Northwestern Normal Institute

LeMars, Iowa

 

 

 

LeMars Semi-Weekly Sentinel
LeMars, Iowa
August 18, 1885

THE TEACHER’S INSTITUTE

The first week of the Plymouth County Teacher’s Institute closed Friday. The roll showed an attendance of ninety-three. The conductor’s speak in the highest terms of the interest taken by those in attendance, all entering into the work with unusual zest, which augurs much good to the cause of education in the county. It is hoped that during the closing weeks of the session every teacher, or those who expect to teach, will take part in the exercises of the Institute. The district, as well as the teacher, is the loser, by not being represented.  Directors should not employ teachers who do not attend the Institute. The drill, the discussion, the lectures, and the prescribed course of study of the Institute, will do more to prepare the teachers for their duties than months of self-study and work. Prof. Wernli is assisted in the work of instruction by Prof. F. B. Cooper, Miss Jennie Randolph, of Sanborn, Prof. C. P. Kilborne, of Akron, and Dr. A. P. Bowman. The following is the enrollment, which, it is thought, will be increased by the addition of at least forty names:

FIRST YEAR'S COURSE.

Age

Name

Residence

17

Nina Armstrong

LeMars

19

Lizzie Good

LeMars

15

Stella Perkins

LeMars

16

Tillie Schmidt

LeMars

16

Grace Hitt

LeMars

17

Minnie Cutnach

LeMars

19

Rosa Welch

LeMars

17

Matilda Koenig

LeMars

18

Maggie McElhaney

LeMars

14

Cora Smith

LeMars

15

Eda Wilson

LeMars

16

Issie Steele

LeMars

18

Jennie Luce

James

18

Clara Goakey

Akron

16

Lissa Jeffers

Akron

20

Frank Take

LeMars

15

Mattie Connelly

LeMars

19

Charles Murphy

Remsen

18

Anna Gainor

LeMars

29

James Thomason

LeMars

18

Mary March

LeMars

16

Emma Kehrberg

LeMars

19

Hettie Shaw

LeMars

16

Jessie Smith

LeMars

16

Lizzie Rembe

LeMars

19

Retta Rice

Remsen

17

Clara Smith

LeMars

17

Mary Beauleau

Westfield

18

Rosa Held

LeMars

16

Jennie Southall

Kingsley

15

Maud Sandford

Merrill

22

O. C. Ford

James

SECOND YEAR’S COURSE.

