Ruskin Colleges


The Ruskin Colleges were a group of American colleges founded in the early 20th century by the socialist philanthropist Walter Vrooman, the college administrator George McAnelly Miller, and others, in the same spirit as the British Ruskin College, which Vrooman had cofounded. A core idea was for students to gain vocational training and earn their way through college by working in a cooperative business associated with the college. Ruskin Colleges were founded in Missouri, Illinois, and Florida.

History

Trenton, Missouri

After cofounding Ruskin College in Oxford, England in 1899, the philanthropist Walter Vrooman returned to the United States. The following year, he and his wife began working to save the Missouri-based Avalon College together with college president George McAnelly Miller. Avalon College was facing financial difficulties following its recent move to Trenton from the small town of Avalon. After Vrooman raised an initial $20,000 and donated 1500 acres of land, the college was renamed Ruskin College, making it the first of that name in the United States. Associated with the new college were two cooperatives: Multitude Incorporated and the Western Co-Operative Association.
At Ruskin College, students got vocational training and earned part of their tuition by working in the college's woodworking, sewing, canning, and farming businesses. Their coursework ranged across art, business, oratory, music, and other subjects. There were also correspondence courses in English, journalism, art, architecture, metallurgy, and several kinds of engineering. Faculty included George D. Herron and Frank Parsons, who served as dean of the correspondence course division. Unlike its British counterpart, the American Ruskin College was coeducational, as were its successors.
The college grew to 80 regular students and 200 correspondence students in its first year. By 1902, however, despite the fact that Vrooman and his associates had spent several hundred thousand dollars supporting the college, it was in financial difficulties. These stemmed from a combination of bad management, poor crop years at the college farm, and resistance from local businesses threatened by competition from the college's cooperatives.

Glen Ellyn, Illinois

In 1903, Miller moved the college to Glen Ellyn, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, where a real estate developer converted a hotel into the college's main building. Miller served as dean, and faculty included the writer May Wood Simons. This second Ruskin College amalgamated with a dozen other colleges, including Chicago Law School, turning itself into Ruskin University. The new university's chancellor was J. J. Tobias, who was also chancellor of the law school. It attained an enrollment of 2,500 with another 8,000 correspondence students. However, the college quickly ran into financial difficulties, and Miller decided that for a socialist college such as he envisioned to survive, it needed to be away from established businesses antagonistic to its cooperative structure, and it needed enough land to thrive as an independent town.

Ruskin, Florida

Miller decided to move the college again, this time settling on an area that developed into the town of Ruskin, Florida. Miller and his wife, Addie Dickman Miller, moved there in 1907, along with the family of one of Addie's brothers, Albert P. Dickman. They acquired some 12,000 acres of pine-forested land that included a turpentine camp, which became their temporary headquarters. They set up a sawmill, cleared land, and built the town from scratch. Building lots were also sold, and buyers of these acreages became members of a cooperative called the Ruskin Commongood Society that made infrastructure improvements to the burgeoning town, including building a new Ruskin College. Some members of the new community came from two Ruskin-inspired colonies elsewhere in the South that had failed: the Ruskin Colony in Tennessee, and Duke Colony in Ware County, Georgia.
The new college opened its doors in 1910, with Miller as president and Addie as vice-president. Socialist newspapers nationwide wrote up the college, and students came from as far away as Japan. By 1913 the school had 160 students studying literature, music, drama, social sciences, shorthand, and speech. Once again, students worked part of each day to help pay for their education.
In 1917, the advent of World War I meant that most of the students left the school for some form of war service, creating new financial difficulties. In 1919, most of the college burned down, although the Millers' house was spared and is now on the National Register of Historic Places; it currently houses the Ruskin Woman's Club. When George Miller died later that same year, the college closed.