Giles Shurtleff Home and Statue, 
        159 South Professor Street 
        Geoffrey Blodgett 
        Oberlin Architecture, College and Town -- A Guide to its 
        Social History (Oberlin, Ohio: Oberlin College, 1985).  
      This was General Shurleff’s third and final contribution to the 
        movement of village architecture across the Gilded Age. Having sold his 
        first home (the Shurtleff-Monroe house, now standing by the conservatory 
        parking lot) to James Monroe in 1870, he next built an elegant Italianate 
        house on Elm Street (later known as Elmwood, and pulled down in 1963 to 
        make way for South Hall). In 1892 he hired the firm of Weary & Kramer 
        to design this fashionable Shingle Style home on the former site of Oberlin’s 
        first graveyard. The long arc of the north gable roof, sweeping down past 
        cozy balconied windows and over the porch, is the most striking feature 
        of an elaborate design, and is best viewed from the pathway along Plum 
        Creek. 
      Giles Shurtleff, who was born 
        in Quebec just north of the Vermont line, graduated from Oberlin College 
        in 1859. He was a strong-willed anti-slavery man, and he fought a lively 
        Civil War. Captured while leading the Monroe Rifles (an Oberlin company 
        named for James Monroe) in western Virginia in August 1861, he spent a 
        year in confederate prisons. After release in a prisoner exchange he shunned 
        medical discharge and took command of a black regiment organized by fellow 
        Oberlinian John Mercer Langston. Shurtleff led the regiment through several 
        fierce battles in northern Virginia, was badly wounded, and came out a 
        brigadier general. Life was calmer after that. He devoted it to teaching 
        Latin and raising money for his alma matter. He held several important 
        administrative posts at the college before his retirement. In 1898, 33 
        years after Appomattox, he got his sword and faded blue uniform and posed 
        for sculptor Emily Ewing Peck, who in good Oberlin fashion relieved the 
        general of his sword. The resulting neo-classical statue has stood on 
        the lawn in front of Shurtleff, amusing college students since its unveiling 
        in 1911.  
      The college converted his home into a dormitory in 1912.  
      The text on the monument reads as follows: 
      "Freedom can not be given, it must be earned." 
      "Giles Waldo Shurtleff (1831-1904): Believing in 
        the ability of the negro to aid in the fight for his freedom, he organized 
        the first regiment of colored troops raised in Ohio. Inspired by his leadership 
        they offered their lives for the freedom of their race." 
      "Captain Co. C. - Oberlin Students - 7th Regt., Ohio 
        Volunteer Infantry, 1861 
        Prisoner of War, August 1861-August 1862 
        On Staff of General Wilcox, 9th Army Corps, October 1862-March 1863 
        Engaged in the Battle of Fredericksburg, December 1862 
        Lieut. Colonel and Colonel, 5th US Colored Troops, July 1863-June 1865 
        Before Petersburg, this regiment lay two months in the trenches under 
        daily fire. 
        Nearly half its men were lost and he was severely wounded in the charge 
        on New Market, September 1864. 
        Brevetted Brigadier General, March 1865." 
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