Samuel Walker McCall was an American Republican lawyer, politician, and writer from Massachusetts. He was for twenty years (1893–1913) a member of the United States House of Representatives, and the 47th Governor of Massachusetts, serving three one-year terms (1916–1919). He was a moderately progressive Republican who sought to counteract the influence of money in politics.
McCall circa 1920
Governor McCall in 1916
Governor McCall speaking in Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts, with Lt. Governor Calvin Coolidge in background (1918)
McCall viewing reconstruction efforts in visiting Halifax, Nova Scotia, after the Halifax Explosion (November 1918)
The Mount Carroll Seminary was the name of Shimer College from 1853 to 1896. The Seminary was located in Mount Carroll, Illinois, in the United States. A pioneering institution in its time and place, the Mount Carroll Seminary served as a center of culture and education in 19th-century northwestern Illinois. Despite frequent prognostications of failure, it grew from 11 students in a single room to more than 100 students on a spacious campus with four principal buildings. Unusually for the time, the school was governed entirely by women, most notably the founder Frances Wood Shimer, who was the chief administrator throughout the Seminary's entire existence.
Earliest known drawing of the Seminary, from 1867.
Frances Shimer, founder of the school and proprietor or co-proprietor from 1855 to 1896
The Oread, published by the Oread Society.
Mount Carroll Seminary, engraving, 1878.