enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Oberlin College - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oberlin_College

    Oberlin's football team was the first team coached by John Heisman, who led the team to a 7–0 record in 1892. Oberlin is the last college in Ohio to beat Ohio State (winning 7–6 in 1921). Though in modern times, the football team was more famous for losing streaks of 40 games (1992–1996) and 44 games (1997–2001), the Yeomen have enjoyed ...

  3. Mary Jane Patterson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Jane_Patterson

    Their eldest child, Mary Jane Patterson, was born in 1844. Thus, despite some accounts stating that the family were runaway slaves, they were in fact free when they moved north from Raleigh, North Carolina, to settle in Oberlin, Ohio, an abolitionist town, in 1852. [1] [11] In 1857, Patterson took a one year preparatory course at Oberlin.

  4. The First-Year Experience Program - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_First-Year_Experience...

    Originally, Boston College was where the first Freshman Orientation class was offered in the year 1888. Reed College, based in Portland, Oregon, was the first institution to offer a course for credit when, in 1911, they offered a course that was divided into men-only and women-only sections that met for 2 hours per week for the year.

  5. List of Oberlin College and Conservatory people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Oberlin_College...

    Antoinette Brown (1847), first ordained female minister in the U.S. John M. Brown, bishop of the AME Church; Lewis Sperry Chafer (1891), theologian; one of the prominent proponents of Christian Dispensationalism; founder and first president of Dallas Theological Seminary; Fanny Jackson Coppin (1865), influential educator and missionary

  6. John Jay Shipherd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Jay_Shipherd

    Oberlin was the first co-educational college in the United States. Both Shipherd and Stewart served as Trustees, after Oberlin was incorporated by Ohio in March 1834. Church services were an integral part of the Oberlin colony. Led by Shipherd, the Congregational Church of Christ at Oberlin, was organized in September 1834. [6]

  7. Lucy Stanton (abolitionist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucy_Stanton_(abolitionist)

    Lucy Stanton Day Sessions (October 16, 1831 – February 18, 1910) was an American abolitionist and feminist [1] figure, notable for being the first African-American woman to complete a four-year course of a study at a college or university. [2] [3] She completed a Ladies Literary Course from Oberlin College in 1850. [4]

  8. Five Colleges of Ohio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Colleges_of_Ohio

    In its final phase in 2018-19, the project included a test of three advanced Chinese language courses shared among four of the colleges via distance technology. In curricular development: Teagle Creativity and Critical Thinking Assessment 2005-2006, a multi-year project funded by The Teagle Foundation that developed tools to assess outcomes of ...

  9. Oberlin Conservatory of Music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oberlin_Conservatory_of_Music

    In 1867, two years after the Oberlin Conservatory's founding in 1865, the previously separate Oberlin Conservatory became incorporated with the college on a similar grant. [ 1 ] In tandem, the administration claimed that "Oberlin is peculiar in that which is good," notable as the first college and first conservatory in the United States to ...