Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
society/education

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Monmouth College

Private college in Monmouth, Illinois, US

Monmouth College

Summary

Private college in Monmouth, Illinois, US

FieldValue
nameMonmouth College
former_namesMonmouth Academy (1853–1856)
imageMonmouth College Seal.png
image_size150
latin_nameCollegii Monmouthiensis
mottoLux (Latin)
mottoengLight
established
typePrivate liberal arts college
accreditationHLC
religious_affiliationPresbyterian Church (USA)
endowment$146 million (2021)
presidentPatricia Draves
academic_staff75 (full-time equivalent in 2021)
students727 (autumn 2024)
cityMonmouth, Illinois
countryU.S.
campusSmall town
campus_size112 acre
languageEnglish
athletics_affiliations
sports_nicknameFighting Scots
mascotBig Red
website
coordinates
colorsRed and white
academic_affiliationsAPCU
Annapolis Group
ACM
logoMonmouth College website logo.png
logo_size200

the college in Illinois

Annapolis Group ACM

Monmouth College is a private Presbyterian liberal arts college in Monmouth, Illinois, United States. It enrolls 727 students in Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degree programs including a four-year nursing program and four-year electrical engineering and mechanical engineering programs.

History

Athenian Acropolis]]. The building houses historic classrooms that played a part in educating all living alumni.

Monmouth College was founded on April 18, 1853, by the Second Presbytery of Illinois of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church. Founded as Monmouth Academy, the school became Monmouth College after receiving a charter from the state legislature on September 3, 1856. The college remains affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (USA) and is a member of the Associated Colleges of the Midwest, a consortium of small, private liberal arts colleges. The college's motto "Lux" ("Light") appears on its seal.

The first president, David Wallace built two mission churches in Massachusetts before assuming the Monmouth presidency.

Founded on the eve of the American Civil War, the college immediately faced a crisis. The college's campus was still under construction while virtually the entire male student body left for military service. Two hundred and thirty-two students, faculty members, and trustees served in the Civil War. A quarter of them were wounded and one in eight was killed. Two were awarded the Medal of Honor, and Abner C. Harding, a college trustee who raised a regiment composed largely of Monmouth College students, was commissioned a brigadier general for his leadership in the defense of Fort Donelson in 1863. President Wallace, believing that the college "must educate, whether there be peace or war", kept classes in session for what was then a primarily female student body.

Monmouth was founded as a coeducational college where women and men had equal access to courses. When veterans returning to the college decided to form fraternities, a group of women was determined not to be outdone, and in 1867 established the first fraternity for women, known today as Pi Beta Phi. Three years later, another well-known women's fraternity, Kappa Kappa Gamma, was founded at Monmouth.

Monmouth College had gained national stature by 1911 as shown by its US government classification where 59 colleges and universities ranked higher and 244 ranked lower (out of a total of 345 top colleges).

World War II posed a crisis to the institution similar to that of the Civil War, as male students began enlisting in the service within a month of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and soon only a handful remained on campus. Through an arrangement with the U.S. Navy Department, the college survived by becoming a U.S. Naval Flight Preparatory School, and later offered a V-5 Navy Academic Refresher Unit program for officers. Courses were taught by Monmouth's liberal arts faculty. The Navy later adopted portions of Monmouth's curriculum for training programs nationwide. More than 2,000 Navy men went through Monmouth College, a number of whom would re-enroll at the college after the war funded by the G.I. Bill.

Monmouth's chemistry department gained national prominence in the 1950s when longtime professor William S. Haldeman was recognized with a major award by the American Chemical Society. The Steelman Report on Manpower for Research noted that Monmouth and four other small colleges—Hope, Juniata, St. Olaf and Oberlin—together had "produced more candidates for the doctor's degree in chemistry than Johns Hopkins, Fordham, Columbia, Tulane and Syracuse Universities combined."

Beginning in the 1960s, a secularization movement changed the nature of the college. Concurrent with dwindling financial support from the United Presbyterian Church, the college removed the Church Synod's role in nominating and confirming trustees, thus allowing for the cultivation of new trustees with stronger business acumen and financial resources than those during the college's earlier days. The college otherwise maintained its covenant relationship with the Presbyterian Church.

During the Vietnam War, the military draft (and the ability to avoid the draft by enrolling in college) contributed to increases in college attendance throughout the U.S. Attendance at the college increased but then fell when the draft ended in the 1970s causing financial strain not unlike the losing of students to the Civil War had done in the then distant past.

In 1983, a donation from an alumnus committed $5 million to the endowment and launched a $15 million capital campaign, the largest gift in college history to that point.

During the 1990s, enrollment began a steady increase that would see it more than double over the next two decades, from less than 600 in 1993 to 1,379 in 2009 and then decrease to 753 by 2021. The endowment grew from $23.6 million in 1993 to $87.2 million in 2013 to over $115 million in 2020; $75 million higher than the average for similar colleges. In 2021, the endowment stood at $146 million; $93.6 million more than average Baccalaureate colleges. Between 2002 and 2013, more than $120 million was invested in new construction and renovations to the campus.

Affiliations

Monmouth is a founding member of the Associated Colleges of the Midwest and a member of the Annapolis Group of independent liberal arts colleges. Monmouth also continues its relationship with the Presbyterian Church (USA), although courses in religion are no longer required, and is a member of the Association of Presbyterian Colleges and Universities, of which a Monmouth College president served as chair in 2011–2012. Chemistry at Monmouth is an approved baccalaureate program by the American Chemical Society. Electrical engineering and mechanical engineering are accredited by ABET. The four-year nursing program is approved and conducted in cooperation with Saint Francis Medical Center College of Nursing.

