Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO)

 - Class of 1921

Page 17 of 134

 

Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 17 of 134
Page 17 of 134



Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

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Page 16 text:

Tfiatnrg :mil Brurlnpmrnt nf lt. GI. . EV. Sv. 'JON after deaconess work became an accepted thing in the Methodist Church, with schools at San FranC1SCO and Washington, D. C., the Woman's Home MISSIOUZTY S0- ciety began thinking about a school in the Middle WGS-t, to train young women for this work. At the same t1me,,DI'- J- W- Alderman was dreaming of such a school in Kansas City, Kans. He took the matter up with Mrs. Jane Bancroft Robinson, be- fore the General Conference in 1896. As-a result, ,what Was known as the Fisk Deaconess Home and Bible 'Training School was started, with Miss Mary Pegram as Superintendent. Miss Henrietta Bancroft, as Secretary of Deaconess Work, was a very helpful factor in the growth of the school. The Purpose of the school was to give deaconess training to the nurses at Bethany Hospital, but as others wished to attend, they were admitted. Real school work began in January, 1900, in a house near Bethany Hospital. There were two students and two faculty members, Rev. Christian Reisner, D.D. and'Prof. W. W. Wallace. In the early spring of the opening year, MISS Pegrapn was taken seriously ill and Miss Winifred Spauldmglwas 21PP01Y1ted to take her place. The next fall, school opened in a larger building at 726 Washington Avenue. In 1901, the school was again moved to larl2'f-II' quartersg this time to 608 Everett Avenue. This year the first class of two members was graduated and the enrollment had Jumped from three to fifteen. n The name of the institution was changed in 1902, to Fisk National Training School. In November of that year, Miss Spaulding resigned to take up similar work am0H5r the native girls of Manila in the Philippines and Miss Anna Neiderheiser was then chosen as President. It became very apparent that the work WO11ld continue to increase and it was decided to erect a permanent Home in either of the t'wo cities, which would donate land for the purpose. In less than a month after the decision, two beuutlful sites were offered-one acre in Kansas.C1ty, Kansas, by Dr. J. W. Alder- many the other, ten acres ln Kansas City, Missouri, by Mr. C. E. Schoellkopf. With a thought of future needs in mind, the ten acre tract was accepted. Fisk Hall was erected in 1904 at a cost of 316,000 and the school was moved to Kansas City, Missouri, where it is now located on thc corner of East 15th St. and Denver Avenue. It was thought best that the name of the Institution designate the location, so it was changed to Kansas City National Training School for Deaconesses and Missionaries. The Alumnae Association, ever working for the betterment of the Alma Mater, planned, in 1908 to launch a paper in the interest of the school. In October of the same year, the first copy of the The Kansas City Deaconess was issued. The school was growing so fast, that Fisk Hall was no longer large enough and a small gymnasium building was erect- ed at a cost of S3,000. Praying, planning and working for an- other building began almost immediately, but it was not until 1913 that Schoellkopf Hall was completed and ready for occu- pancy. This building was erected at a cost of S80,000. A school is hardly a school these days without an Annual, so thought the class of 1915, and the result was the first issue of The Shield. A Kindergarten Course had been added to the curriculum and the first diploma from the department was given in 1915. The school continued to grow and advance in its undertak- ing and by 1918, it was necessary to change the curriculum from a two to a three year icourse. . The buildings were again inadequate and praying, planning and working had begun anew f0l' aYl0th6l' lame building, to add to the efficiency of the work.. Plans were drawn up last year for the new building, which will cost at least S100,000, and the raising of funds was actively begun. They are rapidly being pushed to completion, that work on the erection of the build- ing may begin early in the SDFIHSI- It is hoped that a part of it can be used at the opening of school next fall. The present enrollment of the school is eighty-nine. Young women from all parts of the United States, who are interested in equiping themselves for better Christian service, are writ- Ing for information.. So we are assured of a still larger en- rollment for the coming school year. This is but a bare outline of the material growth of an institution in which God has ever been leading into broader fields of usefulness. from year to year. Parc 17 D



Page 18 text:

Cflhv iitanaaa Euilhing For three years we have planned, talked and prayed for a new building and before another issue of our Shield is publfshed we hope it will be a reality. We are proud of our two splendid halls, but God has prospered our work until we have inadequate room and equipment for our present needs. Will you step into one of the class-rooms with me? This room is 11 ft. by 14 ft. and in it there is a piano, nature study specimens and cabinet, hand work cup- board, a loom, gymnasium equipment, samples of Kin- dergarten and Junior handwork, charts for Domestic Science, chairs and desk. Just across the hall is the Domestic Science Kitchen. It will accommodate ten and there are over thirty in the class, so the teacher must have the pupils come in relays, teaching the same lesson three times, when it might all be done at once and with so much less inconvenience, had she more room and laboratory equipment. Missionary work requires some musical training and so you hear the quartette practicing in the chapel, someone practicing the scales in class room No. 1 and someone else vocalizing on ah in the dining room. It really sounds more like a conservatory than a Bible Training School and is rather disturbing to the stu- dents who are trying to concentrate on a line of thought for a thesis or homily, or, to a teacher who is conducting a class. Several rooms in the new build- ing are planned for the music department. The Okla- homa Conference have made this possible by a pledge of 33,000 We have a fine tennis court, excellently located, but a very small gymnasium and very little equipment. The W. H. M- S- will make possible a splendid gym- Hasium lLl1I'0'-lgh their generous pledge of S10,000. For the practical Kindergarten, Industrial and Re- ligious Educational training, we have little or no room. The Children's Department of the W. H. M. S. have pledged the 352,000 for the Kindergarten Roomg the Alumnae Association of K. C. N. T. S. has taken the Manual Training Department which is also EiS2,000. The two 351,000 class rooms are the gifts of Mrs. George O. Robinson and Mr. and Mrs. Judy, the par- ents of one of our graduates. The Exhibit Room which wlll cost 352,000 will be taken care of by the Ne- braska Conference. Many gifts have come, ranging from 3525, which will name a window, to thousands of dollars, from our friends in many states. Anyone who would make a gift of 525,000 had the privilege of naming the building. Last fall at the W. H. M. S. Convention, the women of the Kansas Conference pledged the required amount and named it Kansas Building. ' '. Paz 19

Suggestions in the Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) collection:

Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 7

1921, pg 7

Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 108

1921, pg 108

Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 134

1921, pg 134

Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 54

1921, pg 54

Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 22

1921, pg 22

Kansas City National Training School - Shield Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 7

1921, pg 7


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