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Edman, V. Raymond (Victor Raymond), 1900-1967.

 Person

Dates

  • Existence: 1900 - 1967

Biographical Statement

Victor Raymond Edman was born in 1900 to Swedish immigrant parents and one of six children. He left home in 1918 to join the army and served for one year, spending much of that time in Allied-occupied Germany. After returning home, he attended college and became a missionary to the Quichua Indians in Ecuador from 1923 to 1928. During this time he married Edith Olson, whom he had met in the United States. He came to Wheaton College in 1936 as an associate professor of history and became the college’s fourth president in 1940, a position he held until he became chancellor in 1965.

During his term as president, the College expanded its financial endowments, its enrollment, and its campus. Fourteen major buildings were erected during his twenty-five year presidency. Buildings included Centennial Gymnasium, Memorial Student Center, Old Dining Hall, Smith Hall, Breyer Science Building, McAlister Conservatory, Health Center, Nicholas Library and Edman Chapel, named by the Trustees in his honor. During this time the College also acquired land for the Black Hills Science Station in South Dakota and HoneyRock Camp in Wisconsin.

Over the years Dr. Edman had a number of serious health problems: typhoid fever (from which he nearly died while in Ecuador), cataracts, gallstones, and ever-increasing heart attacks. One of these attacks, which finally proved fatal, occurred on September 22, 1967, while he delivered a chapel message entitled, “In the Presence of the King.”

Dr. Edman had been a very active public speaker with engagements in Africa, Europe, the Far and Near East, South America, and, of course, all over the United States. He authored nineteen books and numerous articles, most of them devotional in nature. Many were translated into several foreign languages. His correspondence often gave personal counsel and advice and reached thousands. He was a personal friend of Billy Graham and often worked with him on his crusades.

Found in 2 Collections and/or Records:

Collection 567 Papers of H. Wilbert Norton

 Collection
Identifier: CN 567
Scope and Contents Oral history interviews, photographs, correspondence, reports, minutes, budgets, pamphlets, and manuscripts relating to Gustav H.W. Norton's (1915-2017) work as an administrator and professor of theology and missiology at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and Wheaton College, as well as his involvement with InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, Evangelical Literature Overseas, and Mid-American Keswick. The collection documents Norton’s childhood, education, and career as professor of missions...
Dates: Created: 1950-2000

Wheaton College Revivals Collection

 Collection
Identifier: CN 514
Scope and Contents

Oral history interviews, questionnaires, reports, videos, and other materials relating to spontaneous revivals on Wheaton College campus in the twentieth century. There are restrictions on some material in this collection. The collection primarily documents the March 1995 revival at the College, largely through oral history interviews conducted during or shortly after the event; also included are thirteen follow-up interviews conducted two years after the revival.

Dates: Created: 1936-1997; Other: Majority of material found in 1994-1995

Filtered By

  • Subject: Children. -- United States X
  • Subject: College students in missionary work -- United States. X

Additional filters:

Subject
AIDS (Disease) 1
Athletes 1
Athletes -- United States 1
Athletes -- United States -- Religious life. 1
Bible colleges 1
∨ more
Bible colleges -- United States. 1
Bible. 1
Children -- United States -- Conversion to Christianity. 1
Christian leadership. 1
Christian life. 1
Christianity and culture -- United States. 1
Christianity and culture. 1
Church renewal -- United States. 1
Church renewal. 1
Church work with prisoners -- Florida. 1
Church work with prisoners. 1
Confession. 1
Depressions 1
Depressions -- 1929 1
Depressions -- 1929 -- United States. 1
Donahue (Television program) 1
Drug abuse. 1
Ecumenical movement. 1
Evangelical Free Church of America -- Missions. 1
Evangelicalism -- United States. 1
Evangelicalism. 1
Faith. 1
Forgiveness. 1
His. 1
Holiness churches 1
Holiness churches -- United States. 1
Holy Spirit. 1
Homosexuality. 1
Hymns. 1
Internet. 1
Interpersonal conflict. 1
Love 1
Love -- Christianity. 1
Missionaries -- Training of. 1
Missionaries -- Appointment, call, and election. 1
Missionaries -- Training of -- United States. 1
Missionaries. 1
Missions -- Biblical teaching. 1
Missions -- Congo (Democratic Republic). 1
Missions -- Congresses -- Asia. 1
Missions -- Congresses -- United States. 1
Missions -- Congresses. 1
Missions -- Educational work. 1
Missions -- Vietnam. 1
Prayer groups -- United States. 1
Prayer groups. 1
Prayer. 1
Prisons 1
Prisons -- Missions and charities. 1
Providence and government of God. 1
Racism -- United States. 1
Racism. 1
Regeneration (Theology) 1
Religion and music. 1
Religious institutions. 1
Repentance. 1
Revival hymns. 1
Revivals -- United States. 1
Revivals -- Wheaton. 1
Revivals. 1
Salvation. 1
Sexual abuse victims 1
Sexual abuse victims -- United States. 1
Sin. 1
Trinity. 1
Wheaton (Ill.) 1
Wheaton College (Ill.) -- Athletics. 1
Wheaton College (Ill.) -- Buildings. 1
Wheaton College (Ill.) -- Employees. 1
Women 1
Women -- Religious life. 1
Worship. 1
Youth 1
Youth -- United States 1
Youth -- United States -- Religious life. 1
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