Lawrence Hall, named after long-time faculty member Isabel Lawrence, opened in 1905 as a dormitory for women. It replaced the first Lawrence Hall after a fire destroyed it in early 1905.
William Byrne Elementary School, 11608 River Hills Drive, Burnsville Minnesota opened in 1967. Burnsville, which was originally spelled Byrnesville, was named for the Byrne family.
This photo shows a view of the Gustavus Adolphus College campus in St. Peter. The largest building is Old Main, which is located at the west end of College Avenue.
Mitchell Hall was completed in 1958 as a dormitory for women. The building was named for William B. Mitchell, who served as St. Cloud State's resident director from 1877 to 1901.
View of two women sitting in front of fire, before Brainard Hall was occupied by male students, it was the home of the National Youth Administration. Brainard Hall was constructed in 1947.
A photograph of three unidentified young women wearing formal dresses, gloves, and crowns, possibly homecoming dance. The young women wear paper crowns.
Black and white image of three men, two who are wearing suits, and the other wearing pants and a sweater, set up a movie camera and film projector in an area light up by floodlights at St. Could State University.
View of the road leading up to the Tenth Street bridge over the Mississippi River.The 10th Street bridge crossed the Mississippi River from the 1890s to 1985. It was replaced with a modern bridge which opened in 1985.
View of the road leading up to the Tenth Street bridge over the Mississippi River.The 10th Street bridge crossed the Mississippi River from the 1890s to 1985. It was replaced with a modern bridge which opened in 1985.
View of the road leading up to the Tenth Street bridge over the Mississippi River.The 10th Street bridge crossed the Mississippi River from the 1890s to 1985. It was replaced with a modern bridge which opened in 1985.
Exterior view of Talahi Lodge and the woods, south of campus on the east shores of the Mississippi River. Opened to use in 1939, The lodge destroyed by fire in 1970.
Sylvia Silvola of Virginia, Minnesota, and Ellen Daufney of Calumet, Minnesota, wearing graduation robes and hats with tassles, standing in front of Griggs Hall on University of Minnesota - Duluth campus on August 18, 1967.
Contributing Institution:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives
View of study tables in Centennial Hall. Completed in 1971, Centennial Hall, named in honor of St. Cloud State's establishment in 1869, served as the campus library until 2000.
View of study tables in Centennial Hall. Completed in 1971, Centennial Hall, named in honor of St. Cloud State's establishment in 1869, served as the campus library until 2000.
Interior view of Centennial Hall. Completed in 1971, Centennial Hall, named in honor of St. Cloud State's establishment in 1869, served as the campus library until 2000.
Students work outside, Gray Campus Laboratory Schoo. The Thomas Gray Campus Laboratory School, opened in 1958, replaced Riverview as the campus laboratory school. The campus laboratory school closed in 1983 and, in 1984, was repurposed and renamed Engineering and Computing Center. The building was initially named for Thomas Gray, who graduated from St. Cloud State in 1872, served as the school's president from 1884 to 1890.
Woodworking class at the Riverview Lab School. Black and white view of boys standing around table using woodworking tools. Riverview Lab School was constructed in 1913.
Exterior view of Riverview. Riverview opened as the campus model school in 1913 where students could watch experienced teachers teach and to student teach. In 1958, the model school moved from Riverview to the new Gray Campus Laboratory School.
Student studying in Centennial Hall. Completed in 1971, Centennial Hall, named in honor of St. Cloud State's establishment in 1869, served as the campus library until 2000.
Students studying at the Centennial Hall sunken lounge. Completed in 1971, Centennial Hall, named in honor of St. Cloud State's establishment in 1869, served as the campus library until 2000.
Students study at Centennial Hall. Completed in 1971, Centennial Hall, named in honor of St. Cloud State's establishment in 1869, served as the campus library until 2000.
Exterior view of Mitchell Hall. Mitchell Hall was completed in 1958 as a dormitory for women. The building was named for William B. Mitchell, who served as St. Cloud State's resident director from 1877 to 1901.
