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 OHIO 601 INSTITUTIONS. Where situated. Denominations. In what year opened. No. of in- structori. Pupils in collegiate department. Pupils in all depart- ments. Antioch college Yellow Springs.. Berea. Unitarian. . 1853 1856 1872 1850 1842 1831 1847 1825 1864 1850 1867 1825 1835 1851 1858 1837 1833 1804 1844 1859 1847 1835 1831 1870 1851 1826 1856 1870 1858 1845 1850 1833 1856 1821 1871 1842 1843 1849 1819 1852 1845 1872 1848 1833 1851 1849 1794 1830 1860 1871 10 18 14 6 18 10 8 "7 8 13 10 15 16 68 3 6 12 11 4 16 27 4 16 "4 5 10 4 14 3 15 'is 10 12 7 14 8 5 7 3 8 3 43 179 101 60 114 87 20 'S5 102 87 85 818 638 159 15 48 159 '75 i59 155 10 66 'is 25 100 122 65 '76 66 "TO 282 '88 56 65 48 'so 48 25 120 288 180 80 220 162 82 iio 210 233 69 183 112 809 125 1,830 50 109 376 217 205 272 806 25 183 '79 150 163 271 Baldwin university Methodist Episcopal Buchtel college. . . * Universalist Capital university Columbus Cincinnati Evangelical Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Cincinnati Wesleyan college Denison university Granville Baptist Farmer's college. * College Hill New Athens Berea United Presbyterian German Wallace college Heidelberg college Hiram college Tiffin Hiram Gambier Eeformed Disciples Kenyon college Protestant Episcopal Not denominational Eoman Catholic Methodist Episcopal Marietta college Marietta Mount St. Mary's of the West Cincinnati. Mount Union.... New Concord Oberlin Iberia Muskingum college Not denominational Congregational Oberlin college Ohio Central college United Presbyterian Ohio university Ohio Wesleyan university Delaware. ., Methodist Episcopal One Study university NewMark'tStat'n Westerville Methodist Episcopal Otterbein university United Brethren in Christ. Eichmond college Eichmond St. Xavier college Eoman Catholic Wooster Urbana university Western Eeserve college ' Urbana Hudson. . New Church. Not denominational Wilberforce university .... Xenia Afric'n Method't Episcopal Friends Wilmington college Willoughby college Willoughby... Springfield Xenia Methodist Wittenberg college. Evangelical Lutheran Methodist Episcopal Xenia college SCHOOLS OF LAW. Law school of Cincinnati college. . . . Ohio state and union law school SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE. Cincinnati college of medicine and surgery Cincinnati Cleveland Cincinnati Eegular Cincinnati college of pharmacy Cleveland medical college Cleveland Pharmaceutic Eegular Eclectic medical institute Eclectic Homoeopathic hospital college Medical college of Ohio u Homoeopathic Cincinnati Eegular Miami medical college Ohio college of dental surgery. . u Dental Pulte medical college. . u Homoeopathic Starling medical college and hospital SCHOOLS OF THEOLOGY. Lane theological seminary Columbus Cincinnati Eegular Presbyterian Mount St. Mary's of the West St. Mary's theological seminary Theological seminary Theological seminary of the Evan- ) gelical Lutheran ioint synod of > Ohio ....'.......:., .... j Eoman Catholic Eoman Catholic United Presbyterian Evangelical Lutheran Eoman Catholic Cleveland Xenia Columbus Carthagena Davton.. . Theological seminary of St. [ Union Biblical seminarv. . . United Brethren in Christ. The system adopted by the One Study univer- sity enables students to complete one study be- fore beginning another. The Cincinnati Wes- leyan college is exclusively for females. Both sexes are admitted to Antioch, Hiram, Mount Union, Oberlin, Ohio Central, One Study uni- versity, Otterbein, Richmond, and the univer- sity of Wooster. Besides these, there are nu- merous seminaries of a high order for the su-, perior instruction of females. In addition to the professional schools above named, there is a law department in Wilberforce university; a medical department (in Cleveland) of the uni- versity of Wooster; a college of pharmacy connected with Baldwin university; scientific departments of Denison university and Oberlin college; and theological departments of Ger- man Wallace college, Heidelberg college, Mount St. Mary's of the West, Oberlin college, Wilber- force university, and Wittenberg college. The Toledo university of arts and trades has recent- ly been organized for advanced artistic and in- dustrial instruction of young men and women. The number of libraries in 1870 was 17,790, with an aggregate of 3,687,363 volumes. Of these, 11,765 with 2,353,000 volumes were pri- vate, and 6,025 with 1,334,363 volumes other than private; 3 town, city, &c., 61,000; 1,118 school, college, &c., 426,013; 4,896 Sabbath school, 796,650 ; and 5 circulating, 8,500. The largest libraries are the public in Cincinnati, which in 1874 had 62,000 volumes ; the state in Columbus, 39,000 ; the mercantile in Cin- cinnati, 35,500 ; and the library of Marietta