S. H. Shipley receipt
Scope and Contents
Receipt to S. H. Shipley for his salary as a teacher in Matthews Academy, which operated as a preparatory department at the College of Louisiana. Shipley may be Samuel Herman Shipley (1815-1849).
Dates
- 1840
Creator
- College of Louisiana (Organization)
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research use.
Conditions Governing Use
Physical rights are retained by the Centenary College of Louisiana Archives and Special Collections. Copyright is retained in accordance with U.S. copyright laws.
Biographical / Historical
In 1825, the Louisiana State Legislature established the College of Louisiana at Jackson, Louisiana,
and granted a charter to the college’s trustees. The original trustees of the college included the
Louisiana governor, Louisiana Supreme Court judges, and twenty-eight people named by the
legislature. The board of trustees included a board president, secretary, and treasurer. Much of the
college’s business was handled by trustee committees. The trustees were responsible for appointing the
college’s president, faculty, and staff; overseeing student discipline; and delivering an annual report to
the Louisiana State Legislature. Each year, the trustees held two regular meetings as well as occasional
called meetings.
In January 1826, classes began at the College of Louisiana and were initially held in the parish
courthouse building. The college constructed dormitory buildings in 1833 and 1837.
The courses offered by the college occasionally changed. In 1829, the college’s bylaws were revised to
list the following courses: English, French, Spanish, Latin, Greek, mathematics, natural philosophy,
chemistry, natural history, geography, moral and political philosophy, ancient and modern history,
logic, and rhetoric. In addition to offering college-level courses, the institution also operated a
preparatory department for lower grades.
By 1845, the trustees faced mounting financial problems and low student enrollment. That year, the
trustees approved dissolving the board and surrendering the college’s charter to the Louisiana State
Legislature. In June 1845, the legislature sold the college’s property and buildings to Judge Edward
McGehee, who donated it to the Mississippi Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South for
the new location of Centenary College, formerly located at Brandon Springs, Mississippi.
Extent
1 Folders
Language of Materials
English
Creator
- College of Louisiana (Organization)
- Title
- Finding Aid to the S. H. Shipley receipt
- Author
- Chris Brown
- Date
- 2019
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Centenary College of Louisiana Archives and Special Collections Repository