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{{Short description|Secondary school}}{{Infobox school
'''Talas American College''' ('''Talas Amerikan Koleji''' or''' Talas Amerikan Ortaokulu''' in [[Turkish language|Turkish]]) was a secondary school for boys, located in [[Talas (Turkey)|Talas]], [[Kayseri]] in [[Turkey]].
| name = Talas American College
| native_name = Talas Amerikan Koleji
| seal_image = Talas American College logo and motto (1889).png
| motto = Head, Hand, Heart & Health
| city = [[Talas, Kayseri]]
| other_name = Talas Academy
| type = [[Private School|Private]], [[Boarding School|Boarding]]
| established = {{start date and age|1889}}
| founder = [[American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions]]
| closed = 1967
| language = [[English language|English]]
| campus_type = Suburb
| houses = Wingate Hall
| colors = {{color box|#871F1F}} Maroon {{color box|#F9D0B0}} Peach
}}

'''Talas American College''' ('''Talas Amerikan Koleji''' or''' Talas Amerikan Ortaokulu''' in [[Turkish language|Turkish]]) often abbreviated as '''Talas American''' or '''TAO''' was a [[Selective school|highly selective]], [[Private school|independent]], [[Single-sex education|all-boys]], [[boarding school]] located in [[Talas, Turkey|Talas]], [[Kayseri]].

Talas American College graduated 857 students over a span of 40 years, from 1927 to 1967. For many years, Talas alumnus continued their education at [[:tr:Tarsus_Amerikan_Koleji|Tarsus American College]] for high school, and after Talas closed, the remaining students were transferred to TAC, further strengthening the bond between the two institutions. In order to maintain this connection and preserve the name of Talas, the Health and Education Foundation ([[Turkish language|Turkish]]: ''SEV'') decided to name the new campus of Tarsus American College the Talas Campus. During a ceremony at the Homecoming event, Talas American College alumnus were also present.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Yarım Yüzyıl Önce Kapanan Talas Amerikan Ortaokulu’nun Adı Tarsus Amerikan’da Yaşayacak |url=https://www.tac.k12.tr/haber/389/yarim-yuzyil-once-kapanan--talas-amerikan-ortaokulunun--adi-tarsus-amerikanda-yasayacak/ |access-date=2024-11-18 |website=Tarsus American College}}</ref>


==History==
==History==
The history of Talas American College is linked to the activities of the [[American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions]] in Turkey. Founded in 1810 and receiving its charter in 1812, the ABCFM was a [[Protestantism|Protestant]] organization based in [[Boston]], [[United States|USA]]. Its mission was to send missionaries abroad for religious purposes, as well as to engage in educational and healthcare initiatives. In 1820, the first ABCFM missionaries arrived in [[İzmir]], located in the western part of the [[Ottoman Empire]], and began to explore the surrounding region of Anatolia. With limited knowledge of the area, their initial focus was to understand the local communities and identify how they could contribute to the welfare of the population. This exploration led to reports on the region, its people, and the existing conditions.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=Johnson |first=Brian |title=“When Men and Mountains Meet” |url=http://talasamerikankoleji.com/Content/Upload/files/Talas_tarihi_kitapcik_TR_low(2).pdf |journal=Sağlık ve Eğitim Vakfı}}</ref>
The college was established in 1871 by US [[missionary]] James L. Fowle, and was turned to a secondary boarding school by Henry K. Wingate in 1889. With the completion of a much larger building in 1906, the college consisted of two schools, one for boys and the other for girls in two separate buildings.
[[File:The members of the founding association of Talas American College.png|alt=The members of the founding association of Talas American College were Lyman Bartlett, Cornelia Bartlett, Caroline Farnsworth, Wilson Farnsworth, Sarah Closson, and Ardelle Griswold, circa 1870 in Talas, Kayseri.|thumb|The members of the founding association of Talas American College were Lyman Bartlett, Cornelia Bartlett, Caroline Farnsworth, Wilson Farnsworth, Sarah Closson, and Ardelle Griswold, circa 1870 in [[Talas, Turkey|Talas]], [[Kayseri]].]]
[[File:ABCFM Talas, Turkey personnel.jpg|alt=Members of the American Board, including Stella Loughridge (first on the left), teacher Susan Orvis (second from the left), and Henry Wingate (sixth from the left), along with other NER staff, Talas-Kayseri, 1919.|thumb|Members of the [[American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions|American Board]], including Stella Loughridge (first on the left), teacher Susan Orvis (second from the left), and Henry Wingate (sixth from the left) in [[Talas, Turkey|Talas]], [[Kayseri]], 1919.]]
[[File:Students and faculty of Talas American College, circa 1930.png|alt=Students and faculty of Talas American College, circa 1930.|thumb|Students and faculty of Talas American College, circa 1930.]]
[[File:Students of Talas American College, with Wingate Hall visible in the background, circa 1950.png|alt=Students of Talas American College, with Wingate Hall visible in the background, circa 1950.|thumb|Students of Talas American College, with Wingate Hall visible in the background, circa 1950.]]
In 1827, Elnathan Gridley, a missionary sent by the American Board, traveled to [[Kayseri]] to study the condition of Christians in the region.<ref name=":1" /> His visit and the subsequent work of other missionaries in Anatolia contributed to the establishment of educational institutions, including Talas American College. In the decade following the Wilson Farnsworth's settlement in Kayseri, significant progress was made, and additional members of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions began to join them. By the late 1860s, along with the Farnsworth family, several missionary families had established themselves in Kayseri.

