Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH)

 - Class of 1973

Page 11 of 219

 

Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 11 of 219
Page 11 of 219



Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 10
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Page 11 text:

6WW0'DGXMVDG'NM'0 DGNMfDGWQ0fiJo-wQ07TocfT'vQ0'fv6N'w0To JOSHUA H. JONES 1900-1908 WILLIAMS S. SCAR BOROUGH 1908-1920 QJWND epwxs emma wwxv f-Yfaassgv e-Ames 0.0089 CLJWA-'J 6 board of directors and trustees shall always be members of said African Methodist Episcopal Church. After Bishop Payne had contracted to purchase the Wilberforce University plant for the A.M.E. Church in March, 1863, he soon secured the co- operation of Professor J. G. Mitchell, then principal of the Eastern District School in Cincinnati, Ohio, and the Rev. J. A. Shorter, pastor of the AME Church in Zanesville, Ohio, in the new venture. ln the next three months these men, as agents of the AME Church raised twenty-five hundred dollars, the down payment under the contract, and on June 11, 1863, the property was formally turned over to them as agents of the church. Immediately, these agents busied themselves in getting a new charter, and in finding prominent persons who would be willing to act as trustees. Within a month these details had been attended to and the new charter was granted on July 10, 1863. Very soon the new board of trustees was organized and the administrative staff of the new institution was elected. D. A. Payne was elected president of the university, J. A. Shorter became the treasurer, and John G. Mithcell was made the principal. Owing to the fact that Wilberforce University was the only Black school with a military department supported by the national government, it immedi- ately took the lead in war service among the Black colleges. The institution sent its quota of men to the First, Third, and Fourth Training Camps and had a large return of men with commissions, including captains, lieutenants, and sergeants. When the call came for clerks for the army, Wil- berforce was again called upon to furnish a quota of seven, which was promptly filled. Three Wilber- force professors and six students took intensive training at the Washington, D. C. Training Camp. Wilberforce men received commissions at Camp Hancock, Georgia, where they were trained as machine gunners. A number of second lieutenants were commissioned at Camp Pike, Arkansas, where training was given in the use of artillery. ln fact, by September, 1918, Wilberforce had as- serted her ascerfdency in the matter of military contributions. President Scarborough Cthen Presi- dent of Wilberforce Universityj summed up the Wilberforce war work by stating that, We may say with becoming modesty and pardonable pride that in all the cantonments Wilberforce students have stood highest as compared with those of other institutions. We have the word of officers for this statement and we have the commissions TO Show Our great pYOpOr'tiOl1 among the grad- uates. During the school year of 1918, the comprehensive plan to cooperate with the colleges in the training of college students was in operation at Wilber- force, and a student Army Training Corps of 400 Soldiers was sent to the University for academic and vocational training. In these movements the institution assumed the responsibility for housing, food, and drill grounds, which created quite a problem with the facilities at hand.

Page 10 text:

BENJAMIN F LEE 1876 1884 SAMUEL T MITCHELL 1884 1900 A A ' . l - I - - - i , - l 5 - - I ' ' force University. He also made contact with per- sons of means for the purpose of providing the needed revenue for continued operation. In spite of their pledges, however, five of the conferences failed to raise their quotas. Only the Ohio and the Baltimore Conferences raised the full amounts. Nevertheless, the agents succeeded in paying seven thousand and five hundred dollars on the property within two years. Before the agents made the final payment on the property, the main building was destroyed by fire. This incident placed the university authori- ties in a serious dilemma, and there was some speculation as to whether the school would be continued. President Payne and his co-workers, however, were determined not to be defeated, and redoubled their efforts to raise the necessary funds with which to rebuild. ln the meantime, Miss Malt- by fitted up classrooms in one of the cottages and continued the work of instruction for those who were not compelled to withdraw. While many of the students did not return to Wilberforce, Miss Maltby's retirement left the school without an ade- quate teaching staff. For a period, much of the instruction was done by J. P. Shorter, one of the advanced students. Shortly after the nation entered the world war, the faculty passed resolutions placing the entire resources of Wilberforce University at the disposal of the government. Telegrams were sent to the President of the United States and to the Governor of Ohio informing them of this action. The Presi- dent replied, as did the Governor, thanking the institution and assuring it that it would be called upon when needed. At a meeting of June 30, 1858, Richard S, Rust, a distinguished member of the New Hampshire Conference, was unanimously elected president of the institution and began his active work at the institution in September of the same year. As an individual, President Rust was exceedingly active: and it was not long before the enrollment increased from a few students to nearly one hun- dred. He revised the curriculum and made exten- sive plans for the future of the institution as a college. In fact, it is said of him that he developed the institution from a primary school into a college within a short time. The African Methodist Episcopal Church then gain- ed possesion of the institution, largely through the efforts of Bishop Daniel A. Payne, and on March 10, 1863, the institution was newly incor- porated as WiIberforce University of the AME Church. In rapid succession the following depart- ments were established by the AME Church in the university: the theological, in 18653 the classi- cal and scientific, in 18671 and the normal, in 1872. The charter secured, by the AME Church for Wil- berforce University of the AME Church , stated that the university was incorporated for the pur- pose of promoting education, religion, and moral- ity among the colored race ... and the institution shall be and forever remain under management, direction and control of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and for that, a maiority of the 5



