iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Massachusetts Campus Offered For Free By Billionaire Family

Campus

First Posted: 03/14/2012 11:39 am Updated: 03/14/2012 3:24 pm

NORTHFIELD, Mass. -- A billionaire family from Oklahoma has turned a no-stoplight town in Massachusetts into an essential destination for Christian institutions nationwide with one extraordinary promise.

They've pledged to give away a 217-acre campus there for free.

Free, it turns out, is an appealing price for the campus founded by famed evangelist D.L. Moody and estimated by its owner to be worth $20 million.

In recent months, the western Massachusetts property has drawn a stream of secret and not-so-secret visitors.

Each suitor must commit to offer an education founded on traditional Christian beliefs and prove they have the money to maintain this sprawling, classic New England campus.

"It's spectacular. It's spectacular. That's all I can say," said Tracy Davis, academic dean of California-based Olivet University, as she walked the grounds last Thursday.

Locals are ready to welcome new neighbors. But there's concern about who's moving in, including how a conservative Christian institution will mesh in a town of about 3,000 in this notably liberal state.

"We hope that whatever's here can bring people together and not divide," said Alexander Stewart, chair of a town committee monitoring the sale.

The campus was once home to the Northfield Mount Hermon prep school, which was founded as a girls' school by Moody in 1879. The rolling property lines the Connecticut River Valley to the east and climbs high enough to offer views into neighboring New Hampshire and Vermont.

But in 2005, Northfield Mount Hermon left to consolidate at another nearby campus, escaping more than $1 million in annual utility costs and the deferred maintenance on a century's worth of august, but aging, stone and brick buildings.

The campus now belongs to the Green family, who own the Oklahoma-based Hobby Lobby craft store chain. They bought it for $100,000 in 2009, intending to give it to a new college named for Christian scholar C.S. Lewis.

That venture stalled in December amid fundraising woes. The C.S. Lewis Foundation, which is starting the college, says it hasn't given up on establishing a school at the Northfield campus, but the uncertainty prompted the Greens to begin a search for another owner. The market to resell the campus doesn't currently exist, said Hobby Lobby president Steve Green. So the family made the campus and its 43 buildings available to select institutions that can meet their criteria.

After $5 million in renovations, the campus is now move-in ready, but expensive to keep that way. Green said he'd like to transfer the grounds to the new owners by at least the end of the year.

But he added the priority is finding the right tenant, and spoke of restoring Moody's original intent to create a place to teach and train people to share Biblical truth. That legacy remains part of even the vacant campus. Busloads of Christians from South Korea, where Moody's ministry had a deep impact, still climb to join hands and pray around Moody's hilltop grave.

"We would love to see the property be used for a great Christian ministry, and if we help somebody to get that started without a lot of heartburn ... and be a light in the area, that would be our primary goal," Green said.

The Greens, through Jerry Pattengale, a college administrator they hired to help find a new owner, originally invited 15 top Christian institutions to take a look, and 11 have visited. About nine others have been allowed to inspect the grounds as news of the offer has spread, and more requests are coming daily, Pattengale said. So far, Olivet, Azusa Pacific University and Liberty University are among the schools whose names have gone public.

Any institution whose interest in the property survives an initial vetting of their plans and finances will be required to provide a detailed proposal, Pattengale said.

Liberty's interest prompted some Northfield Mount Hermon alumni to petition the school's board of trustees to protest any sale to the university, citing what they called the "divisive and hateful" views of its founder, the late Rev. Jerry Falwell. Residents have also met to discuss concerns about Virginia-based Liberty and the fate of the campus.

But Northfield Mount Hermon has no say over what the Greens decide to do with the property, and Liberty is not likely a top contender, anyway. To make the transaction as simple as possible, the family prefers to give the campus to someone who will take it all, and Liberty has discussed assuming control of only a portion of it.

Green added such protests would matter "very little" to the family if it felt it had found a good suitor who would also be a good neighbor. "You'll never please everybody and we understand that," he said.

Northfield itself is scenic and sleepy, with no traffic lights or even gas stations to slow down a trip to somewhere else. The campus, right off the main road, has a new shine, but its emptiness gives it the air of an exclusive boarding school on eternal spring break.

