Inscription
With the help of town founder, David Hudson, Western Reserve College and its Academy were founded in 1826. Often called “The Yale of the West,” the college saw success initially as all of its professors and college presidents were Yale College graduates. Nationally, Western Reserve College became involved with the Underground Railroad and anti-slavery movement 28 years before the Civil War began. Moreover, Western Reserve College established the Loomis observatory, named for Elias Loomis, a Yale tutor and WRC professor, which is now the second oldest observatory in the United States. The Western Reserve College moved to Cleveland in 1882 and eventually became Case Western Reserve University while the Academy remained in Hudson. Today, the Western Reserve Academy is one of the nation’s oldest and most respected independent college preparatory schools.
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More markers in Summit
St. Vincent-St. Mary Catholic High School / A Firm Foundation in Catholic Education
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St. Vincent-St. Mary High School is the oldest continuously operating, public or private, high school in Akron.
Ohio Education Association
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On December 30, 1847, six educators met at the Summit County Courthouse to organize the first convention of the Ohio State Teachers’...
Abolitionist John Brown (1800-1859)
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Bath Center Cemetery / Bath Township Hall
Settlers from New England purchased this land in 1817 for use as a burying ground and to build a meeting house.
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