According to Brian Johnson's ''When Men and Mountains Meet'', the year 1889, when the building known as Konak was opened for educational purposes, is considered the founding year of Talas American College.<ref name=":1" /> In addition to their support in Talas, the American missionaries also shared responsibilities at the Argeus Boys' High School in Kayseri, which had been founded in 1883. However, the management of the school was primarily overseen by the local community, rather than the missionaries themselves. This indicates that the missionaries' educational activities in the region were initially focused on supporting local institutions rather than establishing their own school for boys.

The school in Talas, along with other institutions established by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions , continued its activities until the outbreak of [[World War I]] in 1914.<ref name=":1" /> However, by 1916, the Ottoman government requisitioned many [[American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions|American Board]] properties across Turkey, including the Talas campus, to be used as military hospitals. While the American missionaries in Talas were allowed to continue using two of their homes, Henry K. Wingate was appointed as the consular representative for both American nationals and citizens of Allied nations remaining in the region. However, with the severance of diplomatic relations between the [[United States]] and the Ottoman Empire in the spring of 1917, the Ottoman government expelled all American Board members from Talas. This marked a significant turning point for the institution and its activities in the region.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=İyigör |first=M. Emin Elmacı & Burcu |date=2018-04-21 |title=Kuruluş Gelişim ve Değişim Süreçleriyle Talas Amerikan Koleji |url=https://mjer.inased.org/makale/460 |journal=Akdeniz Eğitim Araştırmaları Dergisi |language=tr |volume=12 |issue=23 |pages=155–171 |doi=10.29329/mjer.2018.138.10 |issn=1309-0682|doi-access=free }}</ref>


In 1926, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions sent one of its most experienced and active members, Paul Nilson and Harriet Fisher Nilson, to Kayseri to revive the schools in Talas. Nilson had started his career with the American Board in 1911 at the St. Paul Institute in [[Tarsus, Mersin|Tarsus]], where he taught until 1915.<ref name=":0" /> After World War I, he returned to Tarsus and managed the St. Paul Institute for the next five years. During this time, Nilson worked to bring the school in line with the newly established educational laws and national curriculum of the [[Turkey|Republic of Turkey]]. Under his leadership, the school received official authorization and was renamed [[:tr:Tarsus_Amerikan_Koleji|Tarsus American College]]. His efforts were part of a broader initiative to adapt the American educational institutions in Turkey to the changing political and educational landscape following the establishment of the Republic.
After serving the region in education 86 years long and graduating notable alumni, the college was closed down in 1968. The boys' school building is being used by the provincial youth and sports authority since 1976. The building of girls' school, which was used as a hospital in 1911, was left to [[Erciyes University]] in 1978.