Age

Name

Residence

24

Edwin Thompson

LeMars

39

Nick Orejir

Remsen

19

Minnie Kehrberg

LeMars

17

Jessie Mitchell

LeMars

17

Florence Baker

LeMars

19

Beattie Baker

LeMars

18

Anastasia Clark

LeMars

18

Eva Gosting

LeMars

23

Belle Watson

LeMars

18

Alice Diamond

LeMars

18

Nannie Kelly

LeMars

23

Mrs. Hattie Hamm

LeMars

20

May Kelly

LeMars

19

Annie C. Linden

LeMars

20

Alice Stokes

LeMars

18

Hannah Held

Hinton

17

Katie M. Linden

LeMars

19

Mary E. Morf

Merrill

19

Nora Sargent

Akron

18

Tillie Fractenicht

LeMars

18

Iowa Holles

Akron

20

Katie Creasy

Sioux City

29

James Muir

LeMars

19

Bert Porter

LeMars

19

Lillie Lambert

LeMars

18

Lola Simpson

LeMars

22

Ida Chandler

Akron

20

Hattie Thompson

Akron

20

Lena Held

Hinton

19

Mary Byrnes

LeMars

25

Evelyn Rocke

LeMars

18

Jane Walker

Remsen

23

Henry Luhman

Hinton

18

Mary A. Webber

Sioux City

26

Emeline R. Scribner

LeMars

18

Cora Arnold

Kingsley

18

Cora M. Porter

LeMars

18

Ruth Sibley

LeMars

21

P. E. Coustade

LeMars

THIRD YEAR’S COURSE

Age

Name

Residence

28

Katie Goldie

LeMars

25

Maggie J. Goldie

LeMars

21

Carrie M. Gilbert

LeMars

20

Exie Eastman

LeMars

23

Inez C. Coons

LeMars

37

Mrs. Jennie Martin

LeMars

25

Mary Connor

LeMars

17

Aggie L. Allin

LeMars

22

May Ella Clark

LeMars

20

Amy Allin

LeMars

19

Lillie Thompson

LeMars

21

Etta DuBois

LeMars

19

Emily Gray

LeMars

20

Annie L. Alline

Remsen

21

Annie Eyres

LeMars

23

Louisa Finch

LeMars

22

Carrie Carrington

LeMars

19

Anna Agnes

Akron

24

D. S. Humphries

LeMars

20

Mrs. Alice Tipton

Kingsley

21

Loua Chamberlin

Agency City


LeMars Sentinel
Friday Evening, August 28, 1885

THE INSTITUTE

The teachers institute will close this evening after a profitable session of
three weeks. The average attendance has been about 125, the largest ever
before in the county. Prof. Wernli has had most competent assistants, Profs.
Cooper, Kilborne, Miss Rudolph and Dr. Bowman, all of who are free in their
praise of the energy and interest displayed by the teacher students, most of
whom go forth to engage in the task of instructing the youth of the county,
better prepared than ever before for their important duties. The teacher's
lot is a varied one.


LeMars Semi-Weekly Sentinel
Tuesday, August 17, 1886

TEACHER’S INSTITUTE.
The Opening Day of the Plymouth County Teachers Institute—Large Attendance.

The Plymouth County Teacher’s Institute opened yesterday morning with the largest attendance ever recorded in the county. The city is crowded with the “jolly school mam’s” from the country, and mare are expected during the week.  The Institute opens with an enrollment of one hundred and twelve names, and it is expected that at least fifty or sixty more will be added to the list. The average attendance last year was one hundred and twenty-five. It is gratifying that so much interest is being manifested in these yearly sessions by the increasing attendance, where those who are to teach the youths of the country, may come together to receive the benefits of the greater knowledge and wisdom of older and wiser minds, of tired and responsible instructors. The absence of a teacher from the Institute is a great loss to the district in which she is employed, as well as the teacher herself; the scholar loses the benefit of increased knowledge she would have derived by her presence.  For this reason every teacher should be present.

Our county superintendent has secured as assistants in conducting the Institute, Prof. Cooper, Prof. Arey, of Fort Dodge, Mrs. Hatch, of Des Moines, Miss Loring and Miss Sibley of this city, as able and competent a corps of instructors as could be secured or desired.

We are indebted to Miss Byrne, our obliging county superintendent, for the following list of those attending, from all parts of the county:

Laura Gray

Mary Stack

Hattie Varnum

Louise Schafer

Louisia Bixler

Alice Burns

Wm. Burns

Luella Schmitt

Addie Tucker

Edith Robinson

Stella Matthews

Lizzie Dresselhuys

Nettie Pinney

Ida Sparks

Ellen Frost

Lettie McDermott

Agnes Tolan

Hilbert Tooker

Bertha Hasbrook

Myrtle Bell

Ella Arberthnot

M. J. Hyde

Tillie Schmidt

Tina Schmidt

Annie Gainor

Violet Jordon

Mildred Tovey

Ella Kiley

Kate Allin

Frankie Gilliland

Matie Clark

Alice McNally

May Joerndt

Ollie Dalo

Lillie Lambert

Paulina Weisgerber

Lillie Crouch

Mattie Connelly

Mary Freeman

Lizzie Rembe

Jessie Smith

Louisa Schewpple

Mollie Sutter

Minnie Cattnach

Emma Kehrberg

Lucia Mclugin

Rose Welch

Nina Armstrong

Eda Wilson

Stella Perkins

Lizzie Good

Maggie McNamara

Linda Clark

Will Jordan

Alice Diamond

Lizzie Jeffers

Iona S. B. Koeler

Nettie Bge (obvious misspelling)