Corinne Allen, owner of Rooster's Bistro on Main Street in Northfield, said Hobby Lobby's decision can't come soon enough. She bought her restaurant shortly before Northfield Mount Hermon decided to pull out and is anxious to serve the customer base of students, their families and alumni she thought she was inheriting.

Many are pleased a Christian institution is coming and want to make things work, said Allen.

"I do believe the town loves the campus; nobody wants to see it go to waste," she said. "In the end, the campus is the town, and it always has been."

1  of  13
PLAY
FULLSCREEN
ZOOM
SHARE THIS SLIDE 
A view through windows in an empty library room looks out onto an historic 217-acre campus in Northfield, Mass. in this photo taken Thursday, March 8, 2012. The campus, along with its 43 buildings, is being offered for free to an orthodox Christian group who can come up a solid plan to use it. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

FOLLOW HUFFPOST COLLEGE

NORTHFIELD, Mass. -- A billionaire family from Oklahoma has turned a no-stoplight town in Massachusetts into an essential destination for Christian institutions nationwide with one extraordinary promi...
NORTHFIELD, Mass. -- A billionaire family from Oklahoma has turned a no-stoplight town in Massachusetts into an essential destination for Christian institutions nationwide with one extraordinary promi...
Filed by Emmeline Zhao  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 1,308
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (15 total)
photo
matt gordon
One nation, under Canada and over Mexico...
05:37 PM on 03/22/2012
Michelle Bachmann is a result of a fundamentalist evangelical college education.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TN4th
Southern Thinker
06:53 PM on 03/21/2012
How can they call it "education" and restrict it to indoctrination?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oldwolf49
Religion is a tool of the evil.
07:32 PM on 03/19/2012
Why does religion have to be intertwined with education????
photo
matt gordon
One nation, under Canada and over Mexico...
05:32 PM on 03/22/2012
The radicals in charge can better tailor all the courses to discourage critical thinking and independent analysis. People lacking in critical thinking skills are far more likely to remain loyal. Critical thinking often leads to questioning the religious teachings and the religious mythology is often discarded by students during college years.
08:00 PM on 03/27/2012
It doesn't! But traditionally speaking (at least out East), most schools were originally founded as seminaries. For better and for worse, this impulse seems to continue...
08:52 AM on 03/19/2012
Harvard College, 1636 - An Original Rule of Harvard College: "Let every student be plainly instructed and earnestly pressed to consider well, the main end of his life and studies is, to know God and Jesus Christ which is eternal life, (John 17:3), and therefore to lay Christ in the bottom, as the only foundation of all sound knowledge and learning."

William and Mary, 1691 - The College of William and Mary was started mainly due to the efforts of Rev. James Blair in order, according to its charter of 1691, "that the Church of Virginia may be furnished with a seminary of ministers of the gospel, and that the youth may be piously educated in good letters and manners, and that the Christian religion may be propagated among the Western Indians to the glory of Almighty God."

Yale University, 1701 - Yale University was started by Congregational ministers in 1701,"for the liberal and religious education of suitable youth…to propagate in this wilderness, the blessed reformed Protestant religion…"

Princeton, 1746 - Associated with the Great Awakening, Princeton was founded by the Presbyterians in 1746. Rev. Jonathan Dickinson became its first president, declaring, "cursed be all that learning that is contrary to the cross of Christ."

