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Page 22 text:
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20 C ODE X. Street to the river. Prospect Street stretched across the campus and through to Clary, then Fourth, Street. Chapin, then Second, Street stretched to where Middle College now stands, there crossing Prospect Street, and turning to wind down the ravine and connect with what was then the head of Pleasant Street. All these streets were hardly more than map-names, for people drove almost at will wherever the undergrowth had been broken down. L. G. Fisher, A. L. Field, and james Lusk, having owned the bluff- line for some distance north and south of where the Gymnasium now stands, and having expected to build homes in that choice location, had given up their claims. Horace Hobart had owned the site of the present chapel, Hazen Cheney had owned four lots opposite Prof. Blaisdell's present home. There had been some eight owners in all. All the streets had been vacated, so far as they lay upon the proposed site, all the land had been given or sold to the Trustees to secure the location of the college in Beloit. The principal deed to this land is dated September rzth, 1846, two lots were conveyed November zrst, 1849. The north and south ends of the present campus, and the Keep place, are much later additions, having been bought in large or small pieces from time to timefi There was then no newspaper in the village, nor even a press. The Rock River House, now a combination of tenement, store-house, and shop, was then a pleasant hotel, where the Goodwin House now stands. The present generation of voters were then young men or boys, many of them and of the girls were pupils in the Beloit Seminary, meeting, as we have said, in the basement of the old stone church. Seven thousand dollars had been subscribed for the erection of the promised building, and the foundations had been laid. The day for laying the corner-stone was auspicious in every respect. The whole neighborhood flocked in to see, as afterward it made a practice of doing as long as Commencement was held outdoors. A pro- cession was formecl and marched to the southeast corner of the foundations, where now, on the corner-stone, the date may be read. Two thousand people are said to have been present, indeedg it is a common experience for the friends of the college to hear in distant places the boast: I saw the corner-stone laid. john M. Keep, presided. There was prayer and song. Rev. A. L. th See an article, entitledw 'L How the Campus was Got, in the Ifamrrl 7216151 for November 5th, 1880. Q In this the name Farrar should now be changed to Vale, and Second Street to Chapin Street. 'llie Keep place has since been bought: the date ofthe deed is March 22d, 1883.
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Page 21 text:
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THE HISTOA' Y OF BEL 017' COLLE GE. 19 a leading place to the impression made by an edihce then thought so hne, by the seminary then iiourishing under the shelter of those im- mortal shingles, and, back of both, by the temper of a community that, while still poorly housed, gave such proof of devotion to the church and the school. A picture of that church has been successfully drawn from memory, it should be hung in Memorial Hall. The Start. The first meeting of the Trustees was held October zgd, 1845, eight of the fifteen being present. That they felt their responsibility is shown by the silence with which they looked at each other, until one said: Well, brethren, what are we to do? and Father Kent answered: Let us pray. Of those eight and fifteen 'A. L. Chapin and Wait Talcott have served continuously ever since, the rest are gone on to service in another world. H The year 1846 passed in consultation and preparation, including the effort to find outside friends. It had been felt all along that Beloit was the place, Beloit had offered ten acres, being the central half of the present site, and a building to cost not less than three thousand dollars. As Father Kent said, Beloit was eighty miles from everywhere, that is, from the lake-shore, with the chain of cities expected to grow up there, from the lead-region, then supposed to be of inexhaustible wealth and likely to build up another group of cities, and from the Mississippi, then a great avenue of commerce, the development and superiority of the railroad not being then foreseen. A charter was granted by the territorial legislature, it was approved by the Governor February zd, 1846. The College Society took up the new institution and gave it a powerful moral support as well as sums of money amounting to eight thousand dollars in the first ten years. Some little formality attended the laying of the nrst stone by the citizens at the northwest corner of Middle College in the autumn of 1846. Something Visible. T . The corner-stone of Middle College was laid june 24th, 1847, Let us try to imagine the scene. There was a village, then of about seventeen hundred people, very few of them living on the West Side or on the college bluff' No rail- road had yet arrived. The campus of ten acres stretched from College
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Page 23 text:
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THE IJISTOA' lf OF BEL OIT COLLEGE. 21 Chapin, then only a trustee, read a sketch of the slender history thus far made out, Rev. Stephen Peet gave an account of the still more slender resources. Prof Stowe was to have made an elaborate address, but was prevented by illness, his place was taken by several others, who spoke, with a fire that is still remembered, as to the need of a college and the good that it could do. A lead box, nlled with articles of current interest and sealed, was put in place, and then, upon it, Father Kent, the President of the Board, set the corner-stone. The honest old building stands there yet, somewhat modernized and beautified, but substantially the same, having never yet shown so much as a crack in its walls. May the omen prove abundantly true. The First Teachers and Learners. October 15th of that year, tive young gentlemen , as an old history politely calls them, became the first Freshman class, S. T. Merrill, the principal of the Beloit Seminary, had charge of them through most of that year. They were taught at first in the same old basement, after- ward in the house on Pleasant Street, now owned by Miss King, and nnally, with the boys and girls of the Seminary, in Middle College. The names of four of that first class may be found at the head of the roll of the Alumni, the fifth was Strong lVadsworth: it was counted a sign of the future that Mr. Wadsworth, after taking half of his course at Beloit, was admitted at Yale to the class corresponding to the one that he had left. - April 27, 1848, J. J. Bushnell arrived, descending from Frink and Walker's stage at the door of the Rock River House, and hastening to find Rev. Dexter Clary, the Secretary of the Trustees. joseph Emer- son arrived on the 24th of May. These two young men, college-class- mates and somewhat experienced as college-tutors elsewhere, had been called and were now elected to divide the work of instruction, Mr. Bush- nell taking mathematics and Mr. Emerson the ancient languages. As a matter of fact, they divided the work on another line, Mr. Bushnell taking the business, and Mr. Emerson the teaching. Struggle. Nor was Mr. Bushnell's the less important task. The walls of Middle College had gone up as high as four thousand dollars would pay for and then had stopped, lloorless, rooiiess, windowless, bleak. The subscrip- tion had been reduced, as subscriptions generally are, and things looked dark. It was the low tide that always tends to follow the flood of
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