From 1863 until 1864, students published six numbers of ''The Students' Repository: A Quarterly Periodical, Devoted to Education, Morality & General Improvement'', "organ of the students and friends of the Union Literary Institute". One thousand copies were printed of one issue. The magazine received some national recognition, being mentioned in ''
Harper's Weekly and receiving three pages in the North American Review''. (Smothers was an African-American man who had received nine months of formal education before starting to serve as a teacher.) The school suspended operations when he left.) Among the contents of the
Repository: • "Uncle Abram", a report on an elderly slave who was whipped severely, by E[lkanah] Beard, "chief field agent in the Mississippi valley for the Freedman's Committee of the Indiana Yearly Meeting of Friends". Beard also contributed "A Trip Down the Mississippi River", on conditions in the
contraband camps set up in the wake of the advancing Union armies. Beard's journals were not transcribed in full and published until 2017. •
Charles Eliot Norton, editor of the
North American Review, also contributed an article to the ''Students' Repository'': "The Moral Unity of the Human Race", described as an "Extract from an Address...on the 'Correspondence of American Principles in Religion and Politics', read before the Autumnal Convention of the
Unitarians, at Springfield, Mass., Oct. 14, 1863." • Also by Norton: "The Legend of the
Wandering Jew", along with an "extract from one of his recent letters to us", appeared in the final issue, dated October 1864. ==Later years==