Page 12 text:

G5M?JGSMfD6 SMO'E6'N40fDGWQ00'DG5'WfDG'WWVDGN'UfD JOHN A. GREGG 1920- 1924 GILBERT H. JONES 1924- 1932 Q2Q'k9QOWk9Q!Qk97Wk9QOWkDQ2WkDQ2'Wk9Q2Wk9 After the war was over Wilberforce University became one of the centers for the rehabilitation of the soldiers who returned from the war. Since 1922 both a junior and a senior unit of the Re- serve Officers Training Corps have been in opera- tion at Wilberforce University. Shorter Hall, having been built with difficulty by the sacrifice of the church in the years immediately following the Civil War, had come to be a shrine representative of the A. M. E. Church's devotion to the cause of education, and a symbol of the Black race's sentiments surrounding the founding and development of the university hovered around its sacred walls. The ground on which it stood was hallowed ground. At least, so said the orator from year to year from the chapel platform. But more than that, Shorter Hall was an emblem of the church's power, the church's control over the institution so largely supported by the State of Ohio. Without its halo of sentiment, Shorter Hall was not a commodious building, neither was it in good repair. Its stairtreads squeaked as one mounted the stairs: its floors were worn through in places: its ancient walls were dingy and full of nail holes: and its class rooms were small and poorly lighted. Yet Shorter Hall was actually the educational and spiritual center of activities of Wilberforce from the time of Payne until the time of its destruction. President Gregg characterized it as follows: The building, from which have gone some of the most influential men of our race, and which stood like a mighty fortress at the frontier between the ignorance and impotence of an emerging race and its great accomplishments of today. In order to understand the relationship existing be- tween the A. M. E, Church and the State of Ohio in the management of Wilberforce University, one must take into consideration the quasi-religious character of the Combined Normal and Industrial Department Board of Trustees. Historically, the University Board of Trustees, represents the cor- poration, which is a creature of the A. M. E. Church The C. N. 84 I, Department Board of Trustees is a board of trustees representing a joint relation- ship of the church and state, and is composed of members elected by the University Board of Trust- ees and members appointed by the governor of the State of Ohio. The University Board of Trustees is compo'sed of two kinds of members: legal trustees which represent the corporation in all important business and legal relationships, and conference trustees, who serve in a consulting and advisory capacity, but who have no voice or vote in business or legal matters. The legal board consists of twenty- one members elected by co-option with a pattern of choice which is easy to follow. The three bishops representing the particular episcopal districts which directly support the school, certain other members representing these districts, and a few members representing the church at large consti- tute the legal board. ln 1932 the legal board consisted of seven A. M. E, Bishops, eleven prominent A. M. E. minis- ters, and three A. M. E. laymen, and in 1936 there were seven A. M. E. Bishops, twelve prominent 7

Suggestions in the Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH) collection:

Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 35

1973, pg 35

Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 127

1973, pg 127

Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 44

1973, pg 44

Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 88

1973, pg 88

Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 187

1973, pg 187

Wilberforce University - Forcean Yearbook (Wilberforce, OH) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 166

1973, pg 166


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