Students in 1961 at North Central Bible Institute in Minneapolis Minnesota. Staff (Beginning top row, left to right): Philip Gustafson, Fred Halquist (Building Manager), Arnold Swanson (Maintenance), Frank Leroy (First Engineer), Unidentified, Betty Hintz (Cafeteria), Ethel Hague (Cafeteria), Arline Swanson (Assistant Matron and Housekeeper), Estella Burkhart (Librarian), Virginia Peterson (Bookkeeper). Faculty (Left to right): Reverend Wilson A. Katter, Ione Soltau (Dean of Women, Instructor in Religious Education and Psychology), Frank J. Lindquist (Instructor in Doctrine I, Doctrine II, and Parliamentary Law, Founder), G. Raymond Carlson (Instructor in Pastoral Theology, President), Ivan O. Miller (Instructor in Introduction to Prophecy), T. J. Jones (Instructor in Old Testament, Acts, and Prophecy), Reverend M. C. Nelson (Dean of Men, Instructor in Bible, Speech, and Religious Education), John Phillipps (Instructor in Greek, Psychology, Literature, Philosophy, Romans), Arvid Kingsriter (Instructor in New Testament, Thessalonians, and Corinthians), Amos Levang (Instructor in History of Religious Education and Pedagogy), Alyce Phillipps (Instructor in First Aid), L. B. Larsen (Instructor in Conducting, Music History), Orill Krans (Instructor in Polemics, Music Appreciation, Band, and Choralettes), Leland Shultz (Instructor in Religious Education), Ray Levang (Instructor in English, Church History, Ancient History and Science). Seniors (Left to right): Lorenzo Cutsforth, David Fincher, Barbara Gilbert, Thurman Green, Esther Hansen, John Holmquist, Esther Hultquist, Melvin Johnson, Jim King, Sally Lake, Elaine Lewis, Leroy Lewis, Sylvia Loukinen, Lowell Lundstrom, Franklin McDuffie, Larry Malcolm, Edward Messinger, Fred Orr, Neal Paulson, James Ralson, Frank Stegeman. Junior Graduate (left to right): Elaine Cutsforth, Nancy Bent, Inez Bork, Estel Clark, Bonnie Fischer, Gordon Fraser, Gayle Turner, Bonita Jones, Richard McWatters, Darrel Osborn, Florence Simmons, Audrey Storms, Ray Storms, Howard Stenerson, Raymond Bey, Douglas Bjerke, Daniel Bowman, Robert Bruemmer, John Burnell, Naomi Burroughs, Douglas Clair, David Crawford, Russell Eckerson, Arnie Gilbertson, Victor Hedman, Evangeline Heitke, Paul Hendren, Samuel Johnson, Jack Packila, Joy King, Roger Koeshall, Doris Lanus, Darrell Olson, Leon Olson, David Opie, Gary Ribble, Beverly Ryan, John Sandgren, Bennie Sheffield, David Simmons, John Sorensen, Jeannette Standen, Marcella Stevenson, Elda St. John, Roger Swanson, Robert Turner, Sharon Turner, Lola Vetter, Sarah Vetter, Sharon Wallace, Louis Walton, David Ward. Junior Graduate (Outside border): Lyle Blair, Gordon Bialik, Richard Ballinger, David Baldwin, Robert Abbott, Bruce Talso, Donald Upton, Irene Van Demark, Royal Voeller, Joan Ward, Ilene Williams. Sophomores (Beginning top row, left to right): Dennis Abbott, Janice Adamson, Ellen Aldrich, Erma Aldrich, Maryln Anderson, Richard Babcock, Barbara Baker, JoAnn Battishill, Rolf Bergman, Marlin Bowman, Mary Buntenbach, Mildred Burgess, Thomas Byrtus, David Campbell, Craig Carter, Connie Center, Robert Cilke, Elwin Clifton, Elaine Coats, John Collins, John Colwell, Richard Corning, David Cutsforth, Charles Davis, Ruth Droll, Lois Elfstrom, Eloise Engle, Charles Fairfield, Fern Geffert, Mae Marie Godfrey, Beryl Grunewald, Beverly Hart, Barbara Haugen, Ivan Holmquist, Melvin Holmquist, Larry Jent, Jack Johnson, Jerroll Jorgenson, Bevery Krans, Byron Krans, Ralph Leiviska, Robert McCown, Linda Mancini, Delores Mathis, Lloyd Meyer, Jerry Miller, Irene Moening, David Nelson, Roger Pankratz, Jerry Parsley, Karen Parsley, James Phillips, Dennis Pigman, Kennett Radford, Larry Redmond, Arlene Rosewall, Georgia Rothwell, Loretta Rothwell, Leonard Salvig, Gayrene Schooley, Robert Schooley, Peggy Scofield, Linda Seddon, Gerald Smith, Mary E. Smith, Wayne Smitham, Carol Stevens, Jack Strom, Alice Szabo, Judy Teehee, Jeanette Thompson, Arthur Walker, Edward Werranen, Helen Werranen, Charles Westendorf, John Wibley, Richard Wills, William Winkler, Phillip Yoakum. Freshmen (left to right): Barbara Adair, Arden Adamson, Norma