O. C. Ford

Matilda Koenig

Eva Gosting

Emma Kisley

Kate Linden

Annie Linden

Isabel Steele

Emeline Scribner

Alice Stokes

Mary Bryrne

Nomie Kelley

Mary Kelley

Belle Watson

Hannah Held

Minnie Kehrberg

May McIngin

May Deegan

J. A. Philips

W. C. Nor_oly

Wm. Jeffers

Helen R. Hill

Jennie Southall

Lena Held

Nora Sargent

Loretta Dunn

Aggie Allen

Amy Allen

Florence Baker

Annie Alline

Minnie Albright

Alice Freeman

P. E. Courtade

Lillian Washburn

Mary Connor

Annie Ayers

Mary Winslow

Clara House

Minnie Kluckhohn

Katie Diediker

S. R. Roberts

Mrs. A. Tipten

Annie Agnes

A. E. Robertson

Kate Goldie


LeMars Sentinel, Friday, March 4, 1887, Page 3, Column 6:

 
    The Northwestern Normal Institute at LeMars, Iowa, will begin March 28, 1887.  The opportunity for the training of practical teachers is now open to all who wish to avail themselves of it.  Anyone intending to attend the institution should apply at once either personally or by letter to the undersigned.  Such families at LeMars that are willing to board students are requested to inform me in regard to accommodation and price.
 
Respectfully yours,
J. Wernli
 
LeMars Sentinel, Tuesday, June 25, 1889, Page 3, Columns 4-5:
 
THE NORTHWESTERN NORMAL 
Meeting of the Advisory Board Friday afternoon.--Present Condition and
Future Prospects--Prof. Wernli's Report.--Commencement Exercises in the evening.
 
    At the meeting of the Normal Advisory Board, Friday afternoon Rev. J. E. Snowden was made chairman and J. M. Emery secretary.  The attendance was not large and none of the members from abroad were there, though several sent letters of regret, among them  Hon. Henry Hospers, of Orange City, Ex-Gov. Carpenter, of Ft. Dodge, H. C. Wheeler, of Odebolt and several others.  Rev. I. N. Pardee addressed the meeting at some length upon the present condition of the school, the work it had done and its needs.  There was a general discussion of the situation in view of the approaching expiration of the three years which Prof. Wernli has agreed to keep up the school up in LeMars and of the offer he has had to remove it to Sioux Falls.  M. A. Moore made a report from the committee of which he is chairman, suggesting a plan for raising a fund to keep the school in LeMars and it was adopted by the board.  M. A. Moore, Rev. J. E. Snowden and J. M. Emery were appointed a committee to secure an agent to work in this and adjoining counties to secure subscriptions, make contracts for scholarships and have authority to promote the educational and financial interests of the school in every way.  The committee will proceed to business at once.
 
    Prof. Wernli made a report of the work done by the school since the opening, as follows:
    "Our normal school was established to train teachers that would give to our growing generation in the northwest such instruction as our children have a right to claim at the end of the nineteenth century.  The great need was deeply felt and in the name of God and for the benefit of our suffering youth the work was commenced.
 
    "Our intention was to help individually the northwest until the grand state of Iowa would see our own energy and success and then make our work her own.
 
    "How we succeed in our work the following exhibit will prove:  (1) During the first year, or from March 28 to August 12, 1887, the attendance of pupils was 29.  (2) During the second year, 1887-1888, the entire attendance was 113.  (3) During the third school year of 1888-89 the total enrollment reached 193.  (4) The entire enrollment since the beginning of the school is 283.  (5) These students belong as follows:  Plymouth county, 230; Dakota, 11; Lyon, 6; Osceola, 4; Cherokee, 1; Sac, 3; Sioux, 18; O'Brien, 3; Humboldt, 7; Woodbury, 1; Buena Vista, 1; Minnesota, 4.  (6) Of the students that have attended during the existence of the school ninety-three have passed the examination before county superintendents and entered the public schools as teachers.  (7) Many of them have returned again after teaching one or more terms to continue their studies.  (8) In order to give our young and hard-working but poorer classes an opportunity to obtain the blessings of a good, practical education, we charge a very moderate tuition and furnish the students with everything needed in the school while the entire expenses for forty weeks need not exceed $120, comprising tuition, board and lodging.
 
    "The course of study contains every branch taught in the state normal, and such additional instruction as regarded essential for our people in the west, as horticulture, arborculture, bookkeeping, commercial law, etc.  That our pupils may join those classes no extra tuition is demanded.  The course of study is so arranged and the program planned in such a manner that any scholar of proper age and a desire to learn can enter the school at any time, while at the same time every teacher endeavors to exert a wholesome and encouraging influence upon each individual scholar.
 
