Black and white and tinted glass slides of Manchester College and the North Manchester community, c. 1900-1950. |
1 | [separated] Oakwood Hall and residents |
2 | Street with automobiles [College Avenue?] |
3 | [cracked] Oakwood Hall |
4 | Chapel scene [College Chapel, Administration Building?]: "MC's Service Flag" hangs in front; some of those in attendance wear plain garb and/or headcoverings; numbered 46 |
5 | "Fountain and Spoonholder" and College Avenue houses and oaks |
6 | Eleven men and women and two cars in front of the North Manchester depot |
7 | Powerhouse |
8 | The Bible School building |
9 | Ikenberry Hall and the Bible School building |
10 | college campus drawing showing Ikenberry Hall, the Bible School, Bumgardner Hall, Oakwood Hall, gymnasium, powerhouse, science hall |
11 | Main Street, North Manchester (early cars, horses and buggies, buildings) |
12 | Male students and instructor in wood shop |
13 | Males and females seated in classroom |
14 | Walnut Street Church of the Brethren, North Manchester |
15 | Female students in early home economics lab; labeled MC 9[cracked] |
16 | College Avenue:Ikenberry Hall, the Bible School, Bumgardner Hall, Oakwood Hall, and other buildings; bare oak trees |
17 | Gymnasium (1911-1963) |
18 | Two women in front of Science Hall or Library |
19 | Car on curving dirt road with trees and utility lines |
20 | Young woman wearing headcovering (probably Brethren);labeled MC 6 |
21 | College Avenue house under construction |
22 | Bumgardner Hall; many young oak trees and two men conversing in front of building |
23 | Ikenberry Hall |
24 | Library with students |
25 | "What One Church Did. LaPorte, Indiana. A membership of seventy. Most of them are poor. $800 for a.m. offering, 1920. $1020 for Manchester and Bethany. $1400 for a new church. How did they do it? By practicing stewardship. Tithing." |
26 | [song lyrics?] "Manchester College. "4. Ofttimes when students here do come/They're met by cupid's dart;/And seldom do they leave the place/Without a stolen heart./And later, in their children's hearts,/They plant the germ of love/For their own Alma Mater, dear,/Which always stands above."5. And now, dear friends, where'er you go,/Speak for M.C. a word./And spread her glory far and wide/Till every soul is stirred./We hesitate to close our song--/The half has not been told,/But just before we go, we'll give/Three cheers for the Black and Gold." |
27 | College Greenhouse |
28 | unidentified (not North Manchester) |