Kansas Historical Quarterly
The University of Kansas and the
Years of Frustration, 1854-64
by C. S. Griffin
Spring 1966 (Vol. 32, No. 1), pages 1 to 32
Transcription and HTML composition by Tod Roberts;
digitized with permission of the Kansas Historical Society.
NOTE: The numbers in brackets refer to endnotes for this text.
WHEN the University of Kansas opened on September 12,
1866, the only things it had in common with an actual
university were a name, a charter, and a large measure of
faculty factionalism. In every other way, the University of
Kansas was merely a preparatory school for an institution of
higher learning that did not yet exist, and an
undernourished preparatory school at that. The last section
of the charter of 1864 had absolved the legislature of all
fiscal responsibility for the university's organization; the
charter made no promise at all of financial support in the
years to come. In 1865 and 1866 the board of regents had
only some $20,000 at its disposal. Three weeks before the
opening, moreover, the regents had run out of funds. The
university did possess 72 sections of land granted by the
national government, the sales receipts from which were to
be a permanent endowment, but none of the land had been
sold. Just as money was in short supply, so were students
prepared for university work. The state's facilities for
secondary education were as underdeveloped as its economy.
Of the 55 students who matriculated early in the first
semester, not one, in the faculty's opinion, was ready for
college.
To teach them the necessary
high-school subjects, the university had a part-time
lecturer and three full-time professors, whose abilities as
teachers and scholars were as yet uncertain. Small though
the faculty was, it was already cliquish: two of the
professors thought the third, who was also the acting
president, to be personally uncongenial and intellectually
incompetent. To house the professorate and the student body,
the university had one three-story building, 50 feet square,
located high on a treeless bill in Lawrence once known as
Hogback ridge, but now named more elegantly Mount Oread.
There were a few books but no library, some scientific
equipment but not nearly enough. The university's future was
entirely uncertain, and even its present condition was
worrisome.
Amid the liabilities,
however, the University of Kansas had one great asset: it
existed. Its existence was its most striking characteristic.
Under the most favorable of circumstances, the appearance of
a public university in Kansas would have been a significant
event. Under the distressing conditions that prevailed in
the territory and state of Kansas in the 1850's and the
1860's, the university's existence was surprising indeed.
After the organization of the territory in 1854, it had
taken Kansans 12 years to create the institution. During
those years, Kansans had suffered from practically every
affliction known to man: from violence, murder, and
territorial civil war, from a bloody and costly national
civil war, from drought and famine and disease and poverty,
from senseless and unscrupulous political conniving complete
with lies, deceit, and wholesale knavery. In such an
environment, the cause of higher education had to suffer,
and the citizens who were sincerely dedicated to the cause
must be disappointed time and again. The creation of the
university was not exactly a miracle -- miracles were rare
in Kansas -- but it was still an awesome event.
Curiously enough, the University of Kansas in
its fetal years suffered most from a general enthusiasm for it in the territorial
and early statehood periods. In a later day, many of the university's supporters
would be fond of believing that the school was the peculiar product of a noble
idealism monopolized by a minority of high-souled. citizens. According to this
legend, it was the men and women who came to Kansas in the mid-1850's to keep
the territory free from human slavery who created the state university. They
knew, the legend ran, that freedom required the diffusion of education among
the people, and therefore they built the school. Naturally enough, they located
it in Lawrence, the center of Free-State activity. Kansas in the 1850's, rhapsodized
an elderly lady faculty member half a century after her graduation from the
university in 1874, was settled by the pure of heart. Its early settlers had
emigrated from their former homes not "in quest of gold, or adventure,
as men have peopled many other states, but with the unconquerable purpose to
keep this soil free from the curse of human slavery.... It was these freedom-loving
men and women who, with small resources and in a scantily-populated territory,
built a complete school system, which they crowned with the State University."
"K. U. is a University set on a hilltop," ran a pamphlet of 1922 describing
the school to adolescent freshmen. If they gazed off to the eastward from Mount
Oread, they could see the "open valley through which came, half a century
ago, those New Englanders who brought with them to the outpost of Lawrence the
Harvard idea of education, and early set up here the beginnings of a great University."
[1]
Like many another legend,
this one was at once charming and childish. Both before and
after the admission of Kansas as a state in 1861, no group
or faction was alone in its desire for a state-supported
university. The Free Staters wanted one, of course, but so
did their opponents -- whom the Free Staters constantly
vilified as Proslavery barbarians -- and so did large
numbers of Kansans who took no sides in the political and
moral conflict. The university's general popularity was
chiefly responsible for the delay in its founding. During
much of the territorial period, the war between the Free
Staters and the Proslaveryites prevented the political union
necessary to create public institutions of higher education.
In 1861 and 1862 Kansans in various communities were so
enamored of the state university that they fought bitterly
over its location, and thus delayed its appearance for
another two years. And then in 1863 and 1864, the University
of Kansas suffered from its very location in
Lawrence.
By the summer of 1855, the idea of the state
university had come to Kansas. No man in truth could say who brought it; no
faction could claim it as its own. It appeared naturally, as part of the inevitable
effort of Kansans to reproduce in a new environment institutions which had proved
valuable in the older states. When Gov. Andrew H. Reeder addressed the members
of the first territorial legislature on July 3, 1855, he assumed that they would
provide a public educational system for the territory as a matter of course.
Every American knew the importance of education, Reeder said, and he would not
waste time by describing it. "To enlarge upon the necessity of general
education for producing good government," he told the lawmakers, "would
be at this day a work of supererogation, and I leave the matter in your hands,
confident it will receive the attention it deserves." [2] If the
emphasis of many Americans who saw a relation between education and democracy
was on state-supported common schools, state-supported higher education had
its own share of enthusiasts. By the mid-1850's state universities had become
commonplace in the South and West, though not in the Northeast. Missouri had
one, chartered in 1839, and so did Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, Ohio, Indiana,
Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, and a number of other states. [3]
The territorial legislature responded as Reeder
knew it would. During the session in July and August, 1855, the lawmakers established
a system of common schools for the territory, and also approved a charter for
the University of the Territory of Kansas. It was to be located in the town
of Douglas, several miles up the Kansas river from Lawrence, providing that
the town fathers would give ten acres of land for the site. Although the legislators
anticipated private donations, the main source of support was to be a fund derived
from the sale of land that the national government would presumably bestow.
Under the control of 20 curators chosen by the joint vote of both houses of
the legislature, the University of the Territory of Kansas had as its purpose
the "promotion of literature and of the arts and sciences." The curators
might confer all such degrees as were "known to and usually granted by
any college or university." [4]
Unfortunately, the institution never appeared.
Political turmoil surrounded the legislature and its acts; amid the confusion
the University of the Territory of Kansas had to remain a dream. According to
Free-State partisans, the legislature was the "bogus legislature,"
elected illegally by Proslavery Missourians who had crossed the border on election
day the previous March to make sure that the representatives had the right ideas
about Negro bondage. Free Staters denied the legislature's legitimacy, and refused
obedience to its laws.
In light of what the bogus legislature had done,
it was surprising that when Free-State leaders spoke out in favor of a university,
they spoke with a comparatively weak voice. In September, 1855, many Free, Staters
gathered in Topeka under the leadership of Charles Robinson and his allies to
begin the so-called "Topeka statehood Movement." Among their accomplishments
was a constitution under which they hoped that congress would admit Kansas to
the Union. The Topeka constitution made the creation of a system of public schools
mandatory upon the state legislature. On the subject of the university, however,
the document was only permissive. If the legislature wished to do so, it could
establish a university "with such branches as the public convenience may
hereafter demand, for the promotion of literature, the arts, sciences, medical
and agricultural instruction." [5]
Nothing tangible ever came
of that contemplated university, either, for congress never
admitted Kansas to the Union under the Topeka constitution.
Its significance was only to show that no matter which side
won the territorial battle, whether Kansas entered the Union
as a slave state or a free state, the commonwealth would
almost certainly have a state university. Through the months
of struggle that lay ahead -- through the territorial civil
war of 1856, the contest over the Lecompton constitution of
1857, the continuing efforts to capture control of the
territorial legislature -- the contentious Kansans kept the
idea of the state university alive. In 1859, with opponents
of slavery now vastly outnumbering their opponents, Kansans
wrote provisions for a state university into the Wyandotte
constitution, under which Kansas became a state in 1861. The
idea of the state university transcended the Kansas
conflict.
The practice, however, was something else again.
Both the Free Staters and their enemies wished to control the university themselves.
There was not the slightest chance that a territorial legislature boycotted
by Free Staters would select curators from among their number. Late in 1856,
by contrast, when a number of Lawrence men started a territorial university
movement of their own, it was a strictly Free-State institution that they had
in mind. The scheme of the Lawrence promoters represented a change in the original
hopes of the town's leaders. Back in 1854, when the vanguard of the New England
Emigrant Aid Company's agents and settlers established the Free-State community,
the hope had been to establish a private college at an early day. According
to the original petition of the New England Emigrant Aid Company to the Massachusetts
legislature in 1854, one of the organization's purposes was to furnish the emigrants
with the "advantages of education." The company's propaganda assured
prospective settlers that schools would appear in the territory right along
with all the other institutions of 19th century civilization, such as mills,
churches, and hotels. In the fall of 1854, Charles Robinson, one of the company's
Kansas agents, told treasurer Amos A. Lawrence that the citizens of the Lawrence
settlement would start a college just as soon as they could. A plat of the town
made about the same time showed Mount Oread as set aside for the location of
a college and churches. [6]
But if the spirit were
willing, the purse was weak. Even if the proposed college
was no better than the nation's least distinguished
institutions of higher education, it would still require a
building, a faculty, and several hundred dollars a year. The
Emigrant Aid Company never had enough money for the purpose,
and the FreeState leaders in Lawrence could not raise it
among themselves. In January, 1855, they began a school of
sorts, its teacher paid by the parents of the 20 or so
students in attendance, and the settlers continued a school
with changing locations and changing teachers right along.
