Type | Manual labor college |
---|---|
Active | 1831–1844 |
Founder | David Nelson William Muldrow David Clark |
Religious affiliation | Presbyterian |
President | David Nelson (1832–1835) William S. Potts (1835–1839) Hiram P. Goodrich (1839–1843) John Blatchford (1843–1844) |
Location |
Marion College was a small school in Marion County, Missouri, 1831-1844. It was the first college to be chartered by the Missouri state legislature, and the second educational institution in Missouri to be granted the right to confer college and university degrees.[1][2] Founded in 1831, Marion College was originally planned as a manual labor college focusing primarily on agriculture, while also teaching classics. From 1835, it also incorporated a theological seminary. The school was founded by private individuals, but was strongly Presbyterian.[1] Its three schools were located in Philadelphia, East Ely and West Ely in Marion County, Missouri.[3]
The college attracted many investors, faculty and students from the East. It was opposed by proslavery residents of northeastern Missouri, who were particularly critical of founder and president David Nelson, an antislavery activist.[4][5] Marion College was also part of a speculative bubble in Marion County, involving investment in Marion City, Philadelphia, and a planned railroad line.[1] Enrollment dropped following the financial crisis of 1837, and by the spring of 1844, the college had closed.[1]
:3
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).:2
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).