All Saints' Episcopal College was originally an Episcopal college for women in Vicksburg, Mississippi. It began accepting male boarding students as All Saints' Episcopal School in 1971. It was founded in 1908 and it ceased operating as a traditional school in 2006. Currently, All Saints' provides training to Americorps students in a residential setting.
Introduction
edit"All Saints' Episcopal College, established in 1908, was the outcome of years of planning. Its beginning is traced to the broad foundation of diocesan activities laid by the first Bishop of Mississippi, William Mercer Green, who was consecrated in 1850 and served as Bishop from 1850 to 1887."[1]
The College of St Andrew was the first of a series of diocesan schools established in Jackson in 1852. This was long before public schools. The Civil War disrupted plans for a diocesan school for girls, but other diocesan schools were established including: Wilson Hall at Early Grove in Marshall county; the Church School, Mississippi City; Okalona School for colored students in Okolona; and the Vicksburg Industrial School for colored boys and girls.[1]
In 1903 Theodore DuBose Bratton, D.D., L.L.,D., a South Carolina native was elected Bishop of Mississippi. Bishop Bratton's idea of the establishment of All Saints' grew out of his own interest in Christian education and his desire to finish the work begun by Bishop Green.[1]
History
editThe Name
editThe school was called the "Episcopal Diocese Girls College" in the records of the sale of the Vicksburg property, "All Saints' Episcopal College" in the Vicksburg Evening Post article on the opening and "All Saints' College for Girls" in the Times Picayune.[2] The Diocese provided a loan of $50,000 to the new institution.[2] The City of Vicksburg gave the school 25 acres and $32,500.[1]
William Mercer Green Hall
editThe original building was named William Mercer Green Hall after Mississippi's first Episcopal bishop. The cornerstone was laid with Masonic honors on All Saints' day 1908. The building was designed by DeBuys, Churchill and Labouisse, architects of New Orleans and built by I. C. Garber of Jackson, Miss. who was awarded the contract for a bid of $62,175.[1]
"The building was constructed on a steel frame of brick and concrete, 230 feet long and 40 feet wide, and the final cost was $80,000."[1] The building included dormitory space for 50 students, a kitchen, dining room, administration offices, recital rooms, sound proofed practice rooms, a library and reading room, an infirmary, and art studios with prism glass skylights. The grounds included gardens for fresh vegetables and a small herd of Jersey cows for fresh milk.[1]
Highlights
editThe First Academic Year 1909 - 1910
editThe Rev William Mercer Green Jr., grandson of the first bishop of the diocese, was named the first Dean of the college. In the 1909 catalog we find the following statements:
The High School will conform to the standard set by the Southern Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools. The Carnegie Unit System will be observed, and for graduation in the High School Course, 14 units will be required.
All Saints' will take the rank as a Junior College. It will confer no degrees, but its graduates will receive a Certificate of Graduation which will represent the completion of the first three years of a Standard College or University. The course will be equivalent to 48 points.
and a table of fees.
Tuition, board, fuel, light, laundry | $265–275.00 |
Medical fee, for boarders | 10.00 |
Incidental fee | 5.00 |
Day students, college | 75.00 |
Day students, high school | 60.00 |
Day students, preparatory | 50.00 |
In addition to science, mathematics and English, students could take 4 years of Latin, as well as courses in Greek, French, Spanish, and German. The College courses covered mathematics, history, English, science, Latin, French, Spanish, German, Greek, Italian, Bible, and Ethics. The school year consisted of 2 terms of 18 weeks each.
There were daily services in the chapel on campus, and Sunday services could be attended at any local church of the student's choice with a proper chaperone.
1910 - 1911
editTwo intermediate years were added to the school. Fr. Green left All Saints' to become rector at St. Andrews in Jackson.