Although the school was a token of an honest desire for
education, it was not a college, and it never became one.
[7]
By December, 1856, the Lawrence promoters had
abandoned their scheme of a private college and were bunting for larger game.
A committee of the town's leading citizens had laid plans which came to a climax
in a mass meeting on Christmas day. In the university movement appeared a number
of traditional American ideas. The welfare of any community, said a planning
group, depended in great measure upon institutions of education. The educational
system most conducive to the public good was one which provided for the education
of the whole people "on an equal basis and at the public expense. The child
of the honest and humblest parent," the committee said grandly, "ought
in the eye of the State, to stand on a par with the most favored child of fortune.
A system of Free Public Schools, in which the child can be received at the start,
and carried forward, if he demands it, to the university with all its opportunities
for preparation to fill the highest positions in society, is the greatest boon
that can be conferred upon any community." On December 8 William F. M.
Arny made the same point in a letter to Gov. John W. Geary. Arny was an agent
of the National Kansas Committee, an organization supporting the Free-State
cause, and he was also at the time a member of the Illinois State Board of Education.
Seeking Geary's support for the plans of the Lawrence promoters, Arny said that
no argument was required to demonstrate the advantages of public education.
"Our people are generally what their early instruction has made them: morally,
intellectually and physically a blessing to their age; or, wicked, debased and
destructive to the general welfare." Therefore every state should have
the best educational system that its government could provide. Among other things,
the system should include a completely modern university, with normal, agricultural,
and mechanical schools as well as schools of law and medicine and every other
subject that seemed desirable. [8]
The meeting on December 25
was under the control of Arny, Charles Robinson, George W.
Deitzler, Erastus D. Ladd, and several other prominent
citizens. With comparatively little discussion, the
gathering adopted a resolution from a business committee
stating that the time had come to establish a college in
Kansas, more specifically in Lawrence. To govern the
institution, the meeting approved the appointment of 15
trustees, of whom 10 were to be residents of Kansas. They
included Governor Geary and a number of men of unquestioned
loyalty to the Free-State cause, such as Charles Robinson,
Samuel C. Pomeroy, and the Rev. Ephraim Nute of Lawrence,
William F. M. Arny of Illinois, Amos A. Lawrence of
Massachusetts, a wealthy merchant and the treasurer of the
New England Emigrant Aid Company, and ex-Gov. William Slade
of Vermont, long a leading abolitionist.
The college contemplated by
the Lawrence men was to be a private one at first, paid for
by private subscriptions. Charles Robinson estimated that
$100,000 would be necessary to get the institution off to a
good start, which meant that much of the money would have to
come from outside the territory. Robinson and his cohorts
believed that the friends of the Free-State cause would be
generous. Ephraim Nute, indeed, had been corresponding with
Amos A. Lawrence, and Lawrence stood ready to aid the
project with a gift of over $10,000. But the great hope of
the Lawrencians was to create a private college so that when
Kansas received an anticipated land grant from congress for
a state university, they would have a school actually
standing on the ground as a worthy beneficiary. Robinson
told the mass meeting that if $100,000 could be secured at
once, it would be a strong inducement to congress to approve
the land grant for which the Lawrence leaders intended to
ask.
This was persuasive
reasoning. Having voted to establish a college, the citizens
at once appointed a committee to petition congress for land.
It consisted of men who were adept at concealing their real
purpose: Robinson, Arny, Philip P. Fowler, F. A. Hunt, and
George W. Brown. The members said nothing about the fact
that they were working in behalf of Lawrence alone. Instead,
they professed to be a committee appointed by a "Mass
Convention of the citizens of Kansas Territory." With no
false modesty, they asked congress for the stupendous grant
of 650,000 acres of land. Of the amount, 400,000 would be
divided equally among four seminaries to be established in
four equal divisions of Kansas, and the other 250,000 would
go to the state university. The committee reminded congress
that since 1803 every new state had received a gift of land
for such a purpose; they neglected to mention, however, that
the standard land grant for a state university was only 72
sections, or 46,080 acres. The land was to be selected at
once, before the Kansas lands were put on the market, and
held in trust until the territory became a state. At that
time the state legislature -- the Free Staters hoped that
they would control it, but they did not say so -- would
dispose of the land as its wisdom dictated.
[9]
If the Lawrence men had one
eye on the Proslaveryites, they had the other on Free
Staters elsewhere who were also angling for the university.
Institutions of higher learning might be a main bulwark of
democracy, but they could also be fountains of economic
prosperity for the towns that got them. The Lawrence men
were looking forward to a second meeting of the Free-State
legislature, which was the Free Staters' answer to the
territorial bogus legislature. Claiming authority under the
Topeka constitution of 1855, Free-State representatives were
preparing to gather in January, 1857. To a group of
indignant Free Staters in Manhattan, who had their own plans
for the legislature, the Lawrence scheme was transparent
trickery. On January 12, 1857, Manhattanites held a mass
meeting in support of a public university, and charged the
Lawrence boosters with underhanded conniving. The call for
the general meeting in Lawrence on Christmas day, several of
them pointed out, had appeared only on December 20.
According to Albert A. Griffin of Manhattan, news of the
meeting had not reached his town until after the Lawrencians
had met, acted, and adjourned. The meeting, Griffin argued,
was a "disreputable attempt to obtain by trickery" what the
Lawrence men feared "they might not be able to obtain by
fair means." Kansas needed a public university, he said, but
it ought to be established in a central and accessible
location -- he meant Manhattan -- rather than in Lawrence.
Griffin claimed that he had no objection to locating a
university in Lawrence if after full discussion the people
of Kansas thought it advantageous. But the Lawrence
maneuvering was likely to injure the Free-State party, and
thereby the university cause, he said, when its supporters
in the East discovered that "those who have been extolled as
martyrs are playing a "grab game' for the building up of the
places they are peculiarly interested in." Griffin had begun
to fear, so he said, that the charge of corruption "so long
urged against certain leaders, is founded in truth." For all
the spleen and all the plans of the Manhattanites, however,
the Free-State legislature decided in favor of Lawrence. On
June 13 "Gov." Charles Robinson signed a bill establishing a
university in his community. [10]
While the Lawrence and
Manhattan rivals were arguing about the location of the
university, still other Kansans continued to be interested
in it. In January, 1857, the second territorial legislature
met in Lecompton, with the Free Staters once more boycotting
it and calling it bogus. Governor Geary suggested that the
lawmakers create a territorial university. The governor did
not care which of the political factions established a
university as long as it appeared. Replying to William F. M.
Arny's invitation to be present at the mass meeting in
Lawrence on December 25, Geary had heartily approved the
university scheme. Possibly not knowing exactly what the
Lawrence men had in mind, or perhaps trying to avert it,
Geary said that he would rejoice to see the "citizens of the
Territory, without distinction of party," petition congress
for university lands. Now he urged the territorial
legislature to ask for acreage to support a university which
when completed should include normal, agricultural, and
mechanical schools. A university, endowed by congress, Geary
said, "would be a blessing to our people; disseminate useful
and scientific intelligence; provide competent teachers for
our primary schools; and furnish a complete system of
education adequate to our wants in all the departments of
life. [11]
The legislature accepted
Geary's suggestion without debate, with the bill coming from
the house committee on education whose chairman was Joseph
P. Carr of Atchison. On February 19 the governor signed an
act creating the Kansas Territorial University. Its purpose
was to "Promote and encourage the diffusion of knowledge in
all the branches of learning, including the literary, law,
medical and theological departments of instruction." The
site of the university was to be Kickapoo, in Leavenworth
county. A body corporate and politic of 22 men, named in the
act, was to govern the school. They and their successors in
office were to have all the powers and privileges granted in
the act of 1855, including the power to receive and use the
receipts from the sale of government lands.
[12]
Throughout 1857 and 1858
Kansans remained divided politically, but united in support
of a territorial and state university. In May, 1857, Gov.
