High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 16 text:
“
uxrf C out fl-Tf1e1024 CRIM.f0NDj1 C gmac pp an Q :for one year. She remarks that even her seanty schooling surpassed that of most of the members oilf her class upon entering Brockway. The task of such an insti- tution was at that time, she declares, extremely difficult owing to the lack of preparation ot the beginners. Brockway College was originally more ol? an academy than a eollege. What is now a wing oi? East 'Hall was the only buildingg elasses 'lior girls were held on the 'first' tloor and for boys on the second. 'llhere were two teachers, one avman, the other a woman. It was the coming of the Reverend Wiliiam E. Merriman that gave Ripon its real beginning, as has been related above. - Several years atfter graduation Miss Adams returned to Ripon as head of the department ot Greek and Latin. One ot her most precious treasures today is a silver card tray, a remembrance from her last' class in Greek. She was forced to leave Ripon finally because ot? the death ot her mother. For 'fourteen years she kept house ilfor her tather until he also died. Miss Adams' has always, and still is, intensely interested in educational matters. She is a stauneh supporter ot the theory ol? discipline for its own sake. At her home in Omro she for many years privately coached boys and girls preparing t.o enter colleges and has been instrumental in sending many new students to Ripon. Today, she explains, I am still as interested as ever in my Latin and Greek, although l have not as much time to devote to them as formerly. ' ' Ripon College is rightly proud to designate such a remarkable woman as among its first' graduates. Miss Adams is an example which other generations of Riponites may well attempt to copy. She exemplifies the true Crimson spirit and is still as loyal to her alma mater as upon graduation day. In June, 1921, she attend- ed the eonnneneement exercises at the college, and, if possible, hopes to be present again this yea r. And yet, upon her own authority, her feel- i ing is not singular for a Riponiteg it is simply the spirit of New Ripon which lives eter- nal. Miss fldams' 1101110 in Omro fV. 'Gf me c 'mx nn rif t- e i g p pgwagfp 1111 p an gp .R 'll a-16+ Page I5
”
Page 15 text:
“
i if A CRIMSONIB mv U21 Q The First Graduate ODAY there is no individual living better able to eulogize Ripon College than is Miss Luthera Adams, the only living graduate of the Class of 1867, the A ,uvii V first class to be graduated from this institution. It is to Miss Adams that this annual has been dedicated and to 'i if- ' 1e her that the staff is indebted for much of the material lulplyl i JAIIIA which is presented in this section. i 'i e I'm a pretty old lady, 'l Miss Adams smilingly speaks MUS -'Y 1111111-U '67 of herself. However, eighty-two years of service have not left the customary marks on Ripon's pioneer student, and, living alone in the homestead which her father built over seventy years ago in the little city of Omro, Miss Adams is still as active mentally and as interested in educational matters as she was during her several years both as student and instructor in Ripon College. A veritable storehouse of information, she is enthusiastic in her responses regarding herself, Ripon and the general drift of educational matters during the past two generations. lt is a. source of no little wonder to her how present-day students acquire any knowldedgeg rather, how they find time for studies in face of the other activities which must attract their attention. The remarkable memory of Miss Adams is demonstrated by her ability to recall names and faces. She is able to pursue the pages of an old photograph album which she completed during her stay at Ripon and designate the names of every individual, only having to pause casually to recall Christian names. Each face inevitably suggests an anecdote and an hour with Miss Adams is to become acquainted with a new type of student life, characteristic of colleges and universities in general sixty years ago. A X Miss Adams was a student at Ripon College for over seven years, her attend- ance being frequently interrupted by necessary periods of teaching at Mlaupun and Omro in order to secure money with which to continue. Coming to NVis- consin from New York with her parents, at the age of eight years. she had the advantage of very little early training. ltler father first settled at Pickett near relatives. but upon a visit to Oshkosh he heard of the erection of a new mill at Omro and the need of a blacksmith, which was his trade. So he moved his wife and only child and became one of the first settlers in that village. Today the Oniro High School and graded school buildings as well as several blocks of residences are on land originally claimed by John Adams. The first school which Miss-Adams attended was conducted by a Yale grad- uate who happened to spend a winter in Omro and who hired the back part ot' a vacant store building in which to hold his evening classes. Public schools were unheard of at that time a.nd most children depended upon their mothers for their learning. Prior to entering Ripon Uollege, which was then known as Brockway Hall. Miss Adams attended a seminary for girls at Rockford, Illinois. C01 E 15 04:1 5 vkmoi , mf f ' m , UD I '..l7 , , 1 ' Page I4
”
Page 17 text:
“
im: to .step-tgggzqcemmyaga. as m The Republican Party ' N a little school house which now stands on the southwest corner of Ripon campus, was held March 20, 1854, a meeting which marks the first break from the old Democratic party a.nd the organization of a new party under the name ' ' Republican. 1 It was at the time the Nebraska Bill threatened to pass Congress and become a law.. ln answer to what appeared to threaten a spread of slavery into northern states, a body of Ripon citizens rose to protest passage of the bill. Chief among those who read in the Nebraska Bill an menace to the anti-slavery forces, stood Mr. Alvan E. Bovay. With Mr. J ehdeiah Bowen as his chief helper, he headed the new movement and started propaganda which soon resulted in definite action. .Llc it was who iii-st suggested the name Republicanl' for the new party. It was also he who interviewed Horace Greeley in New York City two years before the party wa.s definitely organized, and who later was responsible for Greeley's editorial suggesting the name. After several preliminary meetings, a, mass meeting was finally held on the night of March 20, 1854. in the school house 5 a meeting which Udeiinitely and positively cut loose from old parties and advocated a new party under the name Republican. Of this meeting M r. Bovay himself later wrote: HI set to work in the most systematic way that I could contrive, to dissolve the Whig party and all other parties opposed to the slave party, and to organize the Republican party right here in Ripon, because I was fully convinced that sooner or later others would take similar steps elsewhere, and that in a few months we should have a. great irresistable Northern party, organized on the single issue of the non-extension of slavery. , . . . They came to our meetings, and were respectfully heard. but the large majority had made up their minds. The hour was late, the candles burned low. It was a cold, windy night at the vernal equinox. In the end, all IDHJCN two or three gave in and we formed an organi- aation .... The election of that first Republican committee-A. E. Bovay, Jehdeiah Bowen, Amos Lo- per, Jacob Xhloodruff and Abram Thomas-was a sol- emn act .... It was no fragmentary movement. It contemplated the consoli- dation of all shades of an- A ti-slavery opinion under the name Republican. Home of Mc Rcjzublimn Parry ' T 9 VVYV V -gfffffs, . . - him-Q i . Un .'1lff5 3f.QfTB .. ti-alive it w Cr 2 Swugaoiq Page I6
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.