Historical Images of Porter County
Faculty, Dodge's Telegraph, Railway Accounting and
Radio (Wireless) Institute
Valparaiso, Indiana
Date: 1924
Source Type: Photograph
Publisher, Printer, Photographer: Dodge's
Telegraph, Railway Accounting and Radio (Wireless) Institute
Postmark: Not applicable
Collection: Steven R. Shook
Remark: Individuals identified in photograph include C. A.
Harmon, J. M. McNeely, R. K. White, O. N. Owen, Dorothy Day, Evelyn Remsted, D.
R. Clemons, M. E. Packman, and G. M. Dodge. The Dodge Institute of Telegraphy
was initially established as a department of the Northern Indiana Normal School
in 1874 by G. A. Dodge. At that time, Dodge was employed as telegrapher of the
Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chicago Railroad and saw opportunity in better educating
future telegraphers. Reorganized by Dodge and F. R. Lunbeck in 1891, the school
flourished and became the largest telegraph and railway instruction institution
in the United States. As radio entered the scene, training in "wireless"
communication was added to the curriculum of the institute. Dr. J. B. Hershman
purchased the Dodge Institute in 1939 and moved the campus to the site formerly
occupied by Pitkin-Brooks and L. E. Myers companies at Center Street and West
Lincolnway. Following World War II, the Dodge Institute was renamed the
Valparaiso Technical Institute. Valparaiso Technical Institute went defunct in
April of 1991, ending 117 years of operation.
Return to
Valparaiso
Schools Images
Index
Return to
Porter County Photographs & Historical Images
Please contact the
Porter County GenWeb Coordinator if
you can provide any additional information concerning this image.
Image and related text prepared by Steven R. Shook