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Origins of Hamline University

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Hamline University, Red Wing

Hamline University, Red Wing, c.1865. Photograph by Kenneth M. Wright Studios.

In 1854, a group of Methodist ministers founded Hamline University in Red Wing. It was the first college established in Minnesota Territory.

William Pitt Murray, a St. Paul attorney and a leading Methodist layman, became an early supporter of a "Minnesota Academy" for the territory. He was influential in getting the territorial legislature to grant a charter for such a school on March 3, 1854.

Although St. Paul appeared the most likely university site, William Freeborn, one of the new school's trustees, lobbied for Red Wing. Freeborn believed the town had a bright future. The new school, named for Methodist bishop Leonidas L. Hamline, opened in Red Wing on November 16, 1854. Classes for the thirty-three students were held on the second floor of the Smith-Hoyt building.

The school enrolled women students from its beginning. Co-education of women and men was still a rare occurrence in 1854, but the idea was taking hold. Hamline served largely as a preparatory school at first and was operated by a small staff. Jabez Brooks, a thirty-one-year-old Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Connecticut's Wesleyan University, became principal and lead teacher. Miss Louisa Sherman was instructor of modern languages, painting, and drawing. Mrs. Frances L. Dunning, a music instructor, completed the staff.

Emily and Elizabeth Sorin, daughters of the Red Wing Methodist churchman Matthew Sorin, also taught. The Sorins studied for their collegiate degrees while working with newer scholars.

Hamline opened a three-story brick building on donated Red Wing land in January 1856. Enrollment increased with scholars from Minnesota as well as Michigan, Iowa and Wisconsin taking classes. However, a damaging national economic recession, the Panic of 1857, soon brought hard times. Fund raising withered and student enrollment slipped. Jabez Brooks resigned claiming his heavy workload was affecting his health. Unfazed by the bad news, school officials voted to add a college department to the prep school's organization.

The addition of the Reverend Benjamin F. Crary as Hamline president in 1857 helped stabilize the program. A well-known preacher from Indiana, Crary had taught school previously. He was also an attorney. The following year, Horace B. Wilson, a professor of mathematics and civil engineering, joined the faculty. Wilson, a later state superintendent of public education, gave a boost to Hamline's prestige.

Hamline reorganized its educational program into four major departments: classical, preparatory, scientific, and law. Red Wing attorney Charles McClure started the school of law. In June 1859 Hamline honored its first graduating class: Emily and Elizabeth Sorin. The Sorins' achievement was especially remarkable considering how few colleges were willing to educate women at the time.

Hamline students rushed to volunteer when the Civil War broke out in April 1861. They joined a Red Wing unit that became Company F of the famed Minnesota First Volunteer Infantry Regiment. More than twenty signed up with the 104-man outfit. Three faculty members enlisted in other units. Members of the Hamline contingent fought bravely and suffered heavy casualties during the conflict. The war broke up three successive senior classes as male students left school for the military. About 120 students and faculty members served during the Civil War.

The loss of so many of its students and faculty made it difficult for Hamline to function. Debt soared and left the school on the brink of financial failure. Only twenty-three students enrolled in 1868. It was too small a number to continue the program. Hamline's last graduation in Red Wing was held in March 1869.

In 1873, St. Paul offered Hamline trustees an eighty-acre tract of land along Snelling Avenue as a site for reopening the university. The plan fell through when another national financial crisis dried up funding. Work on a new building was underway but had to be halted in 1874. The campus also shrunk in size. Trustees found money enough for only forty acres instead of the planned eighty.

Classes finally got underway in St. Paul in September 1880.The oldest school of higher learning in Minnesota was reestablished and once more educating students.

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Angell, Madeline. Red Wing, Minnesota: Saga of a River Town. Minneapolis: Dillon Press, 1977.

Alumni Association. "History of the Hamline University of Minnesota When Located at Red Wing, Minnesota, from 1854–1869." St. Paul: Alumni Association of the College of Liberal Arts of Hamline University, 1907.

Asher, Hellen, D. "A Frontier College of the Middle West." Minnesota History 9, no. 4 (December 1928): 363–378.
http://collections.mnhs.org/mnhistorymagazine/articles/9/v09i04p363-378.pdf

--. "The Growth of Colleges from 1850 to 1860, Particularly in the Northwest." Master's thesis, University of Wisconsin, 1926.

Carmichael, Oliver C. "The Roots of Higher Education in Minnesota." Minnesota History 34, no. 3 (Autumn 1954): 92–93.
http://collections.mnhs.org/MNHistoryMagazine/articles/34/v34i03p090-095.pdf

Hicks, John D. "My Six Years at Hamline." Minnesota History 39, no. 6 (Summer 1965): 213–226.
http://collections.mnhs.org/mnhistorymagazine/articles/39/v39i06p213-226.pdf

Hamline University. Annual Catalogue of Hamline University (1857-8). Red Wing, MN: Hubbard and Meredith, printers, 1857.

--. "The Organization of the Volunteer Army in 1861 with Special Reference to Minnesota." Minnesota History 2, no. 5 (February 1918): 324–368.
http://collections.mnhs.org/mnhistorymagazine/articles/2/v02i05p324-368.pdf

Hobart, Chauncey. History of Methodism in Minnesota. Red Wing, MN: Red Wing Printing Co. 1887.

--. Recollections of My Life: Fifty Years of Itinerancy in the Northwest. Red Wing, MN: Red Wing Printing Co., 1885.

Jarchow, Merrill E. Private Liberal Arts Colleges in Minnesota: Their History and Contributions. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1973.

Johnson, Frederick L. Goodhue County, Minnesota: A Narrative History. Red Wing, MN: Goodhue County Historical Society, 2000.

Murray, William Pitt. "Hamline University" in Franklyn Curtiss-Wedge, History of Goodhue County, Minnesota. Chicago: H.C. Cooper, Jr., & Co., 1909, 279–282.

Nute, Grace Lee. In Hamline Halls, 1854-1954. St. Paul: Hamline University, 1987.

Shurtleff, Malcolm Chesney. "The Introduction of Methodism in Minnesota." Master's thesis, University of Minnesota, 1922.

Related Images

Hamline University, Red Wing
Hamline University, Red Wing
Hamline University, Red Wing, c.1863.
Hamline University, Red Wing, c.1863.
Group of students at Hamline University, Red Wing, c.1861
Group of students at Hamline University, Red Wing, c.1861
Emily R. Sorin Meredith (Mrs. Frederick Allison) of Fort Lupton, Colorado. 1859 graduate of Hamline University at Red Wing.
Emily R. Sorin Meredith (Mrs. Frederick Allison) of Fort Lupton, Colorado. 1859 graduate of Hamline University at Red Wing.

Turning Point

Students enlist in Minnesota military units during the Civil War, causing Hamline major losses in enrollment. Student numbers shrink in the post-war years as well, finally causing the university to close in 1868.

Chronology

1854

Methodist clergy gather enough financial support to open Hamline University in Red Wing. It is Minnesota's first college, although originally a preparatory school.

1857

A three-story brick building is built to house the university.

1858

The addition of well-qualified new faculty, particularly Horace B. Wilson, a professor of mathematics and civil engineering, allows Hamline to offer a complete college curriculum.

1861

More than twenty Hamline students enlist to fight for the Union as the Civil War begins. More volunteers join the military in the years following, draining the number of students in the predominantly male university.

1869

The last Hamline graduation on the Red Wing campus is held in March. Low student numbers make the program there unsustainable.

1880

A reorganized Hamline, now located in St. Paul, opens in September.