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Wednesday, July 25, 2018

George R. Smith College

BCD-181-BS_F
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George R. Smith College was a Historically Black College located in Sedalia, Missouri, it was attended by the famed and prolific American ragtime-music piano composer Scott Joplin famous for the piano music piece "Maple Leaf Rag." The institution was associated with the Freedmen's Aid and Southern Education Society of the Methodist Church and played an important role in the lives of young people for several decades.

According to the Encyclopedia of the History of Missouri by Howard Conrad, the building was completed in 1882. The college operated from 1894 until it burned down April 26, 1925, after which its assets were merged (in 1933) with the Philander Smith College in Little Rock, Arkansas. A photograph of George R Smith College, with students, can be found among the references listed here.


Video George R. Smith College



Alumni

  • Myrtle Craig Mowbray, first African American woman to graduate from Michigan State University, in 1907
  • John Wesley Donaldson, baseball player
  • Scott Joplin, ragtime music piano composer
  • T. Manuel Smith, MD, president of the National Medical Association (1942-1943)

Maps George R. Smith College



Presidents

  • P.A. Cool, 1894-1896
  • E.A. Robertson, 1897-1901
  • I.L. Lowe, 1902-1907
  • A.C. Maclin, 1908-1910
  • J.C. Sherrill, 1911-1912
  • George Evans, 1913-1914
  • Matthew Simpson Davage, 1915-1916, later served as president of New Haven Institute, Samuel Huston College, Rust College, and Clark University
  • Robert B. Hayes, 1917-1925

Sedalia, Missouri - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org


References


Ways to Give | Corning Community College
src: www.corning-cc.edu


External links

  • African American Methodism and Higher Education in Missouri
  • The Biggest Little Black College on the Prairie

Source of the article : Wikipedia