After 86 years of serving the region and graduating notable alumnus, Talas American College was closed in 1968. Since 1976, the boys' school building has been utilized by the Provincial Youth and Sports Authority.<ref>{{Cite web |title=129 yıllık okul binası gençlerin hizmetinde |url=https://www.aa.com.tr/tr/turkiye/129-yillik-okul-binasi-genclerin-hizmetinde/1303744 |access-date=2024-11-18 |website=www.aa.com.tr}}</ref> When Talas American College closed in 1967, a decision was made to establish [[Turkish Education Association|TED Kayseri College]] in the city to continue providing education in English. Şahap Sicimoğlu, then-mayor of Kayseri, along with around twenty local residents came together to take the first steps toward its establishment. The initiative was well-received, and on December 21, 1965, it was decided to open a branch in Kayseri. During the opening ceremony, the symbolic first lesson was given by Hugh Kelly, the last headmaster of Talas American College. The school officially began its educational activities on Monday, September 26, 1966, with a ceremony held in the school's garden.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Tarihçemiz – TED KAYSERİ KOLEJİ |url=https://www.tedkayseri.k12.tr/kurumsal/tarihcemiz/ |access-date=2024-11-18 |website=www.tedkayseri.k12.tr}}</ref> The building that once housed the girls' school, which had been repurposed as a hospital in 1911, was handed over to [[Erciyes University]] in 1978.
==Notable faculty==
*[[Paul Nilson]] and [[Harriet Fisher Nilson]]<ref>[http://www.birtugladasenkoy.com/linkler/nilson.htm Paul And Harriet<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


==Notable alumni==
==Notable alumnus==


* [[Mete Akyol]], Turkish [[journalist]] and [[author]]
{{Empty section|date=April 2015}}
* [[Cengiz Çandar]], Turkish [[journalist]] and member of the [[Grand National Assembly of Turkey]]
* [[Korkut Boratav]], Turkish [[Marxian economics|Marxist economist]]
* [[:tr:Ayhan_Sicimoğlu|Ayhan Sicimoğlu]], Turkish [[musician]] and [[television presenter]]
* [[Celil Oker]], Turkish [[crime fiction]] novelist
* [[Vahan Cardashian]], [[Armenian-American]] political activist and lawyer
* [[:tr:İskender_Sayek|İskender Sayek]], Turkish [[surgeon]] and [[professor]]
* [[:tr:Uluç_Gürkan|Uluç Gürkan]], Turkish academic, formerly at [[Middle East Technical University]]
* [[Henry H. Riggs]], American missionary and president of the [[Euphrates College]]
* [[Mehmet Coral]], Turkish [[novelist]], known for ''Extinct Times of Byzantium'' and ''The Lost Diaries of Constantinople''
* [[Oral Çalışlar]], Turkish [[journalist]] and [[author]]
* [[Uygur Kocabaşoğlu]], Turkish historian, formerly at the [[Middle East Technical University|METU]] Department of History and [[University of Cambridge|Cambridge University]] (1991-1993)<ref>{{Cite web |title=Uygur Kocabaşoğlu kimdir? - Kitapları, Özgeçmişi, İletişim bilgileri |url=https://www.kitapyurdu.com/yazar/uygur-kocabasoglu/3346.html?srsltid=AfmBOootRhqULiQfebLUOmVjdtvoFwRGa9rR0Wtg0y7lzUkoqh2kGkpH |access-date=2024-12-27 |website=www.kitapyurdu.com |language=tr}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Uygur KOCABAŞOĞLU |url=http://kaynakca.hacettepe.edu.tr/kisi/80592/uygur-kocabasoglu |archive-url=http://web.archive.org/web/20240713193058/http://kaynakca.hacettepe.edu.tr/kisi/80592/uygur-kocabasoglu |archive-date=2024-07-13 |access-date=2024-12-27 |website=kaynakca.hacettepe.edu.tr}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
{{portal|Schools}}
* [[List of missionary schools in Turkey]]
* [[List of missionary schools in Turkey]]
* [[List of high schools in Turkey]]
* [[List of high schools in Turkey]]
Line 21: Line 60:


