Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL)

 - Class of 1946

Page 21 of 180

 

Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 21 of 180
Page 21 of 180



Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 20
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Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 22
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Page 21 text:

MASTER 1939 1940 1941 1943 1944 BUILDE S School begins operating free of debt. The Mechanical Building is completed. A fivefacre peach orchard and an acre and a hall grape vineyard. Sheep introduced. Administration Building is completed and equipped. Station wagon is purchased. Oakwood Board of Trustees and General Conf ference raise the school to the status of a Senior College. Sidewalks are extended. President's home is built. The student infirmary is remodeled and reopened. The Home Economics laboratory and demonstration rooms are remodeled. The Chemistry and Physics laboratories are built. The College obtained 3100.000 appropriation for a girl's dormitory. In the process of these years the faculty and staff have been enlarged from 11 in 1932 to 31 in 1944'45. There has been an expenditure during this time on buildings, equipment, and improvements amounting to approximately S5300,000. Mrs. E. G White Pro essor j. L. Morgan Elder F. R. Rogers and Family wx if

Page 20 text:

PICNEE S Historical Highlights MILEPOSTS IN OAKWOODS FORWARD MARCH 1 1. S. M. JACOBS ....,........ 18964897 2. S. H. SHAW .... ..,. 1 8971899 3. B. E. NICOLA. . . .... 18994904 4. F. R. ROGERS ..... .... 1 904'1905 5. G. H. BABBR. . .... 19054906 6. W. J. BLAKE .... .... 1 9064911 7. C. J. BOYD ..... .... 1 911f1917 8. J. I. BEARDSLBY .... .... 1 9174923 9. J. A. TUCKBR ..... .... 1 9234932 . . . .1932f1945 11. F. L. PETERSON ........... 1945f 10. J. L. MORAN. . . J. I. Beardsley was the first to receive the title of presif dent, and J. L. Moran was the first Negro president. 1932 1933 1937 1938 The ACORN is Established. Separate ordinances of Huinility for whites and colored are discontinued. Separate chapel and church seats are discontinued. Separate dining room seats for white visitors are discontinued. The practice of having only white Hrst elders is discontinued. The school bus is purchased. Pasteurizing unit for milk is put in. Beginning of the raising of funds through singing groups and girls selling the ACORN.



Page 22 text:

