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Founder, with his wife , of the Pennsylvania Women's College of Trappe/Collegeville, Montgomery County PA.\(see source)
And see google maps for marker of the site of the College, now long gone. It stood on a bluff on the Western bank of the Perkiomen Creek (now Glenwood Venue and Addison Lane)
earlier associated with Abraham Hunsicker's Freeland Seminary (see Reverend Abraham Detweiler Hunsicker )
Collegeville, Pennsylvania, initially known as Freeland Developed primarily in the 1800s following the completion of the Perkiomen Bridge in 1799. It was named after several early colleges, including Freeland Seminary and the Pennsylvania Female College. Both were succeeded by Ursinus College.
Trappe and Collegeville were formally incorporated as separate boroughs in 1896.
https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/photo_buildings/50/ This circa 1860s black and white photograph shows students posing outside the front entrance to Freeland Seminary. (read also: https://www.newspapers.com/clip/112000498/jeffersonville-inn-mentio... ) > a 1932 newspaper article that mentions Freeland Hall at Ursinus
Freeland Hall was originally known as Freeland Seminary. 10 acres of land was purchased, and Freeland Seminary was built, by Abraham Hunsicker in 1848.
Freeland Seminary, located near Collegeville, Pennsylvania, 27 miles northwest of Philadelphia, was established in 1848 by Abraham Hunsicker (1793-1872), who had been ordained as a minister of the Skippack Mennonite Church in January 1847. In October 1847 he with John Oberholtzer left the Mennonite Church (MC), Franconia Conference) to organize the Eastern Conference of Mennonites. When Abraham Hunsicker was elected as minister "he felt more than ever before the need of a provision for more and better knowledge and resolved before God to found a school that should afford to others means of obtaining that of which he was deprived." Therefore in 1848 he purchased 10 acres of land, erected a building, and established Freeland Seminary. The school opened 7 November 1848 with an enrollment of three, which grew to 79 during the year. The curriculum included the first two years of college. Henry A. Hunsicker, his son, who was the principal, stated, "The school flourished beyond expectation, though it received small patronage from the Mennonites whom it hoped to benefit." Among those who attended the school were John F. Funk and Warren Bean, later a bishop in the Franconia Conference. On 1 January 1850 Henry A. Hunsicker was ordained as minister by the Eastern Conference of Mennonites (General Conference Mennonite).
The Hunsickers and some of their followers pursued a more liberal policy than the Eastern Conference. The differences became so great that by 1851 Abraham Hunsicker, his son Henry A., and others were expelled from the group. In 1854 they established the Trinity Christian Society, an undenominational congregation. Gradually this group disintegrated, which ultimately affected Freeland Seminary.
After 17 years Freeland Seminary was leased to A. H. Fetterolf, and in 1869 a group of men organized a corporation and purchased the school, which then became known as Ursinus College. This corporation primarily served the Reformed Church. During the first 20 years of the existence of Freeland Seminary more than 3,000 young men received their education here.
Abraham Hunsicker was also the founder of "the Pennsylvania Female College."
Bibliography Harder, M. S. "The Origin, Philosophy, and Development of Education Among the Mennonites." PhD Dissertation, University of Southern California, 1949: 274.
Hartzler, John E. Education Among the Mennonites of America. Danvers, 1925: 128-129.
Hunsicker, Henry A. A Genealogical History of the Hunsicker Family. Philadelphia, 1911.
Wenger, John C. History of the Mennonites of the Franconia Conference. Telford, Pennsylvania, 1937.
see also: https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Education,_Mennonite
1813 |
February 19, 1813
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Exeter, Washington County, Rhode Island, United States
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1844 |
1844
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1849 |
1849
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1853 |
March 13, 1853
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Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States
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1904 |
April 9, 1904
Age 91
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Providence Township, Montgomery County, PA, United States
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1904
Age 90
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Riverside cemetery, Norristown, Montgomery County, PA, United States
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