For those who would like to know more about our
Scholarship fund, and the school for which it is
named, we offer this article, reprinted from the
February 2007 edition of Memories of Maine
RICKER COLLEGE: A Small School in A
Big County
by Bruce Wright
"We live as long as we are remembered. "
This quotation of unknown origin is true of Dr. Joseph Ricker. D.D.,
who became a savior of' the small school in the big
county that would bear his name: Ricker Junior
College in Houlton. It is also true of Ricker
College and the Ricker Scholarship Fund carried on
by school trustees that awards $157,000 annually to
college bound students 28 years after the college
was forced to close!
Catherine Bell of the town's Hope Museum, which has a Ricker Room
with many school mementos, has two daughters who are
Ricker College graduates. Mrs. Bell points out that
several of the Houlton school graduates made their
mark in government and the arts. Conrad Cyr was a
federal judge. John Pullen, who graduated in about
1928, wrote several books including The 20th Maine
which is about the famous Maine Civil War regiment.
Daniel Wathan was Chief Justice, Maine Supreme
Court, and Elmer Violette also served on the State
Supreme Court.
Sen. Mark Hatfield of Oregon was the commencement speaker in 1967,
and Bruce Springsteen performed at the 1973 Ricker
Snowball Weekend. Arthur Smith, father of Samantha
Smith, the young girl who made national headlines
when she visited Russia, was a Ricker instructor.
These are just a few names associated with Ricker
College.
Dr. Ricker believed in hard work, and he saw it through the years
at the Aroostook County college. He worked his way
as a teacher while earning his divinity degree at
Waterville College, a Baptist school.
On a visit to the county, Dr. Ricker heard about the forced closing
in 1873-74 of what was then Houlton Academy. The
school lacked the finances to continue after the
State Legislature passed a law that required all
Maine high schools to be public schools free of
tuition charges. He wanted to help the little school
in "The County." Even while Ricker was closed,
somehow Miss Mattie C. Hall managed to teach a class
of three pupils! This perseverance and persistence
were hallmarks of Ricker College over the years.
It’s fighting spirit caried the school through many
obstacles and problems.
Dr Ricker, born in York County, believed Ricker could survive and
thrive as a fitting school for Colby College where
students would receive a Christian college
education. This alliance, by deeding the Houlton
property in trust to Colby, gave the Academy Colby's
financial aid of $31,375.95 and enabled it to
continue. It became the Eastern Preparatory School
for Colby.
The college had many names and reincarnations during it’s 130
years. Founded in Houlton in 1848 as Aroostook
County's first secondary school, it was originally
named Houlton Academy. The school was established to
provide better schooling for the town that had only
one grade in a single room at a private house. If no
teacher was available, there was no school.
In 1848 eight trustees asked the State Legislature for help to form
the new school, Houlton Academy. They were granted
"a half township of land" in "Township 14, Range 3,
now Woodland, if they erected a building and showed
a $1,000 reserve by October 1849.
Trustees met the requirements a year early, and
Houlton Academy began classes in the fall of' 1848
with Milton Welch as principal at S200 a year. The
next year trustees set tuition at $2 a term.
Houlton Academy, later named Ricker, represented the only college
preparatory school available for Aroostook County
students for forty years. As a 1960s alumnus
explained, "Traveling was the big reason for
Ricker's success." The presence of a good
preparatory school, later declared a junior college,
in Aroostook County eased or eliminated travel time
and expense for area students. By 1886 the Academy's
three person faculty offered courses in English,
Latin, arithmetic, and history. That same year,
twelve years after Dr. Ricker's involvement in
Houlton Academy, Mrs. Catherine Wording of Grand
Forks, North Dakota donated $30,000 to the school to
build a classroom which was named Wording Hall in
her honor. Her mission was to provide funds to help
small schools survive and prosper.
The Academy was officially named for Dr. Ricker in
1887.
In 1889 or 1899 (sources differ on the date), the Maine Legislature
again came to the struggling school's aid with a
$1,000 grant for ten years. This enabled Ricker
Classical Institute to add more courses and expand
its athletic program.
The Institute had gradually improved its image and
status by 1926 when it had 130 students and a
faculty of eight teachers. Trustees increased the
scope and number of courses. They provided a one
year college program for a few students, a third of
whom continued their education at Colby College.
A sizeable gift in 1928 from E.G. Haskell, and the acquiring of the
Gellerson property on Heywood Street enabled the
Houlton school to build a girls' dormitory. In 1938
the legislature approved Ricker Junior College as a
school qualified to grant associate degrees in arts
and science.
A crippling set-back struck the growing college on March 30 1944
when a fire completely demolished Wording Hall. The
fire destroyed irreplaceable historical records and
items. Post-fire problems sent teachers scur¬rying
to conduct classes any place in town where they
could find space: churches, lodges and at the
airbase. They taught their classes beginning the day
after the fire.
Feisty little Ricker fought back. School alumni,
Aroostook County, the State Legislature and Houlton
area residents contributed generously and worked
together to bring Ricker Junior College back from
the ashes of the devastating fire. A new Wording
Hall was dedicated August 29. 1946. However, the
school lacked a much needed gymnasium. Ricker
alumnus Fred Putnam spearheaded trustees to write a
$154,000 grant proposal for a new gym under a
federal program to aid World War 11 veterans
returning to college. The grant was approved. A
Quonset-style building named Putnam Gymnasium, was
completed in April 1948.
Ricker Junior College achieved its ultimate educational goal in
1949 when it was chartered as a four year liberal
arts college. By 1950 the college had several
well-equipped classrooms, three dormitories, a
gymnasium, and a growing library. With an enrollment
increase in 1960-61, Ricker again expanded by buying
property in town for another men's dormitory. Ricker
also remodeled an old dorm into a cafeteria,
administrative offices and seminar rooms.
Then in 1966 Ricker College faced another difficult problem. The
State required Houlton and all other Maine
communities to become school districts. This meant
the college would need to draw students from outside
the Houlton area, a very difficult, perhaps
impossible task, for the small school.
Ricker closed officially in 1978 but its Board of' Trustees remains
active with a successful and generous college
scholarship program. It is well supported by alumni,
businesses, townspeople and grants. By the year
2000, trustees had a million dollars in scholarship
aid for the youth of Aroostook and Washington
Counties. Gary B. Bossie, executive director of the
Ricker Scholarship Funds, said some 35-40
college-bound students from these counties annually
receive this financial aid.
"Students in good standing may have their scholarship renewed each
year of college," he explained. "I will be writing
131 checks to various colleges throughout the United
States beginning in January." The scholarships were
increased two years ago from $1,000 annually to
$1,500 per year.
The board has given a total of more than $2,800,000.00 in
scholarship aid since its inception in 1985, a
remarkable amount for a small northern Maine School,
but it's not surprising for such a solid educational
institution as
Ricker that has earned the wholehearted support in
every way of alumni and friends.
Yes, the Ricker name is alive and well in the Houlton area with the
Ricker Room at the local Museum filled with school
mementos, in a generous ongoing scholarship fund,
and in the hearts of alumni and town residents who
remember fondly the small feisty school in the big
Maine County. |