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Two of Folsom College's earliest students created the Bryant & Stratton Colleges which later acquired Folsom's school in a possibly forced merger. [2] After the merger with the Bryant and Stratton system, the Cleveland school used the Bryant and Stratton name until 1867, when it took the name Union Business School to celebrate the Union 's ...
John Irvin Beggs (September 17, 1847 – October 17, 1925) was an American businessman. He was associated closely with the electric utility boom under Thomas Edison.He was also associated with Milwaukee, St. Louis, Missouri, and other regional rail and interurban trolley systems.
He enrolled in the Bryant & Stratton Business College and entered Illinois State Normal University. He worked as a real estate broker, teacher at Bryant & Stratton, and with the Pantagraph Stationary Co. He visited Winter Park, Florida, for health issues and "fell in love with the landscape and climate." Knowles Hall at Rollins College
Weaver attended Bryant and Stratton Commercial College. He was elected to the Louisville Board of Aldermen in 1888 and served until 1894. He served as secretary and treasurer of the Kentucky & Indiana Bridge Company from 1889 through 1894. He was appointed postmaster by Grover Cleveland in 1894.
Bryant Bank, a bank in Alabama, United States; Bryant Electric Company, an American manufacturer of electrical components; Bryant Homes, a British house builder, part of Taylor Woodrow; Bryant University (formerly Bryant College), a four-year college in Smithfield, Rhode Island; Bryant & Stratton College, a proprietary college in the United States
Canisius has its roots in the Jesuit community that arose from disputed ownership of St. Louis Church in Buffalo in 1851. [5] [6] Rev. Lucas Caveng, a German Jesuit, along with 19 families from St. Louis Church, founded St. Michael's Church on Washington St. [6] The college followed, primarily for serving sons of German immigrants, along with the high school in 1870, first at 434 Ellicott St ...
It was founded in 1892 as Strayer's Business College [1] and later became Strayer College, [2] before being granted university status in 1998. Strayer University operates under the publicly-traded holding company Strategic Education, Inc. , which was established in 1996 and rebranded in 2018 following its merger with Capella University .
The school taught both men and women, as well as students "young and old." In the years leading up to World War I, Scholfield's faced increasing competition from the four other commercial colleges in downtown Providence, including Johnson & Wales, Bryant and Stratton (now Bryant University) and Rhode Island Commercial School. Courses