20:
62:
impacted the school further, driving enrollment to fifty by 1874–75. In 1880, the
Methodists ceased supporting the school, and the Institute began to act solely as a local school. The institute was abandoned by 1885, and its buildings were used as an orphan asylum.
46:, and graduated its first class that same year. For the next two decades, the school was the largest in central Alabama, enrolling approximately 500 students. J. N. Montgomery was president from 1856 until the Civil War; he was followed by
38:, from 1829 until the 1880s. The Centenary Institute was founded in 1829 as Valley Creek Academy, a local school, but was turned over to the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1838. In celebration of the centennial of
42:, the school was renamed the "Centenary Institute". A. H. Mitchell served as president of the institute from 1843 until 1856. In 1845, the school was conferred the power to grant
84:
58:. The Institute saw its fortunes decline precipitously during the war; by 1865 buildings were in need of repair, and in 1867 the school saw but three graduates. The
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19:
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Lynda F. Worley, "A History of
Centenary Institute, Selma, Alabama,"
88:, (New York: Washington, Neale Pub. Co., 1909), 87-89; Bob Parrott, "
39:
85:
History of Higher
Education of Women in the South, Prior to 1860
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Ruins of the main building, Centenary
Institute, 1934
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155:Educational institutions established in 1829
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165:Methodist Episcopal Church, South
36:Methodist Episcopal Church, South
170:1829 establishments in Alabama
92:", retrieved January 27, 2009.
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16:School in Summerfield, Alabama
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160:Defunct schools in Alabama
107:Wesleyan Quarterly Review
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131:32.51694°N 87.04278°W
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32:Summerfield, Alabama
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90:Centenary Institute
28:Centenary Institute
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52:William J. Vaughn
48:Richard H. Rivers
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149:Categories
122:87°02′34″W
119:32°31′01″N
67:References
40:Methodism
44:degrees
54:, and
151::
82:,
50:,
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