Hartwick Seminary was established in 1797 through the will of John Christopher Hartwick, a Lutheran pastor from Germany who drove a few mission assemblies of right on time pioneers along the Hudson River and the Mohawk River in what is presently upstate New York. His fantasy of setting up an establishment of higher learning turned into a reality not long after his demise, with the establishing of Hartwick Seminary in 1797. In 1816, the New York State Legislature fused the new school—the first Lutheran theological school in America—as a traditional foundation and philosophical theological school in Hartwick, close Cooperstown. The school moved to its present area in Oneonta in 1928, when Hartwick was consolidated as a four-year school. The area for the grounds was given by the City of Oneonta. Bresee Hall, today the most seasoned expanding on grounds, was outlined by noted planner John Russell Pope and implicit 1928. It was recorded on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. The school's binds to the Lutheran Church finished in the 1960s and it now conveys no religious allia
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Hartwick College
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