Pioneer's Progress: Illinois College, 1829-1979

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Illinois College, 1979 - Biography & Autobiography - 409 pages

Celebrating the sesquicentennial of Illi­nois College--"Old Illinois," the oldest college in Illinois--this perceptive his­tory provides an account to which stu­dents will turn for the light it casts on the growth of higher education in the Middle West and the development of high ideals of Christian education al­luded to in the book's title.

Illinois College is fortunate indeed in having its history so ably written, first by Charles H. Rammelkamp, the Col­lege's fifth president (1905-32), on whose centennial history Charles E. Frank, a longtime faculty member, here builds. Brilliantly abridging Rammel­kamp's earlier work, which forms the first part of this book, Dr. Frank pro­ceeds systematically to recount and evaluate the College's eventful past fifty years.

Recalling Evangelist's charge to Christian in Pilgrim's Progress--"keepthe light in your eye, and go up directly thereto"--Dr. Frank sympathetically but resolutely interprets the history of this small college in the Mississippi Val­ley. His is, however, a pilgrimage of ideas, and his account, though of growth and of buildings, never loses sight of the College's beginnings or of its progress.

From inside the book

Contents

18291925
2
Where Have You Been Illinois College?
3
A New Missionary Arrives
8
Copyright

28 other sections not shown

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About the author (1979)

Charles E. Frank is Pixley Professor of Humanities at Illinois College.

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