Academics and resources

The ratio of full-time students to full-time instructional faculty is 10:1.

Monmouth College offers 40 major fields of study and 17 pre-professional fields of study (with 851 different courses offered) in the sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, computer sciences, social sciences, foreign languages, classics, and interdisciplinary fields including premedical and pre-engineering studies, and provides an integrated core curriculum. This curriculum includes four signature courses designed to aid students in making connections across disciplines and understanding their education as an integrated whole. The curriculum allows freshman students to take advanced classes, and senior students to take introductory courses.

For freshmen, the only course requirement is one of the first-year seminar courses called Introduction to Liberal Arts which are limited to 16 to 18 students and shares a common focus on critical analysis and development of written and oral argument. The other 31 courses (usually four are taken per semester) required for graduation can be elected by the student.

The most popular majors are: Business Administration, Physical Education, Psychology, and Economics. Sixteen percent of Monmouth students in the class of 2013 were double majors. A small number of triple majors and interdisciplinary majors also exist. Within five years of graduation, more than 60 percent of Monmouth College alumni attend graduate school or another form of ongoing education.

A survey taken six months after the class of 2023 had graduated showed that 98% of Monmouth graduates were employed (or were in graduate school).

Admission

Admissions to Monmouth are classified as "selective". For the Class of 2017 (enrolled fall 2013), Monmouth received 2972 applications and accepted 1914 (64.4%). In 2022, the acceptance rate was 66%.

In 2023, 51% of students were female and 51% were male. Students come from 28 states and 21 countries. 27% were students of color and 1% were international students.

Associated Colleges of the Midwest consortium

Monmouth is a founding member of the fourteen-member Associated Colleges of the Midwest (ACM) consortium. The colleges share resources and develop and operate common off-campus academic programs. The members of the ACM include colleges in the middle west region of the United States and include Carleton College and Grinnell College among others.

Study abroad and off-campus

Over seventy off-campus programs are available in over fifty countries and run for as little as ten days or as long as a year but generally last one semester. Programs provided through the Associated Colleges of the Midwest consortium take place usually for one semester at over a dozen locales around the globe and include cultural, scientific, economic, historical and other forms of study and research. These programs include scientific research at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, government interning in Washington, D.C., and cultural activities in Florence, Italy. Monmouth College faculty frequently teach in these programs along with other members of the consortium including Carleton College, Grinnell College, and eleven other colleges. Other programs run exclusively by Monmouth College include a program in Scotland.

Fellowships and internships

Incoming new students can participate in research projects with their professors and returning upper classmen during the summer prior to their enrollment
Incoming new students can participate in research projects with their professors and returning upper classmen during the summer prior to their enrollment.

Hundreds of internships are arranged annually for students through the Wackerle Career and Leadership Center. These include public service work around the United States. Students have also interned, beginning as early as the first year, at such businesses as Caterpillar Inc., Deere & Co., Monsanto, law offices, and medical offices. Summer internships are also available in such offices as Admission, Financial Aid, Student Life, Hewes Library, Marketing communication, and fundraising.

Summer research opportunities exist for students and also incoming freshmen and transfers in the sciences and other areas of study. This research is conducted with professors and students working in groups and have included such topics as lightning research, archaeology and music. Included are a stipend and room and board expenses.

Campus

Dedicated in 2013, Monmouth College's Center for Science and Business

Among the resources on the 112 acre campus are academic buildings, athletic fields and facilities, three wildlife sanctuaries for the study of ecology, and trails and other areas for hiking. Notable resources include the Shields Collection of antiquities, the largest privately held collection of Native American artifacts in the region, the only direct copy of the Canopus Stone outside of the Cairo Museum, an astronomical observatory, the Mellinger writing center, the Wackerle Career and Leadership center, and sporting facilities. The Kasch Performance Hall provides a traditional setting for musical performances with excellent acoustics and includes a refurbished three-manual pipe organ. The Wells Theater has been upgraded with high tech lighting and sound equipment. The "black box" experimental Fusion Theatre is located in downtown Monmouth and opened in 2013.

There are ten residence halls, an intercultural house, seven Greek houses, use. The campus has been expanded between 2000 and 2007 with three new residence halls, an apartment complex, an athletic complex, tennis complex, baseball, and soccer fields. It reopened the renovated Dahl Chapel and Auditorium containing a 600-seat English Chapel style recital hall/auditorium as well as music rehearsal space in 2003. In 2008, the April Zorn Memorial Stadium was completed, enlarging the seating capacity for football, lacrosse and track events to 2,600 and adding a new press box.

The largest building on campus is the 154000 ft2 Huff Athletic Center. It encompasses the college's existing Glennie Gymnasium and includes a field house with indoor tennis courts and track, natatorium, fitness complex, wellness suite, locker and training rooms, classrooms and offices.

Opened in 2013 is the $42 million, 138000 ft2 Center for Science and Business, which houses the departments of accounting, biology, chemistry, economics, mathematics & computer science, physics, psychology and political economy & commerce. The facility introduces a cadaver lab, the Adolphson Observatory with research-grade 20-inch reflecting telescope, nuclear physics lab, two parallel computing facilities, a moot boardroom, tax preparation facilities, one-way observation labs, and an FDA-approved nutrition lab in addition to other laboratories.

The college maintains a digital television studio and media (computer) lab, a web-based radio station, digital classrooms, and three art galleries. The college also maintains the LeSuer Nature Preserve, a 16.5 acre nature preserve, the Hamilton Research Pond, a prairie grass laboratory and a riparian property on the banks of the Mississippi river for the purposes of wetland biological research.

