Site of Soule University for Boys
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Raven
N 30° 08.143 W 096° 15.432
14R E 764226 N 3337000
1936 gray granite centennial marker at the NW corner of Hwy 290 and FM-1155, just South of the town of Chappell Hill. The private university was chartered in 1856 and remained active until 1887.
Waymark Code: WMN60X
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 01/01/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
Views: 8

"Soule University was a private Methodist university in Chappell Hill, a rural community in Washington County, Texas, United States.

Chartered in 1856, Soule replaced the male department of 'Chappell Hill Male and Female Institute' and was intended to succeed the failed Rutersville College. The female department became an independent institution, Chappell Hill Female College, eventually outliving Soule and acquiring its campus. Soule University was named after Bishop Joshua Soule.

Soule University began as 'Chappell Hill Institute', a private preparatory school informally established during or before 1850. The school was chartered by the Texas Legislature in 1852 as a non-denominational preparatory school under the name Chappell Hill Male and Female Institute. That same year, Philander S. Ruter, son of Methodist missionary Martin Ruter, was elected president of the school. In 1854, Chappell Hill's charter was amended to affiliate the school with the Methodist Church.

The Methodists had been seeking a replacement for the financially unstable and scandal-ridden Rutersville College and identified Chappell Hill as the site for a new institution of higher education. The Methodist Church took great pains to ensure the new school was under the authority of the Methodist Church, attributing some of Rutersville College's failures to the school's independent legal status.

In 1856, Soule University was chartered as a Methodist-affiliated university and all students in the male department of Chappell Hill Male and Female Institute were transferred into Soule's preparatory department. Classes began in September 1856 with seven academic departments. Originally located in the former buildings of Chappell Hill Male and Female Institute, the university built a new building on donated land in 1858 to separate itself from Chappell Hill Female College.

Soule closed in 1861 at the start of the American Civil War with most students joining the Confederate Army. During the war, the Confederacy used Soule's campus as a hospital. When the university reopened in 1865, the classrooms and library had been badly damaged and most of the school equipment had been lost. The economy of the Chappell Hill area was devastated after the war, limiting the university's sources of funding. When an outbreak of yellow fever in Chappell Hill grew into two epidemics, Soule's student population dropped precipitously and never recovered.

In an effort to broaden the university's reach, Soule opened Texas' first medical school in 1865. The school, located in Galveston, was self-sustaining and eventually severed connections with Soule to become the Texas Medical College and Hospital, now the University of Texas Medical Branch.

The epidemics combined with financial troubles led Soule University president Francis Asbury Mood to petition the Methodist Church to found a new “central university for Methodism” with the full backing of all five Methodist conferences in Texas. The resulting school, originally named Texas University but chartered as Southwestern University, assumed the role for which the Methodist Church had originally founded Soule. The Church declared Southwestern to be Soule's successor in 1873 and the Texas Legislature transferred Soule's charter to Southwestern in 1875.

Local supporters in Chappell Hill kept Soule open for over a decade after the school's charter was transferred to Southwestern. By 1873, Soule had paid off all debts and was seeking to start a law school in another city, despite recently releasing its neglected medical school in Galveston. The university was renamed Soule College in 1878 but enrollment continued to decrease until only 29 students remained in 1887. In that year, Soule approached Southwestern with a proposal that Soule become a correlated school of Southwestern. The proposal was rejected.

Soule University closed in 1887. Soule's campus was used by Chappell Hill Female College until it closed in 1912."

Source: Wikipedia
Marker Number: 8419

Marker Text:
Established in 1855 and chartered in 1856 to replace Rutersville and Wesleyan Colleges * Closed during the Civil War and later by yellow fever * Succeeded in 1875 by South- western University Erected by the State of Texas 1936


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