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://talasamerikankoleji.com/ Talas American College Alumnus Site]
*[http://www.kayserim.net/bilgilendirme/kayseri_egitim_tarihte_yeri_olan_okullar.asp Short history in Turkish]
*
*[http://www.talas.gov.tr/turizm.asp Short history on boys and girls schools]


{{coord missing|Turkey}}
{{coord missing|Turkey}}


[[Category:Education in Kayseri]]
[[Category:High schools in Kayseri]]
[[Category:Educational institutions established in 1871]]
[[Category:Educational institutions established in 1871]]
[[Category:High schools in Turkey]]
[[Category:High schools in Turkey]]
[[Category:International schools in Turkey]]
[[Category:International schools in Turkey]]
[[Category:1871 establishments in the Ottoman Empire]]
[[Category:1871 establishments in the Ottoman Empire]]
[[Category:Education in the Ottoman Empire]]

Latest revision as of 10:42, 6 January 2025

Talas American College
Talas Amerikan Koleji
Location
Map
Information
Other nameTalas Academy
TypePrivate, Boarding
MottoHead, Hand, Heart & Health
Established1889; 136 years ago (1889)
FounderAmerican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions
Closed1967
LanguageEnglish
Campus typeSuburb
HousesWingate Hall
Color(s)  Maroon   Peach

Talas American College (Talas Amerikan Koleji or Talas Amerikan Ortaokulu in Turkish) often abbreviated as Talas American or TAO was a highly selective, independent, all-boys, boarding school located in Talas, Kayseri.

Talas American College graduated 857 students over a span of 40 years, from 1927 to 1967. For many years, Talas alumnus continued their education at Tarsus American College for high school, and after Talas closed, the remaining students were transferred to TAC, further strengthening the bond between the two institutions. In order to maintain this connection and preserve the name of Talas, the Health and Education Foundation (Turkish: SEV) decided to name the new campus of Tarsus American College the Talas Campus. During a ceremony at the Homecoming event, Talas American College alumnus were also present.[1]

History

[edit]

The history of Talas American College is linked to the activities of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions in Turkey. Founded in 1810 and receiving its charter in 1812, the ABCFM was a Protestant organization based in Boston, USA. Its mission was to send missionaries abroad for religious purposes, as well as to engage in educational and healthcare initiatives. In 1820, the first ABCFM missionaries arrived in İzmir, located in the western part of the Ottoman Empire, and began to explore the surrounding region of Anatolia. With limited knowledge of the area, their initial focus was to understand the local communities and identify how they could contribute to the welfare of the population. This exploration led to reports on the region, its people, and the existing conditions.[2]

The members of the founding association of Talas American College were Lyman Bartlett, Cornelia Bartlett, Caroline Farnsworth, Wilson Farnsworth, Sarah Closson, and Ardelle Griswold, circa 1870 in Talas, Kayseri.
The members of the founding association of Talas American College were Lyman Bartlett, Cornelia Bartlett, Caroline Farnsworth, Wilson Farnsworth, Sarah Closson, and Ardelle Griswold, circa 1870 in Talas, Kayseri.
Members of the American Board, including Stella Loughridge (first on the left), teacher Susan Orvis (second from the left), and Henry Wingate (sixth from the left), along with other NER staff, Talas-Kayseri, 1919.
Members of the American Board, including Stella Loughridge (first on the left), teacher Susan Orvis (second from the left), and Henry Wingate (sixth from the left) in Talas, Kayseri, 1919.
Students and faculty of Talas American College, circa 1930.
Students and faculty of Talas American College, circa 1930.
Students of Talas American College, with Wingate Hall visible in the background, circa 1950.
Students of Talas American College, with Wingate Hall visible in the background, circa 1950.

In 1827, Elnathan Gridley, a missionary sent by the American Board, traveled to Kayseri to study the condition of Christians in the region.[2] His visit and the subsequent work of other missionaries in Anatolia contributed to the establishment of educational institutions, including Talas American College. In the decade following the Wilson Farnsworth's settlement in Kayseri, significant progress was made, and additional members of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions began to join them. By the late 1860s, along with the Farnsworth family, several missionary families had established themselves in Kayseri.