Some other colleges started before America's Independence include: Columbia founded in 1754 (called King's College up until 1784), Dartmouth ,1770; Brown started by the Baptists in 1764; Rutgers, 1766, by the Dutch Reformed Church; Washington and Lee, 1749; and Hampton-Sydney, 1776, by the Presbyterians.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Mikeeee
Did you forgive god today?
02:13 PM on 03/17/2012
Just what America needs another backward thinking christian school.
03:41 AM on 03/17/2012
I'm SO GLAD to read NMH will again become what DL Moody always prayed for.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
carleronn
Former bond trader
10:55 AM on 03/16/2012
I am a '68 grad of Mt Hermon and I would like to invite my fellow alumni who are complaining to the BOD about Liberty to read the comments of the citizens of Northfield, in particular Corinne Allen's. These people need this campus to be occupied because it is the economic center of the town. The elitist rantings of certain alumni display no sympathy for the wellbeing of the residents but merely loyalty to their secularist leanings. DL Moody was a fundamentalist, an evangelizer. What better institution than Liberty to both perpetuate his legacy and to reinvigorate Northfield?
03:40 AM on 03/17/2012
Amen.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maternatura
Keep Calm and Carry On!
09:40 AM on 03/17/2012
Just what we need is more fundamentalists. Not!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sids04
sauce on side
06:12 AM on 03/16/2012
Make it he first FSM institution of higher learning. Rahmen !
01:20 PM on 03/15/2012
I graduated from NMH in 1980 and lived on the Northfield Campus. I found that the setting and the school provided a certain sprituality and taught individuals to be tolerent of one another. There was something very special about the place and the people. Althogh the decision to consolidate the two campuses at Mt Hermon was sad, I can understand the cost involved to maintain the property. The decision to sell to the Green family for the purpose of the CS Lewis College was appropriate all things considered: They had the money and the property would continue to provide sprituality for the students. The decision to give the property away with the stipulation that it be used for spritual purposes is the correct decision. Just because the organized religion is 'Christianity' does not preclude the students who will study there from finding their own version of God.
06:54 PM on 03/15/2012
You sound both blessed and wise. And, appreciative of your blessings. What wonderful and unique experiences I'm sure you enjoyed at NMH, and isn't it terrific to trust many more young people will now be permitted to continue on Mr. Moody's legacy? He surely was one of the finest men ever used by God.
12:09 PM on 03/15/2012
The original seller - NMH - put together a terrible deal on this - the practically gave away the campus ($100k) to Hobby Lobby apparently without any requirement that Hobby Lobby actually start a school there and allowing Hobby Lobby to sell it as they wish.

NMH should have just put a conservation easement the property (forever used as green space).
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
carleronn
Former bond trader
10:57 AM on 03/16/2012
That would have really helped the citizens of Northfield thrive economically...not
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cmr86
Reality. Progressively-based.
10:48 AM on 03/15/2012
Who cares?
09:00 AM on 03/15/2012
Wait a second, it says the Green family bought it 2009 for $100,000? That can't be right...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
carleronn
Former bond trader
10:59 AM on 03/16/2012
Yes, because it saved the NMH people $1 miilion in annual upkeep
03:42 AM on 03/17/2012
Yes, sometimes land, real estate or other gifts are sold for a small fee versus being an outright donation. Happens often.
tccat4
We all have a right to our opinion, like it or not
06:06 AM on 03/15/2012
I don't have a problem with a Christian college, as long as they dont look for government funding. Since they are going to be careful as to who attends.
09:39 AM on 03/15/2012
Its a good thing that YOU are OK with it... we were waiting for your approval.
07:37 PM on 03/15/2012
We? Love somebody's money, con?
07:07 PM on 03/22/2012
Thanks for your comment, you got me more interested so I looked into college taxes and found this very good pdf.

Here is the link to the pdf if you would like to see. (its loooong)
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=8&ved=0CGcQFjAH&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.aau.edu%2FWorkArea%2Flinkit.aspx%3FLinkIdentifier%3Did%26ItemID%3D8382&ei=3a5rT77fNsavsALihYGLBg&usg=AFQjCNETHaX2VTThnHavUSHFi99-NTde7A

From the pdf:
Private universities, as well as some public universities and foundations that support
public universities, qualify as tax-exempt charitable organizations because they meet
the requirements of IRC Section 501(c)(3), which includes "[c]orporations, and any
community chest, fund, or foundation, organized and operated exclusively for
religious, charitable, scientific, testing for public safety, literary, or educational
purposes . . ."
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Angela Roque
Justice and Morality
05:59 AM on 03/15/2012
It's a shame that people are criticizing their decision to give away the campus for free to a Christian institution...They purchased it with their money, it's their property, and they are free to give it away to whomever they please. So many people advocate for the freedom to live a lifestyle of their choice, but when it comes to the freedom of religion, so many are against anything related to the choice of being a Christian...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maternatura
Keep Calm and Carry On!
08:38 AM on 03/15/2012
I feel sorry for the community if they are successful with this.
09:40 AM on 03/15/2012
I feel sorry for you... at the end.
03:44 AM on 03/17/2012
Feel sorry for the community? How awful for them to be able to bring in tons of revenue, and bring it in from Christian youth desiring to prepare themselves to serve fellow-man.
05:31 AM on 03/15/2012
I was wondering why Hobby Lobby is closed on Sunday....