Rampart College

[5][6] LeFevre bought Glenrose Park, a 320-acre ranch south of Larkspur in Douglas County, Colorado, in September 1955, using an inheritance from his mother, and started enrolling students in 1956.

[12] In addition, the journal featured an article that proposed a new way of looking at the political spectrum, which was to become an early version of what was later to be known as the Nolan Chart.

Some of the more notable lecturers included Milton Friedman, Ludwig von Mises, Leonard Read, F. A. Harper, Elgie Marcks, Ellis Lamborn, Frank Chodorov, Hans Sennholz, Raymond C. Hoiles, Percy L. Greaves Jr., Ruth Maynard, Oscar W. Cooley, Raymond C. Hoiles, A. Neil McLeod, and Butler D.

[14] According to Doherty, some of the other speakers included Rose Wilder Lane, Gordon Tullock, James M. Buchanan, and Childs.

[21] To resolve this and other problems, LeFevre signed a six-year lease for a suite of offices on the top floor of the First Western Bank Building in Santa Ana and sold the Arcadia property.

During this time period, Rampart College produced two 16mm color documentary films, such as Property: A Basis for Morality and The Meaning of Responsibility and Obligation, which were narrated by LeFevre.

[22] In addition, the institute produced two home study courses, the Fundamentals of Liberty and Raising Children for Fun and Profit, along with 50 thirty-minute lectures on cassette tape based on LeFevre’s Fundamentals of Liberty home study course.

Robert LeFevre in 1986
Robert LeFevre lecturing at his Colorado-Springs based school