Teachers College of Indianapolis

Teachers College of Indianapolis (also known as Indianapolis Teachers College) was a Teachers College in Indianapolis, Indiana founded in 1882 by Eliza A. Blaker. It merged with Butler University to become part of its school of education in 1930.[2][3]

Teachers College of Indianapolis
TypePrivate Teachers College
Active1882 (1882)–1930 (1930)
PresidentInstitution closed
Location, ,
39.7994°N 86.1517°W / 39.7994; -86.1517
CampusUrban
NicknameKindergarten Normal Training School
[1]

History

The Teachers College of Indianapolis was first organized by Eliza A. Baker in 1882 under the name of the Kindergarten Normal Training School. The purpose was to train teachers for the kindergartens of the "Indianapolis Free Kindergarten and Children's Aid Society". Blaker served as both superintendent of the Society and president of the Normal School. In 1884 the Society was incorporated with the school as an integral part of it, with the normal school not being separately integrated until 1913. The school was fully funded by donations, with no financial aid from the state of Indiana or other public sources.

Buildings

For the first 21 years of the school it had no permanent space, however in 1903 a permanent building was erected on the northeast corner of 23rd and Alabama streets in Indianapolis, Indiana. The structure was paid for with private subscriptions was known as the William N. Jackson Memorial Institute. In 1915, the Armenia B. Tuttle addition was built; in 1922 the Model Grade School and Kindergarten building was completed and in 1924, the college purchased a double house adjoining the property of which half was used for a kindergarten and half for a president's house.

Coursework and accreditation


Portrait of students at Eliza Blaker's Teachers College in Indianapolis in 1909.

References

  1. Hollingsworth, Virginia Negley (1946). "VIII". The History of the Teachers College of Indianapolis (MSc). Butler University. OCLC 13739051.
  2. Butler University College of Education
  3. George Waller. Butler University : A Sesquicentennial History.
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