قراءة كتاب The Choctaw Freedmen and the Story of Oak Hill Industrial Academy

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‏اللغة: English
The Choctaw Freedmen and the Story of Oak Hill Industrial Academy

The Choctaw Freedmen and the Story of Oak Hill Industrial Academy

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 3

Edwards15

  • Biddle and Lincoln Universities70
  • Rev. E. P. Cowan, Rev. John Gaston, Mrs. V. P. Boggs91
  • Eliza Hartford, Anna Campbell, Rev. E. G. and Priscilla G. Haymaker108
  • Girls Hall, Old Log House109
  • Carrie and Mrs. M. E. Crowe, Anna and Mattie Hunter116
  • James McGuire and others117
  • Wiley Homer, William Butler, Stewart, Jones148
  • Buds of Promise149
  • Rev. and Mrs. R. E. Flickinger, Claypool, Ahrens, Eaton160
  • Reopening, 1915, Flower Gatherers192
  • Mary I. Weimer, Lou K. Early, Jo Lu Wolcott193
  • Rev. and Mrs. Carroll, Hall, Buchanan, Folsom224
  • Closing Day, 1912; Dr. Baird225
  • Approved Fruits256
  • Planting Sweet Potatoes and Arch257
  • Orchestra, Sweepers, Going to School274
  • Miss Weimer, Celestine, Coming Home275
  • The Apiary; Feeding the Calves294
  • Log House Burning, Pulling Stumps298
  • Oak Hill in 1902, 1903299
  • The Hen House, Pigpen295
  • The Presbytery, Grant Chapel152
  • Bridges, Bethel, Starks, Meadows, Colbert, Crabtree353
  • Crittenden, Folsom, Butler, Stewart, Perkins, Arnold, Shoals, Johnson378
  • Teachers in 1899, Harris, Brown379
  • Representative Homes of the Choctaw Freedmen406
  • The Sweet Potato Field407

  • INTRODUCTION

    TOP

    "The pleasant books, that silently among
    Our household treasures take familiar places,
    Are to us, as if a living tongue
    Spake from the printed leaves, or pictured faces!"

    The aim of the Author in preparing this volume has been to put in a form, convenient for preservation and future reference, a brief historical sketch of the work and workers connected with the founding and development of Oak Hill Industrial Academy, established for the benefit of the Freedmen of the Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory, by the Presbyterian church, U. S. A., in 1886, when Miss Eliza Hartford became the first white teacher, to the erection of Elliott Hall in 1910, and its dedication in 1912; when the name of the institution was changed to "The Alice Lee Elliott Memorial."

    Some who rendered service at Oak Hill Academy, bestowed upon it their best work, while superintendent, James F. McBride and Matron, Adelia M. Eaton, brought to it a faithful service, that proved to be the crowning work of their lives.

    The occasion of receiving a new name in 1912, is one that suggests the eminent propriety of a volume, that will commemorate the labors of those, whose self-denying pioneer work was associated with the former name of the institution.

    Another aim has been, to place as much as possible of the character

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