Euphrates College
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Euphrates College (Turkish: Fırat Koleji, Armenian: Yeprad Koleji) was a coeducational high school in Harput (today Elazığ), a town in the eastern Turkey, founded and directed by American missionaries for mostly the Armenian community in the region.
The American Board of Foreign Missions established 1852 a theological seminary in Harput to educate clergymen for the Armenian Evangelical Church, and expanded it 1859 to "American Harput Missionary College". To meet the growing demand for general education in English language, the school's program was extended in 1878, and it was renamed "Armenia College". However, after 10 years, the Ottoman authorities urged to change the school's name, which became finally "Euphrates College". For the building of the college, $140,000 funds were raised from the US Government and $40,000 from the local people in 1875. The facilities at the collge consisted of a hospital and an orphanage in addition to a theological seminary and high schools for boys and girls.
In 1895, Kurds looted and burned the Armenian villages on the Harput plain, and in the same month the town was attacked and eight of the twelve buildings on the campus were burned down.
Euphrates College at Harput closed shortly after the founding of the Republic of Turkey along with some other American schools in the eastern Turkey.
Contents |
[edit] Presidents
- Dr. James Levi Barton (1893-1894)
- Dr. Crosby Wheeler (1894)
- Dr. Caleb Frank Gates (1894-1903)
- Rev. Henry H. Riggs (1903-1910]
[edit] Faculty
- Ellsworth Huntington (1897–1901)
- Ashur Yousif
- Donabed Lulejian
[edit] See also
- Robert College in İstanbul (1863)
- Talas American College in Talas, Kayseri (1871)
- American Girl’s College in İstanbul (1876)
- Central Turkey College in Gaziantep (1874)
- Anatolia College in Merzifon, Amasya (1886)
- St. Paul College in Tarsus, Mersin (1888)
- List of high schools in Turkey