This carte-de-visite photograph of the original Corvallis College
building, built in 1859, is the earliest known photograph of
what was to become OSU. In 1868, the campus was located on 5th
Street between Madison and Monroe in downtown Corvallis. Perhaps
this photograph was made at the time of the announcement making
Corvallis College the state's land grant institution.
The photograph was taken by Stryker & Dohse, who opened their
Corvallis photography gallery in 1868. It was located above
B. R. Biddle's drug store on Main Street (now Second Street). Their
advertisement in the Corvallis Gazette read "Stryker & Dohse,
Having permanently established themselves in Corvallis, are prepared
to take all kinds of pictures, without regard to weather." [OSU Archives #1344.]
Because of
financial difficulty, a judgment against the college occurred on
April 10. As a result of the judgment, the college is ordered sold.
Corvallis College (building and land) sold at a sheriff's auction to satisfy
a mechanics lien. The College was purchased for $4,500 by Reverend
Orceneth Fisher, Methodist Episcopal Church, South, pastor.
The college reopened in November with Reverend W. M. Culp as principal.
Population in Corvallis: 531; in Benton County: 3,074; in Oregon: 52,465.
Sale of Corvallis College in January to a Corvallis community Board of Trustees
(each a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South).
First Morrill Act, which established land grant colleges, signed by President
Abraham Lincoln on July 2. The act offered every state grants of public
land to help support colleges of agriculture and mechanic arts.
Morrill Act provisions "irrevocably adopted" by the Oregon Legislature
on October 9, although no action was taken at that time to establish
a state college.
Reverend William Asa
Finley (October, 1865 - May 4, 1872), A.M., D.D., a minister
and member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South appointed as
the first president of Corvallis College.
A Collegiate Department offering a four-year, collegiate-level, liberal arts
curriculum was added to the Primary and Preparatory Departments. (The new college
curriculum required three years of Latin, three years of Greek, three years of
mathematics, and a senior year emphasizing ethics, morals, and religious training).
First
annual catalogue published.
The Educational Committee of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South announced
that the college had a deficit of $700.
First class of collegiate standing enrolled (4 students).
Total enrollment, including the primary and preparatory levels, was 126.
Articles
of Incorporation filed on August 22. Corvallis College reincorporated
as a degree-granting "literary" institution of higher
education. Corvallis College incorporated this time on a basis "not
limited in duration but perpetual."
New academic calendar, providing for three terms of 14 weeks each (instead of
two sessions of 20 weeks each) adopted on August 22.
OSU Charter Day, October 27, 1868; the first state support for higher education
in Oregon.
The Oregon Legislative Assembly, through the efforts of W.
W. Moreland, a member of the Corvallis College faculty, "designated
and adopted" Corvallis College on October 27 "as the Agricultural
College of the State of Oregon" and the recipient of land grant
fund income derived from the sale of 90,000 acres in southeast Oregon.
The Corvallis College Board of Trustees accepted the designation
on October 31. Permanent adoption of Corvallis College as the state's
agricultural college came in 1870.
The Oregon Legislative Assembly specified that "all students sent
under the provision of this Charter Act shall be instructed in all
the arts, sciences, and other studies in accordance with the requirements
of the Act of Congress."
Two boards were in operation: (1) a Board
of Trustees appointed by the church to manage Corvallis College;
and (2) a Board of Commissioners appointed by the State of Oregon
to establish and operate an Agricultural College.
Other designated land grant colleges in 1868 were the University of Illinois
at Urbana and the University of California at Berkeley.
General Laws of Oregon, 1868, authorized each state senator to select one student
for a scholarship.
Corvallis College given authority by the State of Oregon to grant three degrees:
Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, and Master of Arts.
Name of institution: Corvallis College and Agricultural College of Oregon.
First student publication, The Student Offering, issued.
Plans
for adding an agricultural college and agricultural curriculum to Corvallis
College announced. The Board of Trustees appointed a committee to prepare
a course of study in agriculture and the mechanic arts. The other college
curricula included the Classical Course (A.B. degree) and the Scientific
Course (B.S. degree).