The Ivory Quinby House, built by a founder of Monmouth College, is now the home of the President of the college and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Students attend functions at the home, including dinners and discussion groups.

Hewes Library

Housing about a half million items, the Hewes Library also contains ancient antiquities and thousands of Native American artifacts.

With over a half-million items catalogued, the Hewes Library houses collections of antiquities, rare books, art, and archaeology. It also provides computer laboratories and tech support. A major remodeling in 2000 resulted in a modern open-stack facility.

Sustainability

Monmouth College has reduced its energy consumption and has increased its recycling contributions in recent years. These efforts include energy reduction through the installation of new heating boilers throughout campus, the use of energy-efficient lighting, low-flow water systems and the replacement of windows in nearly all older buildings. The Center for Science and Business includes energy efficient heating/cooling systems and heat recapture exhaust systems among other features. Recycling efforts extend into every student residence and office building. Some students have also committed themselves to sustainability of food production by opting to live in the college's Garden theme housing which grows its own organic food and harvests its own honey using college facilities including seven acres set aside for such use. The college provides scholarships for students who have demonstrated leadership in sustainability prior to enrolling.

The college provides free access to bicycles for student use, and an electric vehicle recharging station is located on campus.

Students' life

Full-time students make up 100% of the population of about 725 undergraduate students. Students represent about 28 states and about nine countries. Ninety-three percent of students live on campus in dormitories, theme houses, Greek housing, or apartment buildings.

There are over 120 student groups funded by the student government or the college, including cultural, religious, publications, professional, honors, fine and performing arts, political advocacy, service groups, housing, and athletic organizations.

Traditions

Procured by the senior class of 1903 as its graduation gift to the institution, Monmouth College's Civil War-era cannon spent 50 years at the bottom of a creek after having been stolen by the rival junior class. Today the restored weapon, which is technically an artillery rifle, signals Monmouth College touchdowns in the annual Homecoming football game.
Procured by the senior class of 1903 as its graduation gift to the institution, this Civil War-era cannon spent 50 years at the bottom of a creek after having been stolen by the rival junior class

The college's Scottish heritage is reflected in its bagpipes and drums band that have won national titles.

The freshmen walkout is an autumn event that acquaints new students with the town.

Scholars' day held in conjunction with founders' day celebrates academic achievements with a variety of events. The college also cancels classes for a day and holds an honors convocation.

The college owns a restored civil war cannon (technically called an artillery rifle). It was once used to signal touchdowns the Fighting Scots made at homecoming football games.

Safety

The college is located in a residential neighborhood of Victorian homes, removing it from the safety concerns of many urban campuses. The college provides security patrols, an emergency broadcasting system and emergency text messaging system, plus extensive security lighting and the use of security cameras.

Athletics

thumb|170px|Monmouth athletics logo Monmouth College is a member of the Midwest Conference and the NCAA Division III. The college offers eleven varsity sports for men and eleven for women. The college has won the Midwest Conference men's all-sports trophy each of the last two years. The college also offers intramural sports.

The athletic teams' nickname, Fighting Scots, was coined in 1928 to reflect the Scotch-Irish heritage of the college's founders. "Fighting Scots" is a registered trademark of Monmouth College.

Monmouth Fighting Scotsborder=1color= white }}"Men's sportsMonmouth Fighting Scotsborder=1color= white }}"Women's sports
BaseballBasketball
BasketballCross country
Cross countryGolf
FootballSoccer
GolfSoftball
SoccerSwimming
SwimmingTennis
TennisTrack and field
Track and fieldVolleyball

The Monmouth College men's track and field team placed third in the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championships on May 26, 2007. It was the first national team trophy that a Monmouth College sports team has won. The following year, the men's track and field team took second place in the NCAA Division III Indoor Track and Field Championships. Monmouth's track program has produced nine individual national champions, the most recent of which was James Wilson, who won the NCAA Division III indoor long jump national title in 2013.

In 2014, the college's sports teams and student-athletes won awards for academic achievement including national academic honors from seven different organizations. Volleyball and Men's Golf earned team academic accolades from their respective national coaches' organizations for their high team GPA. Eleven team members also earned individual national honors for their academic excellence including one student who became Monmouth's first winner of the NCAA's Elite 89 Award, given to the student-athlete with the highest GPA participating in one of the NCAA's 89 sponsored championships. Four softball players, three track student-athletes, two women's golfers and a men's tennis player also received national academic honors for the 2013–14 academic year.

Monmouth (in red jersey) football game in 2009 vs. St. Thomas Tommies

Monmouth began its college football rivalry with Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois in 1888, making it the sixth-oldest college football rivalry in the country. The two schools play annually for the Bronze Turkey trophy in November (originally on Thanksgiving). ESPN's Jeff Merron has classified the trophy as the fifth-most-unusual in college football. The Bronze Turkey has been stolen several times and was at one time buried under the old MC indoor track for five years. Monmouth leads the series with 71 wins, 50 losses and 10 ties.

The Monmouth College football team has appeared in the NCAA Division III Playoffs in 2005, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2016, 2017, 2019, and 2025. Monmouth's recent varsity football alumni include two former quarterbacks who went on to the National Football League. Through 2013, Alex Tanney '11 has played for Kansas City, Dallas, Cleveland, Tampa, and the New York Giants. Mitch Tanney '06 is director of analytics for the Chicago Bears.

The men's water polo team won the CWPA Division III Club National Championship in 2012.

Monmouth College was a member of the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference from 1921 to 1937.

