BeginningsThe Post-War YearsThe New MillenniumStudent Work Off-Campus


Founded in 1866 by the Minnesota Conference of Congregational Churches, many of Carleton’s first engagements with the wider world were associated with its Christian mission. A number of Carleton’s earliest graduates went on to undertake missionary work in China, Japan, India, Turkey, as well as throughout the United States. Some of Carleton’s earliest international students first become acquainted with Carleton through these missionary connections.

The study of foreign languages at Carleton also has its roots in Carleton’s earliest years: initially, Latin and Greek, with French and German joining them soon thereafter. The early 20th century saw an international dimension introduced to new areas of Carleton’s curriculum, from international relations to geology, with the help of notable figures like Frank B. Kellogg and Laurence M. Gould.

Fenchow Pagoda

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Arakel Garabed Sivaslian
Arakel Garabed Sivaslian
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J. Stanley Stevens '32 and local teachers plant trees on the grounds of the school.
J. Stanley Stevens ’32 and local teachers plant trees on the grounds of the school.
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Fenchow Pagoda

circa 1930s

The Carleton Mission Board was formed in 1903 to coordinate and raise funds for the foreign missionary activities of Carleton students—chiefly, the support of a mission station in Fenchow (Fenyang), Shansi province, China.