Marion College (Missouri)
Marion College was a Presbyterian work college that closed in 1844. Its three schools were located in the Missouri towns of Philadelphia, East Ely and West Ely.
History
Marion College was originally proposed as communal college with a manual labor concept of students assigned a number of acres of land to farm. The institution was organized with an "upper" college in Philadelphia, Missouri, and two "lower" or preparatory schools at East Ely and West Ely. Land was provided by Thomas Muldrow and buildings were erected. William S. Potts, pastor of First Presbyterian Church in St. Louis, Missouri agreed to serve as president. The college suffered from the Old School/New School controversy among Presbyterians over slavery. The final blow came with the financial panic of 1837-39 and the institution closed in 1844.
Connected with Marion College as faculty were Ezra Stiles Ely, Rev. David Nelson, Rev. James Junius Marks, Rev. John Blatchford and Hiram P. Goodrich, as well as Profs. McKee, Hays, Reach, and Thompson.[1]
Noted alumni
- Henry Watkins Allen, governor of Confederate-held territory in Louisiana, 1864-1865
References
- Richardson, William A., "Dr. David Nelson and His Times", Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, vol. 13, no. 4 (January 1921), p. 433-463.
Sources
- Lamkin, Charles F. A Great Small College: Narrative History of Westminster College. 1946.
- Parrish, William E. Westminster College: An Informal History, 1851-1999. 2000.
- Who Was Who in America, Historical Volume, 1607-1896. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, 1967.