Robert J. Walker, who had replaced Geary, reminded Kansans
that they did not yet have a public university, urged its
importance on them, and repeated the old idea that the
success of democracy itself depended on the people's
enlightenment through education. [13] The following
October the men who wrote the Proslavery Lecompton
constitution demonstrated perfectly orthodox concepts about
higher learning. "A general diffusion of knowledge being
essential to the preservation of the rights and liberties of
the people," ran the document, "schools and the means of
education shall be forever encouraged in this State." A
university was not mentioned specifically, but the "means of
education" certainly embraced it. The "Ordinance" which the
Lecompton convention adopted, moreover, and which the
delegates hoped that congress would approve when it admitted
Kansas to the Union, envisioned either a state university or
a state college. According to the ordinance, the President
of the United States was to designate 72 sections of land
which Kansas was to reserve for the use of a "seminary of
learning." [14] While both congress and Kansans
wrangled over the admission of the territory under the
Lecompton constitution in the spring of 1858, Free Staters
attempted a flanking movement to put a constitution of their
own design before the people. The Leavenworth constitution,
drafted in March, called for education at all levels. Above
the common schools, there were to be four district colleges
supported by the proceeds of the sales of the 72 sections of
land which congress would grant to Kansas when it became a
state. As soon as the Kansas economy permitted, the
legislature was to establish "educational institutions of a
higher grade." With the common schools and the colleges,
then, Kansas was to have a "complete system of public
instruction, embracing the primary, normal, preparatory,
collegiate and university departments." [15] Kansans
rejected the Lecompton constitution, however, and although
they approved the Leavenworth constitution, the vote was so
small and public interest so slight that the request that
congress admit Kansas to the Union under it came to
nothing.
A year later the fortunes
of state-supported higher education in Kansas started to
improve, along with the political fortunes of the territory
itself. At the call of the territorial legislature in 1859,
the voters chose representatives to still another
constitutional convention. Its members met July 5-29, 1859,
to produce the Wyandotte constitution. The document required
the legislature to create a state university.
As one of its regular
committees, the Wyandotte convention appointed a committee
on education and public institutions. It included seven
members: William R. Griffith, the chairman, of Bourbon
county, Samuel D. Houston of Riley county, C. B. McClellan
of Jefferson county, Edward Stokes of Douglas county, John
A. Middleton of Marshall county, Samuel Hipple of
Leavenworth county, and Caleb May of Atchison county. On
July 14 the group reported its proposals for inclusion in
the constitution. The legislature was to encourage the
"promotion of intellectual, moral, scientific, and
agricultural improvement" by establishing a uniform system
of common schools, and other institutions of a "higher
grade." Those higher grade institutions were to embrace
normal, preparatory, collegiate, and university departments.
More specifically, the legislature was to create a state
university, which would include both normal and agricultural
"departments," or schools, and which would promote
literature, the arts, and the sciences. Rather than locate
the university at random, the legislature was to place it at
some "eligible and central point." Its financial support was
to come from the returns on an investment fund made up of
receipts from government land sales, grants from the
legislature, and private gifts. No religious sect was to
have any right to, or control of, the fund. Both the common
schools and the institutions of higher grade were to be open
to pupils of both sexes. [16]
The debate in the committee
of the whole revealed almost complete accord among the
delegates that the constitution should at least refer to a
state university. After adopting without debate the proposal
relating to educational institutions in general, the
delegates considered an objection to the university offered
by John P. Greer of Shawnee county. Greer moved to strike
out the section directing the legislature to establish the
institution. In support of his motion, he argued that higher
education should be left to individual or private
enterprise. In a shrewd prediction of what was to come,
Greer said that state universities were often the subjects
of "acrimonious controversy" between the several parts of
their states. All in all, he contended, state universities
resulted in "no particular good." William R. Griffith
contemptuously dismissed Greer's objections. He would refuse
even to debate with Greer the value of a state university to
Kansas, he said, and he presumed that there was no
significant difference of opinion on the subject among the
representatives. He seemed to be correct. The convention
voted Greer's motion down without debate.
[17]
There was a decided
difference of opinion, however, about whether the
constitution should require the legislature to create a
university or merely allow it to do so. After Greer and
Griffith had finished, John W. Forman of Doniphan county
moved to change the key word "shall" to "may." The most
vigorous advocate of Forman's amendment was James G. Blunt
of Anderson county. Blunt explained that he had no intention
of starting a debate about the utility of a state
university. But he thought that the legislature ought to
have the power to discuss and decide the question of its
existence when it met. Merely giving the legislature power
to create the university would properly leave the question
open.
In spite of the fact that
William R. Griffith was chairman of the committee making the
report, he said that he had no strong feelings either way.
But Samuel D. Houston of Manhattan, another of the
committee's members, was adamantly opposed to Forman and
Blunt. Houston admitted, somewhat vaguely, that he was not
especially anxious to have a state university in Kansas if
it were to be conducted in the same manner as state
universities elsewhere. But he was anxious indeed that the
convention require the legislature to act to improve the
economy of Kansas. For this purpose an agricultural branch
of the university or a separate agricultural college was
essential. The western parts of Kansas, Houston said, were
extremely dry. The soil had properties which had never been
adequately tested. Houston was certain from his own
experience that the land had considerable value when
properly treated, but obviously a great deal of
experimentation would be necessary to produce a maximum
yield. An agricultural branch of the university would assist
the "highest possible development of that soil." Its work
would give value to the land, and that in turn would promote
both the settlement and sale of a vast acreage that
otherwise would remain comparatively worthless for a hundred
years. "I hope, gentlemen," Houston pleaded, "you will
consider the importance of taking some step that will thus
enhance the value of one-half the land in Kansas." By the
narrowest possible margin, a vote of 17 to 16, the committee
of the whole let the original proposal stand. After making a
few minor alterations in wording, it then approved the
report and sent it to the convention itself.
[18]
With only one change, the
convention approved what the delegates had just done in
committee. That change had to do with the vexing question of
whether pupils of both sexes should be admitted to the
university. On July 15 John T. Burris of Johnson county
moved to strike out the provision for sexual equality. In
doing so, he raised a question which the delegates had
haggled over two days before. On July 13 the convention had
considered a proposal by Solon O. Thacher of Lawrence that
when the legislature provided for the formation and
regulation of common schools, it should make no distinction
between the rights and privileges of males and females.
William Hutchinson of Lawrence then moved to make Thacher's
resolution apply to the university as well. Burris
immediately jumped up to ask if Thacher's motion with
Hutchinson's amendment would apply to the government of
educational institutions in addition to the admission of
pupils -- if it would entitle women to hold office and
disburse money. Thacher said his proposal would allow them
such privileges, whereupon Burris heatedly objected. He was
certainly willing to admit male and female students alike,
he said, but he did not want women to be able to vote and
hold office in the university. There was no greater
necessity, as he put it, for "inviting" them to hold such
positions than there was for inviting them to "any other
official capacity." James G. Blunt added his
support.
Whatever their opinions on
the structure of the common-school system, neither
Hutchinson nor Thacher would argue that there should be
female as well as male professors in the university.
Hutchinson was merely supporting an equal admissions policy.
He stated that in other states in the Middle West there were
no distinctions between boys and girls in the common
schools. At the higher levels of education, however, there
were distinctions, and they were unjust. To make sure that
such evil practices did not enter Kansas, Hutchinson said
that the "hand of the law must be thrust in" as soon as
students rose above the elementary grades. "It is well known
that some of the most flourishing colleges in the Union have
adopted this system," he said, adding that there was none
"more justly prosperous than Antioch College, in the State
of Ohio, where both sexes are admitted upon an equality."
Yet sensing a sizeable opposition in the convention, and
learning that the report of the committee on education and
public institutions would provide for sexual equality at all
educational levels, Hutchinson withdrew his amendment. The
delegates then passed Thacher's motion by a vote of 22 to
19. [19]
John T. Burris was playing
a strange game. Either that, or he changed his mind on the
proper admissions policy of the university in two days.
Formerly he had supported equal admission. On the 15th,
however, he sought and found majority support for his motion
to strike out the reference in the report of the committee
on education and public institutions. James G. Blunt, who
had stood with Burris against the suggestion that women
should have equal rights with men in teaching and executive
positions, claimed that Burris' motion had to do with racial
matters. If the provision for the "admission of pupils of
both sexes" were stricken, Blunt said, there would be no
chance for the Democratic delegates who were opposed to
equal educational opportunities for Negroes to insert the
word "white" before the word "pupils." Burris did not
explain, however, and his amendment passed.
[20]
The convention's committee
on phraseology and arrangements made a few changes in
wording, none of which affected the meaning of the sections
on education. The relevant parts of the Wyandotte
constitution were sections 2, 7, and 8 of Article
VI:
Sec. 2. The
legislature shall encourage the promotion of
intellectual, moral, scientific and agricultural
improvement, by establishing a uniform system of common
schools, and schools of a higher grade, embracing normal,
preparatory, collegiate and university
departments....
Sec. 7. Provision shall be
made by law for the establishment, at some eligible and
central point, of a State University, for the promotion
of literature, and the arts and sciences, including a
Normal and an Agricultural department. All funds arising
from the sale or rents of lands granted by the United
States to the State for the support of a State
University, and all other grants, donations or bequests,
either by the State or by individuals, for such purpose,
shall remain a perpetual fund, to be called the
"University Fund;" the interest of which shall be
appropriated to the support of the State University.
Sec. 8. No religious sect
or sects shall ever control any part of the common school
or University funds of the State.
Section 9 of Article VI
provided that a board of commissioners was to have charge of
the management and sale of the school and university lands.
The board was to consist of the state superintendent of
public instruction, the secretary of state, and the attorney
general. Whatever the grandiose hopes of men of earlier
days, the convention looked forward only to the standard
congressional land grant. In the "Ordinance" that it
adopted, the convention proposed that the national
government give 72 sections of land to Kansas for the
university's erection and maintenance.