Club and intramural athletics

Monmouth College fields over twenty club athletic teams for men and women spanning about a dozen indoor and outdoor sports. These include sand volleyball, ultimate frisbee, badminton, floor hockey, wrestling and table tennis in addition to the more traditional flag football, basketball, and softball. Some teams are co-educational.

Music

The Dahl Chapel and Auditorium is the oldest academic building on the Monmouth College campus. It was built in 1896 and renovated in 2003

In the Monmouth College music department, majors and non-majors perform in ensembles including chorales, male and female a capella, marching band, concert bands, and an orchestra. The college also has a gospel choir and provides opportunities for musical theatre. The chorale has toured nationally, visiting nearly half the states in the US, and internationally, including trips to Scotland. The group has performed in Carnegie Hall in New York City. The music department subsidizes some vocal ensembles.

All classes, ensembles, and lessons are taught by members of the faculty who are also active performers.

The Kasch Performance Hall, a 600-seat concert hall and stage which is inside the Dahl Chapel, received a $3 million restoration in 2003. Faculty offices, most lessons and classes, practice rooms, and a piano lab are located in Austin Hall, which is two blocks away.

Rankings

In 2024, US News ranked Monmouth College as 129th among National Liberal Arts Colleges and 34th in Top Performers on Social Mobility. The college received an "A" from Forbes in 2023 for financial strength putting it in the top 20% of colleges and universities nationwide.

Notable alumni

Artists and collectors

  • Ralph Waddell Douglass 1920, award-winning artist; author, Calligraphic Lettering style; coauthor & illustrator, Mesaland Series of children's books
Harold Arthur Poling in 1986, chairman and CEO of Ford Motor Company.
  • Jorge Guillermo 1968, royal spouse to Princess Christina of the Netherlands and brother-in-law to Queen Beatrix; noted art collector
  • Edgar Everett Martin 1921, cartoonist, Boots and Her Buddies, reached an audience of 700 newspapers and 60 million readers

Business leaders and economists

  • Calvin Bryce Hoover 1922, founder of the field of comparative economic systems; noted economist and professor, Duke University; author, The Economic Life of Soviet Russia in 1931
  • James L. Pate 1963, chairman, chief executive, Pennzoil-Quaker State Co.; Assist. Secr. of Commerce, spokesman, U.S. President Gerald Ford; chairman, Devon Energy Corp.; chief economist, B.F. Goodrich Corporation
  • Harold "Red" Poling 1949, chairman, CEO, Ford Motor Company[[File:US Navy 050706-N-0000X-001 Vice Admiral James B. Stockdale.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|Vice Admiral James B. Stockdale, while President of the U.S. Naval War College. U.S. Navy, in 1979]]
  • Theodore P. Shonts 1876, American lawyer; industrialist; chairman, Panama Canal Commission; railroad president

College presidents and deans

  • Charles C. McCracken 1908, president, University of Connecticut (1930–1935); Ph.D., Harvard University
  • Thomas H. McMichael 1886, M.A. 1889, President, Monmouth College (1903–1936); moderator, Presbyterian Church of N. America (1915)
  • Maurice H. Rees 1904, medical educator, Dean, U. of Colorado School of Medicine, 1925 to 1945
  • James Stockdale 1946, Vice Admiral, U.S. Navy; U. S. Vice-Presidential candidate; Medal of Honor; President, Naval War College
  • Charles F. Wishart 1894, president, College of Wooster 1921–1944; Moderator, Presbyterian General Assembly 1924

Engineers and architects

John Findley Wallace, chief engineer of the Panama Canal, in 1902
  • Dan Everett Waid 1887, chief architect, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. of New York; President, New York State Board of Examiners and Registration of Architects (1915–1923); president, American Institute of Architects (1924–1926); Fellow, American Institute of Architects
  • John Findley Wallace 1872, chief engineer, Panama Canal project and the Illinois Central Railroad

Journalists and writers

  • Fletcher S. Basset 1869, author; founder of the Chicago Folk-Lore Society; American naval officer
  • Dean E. Fischer 1958, Assistant Secretary of State, Public Affairs; spokesman, U.S. State Department; journalist, Time magazine
  • Roger J. Fritz 1950, management consultant, columnist, international speaker, author of 63 management development and motivational books; 17th president of Willamette University, Oregon, 1969–1972
  • Jane Kurtz 1973, author of over 40 children's books; Golden Kite Award (best picture book text); Year's Best Children's Books award (The Washington Post)
  • Chad Simpson 1998, Micro Award, short and flash fiction author; Teresa A. White Award, Quiddity International Literary Journal.
  • Melissa Scholes Young 1997, noted writer; author; professor of literature

Judges including state supreme courts justices

  • John F. Main 1885, Justice, Washington Supreme Court 1912–1942
  • Robert William Porter 1949, United States chief federal judge; attorney; mayor, Richardson, Texas
  • Silas Wright Porter 1879, justice, Kansas Supreme Court (1905–1923); chairman, Republican State Convention
  • Lyman B. Sutter 1928, mayor, Long Beach, California; municipal court judge

Military including Medal of Honor recipients

  • Reid K. Beveridge 1964, Brig. Gen. (ret.), National Guard, U.S.; functionary, Presbyterian Church; journalist
  • James K. L. Duncan 1866, Medal of Honor recipient, physician
  • Robert Hugo Dunlap 1942, major in the United States Marine Corps, Medal of Honor recipient
  • Stephan T. Johnson 1972, Major general, United States Marine Corps
  • Philip G. Killey 1963, United States Air Force Major General (ret.); Adjutant General, South Dakota National Guard; director, Air National Guard; Commander, First Air Force
  • George H. Palmer 1861, US Army Medal of Honor recipient

