St. Viator College
St. Viator College | |
---|---|
Active | 1868–1939 |
Type | Private |
Affiliation | Catholic |
Students | 300 |
Location |
Bourbonnais, IL, US 41°09′13″N 87°52′34″W / 41.153620°N 87.876140°WCoordinates: 41°09′13″N 87°52′34″W / 41.153620°N 87.876140°W |
Campus | Rural |
Sports | Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference |
St. Viator College was a Catholic liberal arts college in Bourbonnais, Illinois. It is no longer in operation.
History
St. Viator's grew out of the original Bourbonnais village school, founded in 1865 by the Viatorians,[1] to an academy for boys[2] with the help of Father P. Beaudoin and Brothers Martel and Bernard, and on 9/6/1868 to a four-year liberal arts college with the aid of Father Thomas Roy. After nine years of work, Father Roy returned to his home in Canada, and was succeeded by Father M. J. Marsile, who oversaw the college for another 25 years. In 1906, several buildings were destroyed by fire, but courses continued in improvised quarters and new buildings were erected. Father Marsile afterward resigned, and Reverend John Patrick O'Mahoney C.S.V. was appointed president. Under financial pressure, it closed in 1939.[3]
Campus
Roy Memorial Chapel was named for Father Thomas Roy, who served as president of the college. Marsile Alumni Hall was named in honour of Father M. J. Marsile, who was college president for 25 years.[3] After St. Viator's closed in 1939, the campus was purchased by Olivet Nazarene College from Olivet, Illinois.[4] Four buildings on the Olivet Nazarene campus are original from the days of St. Viator's 39-acre campus.
Academics
St. Viator College had a preparatory department and high school in addition to the college and seminary and, for most of its years, had an enrollment of over 300 students.[3]
Student life
During its existence, St. Viator was the host of the Catholic State Basketball Tournament for Illinois.[5] St. Viator College was a member of the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference from 1916-1938.
Notable persons
Many of the college's graduates were priests, but even more entered the professions of law and medicine.[3] Notable alumni included John Tracy Ellis,[6] Sam J. McAllister, Fulton J. Sheen,[7] G. Raymond Sprague,[8] Bernard James Sheil.[9] and Joseph James Smith, youngest son of the notorious bad man "Soapy" Smith.[10]
See also
- Clerics of St. Viator
Notes and references
- ↑ Chronology: A Time-Line of French, French-Canadians, Illinois, Bourbonnais, Kankakee, and the World, p.17
- ↑ Viatorians: Where We Serve Around the World (Chicago)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference.. by Charles George Herbermann, Edward Aloysius Pace, Condé Bénoist Pallen, Thomas Joseph Shahan, John Joseph Wynne. Published 1913, Robert Appleton Co., p.400
- ↑ History of the Village of Bourbonnais
- ↑ Illinois High School Association, Illinois H.S.toric: Catholic High School Basketball Tournaments in Illinois by ROBERT PRUTER
- ↑ http://web.archive.org/web/20060316085534/http://www.onr.com/user/cat/csw/volume4/v4memoria.htm
- ↑ www.fultonsheen.com -- Biography
- ↑ "Father Sprague, senior priest of diocese, dies at 92," Catholic Archdiocese of Peoria, Catholic Post, May 6, 2001.
- ↑ "Meat, and a Bishop," Time, Monday, Jul. 24, 1939.
- ↑ "Soapy's son James" Soapy Smith Soap Box, May 8, 2010.
External links
- Saint Viator history
- "PREPAREDNESS IN CATHOLIC SCHOOLS" by JOSEPH F. SMITH. New York Times, August 26, 1917, Sunday. Section: Instruction, Page 68, 1338 words