[21]
It was one thing to write a
provision for a state university into the constitution,
however, and another thing to write it into law. On January
29, 1861, congress admitted Kansas as a state under the
Wyandotte constitution. In 1861 and 1862 the legislature and
Gov. Charles Robinson wrestled twice with the problem of the
university's location without solving it. The battle
juxtaposed certain amounts of wisdom with large quantities
of political scheming. Although the participants were
honestly eager to create a university, a number of local and
personal interests snared the university bill, frustrated
the university movement, and prepared the way for measures
which directly violated the spirit, if not the letter, of
the state constitution.
One of the more difficult
questions that the legislature of 1861 had to decide was how
to parcel out among the chief towns of Kansas the various
state institutions which the lawmakers had to bestow. Chief
among them was the state capital itself, but not far behind
came the state university and the state penitentiary.
Unhappily for the university cause, there were four towns
whose supporters could command enough votes to give them
reasonable hopes of capturing one institution -- Lawrence
and Leavenworth in the eastern part of the state, and Topeka
and Manhattan farther West. All the men involved understood
that no community could expect to get more than one state
agency. At the start Manhattan had the best chance of
securing the university, for both Lawrencians and Topekans
were far more interested in the capital, and the Leavenworth
backers proved willing to settle for the penitentiary. On
April 17, 1861, with supporters of Lawrence and Topeka
arguing over the capital, the house committee on public
institutions recommended for passage a bill to locate the
penitentiary in Leavenworth, which Rep. Charles Starns of
that town had introduced on April 12. In May both houses
would approve it. At the same time the committee on public
institutions recommended for the approval of the house a
concurrent resolution about the university's location. A
week before Rep. William H. Smyth of Manhattan had brought
in a bill to put the university there. The committee's
resolution said that the Manhattan proposal should receive
careful consideration. In that town, the members noted,
there was a Methodist institution called Bluemont Central
College. Its trustees had offered to donate their building
and grounds to the state in return for the university's
location in and on them. A joint legislative committee of
two should investigate the condition of the college and the
terms of the donation, and report to the legislature.
[22]
Both the house and the
senate approved the resolution. The investigating committee
consisted of Rep. William H. Grimes of Atchison and Sen.
Otis B. Gunn of Topeka. On April 29, they made their report.
They thought the college almost perfect. Its building was a
"substantial and commodious" three-story structure of gray
limestone, measuring 44 by 60 feet. It had eight office,
class, and laboratory rooms on the first two floors, and an
"elegant hall" furnished in a "tasty manner" on the third.
The rooms were spacious, airy, well lighted, and well
adapted to their purposes. Although the scientific apparatus
was not very extensive, it was of the highest quality. In
the library were between 1,200 and 1,500 volumes. just as
attractive as the building was its site. Resting on a high
piece of land overlooking the countryside for miles, the
college presented a "landscape to the eye not surpassed in
beauty and variety of scenery by any other locality in
Kansas."

Charles Robinson, governor of Kansas
(1861-1863), and resident of Lawrence, could never bring
himself to sign a university bill unless it favored
Lawrence as the place of establishment. So Manhattan lost
out in 1861.
The first page of House bill 122 in 1863
which shows Emporia in the act of being scratched. Passed
by the Kansas legislature, the act authorized Gov. Thomas
Carney to appoint a three-man commission to locate the
state university "in or adjacent to the City of
Lawrence," if the citizens could raise a $15,000
endowment fund.
After the endowment was raised the University of Kansas
was formally chartered on March 1, 1864. Located in
Lawrence, it was to have two branches, for male and female
students, and provision was made for six departments. Page
one of the legislative charter enactment is reproduced
above.
An Alexander Gardner photo of 1867 showing
the University of Kansas after it had been operating a
year. The building is Old North College.
The site was also a healthy
one, for there were no ponds or stagnant water nearby. Not
only that, but the college grounds included 120 acres of the
"very best quality of arable lands," with a fine quarry
which would supply stone in abundance for future buildings.
Adjoining the college lands were large amounts of unoccupied
farmland of the same high quality. The title to the college
land was perfectly valid and there were no incumbrances of
any kind. All this the trustees would give to the state of
Kansas; their only condition was that Bluemont College
become the state university. [23]
What Grimes and Gunn did
not say was that the offer of the Bluemont College trustees
was a shrewd move to relieve themselves of an unbearable
burden. Chartered by the territorial legislature of 1858 and
opened in 1860, Bluemont had proved a failure. It was never
a college, for it had only primary and preparatory students.
It was never prosperous, for the Kansas drought of 1859 and
1860 had made money scarce, and funds from the outside
proved impossible to find. With Kansas Methodists having
several other schools to support, with the uncertain
fortunes of civil war lying ahead, with the treasury empty,
the trustees' fondest hope was to unload the school upon the
state. Doing so would tie in very nicely with the
long-standing desire of Manhattanites to get the state
university for themselves. [24]
Still, the college did have
a building and some equipment. If the legislature accepted
the offer, the taxpayers would be saved several thousand
dollars. On the same day that the investigating committee
made its report, Representative Grimes offered a substitute
bill for William H. Smyth's original proposal. According to
it, the legislature would accept the offer of the Bluemont
trustees and the condition they imposed. On May 9 the house
passed Grimes' bill by a vote of 43 to 19 and sent it to the
senate. [25]
In both houses debate over
the bill to locate the university in Manhattan was joined
with the discussions on bills to locate the state capital
and the state penitentiary. Closely watching the whole
struggle was Gov. Charles Robinson. Along with the Lawrence
legislators and their supporters, Robinson wanted the
capital for his town far more than he wanted the university,
but if he could not get the one, he was determined to have
the other. The Wyandotte constitution prescribed that a
popular vote should determine the site of the capital. Both
the Lawrence and the Topeka backers were seeking a law that
would help their chances. Topekans were supporting a bill,
already passed by the house, that called for elections on
November 5, 1861, and annually thereafter, until some place
received a majority of all votes cast. Lawrencians wanted a
bill which would confine the second and subsequent elections
to a runoff contest between the two places receiving the
most ballots in the first vote; they were afraid that a
scattering of ballots would hurt their chances. On May 23,
as the result of a deal among the supporters of the various
towns, the senate passed with a few minor amendments the
house bill to locate the university at Manhattan, and
approved the location of the penitentiary at Leavenworth. At
the same time the senate amended the house bill to locate
the capital to conform with the desires of the Lawrence men.
[26]
When the capital bill got
back to the house, and then went to a joint conference
committee, there was a fierce debate over the senate
amendments. It lasted until May 31, when the senate finally
agreed to withdraw the changes and accept the original
version. Meanwhile, the house had approved the slight
amendments in the university bill and sent it to Governor
Robinson. With the capital issue in doubt, with Robinson
uncertain whether Lawrence would get any state institution
at all, he saw no choice but to veto the measure. On May 28
he returned the bill with a message that was both brief and
shrewd. The location of the university, he said, purported
to be made because of the donation of Bluemont College. But
if the University of Kansas was to be located for such a
reason, "all portions" of the state should have notice and
be allowed to make proposals. In addition, Robinson objected
that the state had no money available for the university,
and claimed that its location was therefore premature. "It
will be time enough to locate this Institution," he told the
legislators, "when the endowment can be made available, and
the question can have been fully canvassed before the
people." The constitution required a two-thirds majority to
override, but in spite of frantic efforts, the Manhattan men
in the house could muster only 38 of the 58 votes cast, two
less than they needed. [27]
Between the meetings of the
legislatures of 1861 and 1862, two events occurred which
affected the university's location. On November 5, 1861,
Kansans went to the polls to choose Topeka as the state
capital. The decision meant that the Lawrence legislators
and their allies would have to make a greater effort than
before to capture the university, lest they get no state
institution at all, and to post double guard to prevent
Manhattan from winning the prize. [28]
The second event, which
proved even more important, originally had nothing to do
with the university. In 1862 James H. Lane of Lawrence and
his faction within the state Republican party tried to oust
Gov. Charles Robinson and several other elected state
officials from office. In a climax to a long-continuing
struggle for power between the two men, Lane accused
Robinson and his cohorts of conspiring to defraud the state
of thousands of dollars worth of state bonds. In February
the house of representatives voted to impeach Robinson and
the others, and the trials before the senate were fixed for
June. At once Lane began scheming to get a satisfactory
majority in the senate. [29]
Meanwhile, the house was
once again trying to decide which of the contending towns
ought to get the state university. The chief competitors
were now Manhattan, Lawrence, and Emporia. The Manhattan
supporters had renewed their offer of a year before to
donate the Bluemont College building and grounds to the
state as the university site. In an effort to outbid them, a
group of Lawrence men offered on behalf of the citizens
$15,000 in cash -- the money was a fund which Amos A.
Lawrence had earlier donated to the Lawrence college project
-- 20 acres of land for the campus, and $10,000 worth of
real estate besides. Emporia's offer was merely 40 acres of
land. After debate the house committee of the whole rejected
the Lawrence and Emporia measures on February 17, and
recommended the Manhattan bill. A day later the house
approved it by the comfortable majority of 45 to 16.
