Browse Items (223 total)

This program lists the commencement activities which will take place from June 3 - 7, 1894. The program is tied with yarn and has deckled edges. The activities include a baccalaureate sermon, class day exercises, the preparatory department…

These Army pay roll muster sheets (Form # 366) list members of the Ottawa University Students' Army Training Corps. It gives their army serial number as well as the date they joined. This payroll is dated October 24, 1918.

This document from Ottawa University shows the exact program of study for the men who joined the Students' Army Traning Corps. There were slight differences in the programs depending upon the soldiers' ages.

Dr. S. E. Price announced that the fall semester of Ottawa University will be delayed until October 1, 1918, so as to coincide with the start of the S.A. T. C. on campus. The school year would be divided into three terms each of three months. Other…

President S. E. Price issued this announcement about the formation of a Students' Army Training Corps at Ottawa University in the fall of 1918. The memorandum outlines the duties, pay, and conditions of joining S.A.T.C.

The Denison Alumni Bulletin of November 1934 has a two-page article about the death of Silas Eber Price. Dr. Price was president of Ottawa University for many years and died in Pasadena, California, on October 27, 1934. His body was taken back to the…

This summation of the accomplishments of President S. E. Price was written after his death in 1934. The author mentions the increase in the endowment and the addition of three new buildings on campus.

Ottawa University printed its annual catalog as an issue of the OU Bulletin starting in 1872. There are some gaps in the early years.The catalog included the school calendar, trustees and other officers of the University, and list of faculty and…

This is a picture of Frederick W. Colegrove who was president of Ottawa University from 1892-1896. He taught at the college for many years.

Dr. Ward received a letter from the President Ebenezer Dodge of Madison University in Hamilton, New York. It appears Ward had written asking for suggestions for a replacement when he retired. Dodge had no one to suggest.