According to Brian Johnson's When Men and Mountains Meet, the year 1889, when the building known as Konak was opened for educational purposes, is considered the founding year of Talas American College.[2] In addition to their support in Talas, the American missionaries also shared responsibilities at the Argeus Boys' High School in Kayseri, which had been founded in 1883. However, the management of the school was primarily overseen by the local community, rather than the missionaries themselves. This indicates that the missionaries' educational activities in the region were initially focused on supporting local institutions rather than establishing their own school for boys.

The school in Talas, along with other institutions established by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions , continued its activities until the outbreak of World War I in 1914.[2] However, by 1916, the Ottoman government requisitioned many American Board properties across Turkey, including the Talas campus, to be used as military hospitals. While the American missionaries in Talas were allowed to continue using two of their homes, Henry K. Wingate was appointed as the consular representative for both American nationals and citizens of Allied nations remaining in the region. However, with the severance of diplomatic relations between the United States and the Ottoman Empire in the spring of 1917, the Ottoman government expelled all American Board members from Talas. This marked a significant turning point for the institution and its activities in the region.[3]

In 1926, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions sent one of its most experienced and active members, Paul Nilson and Harriet Fisher Nilson, to Kayseri to revive the schools in Talas. Nilson had started his career with the American Board in 1911 at the St. Paul Institute in Tarsus, where he taught until 1915.[1] After World War I, he returned to Tarsus and managed the St. Paul Institute for the next five years. During this time, Nilson worked to bring the school in line with the newly established educational laws and national curriculum of the Republic of Turkey. Under his leadership, the school received official authorization and was renamed Tarsus American College. His efforts were part of a broader initiative to adapt the American educational institutions in Turkey to the changing political and educational landscape following the establishment of the Republic.

After 86 years of serving the region and graduating notable alumnus, Talas American College was closed in 1968. Since 1976, the boys' school building has been utilized by the Provincial Youth and Sports Authority.[4] When Talas American College closed in 1967, a decision was made to establish TED Kayseri College in the city to continue providing education in English. Şahap Sicimoğlu, then-mayor of Kayseri, along with around twenty local residents came together to take the first steps toward its establishment. The initiative was well-received, and on December 21, 1965, it was decided to open a branch in Kayseri. During the opening ceremony, the symbolic first lesson was given by Hugh Kelly, the last headmaster of Talas American College. The school officially began its educational activities on Monday, September 26, 1966, with a ceremony held in the school's garden.[5] The building that once housed the girls' school, which had been repurposed as a hospital in 1911, was handed over to Erciyes University in 1978.

Notable alumnus

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Yarım Yüzyıl Önce Kapanan Talas Amerikan Ortaokulu'nun Adı Tarsus Amerikan'da Yaşayacak". Tarsus American College. Retrieved 2024-11-18.
  2. ^ a b c d Johnson, Brian. ""When Men and Mountains Meet"" (PDF). Sağlık ve Eğitim Vakfı.
  3. ^ İyigör, M. Emin Elmacı & Burcu (2018-04-21). "Kuruluş Gelişim ve Değişim Süreçleriyle Talas Amerikan Koleji". Akdeniz Eğitim Araştırmaları Dergisi (in Turkish). 12 (23): 155–171. doi:10.29329/mjer.2018.138.10. ISSN 1309-0682.
  4. ^ "129 yıllık okul binası gençlerin hizmetinde". www.aa.com.tr. Retrieved 2024-11-18.
  5. ^ "Tarihçemiz – TED KAYSERİ KOLEJİ". www.tedkayseri.k12.tr. Retrieved 2024-11-18.
  6. ^ "Uygur Kocabaşoğlu kimdir? - Kitapları, Özgeçmişi, İletişim bilgileri". www.kitapyurdu.com (in Turkish). Retrieved 2024-12-27.
  7. ^ "Uygur KOCABAŞOĞLU". kaynakca.hacettepe.edu.tr. Archived from the original on 2024-07-13. Retrieved 2024-12-27.
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