Ohio History Journal

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EARLY DAYS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON:

EARLY DAYS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON:

EXCERPTS FROM THE CHRONICLES OF NAZARETH

edited by GEORGE RUPPEL, S.M.*

"The Chronicles of Nazareth" is a manuscript history of the first

thirty years of the present University of Dayton. It was written by

Brother John A. Brueck in the latter years of the nineteenth

century as an informal record of the Society of Mary in America

and of the school for boys begun at Dayton in 1850. The

"Nazareth" in his title comes from the name given to the hundred-

acre farm on the outskirts of Dayton where the central house for

the order was established and the school started. The excerpts

reproduced below are taken from the first pages of Brother Brueck's

"Chronicles." They furnish an interesting account of the humble

beginnings of this now flourishing university.

The Society of Mary, of which Brother Brueck writes, is an

international society of priests, brothers who teach, and brothers

who do manual labor. Its members are known as Marianists. They

conduct all kinds of schools from the grade to the university level,

in all parts of the world. They were founded at Bordeaux in 1819

and came to the United States in 1849, where they opened their

first grade schools at Cincinnati, and then in Dayton, Ohio. Since

the Europeans came from Alsace, they worked in German and

French areas, where at least half of the subjects were taught in the

native language. This accounts for the structure of some of the

sentences in the following "Chronicles," and perhaps for some of

the punctuation. It is not known whether the author, Brother

Brueck, was born in this country or not, although he was fifteen

or sixteen when he joined the society in 1855.

In the early part of 1849 Rev. F. X. Weninger, applied to Mr. Sigwart

Muller, leader of the Sonderbund in Switzerland, to mediate in his behalf

for obtaining some Brothers for Cincinnati.1 What gave occasion to this

 

* Brother George Ruppel is a Marianist, a member of the Society of Mary. He is

at present a candidate for a Ph.D. in history at the University of Pittsburgh.

1 The Sonderbund was an alliance of Catholic cantons in a religious conflict between

the Catholic and Calvinist cantons, in which the minority Catholics were defeated, the

Sonderbund dissolved, and the leaders exiled.

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