[30]
When the measure reached
the senate, James H. Lane and his cronies were trying not
only to round up enough votes to convict Robinson and the
other officers, but to expel four pro-Robinson senators and
replace them with Lane men. Lane's charge against the four
was that they held Kansas elective office at the same time
that they held federal military office, which violated the
constitution. Because the senate was closely divided between
the Lane and Robinson supporters, Lane had to proceed
carefully. He and his faction managed to delay a vote on the
university bill while they negotiated with the Manhattan
backers. On February 21 one of the men charged with dual
officeholding resigned, leaving three for Lane to vote out
if he could. On the same day the senate committee on public
institutions sent the university bill to the floor. As it
happened, the three men whom Lane wanted expelled from the
senate were also supporters of Manhattan, and so was the man
who held the balance of power between the Lane and Robinson
groups, Sen. M. L. Essick of Manhattan. Until Lane
approached him with the obvious deal, Essick had been voting
to keep the Robinson men in the senate. Lane told Essick
that if he would change his vote, Lane could supply the
votes of four or five senators for the Manhattan bill, or
enough to secure passage. Essick at first rejected the
proposal, then changed his mind. As an added payment for his
anti-Robinson vote, however, he asked Lane's assurance that
the four new men who appeared would also support the
Manhattan bill. Lane apparently promised this, too, and
Essick switched his vote. [31]
Unfortunately for the
Manhattan men, Lane's promises were worthless. On February
27, before the expulsion of the Robinson men, the senate had
defeated the Manhattan bill by a vote of 13 to 10. Four days
later, however, with the new Lane men now present, the
senate approved Essick's motion to reconsider. At that point
the hopes of the Manhattan supporters were high, for the
vote to reconsider had been 18 to 4, and three of the four
new senators had voted with the majority. But immediately
afterward, when the bill came up for a final vote, only one
of them voted in favor, and the other three -- John M.
Rankin, C. S. Lambdin, and Thomas Roberts -- voted against.
The Manhattan bill lost, 12 to 11, in a stunning
disappointment to Essick and his friends.
[32]
For all that any man could
tell in the spring of 1862, the Kansas legislators might go
on arguing forever about which town should get the
university. Because the state constitution and its framers
contemplated only one university, -to be located at some
"eligible and central point," and because the Bluemont
College trustees were willing to donate a building and land
to the state free and clear, Manhattan was the logical place
for the school. But the Kansas legislature was not operating
according to the rules of logic. In 1863, moreover, when the
legislature finally reached a decision on the university's
site, it was apparent that the lawmakers cared little for
the constitution's spirit. To end the competition and the
squabbling, to placate the citizens of Manhattan, Lawrence,
and Emporia alike, they divided the university into three
parts and distributed them to the three towns.
Securing the University of
Kansas for Lawrence required the kinds of political acumen
and sheer good luck that the town's would-be college
builders had lacked in the past. For all the hopes of the
early settlers, by 1863, the cause of higher education in
Lawrence had come to nothing more than the foundation of an
uncompleted college building on a few acres of ground atop
Mount Oread and a large number of thwarted hopes. There was
no superstructure on the foundation, no equipment, no
faculty, no students, no cash. In December, 1856, when the
Lawrence leaders had organized their mass meeting in behalf
of a private college which they hoped would become the state
university, Amos A. Lawrence in Boston had stood ready to
give well over $10,000 to the institution. It grieved him
that he could not give enough money to construct a building,
he said, but the amount could pay for regular expenses later
on. The contribution that Lawrence proposed to make was in
the form of two promissory notes for $10,000 and interest
which he held on Lawrence University of Appleton, Wis., to
which he had earlier loaned the sum. The college that Amos
Lawrence had in mind, he told the Rev. Ephraim Nute, had two
purposes. On the one hand, it would be a "Center of
learning." On the other, it would be a "Monument to
perpetuate the memory of those martyrs of Liberty who fell
during the recent struggles. Beneath it their dust shall
rest. In it shall burn the light of Liberty which shall
never be extinguished until it illumines the whole
continent. It shall be called the 'Free State College' &
all the friends of Freedom shall be invited to lend it a
helping hand." Five days later, Lawrence assured Nute that
the trustees of the Appleton School were sound men who would
pay off the notes within two years. But he cautioned the
minister and his friends not to do anything rash. They ought
to have $100,000 in hand, Lawrence thought, before they
started the college. [33]
Unfortunately, the other
friends of freedom, when invited to extend a helping hand,
proved unresponsive. Charles Robinson and other Lawrence men
had hoped to divert to their college some of the funds
raised in the East to relieve the suffering Free Staters,
but they had no luck. Amos Lawrence tried to induce John
Carter Brown of Providence, R. I., to put up money for
another Brown University in Kansas, but failed. In January,
1857, Robinson himself went east to attempt to separate
Free-State sympathizers from their money, but came away
emptyhanded. [34] With no college in prospect, in
February, 1857, Amos Lawrence withdrew his offer. Believing
now that a system of common schools in Kansas was more
desirable than a college or a university "at this early day"
he wished to see his money used for them. If at some later
time the government should provide for a university, he
said, no private funds would be necessary anyway. Lawrence
transferred the notes against Lawrence University to Charles
Robinson and Samuel C. Pomeroy as trustees, and he added an
additional $1,000 in the stock of the New England Emigrant
Aid Company. The whole sum amounted to $12,696.14. Only the
interest on the sum could be used. Half of it was to go to
support common schools in Kansas settlements; the other half
was to go to the support of Sunday schools and to supplying
them with books. Only if Lawrence died without giving
further orders could the money go to the Free-State college.
And if Kansas entered the Union as a slave state, Robinson
and Pomeroy were to return the money to Lawrence or his
heirs. [35]
Throughout the rest of 1857
and during most of 1858, the cause of higher education in
the town of Lawrence languished. A national financial panic
in 1857 and a subsequent depression made private money
scarce, and congress granted no land. In addition, the
trustees of Lawrence University in Wisconsin found it
impossible to pay their debts, and the cause of common and
Sunday schools in Kansas therefore suffered as well. Six
years later, the notes were still unpaid, in spite of the
trustees' earnest efforts to find the money.
[36]
By the fall of 1858,
however, the Lawrence promoters had hit upon a new scheme.
If their projected college was a denominational institution,
perhaps they could get money from churchmen and church
governing bodies. To create a denominational college in
Lawrence would be to follow the example of men elsewhere.
The territorial legislatures of 1858 and 1859 had granted
charters for a number of sectarian institutions -- for
Methodist schools in Palmyra and Atchison and Manhattan and
Doniphan, for a Presbyterian university in Highland, for a
Protestant Episcopal university in Wyandotte, and several
more. After some discussion, the Lawrence boosters decided
to throw in their lot with the Presbyterian Church in the
United States of America, which was the so-called "Old
School," or conservative wing of Presbyterianism. There was
irony in the choice, for the Old School Presbyterians had
great support in the South because of the long-standing
refusal of their general assembly to condemn slavery.
[37] But various reports had reached Lawrence that
money from the general assembly's board of education might
be available. After routine passage by the legislature of
1859, on January 19, Gov. Samuel Medary signed a bill to
charter the Lawrence University. Of its 21 trustees, 12 were
to be appointed by the governing body of the Old School
Presbyterian Church in Kansas. Its purpose was to educate
youth in the "Various branches of literature and science."
To that end, the trustees could offer instruction in the
liberal arts and sciences, and they might also train their
students in theology, medicine, and law. The trustees could
award any degrees that they thought proper. Among the
original trustees, named in the act, were Charles Robinson,
Samuel C. Pomeroy, Charles H. Branscomb, Timothy Dwight
Thacher, and several other leaders of the Lawrence
community. [38]
Within a few months,
however, the trustees had become disenchanted with Old
School Presbyterianism, and had conceived another plan. In
the spring of 1859 the Kansas General Association of the
Congregational Church met in Lawrence. Congregationalists
had long desired a college of their own. In 1858 the
association had chosen Topeka as its location, providing
that Topekans would provide enough land and money to
subsidize it. But churchmen in Topeka had defaulted on their
pledges and now the association put the college up for
grabs. Lawrence men grabbed with a will. College enthusiasts
promised $15,000 in cash-most of the sum was Amos Lawrence's
gift -- 151 town lots in Lawrence and elsewhere, 170 acres
of land adjoining the townsite, and 1,200 acres in other
parts of the territory. The institution was to be called
Monumental College as a monument to the Free-State cause and
its partisans. The Congregational association was to choose
the trustees. [39]
Such offers confused the
plans for the college. A Congregational school would require
either a new charter or a change in the old one that only
the legislature of 1860 could make. Congregationalists in
Topeka claimed that the general association had cheated them
of the college, and began to squabble with both the
association and their coreligionists in Lawrence.
[40] Meanwhile, the Lawrence University trustees had
scraped together enough money to build a foundation for the
college structure. The more optimistic among them had hoped
to open the school in April, 1859, but that proved
impossible; not until October did they lay the cornerstone.
Into it went a copy of the Presbyterian Confession of Faith,
for the trustees were still relying on hopes of Presbyterian
aid. It never came. Hard times and the dubiousness of the
whole enterprise made the general assembly's board of
education unable and unwilling to send money to Lawrence. By
the spring and summer of 1860, the Lawrence leaders had
given up on the Presbyterians, and were scouring the East
for Congregational dollars. None of the money that Amos A.
Lawrence had contributed in 1857 to common schools and
Sunday schools had been spent because the trustees of
Lawrence University in Wisconsin had not paid it. In
November, 1859, Amos Lawrence had assented to the use of the
fund for a Congregational college. He himself was a "pretty
rigid Episcopalian," he had said the year before, but he had
no prejudice against "any body of men who love the Lord
Jesus Christ," which certainly included the
Congregationalists. Promissory notes were not cash, however,
and cash was scarce everywhere. [41]
In January, 1861, the
Lawrence leaders made their last gambit. Presbyterians and
Congregationalists being equally poor, they turned to the
Episcopalians. Late in the month, Acting Gov. George M.
