Oberlin Favorite Tips by grandmaR


Oberlin Favorites: 9 reviews and 13 photos

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Reunions - Oberlin
Reunions

Favorite thing: 10 years after graduation

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  • Written Nov 27, 2006
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Graduates ready to be seated - Oberlin

Graduates ready to be seated

The Goal Attained

Favorite thing: I visited Oberlin in October of 1954 (ran into Hurricane Hazel on the way back home), and then lived there during term time for 4 years. Freshman year I lived at Tank Hall which is now a Co-op. The other three years I lived at Grey Gables, which no longer exists.

I rode a bike which was stolen so I no longer have it. It had an oogah horn on it which I lent to someone who didn't return it.

I went to classes at Wright Zoo lab which is no longer there, and the Botany building, also no longer there.

Fondest memory: My dad gave me a 35 mm camera for my 20th birthday, and I took quite a few pictures around campus. When he and my mom came to graduation, he took some photos too.

I went back for my 10th reunion, but it wasn't a particularly exciting experience. I had three children by then.

I went to the 45th reunion with a digital camera. The primary motive for going back was that my roommate was going to be there. The campus has really changed. I don't think I will be going back. I'll have to rely on these old pictures for my fondest memories. You can't go home again.

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  • Written May 16, 2005
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1958 Winter Sunset from Grey Gables dorm room - Oberlin

1958 Winter Sunset from Grey Gables dorm room

The Town That Started the Civil War

Favorite thing: Either.... Wellington or Oberlin.

Oberlin was founded in 1833as an integrated community. The free blacks of Oberlin celebrated Aug.1 (the date of the abolition of slavery in Jamaica) as the day of Independence, rather than July 4.

Women and blacks were admitted to the college. In 1841 it graduated the first women to earn a college B.A. degree in the United States.

Knowing that Oberlin was the first co-educational college in the United States meant a lot to me.

A large number of the students from Oberlin became abolitionists and went South to lead slaves to freedom. By the time the town officially incorporated in 1852, it was a major terminus of the underground railroad and had helped 3000 slaves escape to freedom.

In 1858, Democrats in Ohio gained control of the state legislature and repealed the personal liberty law that allowed fugitives to apply for a writ of habeas corpus. The fugitive slaves who sought refuge around Oberlin became targets of slave-catchers from the South who entered Ohio under the authority of the federal Fugitive Slave Law. When a US Marshall captured a fugitive slave and took him to Wellington to American House (a hotel which was on the site of Wellington's present day library), a group from Oberlin, including John Mercer Langston, Ohio's first black lawyer, and John Copeland 'rescued' him. This is known as the "Oberlin-Wellington Slave Rescue" which is considered by many to be a direct cause of the American Civil War

Fondest memory: The government indicted 37 of the rescuers group for violating the Fugitive Slave Law. While the Rescuers waited in jail, they were visited by John Brown whose father Owen had been an Oberlin trustee in the 1830s.

John Brown recruited 2 blacks at Oberlin for his Oct. 16 raid on Harper's Ferry: John Copeland, and Lewis Leary, whose Irish ancester Jeremiah O'Leary had fought in the Revolution with Nathaniel Greene. Oberlin would also be blamed for causing Brown's raid.

John Mercer Langston organized Ohio's first black regiment in 1863 and became a national leader for blacks after the war, founding the National Equal Rights League, organizing the Freedman's Bureau, becoming professor at Howard University, serving as minister to Haiti and as the only black congressman from Virginia in 1890.

Information from Sources:

* Brandt, Nat. The Town That Started the Civil War. Syracuse University Press, 1990. 315 p.
* Hart, Albert Bushnell, ed. The American Nation: a history from original sources. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1904-18.

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  • Updated Jul 23, 2004
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Wilder Hall 2004- Upper left inset - 1959 - Oberlin

Wilder Hall 2004- Upper left inset - 1959

Men's Building Becomes Wilder

Favorite thing: When I was a freshmen, many of the freshmen men were housed in Men's Building, which was at 135 West Lorain Street

The construction of the Men's Building was begun in 1909 and the building was completed in 1911, at a total cost of $460,000. It was the gift of an anonymous donor. The architect was Mr. J.L. Silsbee of Chicago, and the building was erected by Mr. George Feick of Sandusky. It was designed to be the center of the men's activities of all kinds—social, religious, athletic, musical, and literary. It contained reception rooms, offices, and rooms for the Young Men's Christian Association, athletic, trophy, and Glee Club rooms, and assembly room seating five hundred, rooms for the men's literary societies, and dormitory accommodations for one hundred and fourteen men. In 1928 the assembly room was named the "King-Bosworth Room."

Wilder Hall now houses Oberlin's student union. The Dean of Student Life and Services, the Multicultural Resource Center, the Office of Chaplains, the Oberlin Student Cooperative Association (OSCA), and the Experimental College (ExCo) all have offices there as well as most of the college's 100-plus student organizations.

Fondest memory: There was a Recreation Hall which included a bowling alley where we had co-ed PE classes, and there was a snack bar kind of place.

Midway in the 1955-56 school year, the anonymous donor (Mr. Wilder) died, and at that point the building was renamed in his honor. The headline in the college paper was "Men's Building Becomes Wilder".

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  • Written Jun 12, 2004
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grandmaR Used To Live Here!

grandmaR

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