List of Upsala College people

This is a list of the people associated of Upsala College including the school's presidents, its faculty and alumni. Upsala College was a Lutheran-affiliated, private college located in East Orange, New Jersey (1899–1995). After years of declining enrollment and financial problems, Upsala College closed in May 1995.

Presidents of Upsala College

edit

Nine men have served as the president of Upsala College in its 102-year history.[1] Most of these men were Lutheran clergymen.[1] Only one, the Rev. Dr. Evald Benjamin Lawson (1904–1965), was an alumnus of Upsala College.[1]

Portrait College President Years in office Education[1] Notes
1 Rev. Lars Herman Beck
(1859–1935)
1893–1910
  • Chosen to be the first president by the Augustana Synod at its annual meeting.[1]
  • October 1893, met with first 16 students in a Brooklyn, New York church basement.[1]
  • School offered land in Kenilworth, New Jersey in 1898, Upsala became a four-year degree-granting college in 1903—graduating its first students with B.A. degrees in 1905.[1]
2 Rev. Peter Froeberg
(1873–1954)
1910–1920
  • B.A., Augustana College (1898)
  • B.D. Augustana Theological Seminary (1902)
  • attended Yale University, 1900-1905
  • Often borrowed money in his own name to pay the college's debts, including securing a large mortgage from Scandia Life Insurance Company to pay the entire debt and end foreclosure proceedings.[1]
3 Rev. Carl Gustav Erickson
(1877–1936)
1920–1936
  • B.A., Augustana College (1904)
  • B.D., Augustana Theological Seminary (1908)
  • Reorganized the curriculum and faculty[1]
  • Student body increased from 300 to 1,500 during his tenure.[1]
  • Raised $465,000 to develop the school including 1923 purchase of 45-acre campus in East Orange, New Jersey.[1]
4 Rev. Evald Benjamin Lawson
(1904–1965)
1938–1965
  • Expanded the college's East Orange campus; new buildings were built including the Beck Hall, residence halls, library and chapel.[1]
5 Rev. Carl Gustaf Fjellman
(1919–2011)
1966–1976
  • Oversaw completion of Puder Hall for the sciences (1968), College Center (1970), Art Center (1971), and townhouse complex.[1][2]
  • Changing demographics made multiculturalism, integration and diversity key issues.[1]
6 Rodney Otto Felder
(1927–1997)
1976–1984
  • Expanded school by acquiring the Wirths Campus in Wantage Township, Sussex County, New Jersey.
  • Previously a teacher and administrator in public school system and taught at various colleges.[1]
  • Last president of Finch College in New York City (1970–77).[3]
7 David Eugene Schramm
(1936–2021)
1986–1988
  • Brief presidency saw declining enrollment.[1]
  • Resigned over "differences of opinion as to how the college could best achieve its goal while preserving its mission" with the trustees.[4]
8 Rev. Robert Edgar Karsten
(1930–2014)
1988–1994
  • Attempted to stem tide of serious financial problems, declining enrollment and academic standards, brought in international students.[1]
9 Paul Victor DeLomba
(1935–2018)
1994–1995
  • Partner and project manager with Price Waterhouse,[5] DeLomba was hired in 1994 by the board of trustees to close the college.[1]

Faculty and staff

edit

Academic faculty

edit

Athletic staff

edit
  • Ron Rothstein, professional NBA basketball coach, former college basketball player, former teacher and basketball coach (1974-1975)

Alumni

edit

This list of alumni includes both those who completed degree programs and graduated from Upsala College, as well as those who attended but did not graduate.

Academia and research

edit
Name Degree (year) Description
Joan W. Bennett B.S. 1963
  • geneticist
John Langston Gwaltney B.A. 1952
  • anthropology professor
Birger A. Pearson B.A. 1957