Beebe signed a bill to charter the Lawrence University of
Kansas. Half of its trustees were to be chosen by the
standing committee of the Episcopal diocese of Kansas, on
nomination by the bishop. Among the first trustees, named in
the act, were Charles Robinson, Charles E. Miner, the Rev.
Charles Reynolds, and James Blood, all of whom had been
trustees of the Lawrence University in its Presbyterian
phase. [42]
It no longer mattered,
however, which denomination backed the college. By 1861
Lawrence men believed either the state capitol or the state
university a more attractive adornment than a private
institution. When Kansas became a state, the college cause
and the college building were no farther advanced than they
had been in October, 1859. Drought and depression in Kansas
had made it impossible for the citizens to help themselves.
During the next two years, the Episcopalians were unable to
aid the institution. The Lawrencians had dreamed nobly, but
their dreams had failed. Thus they turned to the last
possible source of aid available -- the state
legislature.
On January 14, 1863, Gov.
Thomas Carney, the state's new chief executive, delivered
his inaugural message. In it he urged the legislature to set
about establishing a state university. Noting that the
constitution required the institution, he called the
attention of the legislators to the Morrill act, passed by
congress the year before. The law gave to each state 30,000
acres of government land for each senator and representative
to which the state was entitled under the apportionment of
1860. After selling the land, the states were to use the
receipts as an investment fund whose returns were to support
at least one college. The "leading object" of the colleges
was to teach such branches of learning as were related to
"agriculture and the mechanic arts," in such manner as the
state legislatures might prescribe, in order to "promote the
liberal and practical education of the industrial classes in
the several pursuits and professions in life." But the law
also stated that "scientific and classical studies" might be
taught in the colleges. [43] Carney, naturally
assumed that the Kansas legislature would establish one
institution that would both take advantage of the Morrill
act and fulfill the provision of the state constitution
requiring a university. "A wise combination of the interests
of the State, and a just application of the means which the
General Government should grant," he told the lawmakers,
"Will enable us to do for education all that an intelligent
people could ask or desire." It was for the legislature to
perfect this combination." [44]
Carney's idea was not only
natural but sensible. The Kansas constitution envisioned one
university, which would include a department -- that is, a
school -- of agriculture, and the governor was interpreting
it in the only reasonable way. But the legislature of 1863
was divided into three parts on the question of where the
school should stand, with the adherents of Manhattan,
Lawrence, and Emporia still seeking satisfaction. Thanks in
part to the Morrill act, it proved possible to please them
all. Manhattan came first. On February 3 Carney signed a
joint resolution of the legislature by which the state
accepted the terms of the Morrill act and agreed to follow
its provisions. Scenting a victory, the trustees of Bluemont
College and their Manhattan backers had once more offered
their land and building to the state, this time in return
for the agricultural college. Between January 29 and
February 7, a bill to locate the new institution on the
Bluemont College grounds, introduced by Henry W. Ide of
Leavenworth, moved routinely through the house to unanimous
passage. The senate debated the matter for a time, briefly
entangling the bill with the contest between Emporia and
Lawrence for the university, and on February 13, also
approved it unanimously. [45]
While one part of the
originally contemplated University of Kansas was heading
west to Riley county, other parts of it headed east to
Lawrence and south to Emporia. The climax of the two-year
struggle to locate the institution was furious. By the end
of January the house of representatives had a Lawrence bill
and an Emporia bill to deal with. The former was introduced
by George Ford of Douglas county, the latter by Charles V.
Eskridge of Emporia. Lawrence was now offering less than it
had in 1862; the $15,000 Lawrence fund and the 20 acres of
land were in the bill, but not the $10,000 worth of land.
Emporia, by contrast, had increased its promised gift from
40 to 80 acres. Despite the more attractive terms of the
Lawrence proposal, on January 31, the house committee on
public institutions, whose members very likely knew that the
Lawrence town fathers did not have the $15,000 actually in
hand, recommended the rejection of the Lawrence bill and the
passage of the Emporia measure. This was a blow to the
Lawrence hopes, but during the next ten days the city's
supporters formed a massive lobby to secure passage despite
the committee's disapproval. Their most effective inducement
to the legislators, of course, was the promised $15,000.
After the contest was over and the Lawrence men were
victorious, Charles Robinson told Amos Lawrence that the
fund was chiefly responsible for the triumph. "It was with
great difficulty that the location was secured here,"
Robinson wrote, "and nothing saved us but the inducement of
your fund." [46]
Possibly Robinson was
correct. But if several of his contemporaries were also
correct, there was political jobbery involved as well. In a
later year, a brother of one of the Lawrence lobbyists
recalled that the Lawrence men had bought as many votes as
they could at the going rate of around $5 apiece to get the
university. William Miller claimed that his brother Josiah,
the Lawrence postmaster, had actually saved the institution
for his own town when he accidentally discovered two
unbribed members of the house and paid for their ballots
with $4 that he happened to have in his pocket at the time.
Charles V. Eskridge stated in the house on February 10 that
on the streets of Topeka men were talking about the use of
"corrupt means" to procure passage of the Lawrence bill, and
demanded an investigation. In the absence of any specific
charges, however, the house refused to act. [47] At
the same time, rumors were common in Topeka that the
Lawrence men had made a deal for an exchange of votes with
men interested in securing the state insane asylum for
Osawatomie in Miami county, and that they had done the same
thing with representatives of the northern tier of Kansas
counties who desired a railroad to connect with the great
transcontinental line. The Pacific railroad bill which
congress had passed in 1862 included a section -- the
so-called "Henderson Amendment" -- which allowed the Kansas
legislature to decide whether the Hannibal and St. Joseph
Railroad of Missouri might lay track west through Kansas
from St. Joseph, ultimately to join with the main line which
moved west from Omaha. The amendment was the product of a
struggle for economic supremacy between St. Joseph and
Atchison. If the state legislature forbade the extension of
the Hannibal and St. Joseph road, Atchison would win a
notable victory, for the congressional act authorized the
Hannibal and St. Joseph to build through that city. In the
absence of a railroad west from St. Joseph, Atchison might
well become the railroad hub of the region. Naturally
enough, the northern counties of Kansas wanted a railroad
west from St. Joseph very badly indeed.
[48]
It was impossible to say,
however, exactly what factors influenced the individual
members of the house in the maneuvering which led to
Emporia's defeat and Lawrence's victory. After several days
of debate and delay, the house took up Eskridge's bill on
February 9 in the committee of the whole. After hours of
bitter argument, the house found itself evenly divided. In
the course of debate, the Lawrence supporters, led by James
S. Emery, George Ford, and William Foster, managed to get
the bill amended to provide for the university's location at
Lawrence instead of Emporia, providing that Lawrence gave
$15,000 and 40 acres of land to the state in return. When
the amended measure came to a vote in the committee of the
whole, the house was tied, 33 to 33. Luckily for Lawrence,
Rep. Edward Russell of Doniphan county was speaker pro tem,
and he cast his tie-breaking ballot for Lawrence. Having
recommended the amended bill for passage, the committee of
the whole rose, the house beat down a motion to adjourn by a
vote of 37 to 36, and by a vote of 38 to 35 ordered the bill
engrossed for a third reading and final action. On February
10 the measure passed the house, 38 to 32. The final
balloting gave credibility to the idea of a deal between the
Lawrence backers and the supporters of the northern railroad
line. Every one of the 11 representatives from Doniphan,
Brown, Nemaha, Marshall, and Washington counties -- the
extreme northern tier -- favored the measure; the role
played by Representative Russell was obviously crucial. All
except seven of the other 27 affirmative votes came from the
two eastern tiers of counties south of the Kansas river. The
Lawrence promoters won the votes of all the representatives
from Douglas, Franklin, Miami, Anderson, Linn, and Allen
counties. In addition they picked up votes from two of the
three representatives from Johnson county, and one of the
three from Bourbon county. Beyond those, there were four
votes from Leavenworth county, two from Jefferson county,
and one from Osage county. The opposing votes came in part
from Atchison and Leavenworth counties to the north and east
of Lawrence, but mainly from the counties lying to the west
and southwest, whose representatives saw no particular
advantage in locating the university in Lawrence.
[49]
The senate proved to be far
more hospitable to the Lawrence bill than the house had
been. On February 13 its committee on public institutions
and buildings recommended the measure for passage. On the
17th it survived its crucial test. In a last effort, Sen.
Perry B. Maxson of Lyon county moved to strike out all of
the bill after the enacting clause and to substitute the
original Emporia measure, but the senate defeated his
proposal decisively, 18 to 7. The next day the senate passed
the Lawrence bill, 19 to 4. On February 20 Governor Carney
signed it. [50]
If the new act was an
obvious victory for Lawrence, it was not necessarily a
triumph for the university itself. Now that both
Manhattanites and Lawrencians had been satisfied in their
desires for state institutions, there seemed to be no reason
not to satisfy Emporia as well. On February 19
Representative Eskridge introduced a bill to establish,
locate, and endow a state normal school at Emporia. The bill
passed both houses easily; early in March, Governor Carney
obligingly signed it, too. [51] Kansas now had three
state institutions of learning, two of which had been
unforseen until 1863. Both the agricultural college and the
state normal school were properly parts of the university.
