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Randolph-Macon College: Harlan Fiske Stone: 1894 Amherst College: Owen Roberts: 1895 University of Pennsylvania: John Barlow: 1895 Brown University: Louis Brandeis: 1895 Harvard University [6] Caroline Ransom Williams: 1896 Mount Holyoke College [7] John D. Rockefeller Jr. 1897 Brown University [8] Richard B. Carter: 1898 Harvard University ...
Randolph–Macon was founded in 1830 by Methodists Hekeziah G. Leigh and John Early. [6] and Staten Islander Gabriel Poillon Disosway of New York City.It was originally located in Boydton, Virginia, near the North Carolina-Virginia border; but as the railroad link to Boydton was destroyed during the American Civil War, the college's trustees decided to relocate the school to Ashland, Virginia ...
The college was founded by William Waugh Smith, then-president of Randolph-Macon College, under Randolph-Macon's charter after he failed to convince R-MC to become co-educational. Randolph-Macon Woman's College has historic ties to the current The United Methodist Church (and its predecessor bodies of Methodism in the former Methodist Episcopal ...
Randolph-Macon Academy (R-MA) is a coeducational private boarding school in the U.S. state of Virginia with a military leadership component. R-MA serves students in grades 6-12. The 135-acre (0.55 km2) campus overlooks Front Royal, and is 70 miles (110 km) west of Washington, D.C. It is one of six private military schools in Virginia.
M. Thomas Inge, Robert Emory Blackwell Professor of Humanities at Randolph–Macon College; Samuel Lander, Methodist minister who founded what later became Lander University; Henry Ludwell Moore, economist at Columbia University; Christopher Morse, Christian theologian and professor of theology and ethics at Union Theological Seminary
Randolph–Macon Yellow Jackets (6 C, 2 P) F. Randolph–Macon College faculty (26 P) Pages in category "Randolph–Macon College" The following 4 pages are in this ...
The annual Gillie A. Larew Distinguished Teaching Award is the oldest of Randolph College's faculty awards. [5] A portrait of Larew by painter Winslow Williams, commissioned in 1986 by the alumnae of Randolph-Macon Woman's College, is part of the permanent collection of the Maier Museum at Randolph College. [6]
M. Thomas Inge (March 18, 1936 – May 15, 2021) [1] [2] [3] was an American academic. He was the Robert Emory Blackwell Professor of Humanities at Randolph–Macon College in Ashland, Virginia, where he taught, edited, and wrote about Southern literature and culture, American humor and comic art, film and animation, Asian literature, and William Faulkner.