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Scripts & |
Moment
of Indiana History: Scripts Island
Park Assembly A cultural oasis at Sylvan Lake…The Island Park Assembly, on this Moment of Indiana History. President Theodore Roosevelt called it "the most American thing in America." With its passing, it’s been said, “the American middle class in the interior lost something valuable.” The Chautauqua movement brought religion, politics, culture and entertainment to small towns and rural outposts across the United States from the 1870s through the 1920s. After the establishment of a family bible camp on a lake in western New York State in 1874, the concept of the Chautauqua was rapidly reinterpreted around the country. In a few years, Dr. A. H. Gillett organized Indiana’s Western Chautauqua in northern Noble County as a conference for Methodist Sunday School teachers. In time, the Western Chautauqua expanded in scope to interdenominational and secular offerings. Otherwise known as the Island Park Assembly, the grounds were located on Sylvan Lake’s Kerr Island, connected by bridge to Rome City. Unlike the so-called “tent” or “circuit” Chautauquas of the era, the Island Park Assembly was a permanent fixture, boasting, in its heyday, formal gardens, brilliant electric illumination, a hall seating 2500, a museum and classrooms, where children learned about art, music, language and scripture. During the annual gathering, which began in late July and lasted for three weeks, visitors might hear an address by three-time Democratic presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan. Other speakers included temperance crusader Sam Jones, Hoosier poet James Whitcomb Riley, and former slave Blanche K. Bruce, the first African-American ever to serve a full term in the U.S. Senate. Though somewhat remote, Island Park Assembly enjoyed a steady stream
of visitors from across the Midwest, thanks to rail service provided by
the Grand Rapids and Indiana Rail Company. The railroad, which had leased
the grounds to the Western Chautauqua association, offered special excursion
rates to Rome City and season passes to the summer gathering. Writing
for the Grand Rapids Herald in1949, one journalist recalled the excitement
of his first train trip to the assembly in the early 1890s— Writer: Yaël Ksander Sources for this program include:
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