If the university fulfilled the provisions of the state
constitution, Kansas would have two agricultural schools and
two normal schools. There might be a higher wisdom at work
amid the local rivalries and the dismemberment of the
university, but it was hard to discover.
According to the university
law, Governor Carney was to appoint three commissioners to
locate the institution at "Some eligible point" in or near
Lawrence on a site of not less than 40 acres of land. In
addition the citizens of Lawrence were to raise $15,000 for
an endowment fund which they had to deposit with the state
treasurer within six months after the 40-acre site had been
given to the state. Failing the deposit of the money,
Emporia instead of Lawrence would get the university,
providing that its citizens contributed 80 acres of land.
[52]
Carney appointed Simeon M.
Thorp and Josiah Miller of Lawrence and Isaac T. Goodnow of
Manhattan as the commissioners. Thorp had just completed a
year's term as state superintendent of public instruction;
Goodnow, who had once been principal of Bluemont College,
was his successor. Miller was the Lawrence postmaster.
[53] On their first official inspection of possible
sites in and around Lawrence, the three men canvassed a
number of places, but none of the others was as attractive
as the obvious one atop the highest part of Mount Oread. The
land belonged to Charles and Sara Robinson. However much the
Robinsons desired a college or university in Lawrence, they
were not at all willing to donate 40 acres to the state. In
March and April the commissioners, the Robinsons, and the
Lawrence city council worked out a scheme by which everyone
seemed to gain something. Charles and Sara had originally
been willing to sell the 40 acres for $2,000. The logical
purchaser would have been the city itself or a group of
citizens who would have given the land to the state. But
surplus capital both public and private was hard to find. A
subscription drive having failed to raise all the money, the
Robinsons and the city council arranged two swaps and a
payment in cash. In return for 22-1/4 acres, Charles
Robinson received half a block of land from the city. Sara
yielded 17-3/4 acres for $600 and 10 acres of land on
another part of Mount Oread. With these arrangements
perfected, Charles and Sara bestowed the 40 acres directly
on the state. [54]
After the site had been
chosen, the Lawrence residents had until November 1, 1863,
to raise $15,000. On February 22, two days after Governor
Carney signed the Lawrence bill, Charles Robinson wrote to
Amos A. Lawrence to ask permission to use the money owed by
Lawrence University in Appleton, Wis., to secure the state
university. Robinson had already told the citizens that he
believed that Amos Lawrence would consent; as a result,
Robinson wrote, they were relying on his approval. Amos
Lawrence agreed at once, and even offered to bring whatever
pressure he could on his Wisconsin debtors to pay up. In
spite of their desire to honor their obligations, however,
the Lawrence University trustees simply could not do so.
[55] Because it was utterly impossible to raise the
money in Lawrence, Kan. -- especially after William Clarke
Quantrill's devastating raid on August 21 -- Robinson and
his colleagues asked Amos Lawrence for a gift of $15,000. In
return for it, they promised, they would surrender the notes
they held. This was boldness indeed, and it was partially
successful. Lawrence agreed to furnish $10,000 in cash, if
the Lawrence citizens would raise the rest. With November 1
drawing ever closer, there were public spirited men ready
enough to make pledges, but the law demanded cash. After a
frantic search, the Lawrence leaders found that Governor
Carney would advance the money from the personal wealth that
he had accumulated as a wholesale grocer in Leavenworth. He
took the notes of the citizens for $5,000, and thus the
Lawrence men scraped in under the deadline. On November 2
Carney formally announced that Lawrence had met the
requirements made by the legislature and that the university
was in Lawrence to stay. [56]
Having been extremely
generous, Carney and his debtors then worked carefully to
get their money back from the state. In his message to the
legislature of 1864, the governor asked the lawmakers to
reimburse the Lawrence citizens for the money they had in
effect just contributed. His justification was that the
people of Lawrence had lost much in Quantrill's raid through
no fault of their own. As he contemplated their sufferings
and pleaded on their behalf, he grew almost maudlin. Their
$5,000 gift had been "noble as well as generous." In a "fell
hour," be said, "they lost, as it were, their all. Rebel
assassins did this fatal work. Where, then, the patriot
heart in the State, that would not say promptly, 'Return to
these public-spirited men the generous gift, which, when
wealthy, they promised, and which promise, when poor, they
fulfilled? Where the legislator, knowing these facts so
honorable to them and to humanity itself, who would hesitate
in meeting this wish of the people, and of doing a duty
which the State owes to herself?" [57]
There were patriot hearts
aplenty among the legislators. The relief bill, introduced
by Rep. James S. Emery of Lawrence, passed the house, 55 to
0, and the senate, 16 to 0. In relieving the Lawrence
citizens of their indebtedness, and Carney of his fear that
he might go unpaid, however, the legislature put yet another
burden on the future University of Kansas. For Emery's bill
took the money from the endowment fund itself, reducing it
by slightly over $5,000. The money had made a swing from
Carney to the Lawrence citizens to the state to the Lawrence
citizens and back to Carney. Before the university opened --
before it had a charter, for that matter -- the institution
was already over $5,000 poorer than it should have been.
[58]
But at least and at last,
the University of Kansas had a home. The legislature of 1864
would also give it a form by passing a charter law which
Governor Carney signed on March 1. As the first stage in the
university's history ended, however, and the next stage
began, the institution was already different from the one
that the framers of the Wyandotte constitution and many
sympathetic Kansans had expected. Thanks to the existence of
the schools at Manhattan and Emporia, there was a real doubt
that the university would ever contain an agricultural
school and a normal school as the constitution required.
Although Lawrence might be an "eligible" point for the
university's location, it was anything but a "central" point
in the state as a whole. Precisely because of its location
in Lawrence, the university's endowment fund was a third
smaller than the original location law required. Neither the
Lawrence citizens nor the state legislature had committed
themselves to any material assistance. Kansans who were
sincerely interested in the cause of state-supported higher
education could only hope that the future would be happier
than the past.
Notes
C. S. Griffin,
a native of Rhode, Island, received his B. A. from Brown
University, and his M. A. and Ph. D. degrees from the
University of Wisconsin. He is now an associate professor
of history at the University of Kansas, Lawrence.
This article is a
condensation of Chapter 1 and part of Chapter 2 of his
new work, The University of Kansas: A History,
1864-1964, scheduled for publication late in
1966.
1. For these and similar expressions of the Free-State
legend, see Hannah Oliver, speech On September 30, 1926, "Annual Freshman
Induction Ceremony. Speeches on the History of Kansas University by Hannah Oliver,
Graduate of the Class of 1874, Professor Emeritus of Latin." Mss., Watson
library, University of Kansas; When You Come to K-U. Bulletin
of the University of Kansas, Lawrence, v. 23 (May 15, 1922), p. 11; Scott
Hopkins, "Address on Behalf of the Board Of Regents by Hon. Scott Hopkins"
The Graduate Magazine of the University of Kansas, Lawrence,
v. 1 (November, 1902, p. 56; Franklin D. Murphy, Statement
by Franklin D. Murphy on the Occasion of His Inauguration as the Ninth Chancellor
of the University of Kansas, September 17, 1951 (Lawrence, University
of Kansas, 1951), pp. 3, 4.
2. Journal of the
Council of the Territory Kansas, at Their First Session
(Shawnee Manual Labor School, Kansas Territory, John T.
Brady, Public Printer, 1855), p. 18.
3. Donald G. Tewksbury,
The Founding of American Colleges and Universities Before
the Civil War: With Particular Reference to the Religious
Influences Bearing Up the College Movement (New York,
Bureau of Publications of Columbia University Teachers
College, 1932), pp. 167, 178, 192, 195, 198-200, 202,
203.
4. The Statutes of the
Territory of Kansas Passed at the First Session of the
Legislative Assembly, One Thousand Eight Hundred and
Fifty-five (Shawnee Manual Labor School, Kansas
Territory, John T. Brady, Public Printer, 1855), pp.
931-936.
5. Kansas Free
State, Lawrence, November 26, 1855.
6. Samuel A. Johnson,
The Battle Cry of Freedom: The New England Emigrant Aid
Company in the Kansas Crusade (Lawrence, University of
Kansas Press, 1954), pp. 17, 33; Amos A. Lawrence to Charles
Robinson, November, 1854, William Lawrence, Life of Amos
A. Lawrence: With Extracts From His Diary and
Correspondence (Boston, Houghton, Mifflin and Company,
1888), pp. 115, 116; Frank E. Melvin to Ernest H. Lindley,
October 28, 1938, "Chancellor's Papers," University of
Kansas, Lawrence.
7. Frank W. Blackmar,
Higher Education in Kansas (Washington, D. C.,
Government Printing Office, 1900), p. 17.
8. Herald of
Freedom, Lawrence, December 13, 1856; William F. M. Arny
to John Geary, December 8, 1856, ibid., December 20,
1856.
9. Ibid., January
3,1857.
10. Ibid., January
31, 1857; "The Topeka Movement," Kansas Historical
Collections, 3 (1913-1914), pp. 245, 246, 249.
