Yankton College

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Yankton College Historic District
File:Yankton Federal Prison Camp 2.JPG
Yankton College is located in South Dakota
Yankton College
Location Yankton, South Dakota
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Built 1894
Architect Elmslie,George
Architectural style Romanesque
NRHP Reference # 82003949[1]
Added to NRHP March 22, 1982
File:Yankton College Conservatory NRHP 75001724.jpg
The Yankton College Conservatory in 1912.

Yankton College was a small liberal arts college in Yankton, South Dakota, affiliated with the Congregational Christian Churches (later the United Church of Christ).

Founded in 1881, it was the first institution of higher learning in the Dakota Territory. The man primarily responsible for the college's establishment was Joseph Ward, a local pastor and educator who is one of the two South Dakotans represented in Statuary Hall.

The campus was declared the Yankton College Historic District in 1982 due to the presence of a group of buildings designed by architect George Grant Elmslie. Between 1927 and 1932, Elmslie designed seven structures for the college, of which several were built:[2]

  • Campus Library (1927/1928)
  • Forbes Hall of Science (1929)
  • Look Chapel, project (1929)
  • Power plant (1930)
  • Look Dormitory for Men (1931)
  • Conservatory of Music (1932)
  • Gymnasium, project (1932)

It is probably best known today as the college which NFL football player Lyle Alzado attended. The college's athletic teams were known as the Greyhounds. The football stadium (Crane Youngworth Field) is now used as the home field for the Yankton High School football teams.

Yankton College closed in December 1984, and its campus became the site of Federal Prison Camp, Yankton,[3] which opened four years later.[4]

The University of South Dakota - Springfield, a public university in the same state also originally established in 1881, also closed in 1984, and its campus became the site of a state prison.[5]

Notable alumni

References

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  3. Green, Doug. "From "College Town" to "Prison Town"." Federal Prisons Journal. Federal Bureau of Corrections, Volume 1, No. 1. Northern hemisphere Summer 1989. 25 (26/45). Retrieved on October 3, 2010.
  4. http://www.yanktoncollege.org/AboutUs/History.aspx
  5. http://doc.sd.gov/adult/facilities/mdsp/mdsp.aspx
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  13. http://www.yanktoncollege.org/Portals/0/2010%20BULLETIN.pdf
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External links