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Friends University: Difference between revisions


 

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* [[Darrel Ray]] – writer and speaker on leadership and organizational development

* [[Darrel Ray]] – writer and speaker on leadership and organizational development

* [[Vernon L. Smith|Vernon Smith]] – [[Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel|Nobel Memorial Prize]] winner in economics

* [[Vernon L. Smith|Vernon Smith]] – [[Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel|Nobel Memorial Prize]] winner in economics

* [[André J. Thomas]] musician and composer, professor of music at the College of Music at [[Florida State University]] and the artistic director for the Tallahassee Community Chorus.

* [[André J. Thomas]] musician and composer, professor of music at the College of Music at [[Florida State University]] and the artistic director for the Tallahassee Community Chorus.

* [[Antwan Wilson]] – superintendent of [[Oakland Unified School District]]{{cite news |last=Klivans|first=Laura|title=Six months in, new schools head Antwan Wilson pushing his ‘roadmap’ for a challenged district |work=Oakland North|date=December 15, 2014|access-date=December 9, 2016|url=https://oaklandnorth.net/2014/12/15/six-months-in-new-schools-head-antwan-wilson-pushing-his-roadmap-for-a-challenged-district/}}

* [[Antwan Wilson]] – superintendent of [[Oakland Unified School District]]{{cite news |last=Klivans|first=Laura|title=Six months in, new schools head Antwan Wilson pushing his ‘roadmap’ for a challenged district |work=Oakland North|date=December 15, 2014|access-date=December 9, 2016|url=https://oaklandnorth.net/2014/12/15/six-months-in-new-schools-head-antwan-wilson-pushing-his-roadmap-for-a-challenged-district/}}

* [[Mary Chawner Woody]] – resident, North Carolina [[Woman’s Christian Temperance Union]]

* [[Mary Chawner Woody]] – resident, North Carolina [[Woman’s Christian Temperance Union]]

Private christian university in Wichita, Kansas, US

Friends University is a private nondenominational Christian university in Wichita, Kansas. It was founded in 1898. The main building was originally built in 1886 for Garfield University but was donated in 1898 to the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) by James Davis, a St. Louis business man. In the 1930s the leadership of the school was turned over to an independent board of trustees, with some representation of the Mid-America Yearly Meeting of Friends on the board. It operates today with “an amicable but independent relationship with the evangelical branch of the Society of Friends.”[4]

History[edit]

Garfield University[edit]

The building now known as the Davis Administration Building and formerly as University Hall was designed by architects Proudfoot & Bird and completed in September 1887[5] to house Garfield University. Garfield was an effort by the Christian Churches of Kansas led by W.B. Hendryx to build a Christian college in the Wichita area. Hendryx wanted to name the college after his good friend, U.S. President James Garfield.[6] At the time, it occupied the largest single building used for educational purposes west of the Mississippi River. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Garfield University opened its doors for classes in 1887. The university had 500 students enrolled for the first year and 1,070 for the second year. After graduating its first and only senior class, Garfield University closed its doors in 1890 due to financial difficulties. The school was reorganized and opened again in March 1892 as Garfield Central Memorial University. It closed for good November 18, 1893.

As crop failures and deaths made it difficult for pledges to be paid, the university floundered financially. Edgar Harding of Boston eventually became the owner of the property and began putting out ads for someone to purchase it; James Davis of St. Louis, a Quaker, answered one of those ads. Davis proclaimed “he would buy a college and give it to the Quakers with his first million dollars”. After three visits to the building that would eventually be named after him, he began looking into purchasing the land.[6]

Friends University[edit]

Edmund Stanley

On March 31, 1898, Davis had closed the purchase. Representatives were called in May of that year for a called meeting of the Kansas Yearly Meeting of Friends, because Davis wanted classes to begin that autumn and the meeting was not scheduled until October. The Friends unanimously decided to accept the offer[7] and Edmund Stanley, a clerk of the Kansas Yearly Meeting, was recruited to serve as Friends’ first President.[6]

In October, at the scheduled meeting, Stanley reported that the school was opened on September 21, 1898, and that “In accordance with the purposes in organizing and maintaining a denominational institution for higher education, we are encouraging such movements as will cultivate and stimulate…



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