Eastman Business College
The Eastman Business College was a business school located in Poughkeepsie, New York, United States.
History
The college was founded in 1859 by Harvey G. Eastman, and was for a time one of the largest commercial schools in the United States. Eastman college was located in Poughkeepsie NY.
Rather than merely being a theoretical school, students gained practical experience in the business arts by actually performing the tasks that would be expected of them in their working careers, a novel approach at the time.
The Reverend William Lloyd taught at Eastman College in the late 1800s.
In 1897, Eastman Business College, Poughkeepsie, NY, had a Business Department, which offered hands-on practice in a mock bank and a mock railway and express office, and also taught book-keeping; a School of Shorthand; which trained students in shorthand, typing, duplicating, and filing; a School of Penmanship, which prepared students to teach writing and pen art; and a School of Telegraphy, which trained students as telegraph operators.
The 1898 catalog of the Eastman Business College and its affiliated school, the New York Business Institute, stated, "These schools do not receive students of the Negro Race".
In 1905 S. V. Daniels, a 17-year-old from St. Thomas, Virgin Islands withdrew from the main college following the petition of 160 southern students alleging that he was partially of African descent, and transferred to the Harlem branch.
The college closed on June 10, 1931.
Notable alumni
- Martin F. Allen, Vermont politician
- Dwight L. Burgess, Wisconsin politician
- Harry C. Bentley, founder of Bentley University
- Ernest Cady, Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut[1]
- Edmund Elisha Case, painter
- LeRoy Collins, Governor of Florida
- Chester Poe Cornelius, Native American activist
- Porter Dale, United States Senator from Vermont
- Henry T. DeBardeleben, coal magnate
- Henry S. De Forest, United States Representative from New York
- Nelson W. Fisk, Vermont businessman and Lieutenant Governor
- Obadiah Gardner, United States Senator from Maine
- Thomas Goldie, Canadian politician
- Henry Mayer Halff, rancher
- William P. G. Harding, banker
- Robert Henry Hendershot, American Civil War drummer boy
- Mark C. Honeywell, US electronics industrialist; founder, President and CEO of Honeywell International
- John L. Jolley, United States Congressman from South Dakota
- Mahlon Kline, pharmaceutical executive
- Joseph B. Keeler, Brigham Young University faculty member
- S. S. Kresge, retail businessman
- Monroe Henry Kulp, United States Representative from Pennsylvania
- Lorenzo D. Lewelling, 12th Governor of Kansas[2]
- Theron Marshall, Dutchess County landowner, Politician
- John Hamilton Morgan, LDS official
- John M. Parker, Governor of Louisiana from 1920 to 1924
- Edmund Platt, United States Representative from New York
- John Reber, United States Representative from Pennsylvania
- Daniel Elmer Salmon, veterinary surgeon
- Samuel Roger Smith, founder of Messiah College
- Reuben L. Snowe, Maine politician
- Calvert Spensley, Wisconsin politician
- Thomas Bahnson Stanley, Governor of Virginia
- Nelson Story, Montana pioneer
- Lee Emmett Thomas, Louisiana politician who served as mayor of Shreveport from 1922 to 1930[3]
- James E. Towner, New York politician
- Frank B. Weeks, Governor of Connecticut
- Timothy Woodruff, United States Congressman and Lieutenant Governor of New York
- William Ziegler, industrialist
References
- Burton, Richard, ed. (1898). Men of Progress. Boston: New England Magazine. pp. 211–212.
Ernest Cady Lieutenant Governor.
- "Kansas Governor Lorenzo Dow Lewelling". National Governors Association. Retrieved September 29, 2012.
- "Thomas, Lee Emmett". Louisiana Historical Association, A Directory of Louisiana Biography (lahistory.org). Archived from the original on September 23, 2010. Retrieved December 29, 2010.
Further reading
- "Daniels Leaves College", Washington Post, April 18, 1905
- A Brief History of Eastman Business College, 1875