by Tom Castaldi
After several citizens of Fort Wayne raised $13,000 and William
Rockhill donated three acres of land for the college, a board of fifteen
trustees was appointed in 1847, advertisements for students were printed, and
one of the largest buildings then in Fort
Wayne was erected.
This four-story building in the center of a campus at the end of Wayne
Street held as many as one hundred students.
The curriculum was traditional, with required studies
in Latin, Greek and mathematics, as well as moral philosophy, music and
penmanship. In September 1850, the fist
male students were enrolled as a separate division, and the entire student body
was united as the Fort Wayne
Methodist College
in 1853. College life was strictly
regulated. Daily attendance was required
at chapel, Sunday worship and a weekly “Singspriation.” Smoking, chewing, drinking, dancing, card
playing, visiting downtown Fort Wayne
and “roaming the fields” were all forbidden.
One of the most notable students in these early years
was Henry Lawton, who became a career soldier and a model hero of the later
nineteenth century. Another student,
Samuel Morris, also gained considerable local notoriety. The product of Methodist missionary work,
Morris had been known in his West African tribe of Kru as Prince Kaboo. He was converted and came to the United States
and entered the Fort Wayne
Methodist College
in 1892. He had a charming personality
and a zealous religious vocation, which quickly made him one of the best-liked
students at the college. But, in 1893,
he became ill and died. The funeral was
one of the largest ever witnessed in Fort
Wayne. The
touching story of Samuel Morris’ conversion, his zeal for education and his
untimely end was widely told and attracted numerous new students to the college.
Because the college had been in serious financial
trouble throughout the late 1880s, the legacy of Samuel Morris became crucial
to the survival of the school. When Fort Wayne Methodist College
closed in 1894 and moved to Upland
to begin a new life as Taylor
University, one of its
first two buildings was named Samuel Morris Hall in recognition of the spirit of
Prince Kaboo.
Nearly a century later, Taylor University
returned to Fort Wayne
and opened a branch campus on the south side of the city.
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