Cincinnati Wesleyan College per Baird's was located in Cincinnati, Ohio. This WL is presently a REDIRECT to
Ohio Wesleyan Female College, a school that in turn merged into
Ohio Wesleyan University in 1877, but the Cincinnati Wesleyan College is not mentioned in the article text. The Cincinnati school apparently had a longer trajectory as it was formed in 1842 and closed in 1892. --Was it then absorbed directly into Ohio Wesleyan University? Or did it just close. Either way, it needs to be mentioned in one of the articles OR have a standalone article published. Noting another nearby seminary, apparently there was no connection with
Cincinnati Female Seminary (1843-1861) which merged with
Mount Auburn Young Ladies’ Institute in 1961. Cincinnati Wesleyan had a chapter of
Kappa Alpha Theta and
Pi Beta Phi.
Iowa East Normal School, listed in Baird's as the site of Pi Beta Phi's early Xi chapter, and a collegiate chapter of the P.E.O sisterhood. Was located in Columbus Junction, Iowa. [11][12]
Jacksonville Female Academy, merged with
Illinois College in 1903, but that article has little information about the school and the Jacksonville link is presently a redirect. Should be a standalone article. This school was the site of the Phi chapter of
Pi Beta Phi while it was still I.C. Sorosis, and a chapter of the
P.E.O. Sisterhood.
Knight's School, The Cathedral School for Girls was located in
Havana, Cuba. It had a chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi. Episcopal Bishop Albion W. Knight had a school in Cuba (not sure it had a formal name). The Cathedral School for Girls was an Episcopal school in Florida. Did the chapter move when Knight closed his mission in Cuba? Cannot find enough on the mission school but the Cathedral School looks promising.
National Conservatory of Dramatic Arts, located in Washington, D.C., had a chapter of Delta Psi Omega National Theatre Honor Society, the junior college division of Alpha Psi Omega.
Northeastern Christian Junior College was a college in Villanova, Pennsylvania that closed in 1993. It had a chapter of Delta Psi Omega National Theatre Honor Society, the junior college division of Alpha Psi Omega.
St. Phillip Hospital School of Nursing was a training school for African American nurses in Richmond, Virginia. It closed in 1962. It had the Zeta Beta chapter of
Chi Eta Phi nursing sorority, starting in 1957.
Wood Junior College was located in Mathison, Mississippi. It had a chapter of Delta Psi Omega National Theatre Honor Society, the junior college division of Alpha Psi Omega.
York Methodist College as a standalone article or possibly this school name should be added due to a very thin connection to Nebraska Methodist College, if that school's history is expanded. York, Nebraska was the site of the Nebraska Alpha chapter (1884-1888) of
Pi Beta Phi. The Baird's Archive says this chapter lingered until 1892, but this might be in error and is problematic because the school closed in 1888. A medical school called Nebraska Methodist College had been linked to both school and chapter in previous iterations of the Pi Phi list, but the chapter existed seven years prior to the establishment of the Nebraska Methodist College in 1891 - it was in Omaha. The school named York Methodist ceased operations in 1888, (again, the older Wikipedia page says it ceased operations in 1892, but I cannot find a collaborating reference), a few years before the formation of Nebraska Methodist College.[19]
^Robson, John, ed. (1963). Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities (17th ed.). Menasha, Wisconsin: The Collegiate Press, George Banta Company, Inc. pp. 579.
Cincinnati Wesleyan College per Baird's was located in Cincinnati, Ohio. This WL is presently a REDIRECT to
Ohio Wesleyan Female College, a school that in turn merged into
Ohio Wesleyan University in 1877, but the Cincinnati Wesleyan College is not mentioned in the article text. The Cincinnati school apparently had a longer trajectory as it was formed in 1842 and closed in 1892. --Was it then absorbed directly into Ohio Wesleyan University? Or did it just close. Either way, it needs to be mentioned in one of the articles OR have a standalone article published. Noting another nearby seminary, apparently there was no connection with
Cincinnati Female Seminary (1843-1861) which merged with
Mount Auburn Young Ladies’ Institute in 1961. Cincinnati Wesleyan had a chapter of
Kappa Alpha Theta and
Pi Beta Phi.
Iowa East Normal School, listed in Baird's as the site of Pi Beta Phi's early Xi chapter, and a collegiate chapter of the P.E.O sisterhood. Was located in Columbus Junction, Iowa. [11][12]
Jacksonville Female Academy, merged with
Illinois College in 1903, but that article has little information about the school and the Jacksonville link is presently a redirect. Should be a standalone article. This school was the site of the Phi chapter of
Pi Beta Phi while it was still I.C. Sorosis, and a chapter of the
P.E.O. Sisterhood.
Knight's School, The Cathedral School for Girls was located in
Havana, Cuba. It had a chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi. Episcopal Bishop Albion W. Knight had a school in Cuba (not sure it had a formal name). The Cathedral School for Girls was an Episcopal school in Florida. Did the chapter move when Knight closed his mission in Cuba? Cannot find enough on the mission school but the Cathedral School looks promising.
National Conservatory of Dramatic Arts, located in Washington, D.C., had a chapter of Delta Psi Omega National Theatre Honor Society, the junior college division of Alpha Psi Omega.
Northeastern Christian Junior College was a college in Villanova, Pennsylvania that closed in 1993. It had a chapter of Delta Psi Omega National Theatre Honor Society, the junior college division of Alpha Psi Omega.
St. Phillip Hospital School of Nursing was a training school for African American nurses in Richmond, Virginia. It closed in 1962. It had the Zeta Beta chapter of
Chi Eta Phi nursing sorority, starting in 1957.
Wood Junior College was located in Mathison, Mississippi. It had a chapter of Delta Psi Omega National Theatre Honor Society, the junior college division of Alpha Psi Omega.
York Methodist College as a standalone article or possibly this school name should be added due to a very thin connection to Nebraska Methodist College, if that school's history is expanded. York, Nebraska was the site of the Nebraska Alpha chapter (1884-1888) of
Pi Beta Phi. The Baird's Archive says this chapter lingered until 1892, but this might be in error and is problematic because the school closed in 1888. A medical school called Nebraska Methodist College had been linked to both school and chapter in previous iterations of the Pi Phi list, but the chapter existed seven years prior to the establishment of the Nebraska Methodist College in 1891 - it was in Omaha. The school named York Methodist ceased operations in 1888, (again, the older Wikipedia page says it ceased operations in 1892, but I cannot find a collaborating reference), a few years before the formation of Nebraska Methodist College.[19]
^Robson, John, ed. (1963). Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities (17th ed.). Menasha, Wisconsin: The Collegiate Press, George Banta Company, Inc. pp. 579.