Mas. JENNIE B. ALLISON Elder John Allison, pastor of the Ephesus S. D. A. church, Santa Monica, California, shown above Cleftj and his wife, both of whom are former Oakwoodites, look on smilingly as his mother fcenterj, Mrs. Jennie B. Allison, is congratulated by public school officials of Los Angeles. Mrs. Allison, who was born a slave, was given high honors upon her graduation from the eighth grade at Jefferson Evening High School in her eightyffirst year C1936J. She received wide publicity for her remarkable attainments. Commenting, she said, Had this chance been given to me some eighty years ago, I would not be at the bottom looking upg but I would be at the top and stooping down to help others attain that which has been given mef, Mrs. Allison was a charter member of the first organized Seventh' day-Adventist church among Negroes in North America. This church was located at Edgefield Junction, Tennessee. Brother Lowe, a converted Baptist minister, pastored the Edgefield Junction church. The building cost 5300, and the first Sabbath School offering totaled twentyfiive cents. Mother Allison is now in her nineties. Among her children are Professor Herbert Allison, a high school principal at Clarksville, Tennesseeg Mrs. Florence Brawley, a music teacher in the Los Angeles Public School System, and the late Elder T. H. Allison of Chicago, Illinois. 20 The Days of Small Beginnings 'LWho hath despised the days of small things? A prophet who laid strong foundations for God's work asked this pointed question. The question is pertinent to the beginnings of the Advent Movement among Negroes and, especially, to the founding and the remarkable developf ment of Oakwood College. We have come a long way since the founding of the Oakwood Industrial School in 1896. With the coming of the Morning Star. the missionary, educational. and health phases of the Third Angel's message were launched simultaneously. Long before the Southern Union was organized and before the idea of Colored Conf ferences was ever conceived, the Southern Missionary Society pioneered in the field of evangelism and Christian education throughout the South. In their own words, The founders of the Southern Missionary Society started out with the idea that the best way to reach a people that needed uplifting was to go where they lived and elevate them in their homes. With this oh-ject in view a small band of workers went from Michigan to Mississippi and began work in an humble way Vi Niall I 1 1 DAYS OF in 1895. For four years this company did a preparatory work without special organization. But as time passed the advancing interest of the work made it necessary to purf chase land, erect school buildings, and organize upon a permanent basis. Consequently, the Southern Missionary Society was organized May, 1898, and legally incorporated in Mississippi, March 15, 1899 Gil The Southern Missionary Society established training centers over a widely scattered area. The society at one time conducted about fiftyffive mission schools with an enrollment of eighteen hundred students. A notable example of these schools was the Hillcrest Manual Training School, which was founded by Professors Staines and Bralliar in 1907. Many of our early workers and lay members will recall this school. Professor E. R. Rogers, a faithful pioneer. served as Supervisor of Missions. Considerable progress was made under his leadership. In spite of fierce opposition and the defeatism of the fainthearted, sound advances and steady growth characterized the work in all lines of mis' sionary endeavor. Out of the Southern Missionary Society developed the organization which was known as the Southern Union Mission. The next point of divergence came when the work of Negro 'Seventhfday Adventists became fully inf tegrated into the General Conference as the North American Negro Department in 1909. The Oakwood Training School gradually assumed a leading role in our educational work. At a regular bi' annual session of the General Conference of Seventhfday Adventists held in Battle Creek, Michigan. in the autumn of 1895, it was unanimously decided that an industrial school should be established in the South for the training of Negro Seventhfday Adventist youth. The committee to select suitable property was G. A. Irwin, O. A. Olsen, and H. Lindsay. They were authorized to purchase property not exceeding 38,000 They found a site at Huntsville, Alabama, and paid 56,700 cash for 380 acres. Professor Solon M. Jacobs of Fonatelle, Iowa, was invited to serve as Principal of the Oakwood Industrial School. The first teachers were Elder H. S. Shaw, Professor Jacobs, Arthur B. Hughes of Battle Creek College, and Miss Hattie Andre. The first twenty students came in from April 3 to November 16, 1896. They came without a single necessity. ,The original sixteen were Frank Brice, George Graham, Ella Grimes, Robert Hancock, Etta Littlejohn fthe mother of Charles Bradfordea college junior of 19465, Mary X Ima. X ,sa fm ' - f - . ff -.- it if I se e P il. uf M' A ,, J. A .fi fi iN 'Li I 1 5- 15 1 i I sfffgf' .ag . it I il J .J -1 ' gel, . w- ' . M- M . -.i i- - - ' .' Xiaiqsis t W 'HI WI ig i'i I1 '..L l ' ' 'Tl 1: I 'I il e' E ' 2 3 F 4' - i. ' ' if Y -2 1 -22353- fi it .T , ll' 15 - I. a w.ef,:' . .- ii ' I 'i T if 'AN f Um I 1 451 I I 'A' 1 is I , f r-595 4 N V i , i SSB . .Nj .-25 Pg ,M i f.f g'f., Messing bizgynina . i ,Xi :li-, '4f' Eli. f, + I W.. J ga' sfRG,Miss Y' f ' 'Tt '-H-T , aux J vi, i'h,- L, v1Nx.VuN'w:.Ns :T lm., QU, Ia, iikuvul wx- W . ,M .I i,,, . . . 0.1, ' . ws in

Suggestions in the Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) collection:

Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

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Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

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Oakwood University - Acorn Yearbook (Huntsville, AL) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

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