National political leaders

  • Mohd Nasir Hashim 1969, member, Selangor State Assembly, Kota Damansara, Malaysia; president, Socialist Party of Malaysia
  • William Medcalf Kinsey 1869, U.S. Representative from Missouri; circuit court judge; attorney
  • Robert Thaddeus McLoskey 1928, U.S. Representative from Illinois; member, Illinois House of Representatives
  • Ilo Browne Wallace 1911, Second Lady of the United States; co-founder, Pioneer Hi-Bred International; sponsor,

Philosophers and clergy

  • Ann Garry 1965, founding director, Center for the Study of Genders and Sexualities; chair of the Department of Philosophy, California State University, Los Angeles; Humphrey Chair of Feminist Philosophy, University of Waterloo; Fulbright lecturer, University of Tokyo and Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
  • Robert H. Meneilly 1945, founding pastor, 7000-member Village Presbyterian Church; author
  • Samuel M. Thompson 1924, philosopher, author of three bestselling textbooks of Philosophy; co-author, Confession of 1967, a major statement of faith of the Presbyterian Church (USA)
  • William J. Winslade 1963, author, research principal of philosophy, medicine, and ethics; professor, philosophy of medicine, University of Texas

Playwrights and actors

  • Jim Verraros 2004, dance musician; actor
  • Helen Wagner 1938, actress, star of As the World Turns; 2004 Lifetime Achievement award, Academy of Television Arts and Sciences
  • William Young 1863, playwright, writer, actor, known for his play adaptation of the novel Ben-Hur

Professional sports

  • Francis Louis "Jug" Earp 1921, N. F. L. player, Green Bay Packers; inductee, Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame; player, N. Y. Yankees football
  • Keith Frank Molesworth 1928, Chicago Bears football player; backfield coach, Pittsburgh Steelers; head coach, Baltimore Colts; vice president and director of personnel, Baltimore Colts
  • Joe Tait 1959, longtime radio voice, Cleveland Cavaliers
  • Alex Tanney 2011, N. F. L. quarterback; assistant coach, Philadelphia Eagles

Reformers and activists

  • Mary G. Charlton Edholm 1876, noted reformer, journalist, editor
  • Martha Lena Morrow Lewis 1892, national lecturer, Women's Christian Temperance Union; organizer, women's suffrage; first woman member, National Executive Committee, Socialist Party of America
  • Robert Wilson McClaughry 1860, Warden, United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kansas; early leader in modern penal reform; General Superintendent of Police, City of Chicago
  • Rachel J. Nicol 1868, co-founder, Pi Beta Phi, first secret collegiate society for women patterned after men's fraternities; physician (M.D.)
  • Danielle Nierenberg 1995, activist; author; journalist; co-founder/president, Food Tank: The Food Think Tank
  • Harriet Shetler 1938, co-founder, (American) National Alliance on Mental Illness; editor
  • Dorothy Vellenga 1959, Peace Corps volunteer; sociologist; author
  • John M. Work 1891, founding member, executive secretary, Socialist Party of America; author.

Scientists

  • Karen Bush 1965, award-winning American biochemist; editor of peer-reviewed scientific journal
  • Kennedy J. Reed 1967, theoretical physicist, Lawrence Livermore Nat. Lab.; founder, Nat. Physical Science Consortium (NPSC); Presidential Award, Excellence in Science, Math. and Engineering Mentoring; Fellow, American Physical Society; Fellow, American Assn. for the Advancement of Science;
  • David Turnbull 1936, chemist, major contributor to solidification theory and glass formation; elected to National Academy of Sciences; Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, awarded the Japan Prize and the Franklin Medal

State governors, lieutenent governors, senators and representatives

  • Robert Hendricks Brink 1968, representative, Virginia House of Delegates; attorney
  • Alfred L. Buchan 1869, member, Wisconsin State Assembly; physician
  • Clarence F. Buck 1892, senator, Illinois State Senate; newspaper editor
  • Herschel L. Carnahan 1901, 30th Lieutenant Governor of California; attorney
  • [[File:Charles A. Sprague.jpg|thumb|upright=0.7|Charles A. Sprague, Governor of Oregon in 1940]]James R. Carpenter 1889, Wyoming state senator; inventor
  • Sarah Bond Hanley 1887, Illinois State Representative; one of the first two women in the Illinois State Assembly; delegate to the Democratic National Convention 1924; a founding member of Democratic Women's Club in the U.S.
  • Robert S. Hamilton 1892, Illinois State Senator, attorney
  • Mattie Hunter 1976, senator, Illinois State Senate; Senate Majority Caucus Whip
  • James Montgomery Rice 1864, American army colonel; lawyer; member, Illinois House of Representatives; contributed to the founding of the U. S. National Guard
  • James H. Rupp 1940, Illinois state senator; mayor, Decatur, Illinois, and businessman
  • Richard Elihu Sloan 1877, Governor, Arizona Territory; Assoc. Justice, Arizona Territorial Supreme Court; judge, U. S. District Court
  • Charles A. Sprague 1910, Governor, Oregon (1939–1943); editor, publisher, Oregon Statesman
  • Earl W. Vincent 1909, Republican U.S. Representative, Iowa 9th congressional district; federal judge; fifth judicial district of Iowa judge
  • Jonathan C. Wright 1987, judge, Ill. Circuit Court; member, Ill. House of Rep.; Logan County States Attorney

There are about 12,600 living alumni.

