The completion of the
Louisiana Western Railroad in 1880 – connecting it to
New Orleans and
Houston — had turned Lake Charles from a small village to a growing town. Its population grew from 838 in 1880 to 3,442 in 1890 and 6,680 in 1900. The growth of a timber industry led to new rail lines and made Lake Charles the commercial center of southwest Louisiana. It had also attracted a large number of Northern settlers, particularly from midwestern states like Kansas, Iowa, and Minnesota, who brought their Protestant faiths into more Catholic south Louisiana. Lake Charles College was one of a number of colleges founded by
Congregational churches in the late 1800s, including
Pomona College in California,
Rollins College in Florida,
Yankton College in South Dakota,
Carleton College in Minnesota, and
Colorado College. On June 21, 1887, a meeting of Lake Charles residents heard from
Cyrus Ingerson Scofield of Dallas, who served as superintendent of the
American Home Missionary Society for Texas and Louisiana. The meeting created a nine-member board that included both Scofield and
Seaman A. Knapp adopted articles of incorporation for Lake Charles College: "The objects of said corporation is to erect, maintain and conduct a College, for the Christian education of youth, including all customary departments, as well as the boardling and lodging of pupils, and the conferring of all literary honors and degrees, known and usually granted by any College." While many of the new Congregational colleges being founded in the period were in relatively new areas of white settlement, Scofield wrote "that Southwestern Louisiana is, in respect of settlement, as new a country as North Dakota or Washington. Before the war, and, indeed, until eight years ago, these fertile prairies were wholly unoccupied. A few
Acadians had settled along the bayous — that was all. Now farms are opened, the prairies are already dotted with homes, and thriving villages bead the long line of the railroad. Of all this region Lake Charles is the capital and emporium." For the campus, 16 acres of land a mile southeast of the
Calcasieu Parish courthouse were provided by the
North American Land & Timber Co., which owned large tracts across southwest Louisiana. In 1889, Henry Lynes Hubbell (1830–1908) was selected as Lake Charles College's first president. A native of
Wilton, Connecticut, Hubbell attended
Yale College,
Union Theological Seminary, and
Andover Theological Seminary. After being ordained, he preached at churches in Connecticut, Massachusetts, Michigan, Kansas, Colorado, and New York. In 1886, he moved to
Austin, Texas to lead the
Tillotson Collegiate and Normal Institute, a Congregational college for African Americans which, through merger, later became
Huston–Tillotson University. ==Years of operation==