Politics and public service

edit
Name Degree (year) Description
Betty Boyd
  • former Colorado state legislator
David Demarest
  • political operative, White House communications director (Reagan, Bush administrations)
  • Stanford University administrator
Frank J. Dodd
Brian Fischer B.S. 1966
Nia Gill B.A. 1971
  • New Jersey state senator[8]
Don Guardian B.A. 1975
  • New Jersey Assemblyman
Donald Jacobs[9] B.S. 1987
  • Chief Information Officer, Bucks County, PA[10]
  • real estate investor and developer
  • Fire Marshal, Lehigh County, PA[11]
  • former private sector CIO and executive CIO consultant
  • former New Jersey politician, fire commissioner & emergency management director - Sussex County
  • BS - Mathematics conc: Natural Science, Edison State University,[12] 1989
  • M.Div studies - New Brunswick Theological Seminary,[13] 1993
  • MBA - Southern New Hampshire University,[14] 2017
Hymen B. Mintz (1909-1986) A.B. 1929
Matthew Patrick
  • Massachusetts state representative
Richie Roberts did not graduate
Harold J. Wirths (born 1965) A.S.

Arts and entertainment

edit
Name Degree (year) Description
Louis Chu Asian-American author, Eat a Bowl of Tea
Richie Davis Canadian Football League player and Grey Cup champion
Kay Gardella New York Daily News television critic
Walt Housman football player
Don Kirshner songwriter, rock music producer[17]
Allen Klein B.S. 1956 music industry executive, talent manager (Sam Cooke, The Beatles and The Rolling Stones), and pioneer in freeform radio
Dick Kryhoski Major League Baseball first baseman, 1949 World Series with New York Yankees
Bob McCann did not graduate professional basketball player
Robert W. Peterson newspaper reporter and author
Jerry Recco did not graduate radio personality (WFAN, WHTG, WINS)
Gunārs Saliņš Latvian modernist poet
Vin Scelsa radio personality, created Idiot's Delight freeform radio program
Sally M. Walker B.A. 1975 juvenile science and nonfiction author
Tammy Nichalson B.A. 1994 Entrepreneur

|- | Chris Desiderio || B.A. 1988 || Renowned tonsorial artist

Fictional alumni

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Series I Presidential Papers" Archived 2015-01-15 at the Wayback Machine in the "Upsala College records, 1893-1995" Archived 2014-10-19 at the Wayback Machine held in the collection of the Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center, Augustana College (Rock Island, Illinois). Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  2. ^ Staff. Obituary for Carl Gustaf Fjellman in The Star-Ledger (3 July 2011). Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  3. ^ Arenson, Karen W. "Rodney O. Felder Dies at 69; Finch College's Last President" in The New York Times (26 January 1997). Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  4. ^ Associated Press (AP). "Metro Datelines: Upsala President Resigns From Post" in The New York Times (27 October 1988). Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  5. ^ Allen, David Grayson and McDermott, Kathleen. Accounting for Success: A History of Price Waterhouse in America, 1890-1990 (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard Business School Press, 1993), 268.
  6. ^ Pearson, Birger A. Birger Albert Pearson - Curriculum Vitae, University of California, Santa Barbara.
  7. ^ Frank J. “Pat” Dodd, New Jersey Casino Control Commission. Accessed March 7, 2018. "Dodd attended Upsala College and Seton Hall University."
  8. ^ New Jersey Legislature. Members: Legislative District 34 - Senator Nia H. Gill Esq. (D). Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  9. ^ name="Donald Jacobs" [1] Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  10. ^ "Home". BucksCounty.org.
  11. ^ "Home". northwhitehall.org.
  12. ^ "Home". tesu.edu.
  13. ^ "Home". nbts.edu.
  14. ^ "Home". snhu.edu.
  15. ^ Manuscript Group 1287, Hymen B. Mintz (1909-1986), New Jersey assemblyman and collector Archived 2017-02-03 at the Wayback Machine, New Jersey Historical Society. Accessed March 27, 2018. "Hymen B. Mintz (1909-1986) was born in Newark, New Jersey (Essex County). He was educated at: Lafayette Grammar School, Newark; Central High School, Newark; and at Upsala College where he graduated with an A.B. (1929)."
  16. ^ Assemblyman Harold J. "Hal" Wirths (R), New Jersey Legislature. Accessed March 7, 2018. "Education: A.S. Upsala College (Business)"]
  17. ^ Schudel, Matt. "Don Kirshner, hit-making rock impresario of the 1960s, dies at 76" in The Washington Post (18 January 2012). Retrieved 24 May 2013.