References

References

  1. "Monmouth College".
  2. "Facts & Stats".
  3. "Monmouth College Student Population".
  4. "Facts & Stats".
  5. (2025-08-27). "Monmouth College welcomes first nursing class in new collaborative program with OSF HealthCare". WQAD.
  6. "'A Proud Day for the College'".
  7. "About us".
  8. (May 30, 1911). "Monmouth College in the War of the Rebellion". Monmouth College Oracle.
  9. "DUNCAN, JAMES K. L.".
  10. Rankin, Jeff. (September 3, 2011). "MC student hero remembered on 150th anniversary of Civil War battle".
  11. "PALMER, GEORGE H.".
  12. "Harding, Abner Clark – Biographical Information".
  13. "Harding, Abner Clark, (1807–1874)".
  14. (1920). "Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities". G. Banta Company, 1920.
  15. "History of Pi Beta Phi". Pi Beta Phi.
  16. (1920). "Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities". G. Banta Company, 1920.
  17. "In The Beginning".
  18. (August 6, 2014). "How Did the Federal Government Rate Your College a Century Ago?".
  19. (November 20, 1950). "Midwest Award Winner Accents Importance of Graduate Work". Chemical & Engineering News.
  20. Steelman, John R.. (11 October 1947). "Manpower for research, Vol. 4 of Science and Public Policy: A Report to the President". The President's Scientific Research Board.
  21. Meyer, Daniel. (2002) A Thousand Hearts’ Devotion: A History of Monmouth College, Monmouth College. pp. 122–147. {{ISBN. 0-9720303-0-1
  22. (September 3, 2009). "Monmouth College sees record enrollment".
  23. (2024). "U.S. News Best Colleges". U.S. News and World Report.
  24. "Endowment market values and investment rates of return". National Association of College and University Business Officers.
  25. "Monmouth College {{!}} Data USA".
  26. "Monmouth College {{!}} Data USA".
  27. "Largest Freshman Class at 396".
  28. (June 8, 2015). "Member Colleges". Annapolis Group.
  29. "About Liberal Arts".
  30. "ACS Approved Programs". American Chemical Society.
  31. "School Profile {{!}} College Scorecard".
  32. "About the Introduction to Liberal Arts".
  33. "Facts & Stats".
  34. "Monmouth College". Carnegie Foundation.
  35. "Monmouth College – Associated College of The Midwest". ACM.
  36. "Colleges". ACM.
  37. (13 April 2009). "ACM Off-Campus Study Programs". ACM.
  38. "Monmouth College Off Campus Study". Monmouth College Off Campus Study.
  39. "Wackerle Career and Leadership Center".
  40. "About the College".
  41. "Huff Athletic Center".
  42. "Center for Science and Business {{!}} Monmouth College".
  43. (March 20, 2014). "Gift from Adolphsons funds observatory atop CSB".
  44. Morton, Jenna. (February 13, 2013). "Monmouth's New Science and Business Center Attracts More Students". W Quad cities news 8.
  45. William, Urban.''Ivory Quinby, The Burlington Railroad, and Monmouth College''
  46. Breeding, Marshall. (August 10, 2014). "Hewes Library".
  47. "Center for Science and Business".
  48. McNamara, Barry. (March 21, 2013). "MC exceeding its recycling projections".
  49. "Sustainability Scholarship".
  50. "Charging locations".
  51. "Organizations".
  52. "Traditions".
  53. (1 April 2012). "Scholars Day returns on Scots Day; Honors Convo also on tap".
  54. "The Monmouth College Cannon".
  55. "Health, Safety & Security".
  56. "Midwest Conference Member Information". Midwest Conference.
  57. [[List of NCAA Division III institutions]]
  58. Monmouth College Wellness Office. [http://www2.monm.edu/wellness/rec-sports/sports2.htm "Intramural Sports"]. Retrieved on October 16, 2015.
  59. (May 25, 2012). "Fighting Scots Nickname and Famous Athletes". Monmouth Scots.
  60. (May 25, 2012). "Bronze Turkey". Monmouth Scots.
  61. "ESPN.com: Page 2 : These really stand out in the case".
  62. Wester, Tim. (23 November 2019). "UW-Whitewater knocks out Monmouth in NCAA Division III football playoff opener".
  63. (July 21, 2013). "Jay Ratliff on Cowboys' PUP list; Demetress Bell signs". NFL.com.
  64. (November 26, 2013). "Source: Cleveland Browns sign QB Alex Tanney from the Dallas Cowboys' practice squad".
  65. (May 20, 2014). "Tampa Bay Buccaneers Sign Alex Tanney and Cameron Brate".
  66. Mayer, Larry. (June 19, 2014). "Bears hire Mitch Tanney to fill new analytics position". Chicago Bears.
  67. "Members – Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference". Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.
  68. "Conference Champions". College Football Data Warehouse.
  69. "The Monmouth Chorale.".
  70. (April 1, 2013). "Campus news".
  71. "Music".
  72. Whitford, Emma. "Forbes 2023 College Financial Grades: The Nation's Strongest And Weakest Schools".
  73. "ArchiveGrid : Ralph Douglass papers, 1954–1964.".
  74. (1996-11-10). "A POSSESSING PRINCESS".
  75. Denise. (2007-02-14). "De sinaasappels blijven in de familie".
  76. [http://www.newspaperarchive.com/ Lynn, Ernest. "Edgar Martin: Fathered the 'Sweetheart of the Comics'".''Altoona Mirror'', September 2, 1960.]
  77. (9 March 2020). "Guardian cartoon of cow in relation to Priti Patel sparks outrage amongst diaspora in Britain". [[The Hindu]].
  78. ''The Economic Life of Soviet Russia''. New York, The Macmillan Company, 1931.
