*** Welcome to piglix ***

Salado College

Salado College Archeological Site
Salado college ruins 2008.jpg
Ruins of Salado College 2008
Salado College is located in Texas
Salado College
Salado College is located in the US
Salado College
Location Corner of South Main Street and College Hill Drive
Salado, Texas, USA
Coordinates 30°56′28″N 97°32′13″W / 30.94114°N 97.53699°W / 30.94114; -97.53699Coordinates: 30°56′28″N 97°32′13″W / 30.94114°N 97.53699°W / 30.94114; -97.53699
Built 1860
NRHP Reference # 85000403
Added to NRHP March 1, 1985

Salado College was a college in Salado, Texas, United States that operated from 1860 until 1885.

Salado College began on October 8, 1859 at a tent meeting at Salado Springs of prominent men from throughout Bell County with a desire to create a high class school in the county. They organized the Salado College Joint Stock Company and raised $5,000 for the college through sale of stock. The board of the company had seven trustees. Colonel Elijah Sterling Clack Robertson was elected President of the board.

Robertson donated 100 acres (0.40 km2) of land to the college on October 16, 1859. Ten acres of the land was for the college grounds and ninety acres was to subdivided and sold to families moving to the area. The proceeds of the land sale provided money for building the school. Salado College was the first college in the state to operate without church or state funds.

On February 8, 1860, Salado College was incorporated by the Texas Legislature for twenty years to grant diplomas, confer degrees and perform other corporate functions. Unlike most colleges of the era in the United States, Salado College was to be coeducational. The college erected a temporary wooden building, and the first classes began on February 20, 1860. Seventy-five students were enrolled the first term. Students that did not live in the area boarded with local families as the college had no dormitory. Teachers temporarily lived in tents.

On July 4, 1860, area Masons laid the cornerstone for the college's permanent two-story limestone building. The ceremony attracted visitors from as far away as Austin and Waco. The college sold many more lots as families moved to Salado to get their children a good education. Attendance increased to 124 students the next year. Attendance at the school peaked at 307 students in 1865 with an average of 250 from 1866 to 1872.


...
Wikipedia

...