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  2. In 1853, Eliot and his friend and parishioner Wayman Crow co-founded Washington University, at first called Eliot Seminary by Crow. From the beginning, Eliot was the university’s guiding spirit and tireless fundraiser, organizing the first fundraising campaign and building the young institution’s endowment.

  3. Mar 24, 2022 · The University was initially named Eliot Seminary after its founder and St. Louis educator, William Greenleaf Eliot.

    • Kay Quinn
    • 1 min
  4. The name of the university was still unclear; in the three years following its inspection the university bore three different names. The board first approved Eliot Seminary but this title was eventually replaced in favor of the Washington Institute, because of William Eliot's stiff opposition to the name.

  5. Sep 12, 2012 · In 1853, St. Louis businessman Wayman Crow requested a charter for a proposed seminary from the state legislature of Missouri. In his request, he called it Eliot Seminary, after William Greenleaf Eliot, his good friend of twenty years. However, he did not tell Eliot beforehand, and when the charter request was granted, the news came as a total ...

  6. Apr 30, 2024 · In 1857, the Eliot Seminary changed its name to "Washington University." Crow writes:

    • Sonya Rooney
    • 2011
  7. The transcript can be read here. The reference to the university is found in Crows postscript, where he mentions “a notice to incorporate the Eliot Seminary.” — Eliot Seminary was our institution’s name for the first year of its existence.

  8. Feb 17, 2023 · By Claire Gauen February 17, 2023. On Feb. 22, 1853, Missouri Gov. Sterling Price signed a Charter that brought Eliot Seminary, the institution that became Washington University, into existence. With the following 17 decades came new names, the construction and near-constant improvement of multiple campuses, and dazzling growth in size ...

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