  79. Pate, Joel (February 17, 2003). "[PATE] Texas Obit – James Leonard Pate". ''rootsweb''. rootsweb. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
  80. "List of Public Companies Worldwide, Letter". ''Businessweek''. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
  81. Abram, Lynwood (January 21, 2003). "Deaths: James Pate, former Pennzoil CEO". ''Houston Chronicle''. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
  82. (October 5, 1993). "Ford chairman Harold Poling retiring, replacement named". [[Sun Journal (Lewiston).
  83. Matthew, Parker. (2008). "Hell's Gorge: The Battle to Build the Panama Canal". Arrow.
  84. (1907-05-05). "How Theodore P. Shonts Works". The New York Times.
  85. Pennsylvania Society of New York. (1920). "Yearbook". The Society.
  86. Ballestrini, Christine. (2019-05-24). "University of Connecticut Office of the President {{!}} History".
  87. (1957-08-04). "Dr. C. C. McCracken Dies; Former State College Head". The Hartford Courant.
  88. Robinson, Luther Emerson. (1927). "Historical and Biographical Record of Monmouth and Warren County Illinois". Munsell Publishing Company.
  89. (1945). "Maurice H. Rees". Academic Medicine.
  90. (2017-02-16). "Stockdale, James Bond – National Aviation Hall of Fame : National Aviation Hall of Fame".
  91. Charles Frederick Wishart, Jean Snyder Felt, ''Memoirs of Charles Frederick Wishart, 1870–1960 ''(S.l.: s.n., 1982).
  92. White, James Terry. (1893). "The National Cyclopædia of American Biography". New York : J. T. White & company.
  93. White, James Terry. (1893). "The National cyclopædia of American biography". New York: J. T. White & company.
  94. Matthew Parker. ''Hell's Gorge: The Battle to Build the Panama Canal''. pp. 214–216.
  95. (1902). "A Biographical History With Portraits of Prominent Men of the Great West".
  96. "Sketch of Lieutenant Fletcher S. Bassett". The International Folk-Lore Congress of the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, July, 1893.
  97. Zumwalt, Rosemary Levy. (1988-06-22). "American Folklore Scholarship: A Dialogue of Dissent". Indiana University Press.
  98. "Nomination of Dean E. Fischer To Be an Assistant Secretary of State | The American Presidency Project".
  99. (March 27, 2011). "DR. ROGER J. FRITZ's Obituary on". Legacy.com.
  100. Hertzel, Laurie. (31 March 2011). "Author Jane Kurtz to receive this year's Kerlan Award".
  101. "Teresa A. White Literary Award: "Buck-a-Word" Contest".
  102. "Melissa Scholes Young".
  103. Stock, Eric. (December 20, 2018). "Logan County State's Attorney Named Circuit Judge". WGLT 89.1 FM NPR from Illinois State University.
  104. "History of the Federal Judiciary".
  105. "KS Courts – Historical Listing of Supreme Court Justices".
  106. (2022-12-04). "History of Longbeach, Office of Mayor".
  107. (2012-05-24). "Brigadier General Reid K. Beveridge".
  108. "James K. L. Duncan".
  109. (August 13, 2013). "Civil War (A-L) Medal of Honor Recipients". U.S. Army Center Of Military History.
  110. (October 22, 2012). "Captain Robert Hugo Dunlap". National Society, Sons of the American Revolution.
  111. (March 30, 2000). "Robert Dunlap Medal of Honor recipient dies". Eagle Publications.
  112. "DUNLAP, ROBERT HUGO". Home of Heroes.
  113. "Stephen Johnson – Recipient".
  114. "Al-Anbar Awakening, V. 1, American Perspectives: U.S. Marines and Counterinsurgency in Iraq, 2004-2009". Government Printing Office.
  115. Personnel, United States Congress House Committee on Armed Services Subcommittee on Military. (2008). "Examination of the Force Requirements Determination Process: Hearing Before the Military Personnel Subcommittee of the Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives, One Hundred Tenth Congress, First Session, Hearing Held, January 30, 2007". U.S. Government Printing Office.
  116. "Guard recognizes Killey for lifelong service".
  117. "Valor awards for George Henry Palmer". Military Times.
  118. (24 April 2008). "Assemblyman reaches out to the poor".
  119. "KINSEY, William Medcalf, (1846–1931)".
  120. "McLOSKEY, Robert Thaddeus, (1907–1990)".
  121. Saxon, Wolfgang. (1981-02-25). "ILO BROWNE WALLACE, 92, WIDOW OF A VICE PRESIDENT TO ROOSEVELT". The New York Times.
  122. DesAutels, Peggy. (October 30, 2013). "Ann Garry: November 2013". American Philosophical Association.
  123. Garry, Ann. "CSULA Emeriti Faculty Biography". California State University of Los Angeles.
  124. Rice, Glenn. (July 22, 2021). "Bob Meneilly, courageous Johnson County pastor who took on racism, extremism, dies". Kansas City Star.
  125. (1996). "Pray as You Go: On Living Your Faith in the Nineties". Andrews and McMeel.
  126. Monmouth Moves magazine, Monmouth College, August 1983, pp. 6–7.
  127. "William J Winslade, PhD, JD". imh.utmb.edu.
  128. Rushfield, Richard. (2011). "American idol : the untold story". Hyperion.
  129. Hevesi, Dennis. (May 3, 2010). "Helen Wagner, Longtime Actress on 'As the World Turns,' Dies at 91". New York Times.
  130. (1903). "The Drama: Its History; Literature and Influence on Civilization". Athenian Society.
  131. Burt, Daniel S.. (2004). "The Chronology of American Literature: America's Literary Achievements from the Colonial Era to Modern Times". Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
  132. (1899). "Current Literature". Current Literature Publishing Company.
