Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA)

 - Class of 1942

Page 15 of 118

 

Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 15 of 118
Page 15 of 118



Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 14
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Page 15 text:

William G. Wirth. 1916-17. The post office and general store converted into classrooms and later home of the woodworking department. After four years of faithful service in Australia, upon the advice of his physi- cian, Professor Machlan returned to America, and in 1913 once more resumed charge of South Lancaster Academy. . . . After three years Professor Machlan accepted the presidency of Washington Missionary College, and Professor William G. Wirth was chosen to fill the vacancy. He remained here but one year, however, and Dr. Mahlon E. Olsen, was elected principal. . . . Through his efforts, in 1918 South Lancaster Acad- emy was formally recognized as Lancaster Junior College, with courses covering four- teen grades. Dr. Olsen returned to Washington, D. C, in 1920, and September of that year found the College without a president. The Educational Department of the General Conference at Washington, D. C, appointed Professor Otto M. John to fill the place temporarily. After a few weeks the College Board elected Professor George R. Leh- man to the position, which he very ably filled until the end of the year. Then for the third time Professor Machlan came to South Lancaster to his old place, not as principal of South Lancaster Academy, but as president of Lancaster Jun- ior College. Feeling that the institution should not long remain a fourteen-grade school, President Machlan immediately took steps to raise its rating, and a four years ' theo- logical course was added to the curriculum. In the fall of 1922 the right to confer the degree of Bachelor of Theology was granted by the General Court of Massachuseits, and Lancaster Junior College became Atlantic Union College. Four years later, the legislature passed a bill authorizing the College to confer upon its grad- uates the degree of Bachelor of Religious Edu- cation. In 1923 the school purchased the large two- story building, for many years occupied by the South Lancaster Post Office and general store, moved it from Main Street across the campus west of the College, and divided it into class- rooms. It later housed the prosperous wood- working department for several years. Mahlon E. Olsen, 1917-20.

Page 14 text:

J. T. Browning Missionary and Industrial Normal, 1913. Professor Haughey was succeeded in 1899 by Professor Frederick Griggs, under whose direction the school made rapid advancement in scholastic standards, enrollment, and general development. . . . Several school courses beyond high school grades were introduced during these years, indicating a tendency toward junior col- lege rating, a goal which was to be realized a few years later. In 1902, Elder Miles built the Student Bindery in South Lancaster. By employ- ing student labor this enterprise has since enabled hundreds of young men and women to earn a part or all of their school expenses. . . . Elder Miles superintended this industry until his death in 1933. Since that time the business has been success- fully managed by his son, Walter E. Miles. In 1907 Professor Benjamin F. Machlan was chosen as Principal Griggs ' s suc- cessor. It was at this time that ' the scholarship plan for colporteurs was introduced to aid students to meet their school expenses. ' In December of this same year the students began to print a small sixteen-page monthly paper called the ' Student Idea. ' Principal Machlan had not long been settled in his new position when he ac- cepted a call to Australia, and Elder C. S. Longacre, who had been Bible teacher of the Academy, became principal. On October 30, 1912, a small group gathered on the campus to witness the laying of the granite cornerstone of the J. T. Browning Missionary and Industrial Normal. . . . Miss Hansa A. Browning had given a donation to the school for a normal building. . . . Besides classrooms sufficient for carrying on eight grades of school work and practice teaching, the third floor was well equipped for domestic science labora- tories, in which Doctor Lauretta Kress was the first instructor. Mrs. Jessie Osborne was the first normal director. . . . Much credit is due to Mr. Charles Kilgore for his untiring interest in the details of the construction and the equipment of the interior. Frederick Griggs, 1899-1907. Benjamin F. Machlan, 1907-09, 1913-16. 1921-28. Charles S. Longacre, 1909-13.



Page 16 text:

Breaking ground for science building, 1932. Oito M. John. 1928-36. In October, 1926, the students voted to change the name of the school paper, the ' Student Idea, ' to the ' Lancastrian. ' The first editor under the new title was Mrs. Ethyl R. Taylor. Since that time the paper has continued without interruption, either in magazine or newspaper form. This same year the Atlantic Union College Alumni Association was organized, a constitution was drawn up, and officers were elected. Although President Machlan was still at his post of duty in September, 1927, when college opened, it was evident to all that his step was slower and his former vigor abating . . . He went to the New Eng land Sanitarium for treatment, but it was to no avail. He was removed to Washington, D. C, where he slowly failed until May 20, 1929, when his labors were ended. In the meantime Professor Otto Marion John, Dean of Emmanuel Missionary College in Michigan, was called to fill the chair made vacant by President Machlan ' s illness. . . . In 1932 President John induced the owner to sell to the school the open lot be- tween the dormitory and the college. This was soon transformed into a beautiful green lawn with a broad cement walk connecting the two main buildings, and it gave to the institution what it had never possessed before, a sizeable campus. April 19, 1932, was another milestone in the history of Atlantic Union College. It had been fifty years since those nineteen students had gathered in that first little schoolroom, — it was the golden birthday of the school, — and a large crowd of Alumni, former teachers, and friends came together to celebrate it. ... A special edi- tion of the ' Lancastrian, ' known as the ' Minuteman, ' was published in honor of the anniversary. Ambitious to raise the standards of the institution, President John worked without ceasing to acquaint stale educational officials with the aims of Atlantic Union College. He enlisted the legal service of former Principal Charles C. Ramsay, for many years a Boston attorney, who manifested his continued interest in the school by his invaluable assistance in procuring from the State Legislature the authority to confer the degree of Bachelor of Arts upon graduates of the college course. In the summer of 1932, through the generosity of Elder E. E. Miles, the Student Bindery Memorial Science Hall was erected on the west side of the new campus. This addition to the equipment of the College materially increased its efficiency. Miles ' Student Bindery Memorial Science Hall. 1932.

Suggestions in the Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA) collection:

Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Atlantic Union College - Minuteman Yearbook (South Lancaster, MA) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959


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