Cedar Valley Seminary

Cedar Valley Seminary
The building being relocated in 2016
Cedar Valley Seminary is located in Iowa
Cedar Valley Seminary
Cedar Valley Seminary is located in the United States
Cedar Valley Seminary
LocationN. 7th and Chase Sts., Osage, Iowa
Coordinates43°17′10″N 92°48′49″W / 43.28611°N 92.81361°W / 43.28611; -92.81361
Arealess than one acre
Built1869 (1869)
Architectural styleItalianate
NRHP reference No.77000541[1]
Significant dates
RelocatedJune 26, 2016
Added to NRHPNovember 17, 1977

Cedar Valley Seminary is a historic seminary building currently at N. 7th and Chase Streets in Osage, Iowa. Prior to June 2016, it had been located at N. 6th and Mechanic Streets.

It was built in 1869 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.

The school was founded at Osage, as a Baptist academy, in 1862, by the joint efforts of Rev. Alva Bush, the citizens of Osage, and the Cedar Valley Baptist Association. On Monday morning, January 12, 1863, Prof. Bush opened the first term of the school, with seventeen boys and fourteen girls.[2]

In his memoir "A Son of the Middle Border",[3] Hamlin Garland recalled that in the late 1870s "The school was in truth a very primitive institution, hardly more than a high school, but it served its purpose. It gave farmers' boys like myself the opportunity of meeting those who were older, finer, more learned than they, and every day was to me like turning a fresh and delightful page in a story book, not merely because it brought new friends, new experiences, but because it symbolized freedom from the hay fork and the hoe."

Before going to the University of Chicago, the orientalist John Merlin Powis Smith taught Greek at Cedar Valley Seminary.

The school was closed in 1910 because, according to one historian, "Waldorf College was established in Forest City by the Norwegian Lutheran people and took away many students and much financial support that would naturally have come to the seminary; the grade of work in the public schools improved with time, and the Cedar Valley Seminary was a near neighbor. These reasons made it seem unwise to longer continue to maintain the seminary".[4]

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ Alonzo Abernethy (1907). A History of Iowa Baptist Schools. Press of the Woolverton Printing and Publishing Company. pp. 251. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  3. ^ Hamlin Garland (1917). A Son of the Middle Border. The Macmillan company. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
  4. ^ Jefferson F. Clyde (1918). History of Mitchell and Worth Counties, Iowa. S.J. Clarke Publishing Company. pp. 65. Retrieved 16 August 2013.