Prosopography of Indian Dickinson College Students: Difference between revisions
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=Indian Women at Dickinson= [[Image: | =Indian Women at Dickinson= [[Image:Conway hall.jpg|thumb|Conway Hall: 1905-1966]] | ||
==Life for Women at Dickinson== | ==Life for Women at Dickinson== | ||
==Indian School Women Who Attended Dickinson College== | ==Indian School Women Who Attended Dickinson College== |
Revision as of 23:29, 12 November 2007
Conway Students
http://chronicles.dickinson.edu/encyclo/c/ed_conwayhall.htm
History of Conway Hall
Indian School Students That Attended Conway Hall
Joseph Adams, William L. Baine, Frank Cayou, Howard Gansworth, James F. Johnson, Antonio J. Lubo, Thomas Marshall, Franklin P. Mt. Pleasant, Jr., Hastings M. Robertson
Life at Conway Hall
Dickinson College Students
Brief History of Dickinson College Up to the Late Nineteenth Century
Student Life at Dickinson College in the Late Nineteenth Century
Indian Students at Dickinson College
Most
List of Students from the Carlisle Indian Industrial School Who Attended Dickinson College
- Joseph F. Adams (Class of 1900)
- William L. Baine (Class of 1903)
- Frank Cayou (Class of 1902)
- Howard Gansworth (Class of 1900)
- James E. Johnson (Class of 1906)
- Antonio J. Lubo (Class of 1910)
- Thomas Marshall (Class of 1900)
- Franklin Mt. Pleasant (Class of 1910)
- Hastings M. Robertson (Class of 1905)
- John J. Harvey (Class of 1910)
Post-Dickinson College
=Indian Women at Dickinson=
Life for Women at Dickinson
Indian School Women Who Attended Dickinson College
Elizabeth Bender: Missionary to the Indians
Elizabeth Bender was a female student at Dickinson Preparatory School and Dickinson College who after graduating spent a year teaching at the Carlisle Indian School. Lizzie Bender and her twin brother Simon were born on June 13, 1865 in Bendersville, PA. She was the daughter of a Methodist minister, Rev. Amos Bender and Elizabeth Sleicher Bender. Her Methodist up bringing would become an important part of Lizzie’s life. Before coming to the Dickinson College Preparatory School with her brother in 1884...see more