The roots
of the
College
and its
mission
can be
traced
back to
1868. With
the influx
of nearly
two million
German
immigrants
following
the European
Revolution
of 1848,
it became
necessary
to establish
a training
school
for German-speaking
ministers.
Thus was
born the
German
Theological
Seminary
of Newark,
New Jersey.
The institution's
first four
students
met on
September
16, 1869,
in a room
in the
First German
Presbyterian
Church.
Courses
in theological
instruction,
Biblical
history,
pastoral
work, natural
philosophy,
and United
States
history
were taught
in both
English
and German
by the
four full-time
faculty.
Classes
were also
conducted
in Hebrew,
Latin,
and Greek.
In 1872,
the school
relocated
to Bloomfield,
occupying
the home
of the
former
Bloomfield
Academy
at Franklin
and Liberty
Streets.
This structure
stands
today as
Seibert
Hall.
In 1923,
the State
Board of
Education
approved
a four-year
college
course
leading
to the
Bachelor
of Arts
degree,
thereby
establishing
Bloomfield
College
as an independent
division
of the
Seminary.
Eight years
later,
in 1931,
the State
Legislature
approved
the change
of the
institution's
name to
Bloomfield
College
and Seminary.
The term "Seminary" was
dropped
from the
institution's
name in
1961, and
was replaced
with the
term "Institute".
This term
was quickly
phased
out, leaving
the institution's
name as
it is known
today:
Bloomfield
College.
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