, Union Center, Paw Paw, Salina, O. (Indian Territory or Oklahoma?) Elk City, Arkansas City, and Lazette. Moline was just a twinkle in J. F. Chapman's eye that year.

A "normal institute" or "normal school" once signified a teachers college.

I recall concerning the Longton College that the community was losing interest and the college was in jeopardy.

The community probably donated school classrooms and dollars to support the effort each year. Or, it may have been the students were footing all or part of the cost.

In 1877, the Elk Falls normal institute appears to be the very first effort at training teachers in Elk County. Between that year and the 1903 Moline College graduation the school site may have switched from place to place depending on which town was lending support.

If these schools are the same, the number of forty-one attending in 1877 and the six or seven in 1903 seems significant.

A research paper on this subject would really be interesting.


Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: W. Gray on April 20, 2009, 01:57:47 PM
I found this in Patterson's College and School Directory of the United States and Canada, 1905.

Under Kansas:

Moline, Elk Co.; pop 695
Moline College; prep; co-ed; none-sect.;
Mrs S. E. Powell, Prin.

Eureka had a Southern Kansas Academy.
Iola had an Iola Business College.
Emporia had the College of Emporia, Emporia Business College, State Normal School, and the Western Musical Conservatory.

Nothing listed for twin sister Chautauqua.

The Elk County superintendent of schools was W. F. Biddinger, Howard.

Kansas was listed as 22nd in population in 1905 with 1,470,495 people of which 1,416,319, or 96.3% were white. 126,977 were foreign born.

The illiteracy rate was 2.9%, third in the nation.


Kansas was, in 2008, 33rd in population with 2,802,134 or about double in 100 years.


Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: W. Gray on May 10, 2009, 09:37:36 AM
Thirteenth Biennial Report of the Secretary of State of the State of Kansas, 1901-1902, shows a Moline Business College.

A Mrs E. R. Powell's name is attached with no other information.


Same book shows following population:
Longton, 517
Howard, 1,071
Moline, 643
Grenola, 485
Elk Falls, not listed

Also lists for Moline school system:
Number of cases of tardiness, 23
Number neither absent or tardy, 5
Number of teachers in high school, 1 male
Number of teachers in grade school, 1 male, 3 females
Total teachers employed, 5
Number of months in school year, 8

Moline State Bank had assets and liabilities of $88,645.19


Howard had 3 high school teachers and 5 grade school teachers

Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: W. Gray on August 07, 2009, 12:47:56 PM
A list of Kansas Ghost Colleges and Universities in the Historical Atlas of Kansas does not show a former college in Moline.

However, in addition to the state normal schools at Emporia, Pittsburg, and Hays, the list shows that Kansas also had state normal schools in Concordia, Fort Scott, and Leavenworth.
Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: W. Gray on August 07, 2009, 03:10:31 PM
Are you sure it was Concordia, Kansas?

Concordia is in Cloud County in north central Kansas and is one county away from the Nebraska border.

The State Normal School at Concordia existed only during the 1870s.

The only other school listed for Concordia, past or present, is a current two-year community junior college.
Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: W. Gray on August 07, 2009, 04:02:14 PM
There was a Western Eclectic College of Medicine and Surgery in Kansas City, Kansas, that went out in 1909.

Concordia is 160 miles northwest of Topeka.

Horton is 58 miles north of Topeka and is just east of the Kickapoo Indian reservation and just south of the Sac & Fox and Iowa Indian reservations.

There is a Washburn University in Topeka. I am pretty sure there are no colleges north of Topeka.
Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: W. Gray on August 07, 2009, 06:57:43 PM
I read it.

I will read most anything on history and, believe it or not, I had a printed copy of that Cloud County history on hand for reference to something else but never thought to refer to it.

There were several private normal schools in the state in addition to the state normal schools. The state run normal school at Concordia did not last through the 1870s according to the Historical Atlas of Kansas.

I guess someone needs to tell the two professors that wrote the Historical Atlas of Kansas (1988) that they need to update their Kansas ghost schools list to include Great Western.

Trouble is, one of them has passed on and the other retired in 1980 and may have the same status by now.
Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: ddurbin on August 15, 2009, 12:34:49 PM
Waldo,
Just wanted to mention that during my days at KSU(70-74), I had classes by both those professors:  Huber Self for Kansas Geography and Homer Socolofsky for Kansas History.  Self had connections to the now ghost-town of Wauneta down in CQ county between Sedan and Cedar Vale.  He was surprised when someone in the class (me) knew where it was.
Title: Re: Moline College
Post by: W. Gray on August 15, 2009, 03:42:17 PM


As I recall, we had some discussion about Wauneta on this forum a couple years ago, including the corner on U.S. 160 where it was located, etc.

I know that Socolofsky has passed on and I think Huber has also.