University of Chicago (1857-1886)

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The first University of Chicago, a Baptist school, was incorporated in 1857 on land donated by Senator Stephen A. Douglas. The University closed in 1886 due to financial difficulties. At the final meeting in 1890, the Board of Trustees changed the name of the institution to the Old University of Chicago so that the new Baptist school being organized as a completely separate legal entity might be called the University of Chicago.

From the description of Records, 1856-1890 (inclusive). (University of Chicago Library). WorldCat record id: 52246567

The institution known as the Old University of Chicago was originally established as the University of Chicago in 1856 on a ten-acre tract of land donated by Senator Stephen A. Douglas. A Baptist school, the University was constantly plagued by financial difficulties and was forced to close in 1886. At its final meeting in 1890, the Board of Trustees changed the name of the institution to the Old University of Chicago so that the new Baptist school being organized as a completely separate legal entity might be called the University of Chicago.

Douglas had first offered the property at Cottage Grove Avenue and Thirty-Fifth Street to the Presbyterian Church for a university, but when they failed to raise the $100,000 he had stipulated, he conveyed the site to a group of Baptists. While the charter required that a majority of the members of the Board of Trustees be Baptists, the school was nondenominational in character, applying no religious test to either faculty or students. Its name notwithstanding, the university was primarily collegiate and vocational in nature with two hundred to five hundred students enrolled annually in preparatory, collegiate, law, and medical schools.

The new institution began almost immediately to encounter financial difficulties. Douglas' connection with the Kansas-Nebraska Act, regarded as a betrayal of the anti-slavery cause, proved a liability in fundraising, and the financial panic of 1857 rendered most of the initial subscriptions worthless. Nonetheless, the trustees proceeded with construction projects beyond the school's means, and debt mounted rapidly. The president, J. C. Burroughs, and the trustees succeeded in securing new subscriptions, but just as it seemed that the institution might reach solid financial ground, the Chicago fire of 1871, followed by the panic of 1873 and the fire of 1874 plunged it into financial peril once more.

Administratively, the university's situation was equally chaotic and disagreements over fundraising, financial management, and faculty appointments escalated into open strife among the trustees. President Burroughs and his most vocal opponent, trustee W. W. Everts, were persuaded to resign, but the trustees created for Burroughs the post of chancellor and made him responsible for the school's financial affairs. Conflicts among the trustees, the president, and the chancellor continued, with administrators arriving and departing in rapid succession.

Union Mutual Life Insurance Company, the university's chief creditor, brought suit in 1881 to foreclose the mortgage on the university's property that it held. In January 1885, the court found in favor of the company. The trustee's hope of redeeming the property proved illusory: the university closed in the autumn of 1886 and the main building was razed in 1890.

From the guide to the Old University of Chicago. Records, 1856-1890, (Special Collections Research Center University of Chicago Library 1100 East 57th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637 U.S.A.)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf University of Chicago (1857-1886). Records, 1856-1890 (inclusive). University of Chicago Library
creatorOf Old University of Chicago. Records, 1856-1890 Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library,
referencedIn Walker, George C. Scrapbook, 1873-1903. University of Chicago Library
referencedIn Butler, Digby B. Papers, 1866-1869. University of Chicago Library
referencedIn Lee, Elon. Papers, 1864-1919. University of Chicago Library
referencedIn Hostetter, Charles Linnaeus. Diary, 1860-1837 (inclusive), 1860-1864, 1882 (bulk). University of Chicago Library
referencedIn Horace H. Lurton Papers, 1860-1915, (bulk 1893-1915) Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
referencedIn Koenitzer, Charles Herman, 1865-. History of the first University of Chicago, 1856-1886 : typescript, [ca. 1927]. University of Chicago Library
creatorOf University of Chicago (1857-1886). [Miscellaneous pamphlets]. Chicago History Museum
referencedIn Walker, George C. Scrapbook, 1873-1903 Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library,
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Butler, Digby B. person
associatedWith Hostetter, Charles Linnaeus. person
associatedWith Koenitzer, Charles Herman, 1865- person
associatedWith Lee, Elon. person
associatedWith Lurton, Horace H. (Horace Harmon), 1844-1914. person
associatedWith University of Chicago corporateBody
associatedWith Walker, George C. person
associatedWith Walker, George C. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Chicago (Ill.)
Illinois--Chicago
Subject
Baptists
Baptist universities and colleges
Baptist universities and colleges
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1856

Active 1890

English

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