1911 - 1912
editWellesley, Smith, Agnes Scott, Sophie Newcomb, Randolph-Macon and Vassar all spoke well of students accepted into their programs from the high school program at All Saints'. The high school was accredited by the University of Mississippi this year and accepted all college credits point by point. A business course was added that included typing, stenography, and bookkeeping. One more grade was added to the intermediate years so that the school now serviced grades 6 through 12 plus the college.
1912 - 1913
editBaseball was added to the athletic department. A letter to benefactors mentioned the need for additional classroom space, an indoor gym, and a chapel.
1913 - 1914
editThe addition of a long-distance phone connection allowed students and parents better communication.
The school admitted only white women[3] and, even after the Episcopal Church began to officially support desegregation in its educational institutions in the wake of Brown v. Board of Education, All Saints' remained segregated.[4]
In 1925 construction began on a dormitory that would become Johnson Hall in honor of Mrs. J. W. Johnson who gave the money for its construction. Another new tradition started when the intramural basketball team was divided into two groups: The Swamp Angels and the Knockouts. The teams would later be the Angels and the Devils and would divide the entire student body into two competitive teams.
In 1942 Fr. Christian got the idea that All Saints' should belong to Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas. The board of trustees was adjusted to reflect members from the three dioceses.
The first male boarding students were admitted for the 1971–72 academic year. The first males to graduate were in the Class of 1972, five boarding students and one day student.
Charlene Eichelberger "Miss Ike" was hired in 1968 to head the Rec Department. She remained with the school until 1992 and returned briefly in 2006–2007 to oversee the cleaning of the campus, buildings, and grounds until AmeriCorps could utilize part of the campus for its programs. Miss Ike is credited with bringing national recognition of the Rec Program to All Saints' and she lived on campus throughout her tenure.
Fr. Dickson's son, Charlie, also worked many years, along with his wife Cassie, until the school closed in 2006. He was unable to attend All Saints' as it was still an all girls school when Fr. Dickson became Headmaster in 1968.
The school utilized the Level System (Levels 1-5 which dictated a student's privileges) rather than retaining the honor code from 1969 until 2002 at which time the Honor Code was introduced. In 2002, the campus went smoke-free. The trimester term was used from 1969 to 2006.
In 2003, the board voted to close the school but temporary financing and tremendous alumni support averted the close until 2006 when the board voted to close the school permanently.
The campus is leased by AmeriCorps but is still owned by the original dioceses since 1942. Select employees live on the campus, employed by the church, and help with the upkeep of the campus.
Leadership
edit1909 - 1911 | The Rev. William Mercer Green Jr., Dean |
1911 - 1912 | Dr. Thomas Pearce Bailey, Dean |
1912 - 1937 | The Rt. Rev. Theodore DuBose Bratton, President |
1937 - 1958 | The Rev. William Gerow Christian, Rector |
1958 - 1961 | The Rev. John Maury Allin, Rector |
1962 - 1967 | The Rev. John Stone Jenkins, Rector |
1967 - 1968 | The Rev. A Dean Calcote, Acting Rector |
1968 - 1983 | The Rev. Alex Dickson Jr., Rector and Headmaster |
1983 - 1999 | The Rev. David Luckett, Rector and Headmaster |
2000 - 2001 | Charles Craft, Interim Head |
2001 - 2006 | The Rev. Martin, Rector and Head |
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h Mary Ellen Turner (1984). For All the Saints. All Saints Episcopal School. ISBN 9780815316367.
- ^ a b "New College Launched. Episcopal Diocese Provides Funds for the Vicksburg Institution". Times-Picayune. May 9, 1908. p. 8.
- ^ Works Progress Administration; Robert S. McElvaine (2009). Mississippi: The WPA Guide to the Magnolia State. Univ. Press of Mississippi. p. 122. ISBN 978-1-60473-289-4.
- ^ Gardiner H. Shattuck Jr. (1 October 2003). Episcopalians and Race: Civil War to Civil Rights. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 111–120. ISBN 0-8131-2772-6.