Ripon


Book Description

From its first settlement by Fourierite communards in the 1840s, before Wisconsin became a state, Ripon has had a long and distinguished history, swept by and nourishing important currents of the nation's saga. The party of Abraham Lincoln was born here in 1854, in the nation's first public gathering to call itself "Republican Party." On the eve of the Civil War, Ripon's "Booth War" brought the city to national attention as a hotbed of abolitionism. Ripon is the birthplace of suffragette Carrie Chapman Catt and department store pioneer H. Gordon Selfridge. Its stately homes and neighborhoods remind many visitors of New England, and its historic downtown remains one of the best preserved in the region. Ripon College, founded in 1851, has often been described as the "Harvard of the Midwest." Its alumni include actors Spencer Tracy and Harrison Ford, jazz singer Al Jarreau, American physicist and health researcher Elda Emma Anderson, and astronaut Jeffrey Bantle.




Ripon


Book Description

Ripon is a charming and quiet city in the San Joaquin Valley in Central California. The community is very faith-based, prioritizing tolerance, gratitude, and family, and these values have played out in the development of the town. In the past 100 years, very few buildings have been demolished but instead have been repaired and repurposed.




Ripon Through Time


Book Description

This fascinating selection of photographs traces some of the many ways in which Ripon has changed and developed over the last century.










Ripon History Tour


Book Description

A guided tour of the historic city of Ripon, showing how the areas you know and love have changed over the centuries.




Secret Ripon


Book Description

Explore the secret history of Ripon through a fascinating selection of stories, facts and photographs.




India Under Ripon


Book Description







India under Ripon: A Private Diary


Book Description

"India under Ripon: A Private Diary" by Wilfrid Scawen Blunt is a book that describes the condition of Indian at the time of Lord Ripon's viceroyalty, which was in truth the awakening hour of the new movement towards liberty in India, the dawn of that day of unrest which is the necessary prelude to full self-assertion in every subject land. The journey it records was made under circumstances of exceptional interest at an exceptional moment and should be instructive in view of what has happened since. It contains a foreshadowing of events that are under our eyes today and suggests a solution to problems which, after long waiting and with an act of timid courage, is gradually being accepted as official.