    "As far as the school is concerned we have been meeting with entire success.  The students come and learn, the school increases, the members of it are our best, our only agents, they have been spreading the name of the Institution and bring their brothers, sisters and friends to us for instruction."
 
THE GRADUATION EXERCISES.
 
    Anyone who thinks there is a lack of interest in the Normal School at home should have been at the German M. E. church last Friday night and taken notice of the people who were there.  Every place where a person could sit or stand was made use of, hot as the evening was.  On the platform sat Revs. Wellmyer, Pardee and Snowden and Prof. Wernli.  The invocation was pronounced by Rev. I. N. Pardee when Misses Eva Luke, Nettie Ege, Ida Koenig, Clara Wernicke, Geneva Glenn, Anna Wernli sang "The Distant Chimes."
 
    By a very wise change in the program the Baccalaureate address by Rev. J. E. Snowden was given at this time instead of at the close.  It was rich in thought and common sense and its counsel well deserved the consideration of the students.  It will be printed in full in the SENTINEL next Friday.
 
    After this there were several declamations, interspersed with music, as published last week, excepting that in the absence of Miss Pardee, Miss Bourgmeyer, sang "The Johnstown Disaster" made a very choice selection and it was a great hit, for which she was generously applauded.  The other musical attraction was a chorus, "Simple Simon," by Prof. F. Hirsch, Chas. Wernli, Geo. Wernli, C. A. Mauer, H. Adler, J. Brown, John Beeley, C. E. Hass and G. W. Hoover.  This was accorded the only encore of the evening.
 
    The two orations were given by graduates of the Normal department.  Mr. C. H. Blake, of Union county, Dakota spoke first, and below is a short synopsis of what he said about
 
COMPULSORY EDUCATION.
 
  He spoke of the rapid progress of the country and the importance of the problem of education, and whether we should adopt the European plan of compulsory education.  Some of the states have laws of that kind, but they are not satisfactory, are not enforced and do not reduce crime; only one criminal in five is illiterate; crime and ignorance do not go together.  New York and Pennsylvania have rigid compulsory education laws, yet their per cent of literacy is nearly double that of Iowa; (word smudged out) per centage of school attendance is only 59, while Iowa's is 75.  The trouble is with poor people who cannot afford to send their children to school.  Especially in the cities, where the poor child is subjected to ridicule and torture by the well dressed children of the wealthy, parents will scheme with it to escape attendance.  The state should aid by bringing the schools to the poor instead of taking the poor to the schools.  The city and town schools are too much in the hands of a few, whom the teacher must favor or lose his position.  Compulsory education is contrary to the principle of American freedom.
 
    Oscar Smith of Akron took for his subject
 
PRACTICAL EDUCATION.
 
    In these days of skepticism it is not to be wondered at that our school system is so sharply criticized.  It is claiming that it is not fitting the young for the duties of life and that it is turning them from manual labor.  They say teachers cultivate the memory at the expense of the reasoning faculties.  The charges can not be substantiated, while the public schools have had so large a share in our national progress.  Now methods are being introduced, teaching harmony in all kinds of effort.  The one who follows a scheme of study is far more likely to look at things, and their relations, in their true proportions than one who pursues a desultory course.  One who chooses a certain line of study which may suit his inclinations may become learned in that line, but he can never become educated.  His one-sided view of any subject, which is the privilege of a symmetrically developed mind.  Educational training gives us that faculty of the mind called judgment.  It can only give a broad, sure foundation for the pursuit of such a life-work as shall be found to be suited to the subject.  It develops him, gives him strength for adversity; it makes earth a paradise, makes a strong government; it gives him power to do and enjoy many things impossible to the untutored mind.
 
    Prof. Wernli made some appropriate remarks in presenting the diplomas, giving the people some of the facts in his report printed above and showing how deeply in earnest he is in his school work.
 
  When the diplomas had been presented, Rev. I. N. Pardee, with some choice compliments to the school and the work done by it, moved a vote of thanks to Prof. Wernli, which was most heartily given.  It was a proud moment for him to see how his conscientious, thorough, self-sacrificing work was appreciated.  A benediction closed the first commencement of the Northwestern Normal School and Business College.  May it not be the last in LeMars.

~Above two newspaper items were transcribed and submitted by volunteer, Viv Reeves.


 


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