Agee, Richard Allen, Thelma Allen, David Anderson, Ronald Anderson, Aloa Atkins, Clarence Axmark, Tammy Bakker, Lannie Berryman, Ruth Ann Bosak, Evelyn Boyd, Leon Brackenridge, David Briley, Sharon Brinson, Frances Brooks, Russell Brown, Darrel Bush, Ronald Callahan, Janet Cedarlund, Beverly Christianson, Robert Coble, Orrin Conklin, Margaret Copley, Marianna Corning, Karen Curry, Vernon Davidson, Viola Dietzman, Roger Doty, James Drown, Marjean Duerksen, George Ehara, Richard Elie, Melva Engle, Larry Foster Joanne Freeman, Danielle Fulk, Doris Geffert, Dorothy Graf, Judy Gross, Gail Gross, Ernest Griffith, Lila Griffith, Darlene Hacht, Wendell Hagenbeck, Lois Harms, Tom Hartwell, Rita Hays, James Henderson, Velva Jo Howard, Marilyn Knecht, Peter Koeshall, Ruth Kooi, Stanley Kramer, Fred Kuykendoll, Dorothy Lewis, Gary Lidgerding, Glenda Line, Daniel Lund, Ted MacDowell, Unidentified, Dennis Masters, Marvin Mathis, Ruth Ann Mathis, Lorrell McCullough, Earl Megginson, Dolores Metz, Sharon Michaelson, Francine Miller, Jean Mulholland, Alice Mustain, Carole Myers, Charles Myers, Robert Novak, Shirley O'Brien, Elaine Olson, Martha Ott, Sandra Petrinec, Unidentified, Robert Ramphal, Viola Reed, Arthur Reif, Kenneth Ross, Thomas Scalf, Marcus Selness, Charles Skaggs, Delmar Skaret, Kathy Skjonsby, Twyla Smith, Anna Staley, Donna Stevens, Elaine Storvik, Roger Striemer, Ethel Sumner, William Thomas, David Thompson, Patricia Ware, Harvey Warren, Unidentified, Judy Wieman, Ronna Lou Wiley, James Williams, Larry Wood, Ardell Youngberg. Unclassified (left to right): Sandra Anderson, Ginger Ballweber, Lonnie Beard, Lora Lee Bowman, Sandra Canaevit, Jane Holmes, Beverly Holmgren, Rose McKenzie, Judy Nelson, Janet Shoberg, Cleveland Smalls, Joyce Smith, Robert Taylor, Erma Voeller, Naomi Winters, Arliss Wyant, David Wood, Darlene Wyant. In 1938, North Central Business College (NCBC) was created and added to the school's title. NCBC was dropped in 1945, and, in 1946, NCBI became NCBI&TS when a Theological Seminary (TS) was added. The seminary remained until 1949. North Central Bible Institute was renamed North Central Bible College in 1957. The most recent name change was in 1998, when North Central Bible College became North Central University.
Students working in language lab. View of a man, sitting at the front of a room with headphones on, speaking into a microphone while men and women sit in individual cubes.
Riverview opened as the campus model school in 1913 where students could watch experienced teachers teach and to student teach. In 1958, the model school moved from Riverview to the new Gray Campus Laboratory School.
Students and faculty on the steps of St. Paul's College. St. Paul's College in St. Paul Park, organized in 1889 offered both a preparatory and collegiate course. St. Paul's was organized and supported by the Northern German Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. This conference included German Methodist congregation in Minnesota plus some in Wisconsin and North Dakota. The school operated until 1917, closing under financial difficulties and the stress of being a German-speaking institution during World War I. Supporters were encouraged to shift allegiance to Hamline University.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota Annual Conference United Methodist Church
Student standing outside of the Counseling Center in "B Building." Opened in 1947 to help alleviate overcrowding in classrooms, the "B Building" stood between Riverview and the Mississippi River.
Exterior view of Stewart Hall. Stewart Hall, which opened in 1948 as St. Cloud State's main classroom building, was named for Warren Stewart. Stewart served as St. Cloud State resident director from 1938 to 1948.
Stewart Hall, which opened in 1948 as St. Cloud State's main classroom building, was named for Warren Stewart. Stewart served as St. Cloud State resident director from 1938 to 1948.
Stewart Hall, which opened in 1948 as St. Cloud State's main classroom building, was named for Warren Stewart. Stewart served as St. Cloud State resident director from 1938 to 1948.