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  1. The Geauga Seminary (also known as Western Reserve Labor Seminary) was a Free Will Baptist school in Chester Township, Geauga County, Ohio. President James Garfield attended the Seminary. History. The school was founded in 1842 by the Western Reserve Free-Will Baptist Society and the first building was constructed in 1843. [1] .

  2. Geauga Seminary,1847-1849, Chester, Ohio where she was a boarding student and took a course of study that focused on Greek and Latin, and also included algebra, science, geography and music. Hiram Eclectic Institute , 1850 -1855, Hiram, Ohio, although a non-sectarian institution that her father helped found, the college was founded by members ...

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  3. Geauga Seminary was located in the town of Geauga, in Chester County, Ohio. Among its founders were David Marks, Ransom Dunn, and A.K. Moulton. The school first opened in 1842 in a church building.

  4. From Geauga Seminary, Garfield decided to test himself further by enrolling at the new Western Reserve Eclectic Institute in Hiram, Ohio. A part of this decision was based on the fact that he did not know what he wanted to do with his life: he mostly disliked teaching children in the district schools, and while he was a capable carpenter the ...

  5. 10 de jan. de 2024 · 1849 Enters Geauga Seminary in Chester, OH. 1851 Enters Western Reserve Eclectic Institute (now Hiram College) in Hiram, OH. 1854-56 Graduates from Eclectic Institute. Enrolls in Williams College, Williamstown, MA; graduates in two years. 1857 Becomes principal of Eclectic Institute; becomes a Disciples of Christ minister.

  6. Lucretia Rudolph was born on April 19, 1832 to Arabella Mason and Zebulon Rudolph. She acquired her love of learning from her father, and was well educated for a woman of her day who enjoyed translating Greek and Latin. She first met "Jim" Garfield when both attended Geauga Seminary, and they renewed their friendship in 1851 as students at the ...

  7. 24 de jul. de 2010 · The Geauga Seminary was coeducational, and one of Lucretia’s fellow pupils there was an awkward and earnest sixteen-year old boy named James Garfield. “A prodigy,” Lucretia called him. In 1850, Lucretia left the Geauga Seminary and enrolled in the new Hiram Eclectic Institute in Hiram, Ohio.