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St. Olaf College company history timeline

1874

PREPARATORY STEPS The educational ideal which Muus constantly kept before his people is crystallized in the Theses which he prepared for the annual meeting of the Norwegian Synod which was held in his home church from the 13th to the 21st of June, 1874.

N.A. Quammen, and Harald Thorson, laid the groundwork for the college’s founding in 1874.

In order to ascertain the attitude of the neighboring clergy and other influential Lutherans, he called a meeting of such to be held in Northfield in the fall of 1874.

1875

St Olaf's School opened on January 8, 1875, at its first site under the leadership of its first president, Thorbjorn N. Mohn, a graduate of Luther College.

On the 18th of June, 1875, Muus reports subscriptions amounting to $9,000, not counting the Northfield subscription.

One day in the winter of 1875 Prof.

1876

An annual (September) festival recalls how on September 7, 1876, local citizens foiled a bank robbery attempt led by Jesse and Frank James and the Younger brothers; the event has been depicted in several motion pictures.

In the course of another year he and Quammen had raised the subscription to $13,000 in their own parishes, and a little later in the year 1876 Prof.

1877

Herman Amberg Preus, president of the Norwegian Synod, laid the foundation stone of the St Olaf School on July 4, 1877.

1878

On the fourth anniversary of the foundation, the 6th of November, 1878, this building was dedicated with impressive ceremonies.

In 1878-’79 they were admitted on the first floor of the new building.

1885

He was made librarian in 1885 and began to work vigorously.

1886

Here the Lutheran Divinity School opened with impressive ceremonies on the 15th of September, 1886.

1887

I, F. Grose was chosen librarian in his place in 1887.

In 1887 the Manitou Messenger was founded as a campus magazine and has since evolved into the college's student newspaper, now called the Olaf Messenger.

1887 was also the year that the first female St Olaf graduate, Agnes Mellby, joined the college.

1888

F. E. Millis organized the scientific department in 1888, and purchased the most necessary apparatus for chemistry and physics, $1000 having been voted by the Anti- Missourians for that purpose.

1890

The first college class graduated in 1890.

The present librarian felt the need of funds, and on Thanksgiving day, 1890, in the hope of interesting others, he donated $100 to form the nucleus of a Permanent Library Fund.

1893

Also in 1893 the Norwegian Synod voted to cut ties with the college, greatly reducing its income.

1897

By 1897, when the synod reinstated the college, the debt was reduced to less than $4,000.

1899

The collection gradually increased, and on the first of May, 1899, it numbered 2,640 volumes.

After having met several times they published their report, which was first warmly discussed in the press, and then for a whole week discussed in the annual meeting held in St Paul from the 21st to the 29th of June, 1899.

Not long after, he was again confined to his bed of sickness from which death released him on the 18th of November, 1899.

1903

Following students’ return from Christmas vacation in 1903, an epidemic of scarlet fever broke out on the campus and quickly spread.

1918

The first cases on St Olaf's campus occurred on November 11, 1918, and shortly thereafter the college hospital was filled to capacity.

1925

Grose, I. F. Fifty memorable years at St Olaf, marking the history of the "College on the hill" from its founding into its golden jubilee celebration in 1925. [Northfield, Minn., The Northfield News, In, 1925] Pdf. https://www.loc.gov/item/26021218/.

1932

In 1932, Red Wing Lutheran Seminary was merged into St Olaf and its Red Wing campus was closed.

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Founded
1874
Company founded
Headquarters
Northfield, MN
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Founders
Bernt Muus
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