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Encyclopedia > Chautauqua Institute

The Chautauqua Institution is a non-profit adult education center and summer resort in Chautauqua, New York. It was founded in 1874 by Lewis Miller and John Heyl Vincent as a camp for Sunday school teachers, and has operated each summer since then.


Since that time, its program has expanded to include the arts, education, and recreation, as well as religion, in a season that runs for nine weeks each summer (from mid-June to late August). People with interests in any of those four areas can enjoy the Chautauqua experience.


A typical day's programming includes a lecture on a social, political or academic issue in the morning; a concert in the evening (often by the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra, but sometimes by a prominent or formerly prominent popular performer); religious services and lectures. A remarkable range of summer school courses in music, dance, drama and general topics is also offered.


The Institution's grounds, between New York State Route 394 and Chautauqua Lake, include public buildings (such as the 6,500-seat Amphitheater), administrative offices, a library, a bookstore, hotels, inns, rooming houses, and many private cottages. There are about 400 year-round residents, but in the summer the population swells to an estimated 10,000 at any one time. The grounds are largely a pedestrian community, with parking lots located on the periphery.


Summer admission is by "gate ticket" which allows the purchaser to enjoy the grounds with their village atmosphere, including many 19th-century houses and attractive gardens; to use the library, public beaches and parks; and to attend lectures and concerts. There is an additional charge for some courses, for opera and theater tickets and for use of the golf course and tennis courts.


One of the oldest day camps in the United States is the Chautauqua Boys and Girls Club. There is also a day care centre for young children. At the other extreme, Chautauqua waives the gate fee for visitors aged 90 and over. (It has been facetiously described as "the place where little old ladies go -- and take their grandmothers.")


The Chautauqua tradition continues to be Christian, and most mainstream denominations are visibly represented through houses that offer both religious programs and lodging to their members. But there is also a strong Jewish presence. Effort are being made to introduce some diversity to the traditional Chautauqua clientele, which is almost entirely Caucasian, and drawn heavily from New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio. There is concern at Chautauqua that the summer experience, once enjoyed by clergy, teachers and others of modest incomes, is pricing itself out of that market, particularly through conversion of older houses into expensive condominiums.


The Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle, described as America's oldest continuously operating book club, designates half a dozen books each year for reading and discussion. The authors generally come to Chautauqua to speak and to talk with readers.


The Amphitheater boasts the Massey Memorial Organ, the largest outdoor pipe organ in the United States. Another feature of the Chautauqua grounds is Palestine Park, at 125-year-old outdoor scale model of the Holy Land. The Miller Bell Tower has an eight-note carillon. The Athenaeum Hotel is said to be the largest wooden building in the eastern United States.


Chautauqua has been visited by United States Presidents from Ulysses S. Grant to Bill Clinton, and by other prominent Americans from Booker T. Washington to Karl Menninger and, in 2003, Tom Ridge. Franklin D. Roosevelt's historic "I hate war" speech was delivered from the podium in the Chautauqua Amphitheater.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
ciweb.org | About Chautauqua | History & Archives (659 words)
The Chautauqua Institution is a not-for-profit, 750-acre educational center beside Chautauqua Lake in southwestern New York State, where approximately 7,500 persons are in residence on any day during a nine-week season, and a total of over 142,000 attend scheduled public events.
The board establishes the policies and direction of the Institution, electing the officers who are responsible for the operation of the Institution.
The Mission of the Chautauqua Institution Archives is to identify, organize, preserve and protect the printed, microfilmed, taped, photographic and other records, and selected artifacts and museum pieces to add to the general and scholarly understanding of the Chautauqua Institution and the Chautauqua Movement.
Chautauqua Institution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1375 words)
The Chautauqua Institution is a non-profit adult education center and summer resort located on 750 acres in Chautauqua, New York.
Summer admission to Chautauqua is by "gate ticket" which allows the purchaser to enjoy the grounds and its village atmosphere, including many 19th-century houses, churches, theaters, pavilions, attractive gardens, and the town square, Bestor Plaza, named after Arthur Bestor, president of the institution from 1915 to 1944.
The ideals of the Chautauqua Institution were spread through out the United States through a series of traveling Chautauqua assemblies that incorporated many of the components of program at the Institution, including lectures, music and a focus on current issues.
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