Friday, September 28, 1975 9 University Daily Kansan Staff Writer Farm area formerly local gathering site BY LORRAINE JOHNSON To the people of the late 1800s, Blismarck Grove, now a farming area north of Lawrence, meant picnics, parties, meetings and fairs. "It was a meeting place that was used by all sorts of people for all sorts of things." George Griffin, director of the Kansas Collection, said Tuesday. She said that Lawrence could have events similar to the celebrations at Blankarck Clencee Hills, chairman of the Douglas County Bicentennial Committee, recently proposed that Lawrence should begin an annual celebration called Bismarck Grove Days. Jimmie Lewis, in a thesis he wrote about Bismarck Grow in 1968, said, "One day could be devoted to evangelism, another to causing doubts about Christianity; one day to celebrate emancipation and another to closing the gates to Negroes." One of the first big events at Bismarck Grove was the National Temperance Meeting in September 1878. Lewis said that in August 1879, another temperance meeting drew 20,000 to 25,000 people on the last Sunday of the meeting. Liberal meetings and Chautauqua, an institution providing popular education, were also events of Bismarck Grove between 1879 and 1882. The temperance meetings at Bismarck Grove were major factors in the Kansas prohibition movement, Lewis said. Kansas passed prohibition in 1880. The National Liberal League, an organization devoted to the complete separation of church and state, sponsored several meetings at Bismarck Grove. While this group promoted abandoning the use of the Bible in schools, Chauqua university students were often called to wear black. W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history, said Chauquaqua started in New York as a Sunday school institute. Chauquaqua of teacher training courses and sermons. The boom years for Bismarck Grove were the 1880s. Nude hosts get rejected GLEN GARDNER, N.J. 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