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The Western Reserve |
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Garfield was a student at the Institute from 1851-1853 and rose to prominence through his intellectual ability and personal charisma. He took two years away to complete his collegiate degree at Williams College, then returned in 1856 to become first a teacher, then principal of the Institute. Garfield was a classical scholar and taught Greek and Latin, along with such subjects as Mathematics and Geology. Recognizing the value of formal education, Garfield broadened the curriculum offered at the Institute and insisted on its nonsectarian character. Although he left Hiram in 1861 to take up the Civil War command of Company A of the 42nd Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry, a regiment recruited from Hiram, his name appeared in the Institute's catalogues until 1863. Throughout his life, he retained his fondness for Hiram, making frequent visits and corresponding with numerous Hiram people. Two of his greatest friends were Almeda Booth, teacher of English, Classics and Mathematics from 1851 to 1866, and Burke A. Hinsdale.
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James A. Garfield, c. 1856
Burke A. Hinsdale, 1870s
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Letter from President Garfield, written from the |
Three years after the Institute attained collegiate rank and became known as Hiram College, Burke A. Hinsdale was appointed president. Again because of the fairly brief terms of the two presidents who preceded him, Hinsdale is known as the first permanent president of Hiram College. During his administration (1870-1882), the College achieved higher academic standing and set an ideal of intellectual honesty and sound scholarship. Hinsdale gathered around him the nucleus of a strong faculty who continued to serve the College for the next half century.
Hinsdale's "permanent" faculty
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Edmund B. Wakefield, |
George Henry Colton, |
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George Alfred Peckham, |
Bailey Sutton Dean, |
Ely V. Zollars was the next president to make a
distinct mark on the College. Serving from 1888-1902, he substantially
increased student enrollment, established a productive endowment, and carried
out a building program that added a dormitory, an administration building,
and a library/observatory to the campus.
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ElyV. Zollars, c. 1890 |
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Teachout-Cooley Library and Observatory |
Miner L. Bates, Class of 1895 |
President Miner Lee Bates, a Hiram alumnus of the
Class of 1895, served from 1907-1930. Much beloved by all Hiram constituencies,
he worked hard to reinforce the college's academic reputation, added several
new buildings and a wing to the library, and led two successful capital
campaigns.
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Kenneth I. Brown, 1931 |
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Bates was followed as president by Kenneth I. Brown,
a 30-year-old Harvard graduate who, more than anyone else, established
Hiram's reputation for innovative education. Under Brown (1930-40),
the faculty tested and approved the Intensive Study Plan, whereby students
took only one course in each of five 7-week terms. The innovative
plan was highly successful and was reviewed in prestigious education journals
as well as in the Saturday Evening Post in an article titled "The
Happiest College in the Land" (September 18, 1954).
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Paul Fall, c. 1955 |
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Hiram students traveled abroad in 1950. |
During the 1950s, |
Hiram's next president, Paul H. Fall (1940-1957)
saw the college through the war years and administered the Intensive Study
Plan for 250 Army Air Force cadets in training at Hiram as well as the
college's traditional students. The College's 100th anniversary in
1950 was celebrated with the dedication of Centennial Hall, a new dormitory
for women. The decade of the 50s saw two more Hiram innovations,
the inauguration of "study abroad" or extramural courses and a summer
Speech course on the Showboat Majestic. Although showboat
summers no longer occur for Hiram students, the College still sends numerous
classes abroad each year, and the students are taught by the Hiram faculty
who accompany them.
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Paul Sharp, c. 1960 |
Elmer Jagow, 1967 |
Paul F. Sharp (1957-1964) and Elmer Jagow (1966-1985)
presided over a 30-year period of expansion which included a substantial
increase in the student body and in the amount of the college's endowment,
as well as the addition of three dormitories, Art and Music buildings,
a student union, and a new main classroom building. Jagow's administration
also focused intensively on increasing minority enrollment and a minority
presence among faculty and staff. Curricular innovations included
the "Twentieth Century Course," the Freshman Colloquium program which is
still a backbone of the curriculum, the Weekend College for adult nontraditional
students, and the Regional Studies initiative, whereby faculty use Hiram's
location on the Western Reserve as a laboratory in which to focus their
academic disciplines.
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The Hiram College Library, 2001 |
The Martin Common leading to |
Under G. Benjamin Oliver (1989-2000), the campus
expanded significantly with the addition of the new library, the Esther and Carl
Gerstacher
Science Building, and the Paul E. Martin Common. Yet another innovation was
the conversion of the academic calendar to a 12-3 split semester plan.
Students enroll in three courses during each of the 12-week terms and take
only one intensive course in each 3-week term. The 3-week intensives
lend themselves particularly to study abroad programs.
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G. Benjamin Oliver, 1990 |
Richard J. Scaldini, 2001 |
The College's Sesquicentennial in 2000 and the
inauguration of President Richard J. Scaldini in September, 2001 celebrated
Hiram's rich past while embracing a promising future. Scaldini served Hiram
for three years before resigning to work as a consultant to higher education
institutions. His accomplishments at Hiram include establishing an
incentive program to foster entrepreneurial thinking and new business practices,
and streamlining the College's strategic planning efforts.
Thomas V. Chema, September 2003
Thomas V. Chema was named Interim President of Hiram College in June, 2003 and was formally named the 21st President of Hiram College on Feb. 2, 2004. Prior to his appointment at Hiram, Chema served the institution as a board member and chairman of the Institutional Advancement Committee, which oversees fundraising, enrollment management and the institution's overall reputation. He has extensive experience leading large and highly visible organizations including the Gateway Development Corporation, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO), and the Ohio Lottery Commission.
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