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This category is for people who attended LaGrange College in Georgia or its predecessors LaGrange Female Academy or LaGrange Female College. LaGrange did not have male students before 1934. Men who attended a LaGrange College in the 19th century more than likely went to the institution that was a predecessor of the University of North Alabama ...
LaGrange College is a private college [2] in LaGrange, Georgia.Founded in 1831 as a female educational institution, LaGrange is the oldest private college in Georgia. [3] It is affiliated with the United Methodist Church [4] and offers more than 55 academic and pre-professional programs, including graduate degrees in education.
LaGrange College alumni (12 P) Pages in category "LaGrange College" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
LaGrange College alumni (12 P) Life University alumni (18 P) Luther Rice University alumni (10 P) M. Mercer University alumni (1 C, 159 P) Middle Georgia College ...
After attending LaGrange College, the Methodist Episcopal College in LaGrange, Georgia, he was ordained at the age of twenty and served four years in New Orleans. He transferred to the Protestant Episcopal Church in 1847 and was ordained by Bishop Leonidas Polk .
Elam, the son of James M. Elam and Rebecca Chambers, was born in Baton Rouge on December 7, 1829. He attended Lagrange College in Kentucky (1846-1847) and graduated from Centenary College in Jackson, Louisiana, in 1850.
Hannibal–LaGrange University was created as the result of the 1928 merger of LaGrange College (founded in 1858 as the LaGrange Male and Female Seminary) in LaGrange, Missouri, and Hannibal College in Hannibal. [5] In October 2022, the trustees at Hannibal–LaGrange University elected Robert Matz as the 18th president of the university.
He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from LaGrange College in 1975 and a Juris Doctor from the University of Georgia School of Law in 1978. Story was in private practice in Gainesville, Georgia from 1978 to 1986. He was a part-time special assistant attorney general of Georgia from 1980 to 1984. [2]