Eli Grenawalt Foster, of Topeka, Kan., ranks as one of the State's
leading and progressive educators. He is a native of Pennsylvania, having been
born on a farm near Elizabethtown, that State, May 4, 1864. He received his
early education in the district schools, supplemented with a course in the State
normal school, at Millersville, Pa., from which he graduated in 1886. After his
graduation he accepted the principalship of the Soldiers' and Orphans' Home, at
Philadelphia, Pa., which position he held during the school year of 1886-87.
But, believing the great West was a better field for the progressive teacher, he
decided to make Kansas his future home, and at the expiration of his contract at
the Soldiers' and Orphans' Home, he came to Topeka. That was in 1887, and since
that time he has been one of the city's most energetic, wide-awake and
painstaking school principals. During his long and successful career in the
school room he has made a careful study of United States history, both as to
subject matter and as to the best methods of teaching the subject to pupils of
elementary schools. As a result of that study he has formulated a series of
historical maps, to be used by both the teacher and the student, which are doing
much to make the study of history interesting and definite to the average pupil.
Foster's "Historical Maps" and "Outline Maps" are now used in the schools of
hundreds of cities throughout the United States and in many of our colleges and
normal schools. He is the author of "Reference Manual and Outlines of United
States History," "Civil War by Campaigns," "Illustrative Historical Chart" (a
series of large maps on American history), a series of "Outline Maps," and a
"United States History." The Jury of Awards of the St. Louis Exposition awarded
a medal and diploma to Professor Foster for the excellence of his series of
historical maps. These publications proved so popular and the demand for them so
great that in 1906 it became necessary to organize the Historical Publishing
Company, of Topeka, to publish and handle his maps and books. Professor Foster
has been president of the company since its organization, and at the same time
has successfully handled the Harrison School. But in 1911
he resigned the latter position to devote all his time to literary work and to
the publishing business.
At Millerstown, Pa., on September 2, 1890, Professor Foster was united in marriage with Miss Alice Mitchell, the daughter of George Howe and Elizabeth (Coleman) Mitchell, and to this union three children were born: Miriam M., Ruth M. and Mitchell Eli. Professor Foster's parents, Eli and Mary (Grenawalt) Foster, are still living on the old homestead near Elizabethtown, Pa. Both are natives of that locality, the former's birth having occurred in 1829 and the latter's in 1838. Eli Foster was a successful schoolteacher in his day, as was his father before him. These honored parents were married in 1857 and were blessed with five sons and five daughters, all of whom grew to maturity and were present at their old home in 1907 to celebrate the golden wedding anniversary of their father and mother.
While Professor Foster is a Republican in politics, still he reserves the right to vote for men of high character for office, irrespective of party. Mrs. Foster was educated at the State normal school at Millersville, Pa., and later graduated from the musical department of Washburn College in Topeka, and is prominent in the city's musical circles. In the retirement of Professor Foster, the Topeka schools will lose one of its best principals and most successful educators, but as his life work will be devoted to educational research and the publication of his excellent works, Topeka's loss will be a gain to the cause of education, not only locally but nationally.
Pages 597-598 from a supplemental volume of Kansas: a cyclopedia of state history, embracing events, institutions, industries, counties, cities, towns, prominent persons, etc. ... / with a supplementary volume devoted to selected personal history and reminiscence. Standard Pub. Co. Chicago : 1912. 3 v. in 4. : front., ill., ports.; 28 cm. Vols. I-II edited by Frank W. Blackmar. Transcribed October 2002 by Carolyn Ward. This volume is identified at the Kansas State Historical Society as microfilm LM196. It is a single volume 3.
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