11. John W. Geary to
William F. M. Arny, December 24, 1856, Herald of
Freedom, Lawrence, January 3, 1857; Journal of the
Council of the Territory of Kansas, at Their Second Session,
Begun and Held at the City of Lecompton, on the Second
Monday (12th) of January, A.D. 1857 (Lecompton, R. H.
Bennett, Public Printer, 1857), p. 17.
12. Ibid., p. 24;
Journal of the House of Representatives of the Territory
of Kansas, Begun and Held at the City of Lecompton, on the
Second Monday (12th) of January, A.D. 1857 (Lecompton,
R. H. Bennett, Public Printer, 1857), pp. 112, 113.
13. Herald of
Freedom, Lawrence, June 6, 1857.
14. Daniel W. Wilder,
The Annals of Kansas (Topeka, Kansas Publishing
House, 1875). pp. 143, 148.
15. Ibid., p.
176.
16. Harry G. Larimer
(comp.), Kansas Constitutional Convention: A Reprint of
the Proceedings and Debates of the Convention Which Framed
the Constitution of Kansas at Wyandotte in July, 1859. Also
the Constitution Annotated to Date, Historical Sketches,
Etc. (Topeka, Kansas State Printing Plant, 1920), pp.
14, 170, 171.
17. Ibid., pp. 172,
173.
18. Ibid., pp. 173,
174.
19. Ibid., pp.
135-137.
20. Ibid., pp. 192,
193.
21. Ibid., pp. 583,
584.
22. G. Raymond Gaeddert, "The
Birth of Kansas (Lawrence, University of Kansas 1940)" p. 116; State
of Kansas, House Journal, 1861, pp. 95, 112, 113,
151, 178, 176.
23. Ibid., 1861, pp.
271-273.
24. Julius T. Willard,
History of the Kansas State College of Agriculture and
Science (Manhattan, Kansas State College Press, 1940),
pp. 11, 12; John D. Walters, History of the Kansas State
Agricultural College (Manhattan, Printing Department of
the Kansas State Agricultural College, 1909), p.
18.
25. State of Kansas,
House Journal, 1861, pp. 274, 296, 316, 349, 354,
355.
26. Gaeddert, Birth of
Kansas, p. 117; State of Kansas, Senate Journal,
1861, pp. 287-293.
27. Gaeddert, Birth of
Kansas, pp. 117, 118; State of Kansas, House
Journal, 1861, pp. 460, 494, 509, 510, 539.
28. Gaeddert, Birth of
Kansas, p. 118.
29. Ibid., pp. 178,
179.
30. H B. 32, Legislature of 1862, "An Act
to Locate the State University," including letter from Solon O. Thacher,
S. N. Simpson, and others to the legislature of the State of Kansas, January
27, 1862, and H. B. 69, Legislature of 1862, "An Act Locating the State
University," Legislative collection, Kansas Historical Society Archives,
Topeka; State of Kansas, House Journal, 1862, pp.
69. 82, 97, 107, 119, 170, 237, 271, 276.
31. Gaeddert, Birth of
Kansas, pp. 120, 121, 179-182.
32. State of Kansas,
Senate Journal, 1862, pp. 125, 127, 144, 149, 150,
155, 158, 191, 192.
33. Amos A. Lawrence to
Ephraim Nute, December 6, 21, 1856 (copies), "Charles
Robinson Papers," Watson library, University of
Kansas.
34. Amos A. Lawrence to
John Carter Brown, January 10, 1857 (copy), "Copies of
Letters of Amos A. Lawrence about Kansas Affairs and to
Correspondents in Kansas: From June 10, 1854, to August 10,
1861; Presented to the Kansas Historical Society by
Mrs. Sarah E. Lawrence, September 17 1888," typewritten ms.,
Kansas Historical Society; Charles Robinson to Sara
Robinson, January 11, 1857, "Charles Robinson Papers,"
Kansas Historical Society.
35. Amos A. Lawrence to
Charles Robinson and Samuel C. Pomeroy, February 14, 1857,
"Robinson Papers," Watson library, University of
Kansas.
36. R. Z. Mason to Charles
Robinson, October 28, 1862, and Charles Robinson to Amos A.
Lawrence, March 17, 1863 (copy), in ibid.
37. Robert E. Thompson,
A History of the Presbyterian Churches in the United
States (New York, The Christian Literature Company,
1895), pp. 136, 137.
38. Private Laws of the
Territory of Kansas, Passed at the Fifth Session of the
Legislative Assembly; Begun at the City of Lecompton, on the
1st Monday of Jan'y, 1859, and Held and Concluded at the
City of Lawrence (Lawrence, Herald of Freedom
Steam Press, 1859). pp. 81-85.
39. Charles M. Correll,
A Century of Congregationalism in Kansas 1854-1954
(Topeka, The Kansas Congregational and Christian Conference,
1953), pp. 75, 76.
40. Ibid., p.
76.
41. Herald of
Freedom, Lawrence, October 18, 1859; Wilson Sterling,
"Historical Sketch of the University of Kansas,"Wilson
Sterling (ed.), Quarter-Centennial History of the
University of Kansas, 1866-1891. With Portraits of
Chancellors (Topeka, George W. Crane & Co., 1891),
pp. 53, 55, 56; Amos A. Lawrence to Charles Robinson,
November 25, 1859, and S. M. Simpson to Charles Robinson,
January 16, 1860, "Robinson Papers," Watson library,
University of Kansas; Amos A. Lawrence to S. M. Simpson,
November 9, 1858 (copy), "Copies of Letters of Amos A.
Lawrence," Kansas Historical Society.
42. Private Laws Passed
by the Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Kansas, for
the Year 1861: Commenced at the City of Lecompton January
Seventh, and Adjourned to and Concluded at the City of
Lawrence (Lawrence, Sam. A. Medary, Public Printer,
1861), pp. 29-32.
43. United States
Statutes at Large, v. 12, pp. 503, 504.
44. Thomas Carney,
"Inaugural Message of Gov. Thomas Carney," State of Kansas,
Pub. Documents, 1863, p. 14.
45. State of Kansas,
House Journal, 1863, pp. 145, 148, 162, 213, 216;
State of Kansas, Senate Journal, 1863, pp. 133, 140,
142, 158, 159, 170-172; State of Kansas, General
Laws, 1863, pp. 10-12.
46. H. B. 81, Legislature
of 1863, "An Act to Locate the State University," and H. B.
122, Legislature of 1863, "An Act to Locate the State
University at Emporia," "Legislative Collection," Kansas Historical Society Archives; State of Kansas, House
Journal, 1863, pp. 82,.92, 119, 149, 162; Charles
Robinson to Amos A. Lawrence, February 22, 1863 (copy),
"Robinson Papers," Watson library, University of Kansas.
47. "Notes on Father's Talk
to Miss Minnie Moodie," January 29, 1917, in account taken
down by Mrs. E. M. Owen, Lawrence, from her father William
Miller, brother of Josiah Miller, "Josiah and William Miller
Papers, Watson library, University of Kansas; State of
Kansas, House Journal, 1863, pp. 227, 237,238.
48. George L. Anderson,
"Atchison and the Central Branch Country, 1865-1874,"
Kansas Historical Quarterly, v. 28 (Spring, 1962),
pp. 3, 10; Gaeddert, Birth of Kansas, pp. 111, 112,
121; Daily Conservative, Leavenworth, February 12,
March 3, 1863.
49. State of Kansas,
House Journal, 1863, pp. 82, 92, 119, 149, 162, 213,
222-224, 230, 366.
50. State of Kansas,
Senate Journal, 1863, pp. 148-150, 170, 173, 174,
191, 192, 199; State of Kansas, General Laws, 1863,
pp. 115, 116.
51. State of Kansas,
House Journal, 1863, p. 292; State of Kansas,
General Laws, 1863, PP. 93-95.
52. Ibid., pp. 115,
116.
53. Sterling, "Historical Sketch,"Quarter-Centennial
History, p. 69; Willard, History of the Kansas State
College, p. 12; John D. Walters, "The Kansas State Agricultural College,"
Kansas Historical Collections, v. 7 (1901-1902),
p. 170n.; "Report of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction," State
of Kansas, Pub. Documents, 1863, passim.
54. M. W. Sterling, "Early
K. U. Finance," Graduate Magazine, v. 11 April, 1913), pp.
204, 205; Frank W. Blackmar, The Life of Charles
Robinson, the First State Governor of Kansas (Topeka,
Crane and Company, 1902), pp. 343, 344; Isaac T. Goodnow,
Josiah Miller, and Simeon M. Thorp to Thomas Carney, April
30, 1863, and accompanying documents, Report of the
Commissioners Appointed to Locate Permanently the State
University, With Accompanying Papers (n.p., n.d.), pp.
3-9.
55. Charles Robinson to
Amos A. Lawrence, February 22, March 17, 1863 (copies), R.
Z. Mason to Charles Robinson, March 30, 1863, "Robinson
Papers," Watson library, University of Kansas.
56. Sterling, "Historical Sketch,"
Quarter-Centennial History, p. 72.
57. State of Kansas,
House Journal, 1864, pp. 30, 31.
58. H. B. 108, Legislature
of 1864, "An Act Relating to the Endowment Fund of the State
University," "Legislative Collection," Kansas Historical Society Archives; State of Kansas House
Journal, 1864, pp. 123, 264, 265; State of Kansas,
Senate Journal, 1864, p. 213; State of Kansas,
Laws of the State, 1864, p.4.
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