  133. (1969-01-08). "Jug Earp". The Pro Football Archives.
  134. "Keith Molesworth NFL Football Statistics".
  135. "Joe Tait Wham! The Voice of the Cleveland Cavaliers". Cleveland Seniors.
  136. (December 16, 2014). "Titans Place TE Brett Brackett on IR; Sign TE Matthew Mulligan to Active Roster". Tennessee Titans.
  137. (1906). "Who's Who in America". Marquis Who's Who..
  138. Mari Jo Buhle, ''Women and American Socialism, 1870–1920''. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 1981; p. 162.
  139. Solon DeLeon with Irma C. Hayssen and Grace Poole (eds.), ''The American Labor Who's Who''. New York: Hanford Press, 1925; p. 138.
  140. (1921). "Robert Wilson McClaughry: 1839–1920". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  141. Newcomer, Mabel. (1959). "A Century of Higher Education for American Women". Zenger Publishing Company.
  142. Becque, Fran. "Doctors Who Wore Badges: Fraternity Women in Medicine 1867–1902".
  143. (December 28, 2010). "Danielle Nierenberg". The Guardian.
  144. (December 31, 2012). "A New Year's Recipe for Fixing the Food System". Businessweek.
  145. Shreeves, Robin. (January 19, 2013). "FoodTank: Planting the seeds of activism". Mother Nature Network.
  146. Martin, Douglas. (2010-04-03). "Harriet Shetler, Who Helped to Found Mental Illness Group, Dies at 92". The New York Times.
  147. (2010-04-10). "Harriet Shetler (1917-2010)". The Boston Globe.
  148. Vellenga, Dorothy D. "The Widow among the Matrilineal Akan of Southern Ghana" in Betty Potash, ed., ''Widows in African Societies: Choices and Constraints'' (Stanford University Press, 1986): 220-240. {{ISBN. 9780804766562.
  149. Peace Corps (U.S.) (1961). ''Annual Report to Congress''. The Corps. p. 30.
  150. (1956). "David A. Shannon. The Socialist Party of America: A History. New York: Macmillan Company. 1955; pp. xi, 320.". The American Historical Review.
  151. "Bush receives international award for contributions to antimicrobial chemotherapy".
  152. "Karen Bush honored for contributions to antimicrobial drug development".
  153. "Karen Bush, Ph.D.".
  154. Distinguished African American Scientists of the Twentieth Century, James H. Kessler, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1996. {{ISBN. 0897749553.
  155. David Jackson, "Obama: U.S. 'outpaced' by other nations in math and science", USA TODAY, 2010-01-06.
  156. "ICSU Executive board".
  157. Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring, Office of the Press Secretary, The White House, July 9, 2009.
  158. "Lawrence Livermore's Kennedy Reed elected AAAS fellow".
  159. ''Science,'' 6 July 2007: Vol. 317. no. 5834, pp. 56–57; {{doi. 10.1126/science.1145490.
  160. "Robert H. Brink (D) * Age: 54 ...". Washington Post.
  161. (1889). "Wisconsin Blue Book 1889, 'Biographical Sketch of Alfred L. Buchan'". State of Wisconsin.
  162. (1924). "Illinois Blue Book 1923-1924, Biographical Sketch of Clarence F. Buck". State of Illinois.
  163. (1944-09-02). "Clarence F. Buck Dies at Home in Monmouth". Freeport Journal-Standard.
  164. (2019-05-23). "In 1928, ex-Riverside man became California's lieutenant governor — but he died tragically 13 years later".
  165. Holmes, Elmer Wallace. (1912). "History of Riverside County, California: With Biographical Sketches of the Leading Men and Women of the County who Have Been Identified with Its Growth and Development from the Early Days to the Present". Historic Record Company.
  166. (1915). "Men of Wyoming: The National Newspaper Reference Book of Wyoming Containing Photographs and Biographies of Over Three Hundred Men Residents". C.S. Peterson.
  167. "J ross carpenter".
  168. Office, United States Patent. (1938). "Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office". U.S. Department of Commerce..
  169. (February 3, 2022). "Research Response: ILLINOIS WOMEN IN CONGRESS AND THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY".
  170. (1910). "Illinois Blue Book 1909–1910, Biographical Sketch of Robert S. Hamilton".
  171. (1967). "Marissa Its People and History 1867 100 Years 1967 (Biographical Sketch of Robert Sherman Hamilton)". Marissa Centennial, Incorporated, Everett Vollert, president.
  172. "Illinois General Assembly – Senator Committees".
  173. Department, Illinois Military and Naval. (1877). "Biennial Report of the Adjutant General". State of Illinois, Military and Naval Department.
  174. (August 1901). "The Daily Review from Decatur, Illinois on August 1, 1901 · Page 4".
  175. 'Illinois Blue Book 1985–1986,' Biographical Sketch of James H. Rupp, p. 114.
  176. Goff, John S.. (1978). "Arizona Territorial Officials Volume II: The Governors 1863–1912". Black Mountain Press.
  177. Goff, John S.. (1975). "Arizona Territorial Officials Volume I: The Supreme Court Justices 1863–1912". Black Mountain Press.
  178. (1939). "Governor Charles A. Sprague's Administration".
  179. "VINCENT, Earl W., (1886–1953)".
  180. (December 15, 2002). "Biographies of New Senate Members". Illinois Legislative Research Unit.
  181. Woodside, Nathan. (November 28, 2012). "The 'Wright' Man". [[GateHouse Media]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Monmouth College — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report