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ON CLASS PINS, RINGS, ETC., ARE LARGE LY GOVERNED BY THE QUANTITY ORDERED
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•
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Cb¢ Crtnttp IUP Volum~
Class
XXV
or 1sgs
Jlartfordt Conn. mav. 1s97
,I
Board
or Editors
managing Editors MORGAN ROUSE CARTWRIGHT, Pennsylvania PHILIP COOK, Missouri
I:it¢rarv Editor HENRY RUTGERS REMSEN, New York
Jlssotiat¢ Editors WILLIAM MORRIS AUSTIN, District of Columbia HENRY JONES BLAKESLEE, Connecticut DUDLEY CHASE GRAVES, Vermont THEODORE HENRY PARKER, Connecticut ALEXANDER PRATT, JR., Connecticut PERCIVAL SARGENT SMITHE, Pennsylvania
6
Editorial
ill'!>
'ltâ&#x20AC;˘-~- NE
of the surest signs of the approaching end of the college year with it gay festivities and many partings is the appearance of the Ivv, giving the record of our hard-earned victories anc1 painful defeats. It bas been, therefore, a great source of pleasure to the Editors to be able to report such a prosperous condition of affairs, both from a scholastic and athletic standpoint, as have existed
~.~
at Trinity throughout the past year. But the pleasure of publishing such records is more than overbalanced by the work and exertion necessary to make the meagre resources of the volume cover the expenses of such a book as may be a credit to college and class alike. We should, therefore, like to urge the college as a whole, for whom the Board acts merely as agent, to lend a heartier support to this volume which heralds abroad the beauties of our college life, and lend a helping hand to those upon whom the whole duty falls. The Alumni are more than enthusiastic, but a little kindlier interest on the part of the undergraduate body would not be out of place. And now the time has come to send the volume whither it will, hoping and trusting only that it may bring credit and honor to dear old Trinity.
The editors wish to express their sincere gratitude to all who may in any way have assisted them in the production of this book by literary or artistic contributions.
7
trinity m
HE charter of Washington College was granted in 1823 by the General Assembly of the State of Connecticut; and by vote of the Trustees, in consequence of the liberal gifts of the citizens of Hartford, the College was located in that city. In 1845, on the petition of the Alumni and the Corporation, the name of the College was changed to Trinity College. This college has no preparatory department or professional schools for graduates, but its purpose is to afford the opportunity for obtaining a liberal education -that is, an education conducted without reference to any future particular profession, calling, or special pursuit on the part of the student. The requirements for admission and the course of instruction for degrees in the Arts have always been practically the same as in the other New England Colleges.
,) 1(s
€XJ)~ns~s The amount of the Treasurer's bill each year is as follows: Tuition , Room-rent for each person, from roo.oo to Incidentals, Heat,
$1 00.00 35.00 30.00 12.50
Total from $242 .00 to 177·50 There are besides, fees for the use of the Chemical and Physical Laboratories. Board is furnished in the College at 4.50 per week. Students may obtain board at private houses in the neighborhood, at rates greater or less, as they may desire To this must be added laundry charges, together with the expense of books, f urniture, clothing, travel , and society fees, which vary according to the ta!'lte and habits of the student, and of which no estimate can be given.
S~bolarsbii'S The amount of the Treasurer's bills can be considerably reduced to holders of scholarships. The income of these scholarships, which are of different values, is placed to the credit of students with limited means, and serves to meet the charges for tuition and room-rent in whole or in part. For holders of scholarships remitting the entire charges for tuition and room-rent, the Treasurer's bill is reduced to $42,50 ; and the necessary expenses of such students, including board and other personal items , will not exceed $250 or 300 a year 8
Rooms and Buildings The new buildings were commenced in 1875路 They are thoroughly drained, well ventilated, and unsurpassed for convenience and comfort. In r88r the Northam gateway was begun, and the western side of the great quadrangle is now completed. Easy access from the city is secured by means of street-cars running to the College grounds. An excellent athletic ground is provided for ball-playing and other outdoor sports ; there are also several tennis courts, and an excellent gymnasium. Most of the rooms are arranged so as to provide for two students rooming together, a common study, and separate bedrooms. All the rooms and hallways are heated by steam, and ventilation is secured by open fireplaces. Water is carried to every floor. The site of the building is remarkable for its healthfulness.
tb~
Gvmnasium and Jllumni Hall
The new Gymnasium and Alumni Hall (or Theatre) stands to the east of the proposed north quadrangle, near the driveway from Vernon Street, and faces the west. It is substantially built of brick a nd laid in red mortar, with a finish of Portland sandstone. The frontage is fifty-six feet, and the length one hundred and six feet. The entrance is at the level of the running track of the gymnasium ; from the vestibule ample stairways lead down to the latter and up to the theatre, which bas a seating capacity of soo. The equipment of the gymnasium embraces modern apparatus, and the latest patent appliances in this department. An instructor in athletics is in charge of the building.
tb~
Jaruis
拢aboratori~s
This building is built of brick in early French Romanesque style, and is two stories high with a basement, having a frontage of seventy-nine feet, and a depth of sixty-five feet. The angles of the building are emphasized by large ventilating turrets, which not only serve a practical purpose, but add greatly to the breadth of the wall-mass. The main object in constructing this building has been to make ample provision for laboratory work in chemistry and physics. The physical laboratory is equipped with a dynamo and engine, and the rooms have been arranged with special reference to making facilities for practical work as complete as possible. The equipment in the chemical laboratory is such as is required for good work in qualitative and quantitative analysis and assaying.
catalosuu Catalogues and Examination Papers may be had on application to the Secretary of the Faculty. For Scholarships and general information, application should be made to the President. 9
R~quir~m~nts
for Jldmission
Candidates for admission to the Freshman Class are examined in the following studies:
I.
Cours~
in Jlrts
GREEK Grammar (Hadley or Goodwin) Xenophon : Anabasis, four books Homer: Iliad, three Books, with Prosody Prose Composition (Jones or White: the exercises in the first half of the book) History of Greece The translation of average passages, not previously read, from Xenophon and Homer, will be accepted as an alternative to the above mentioned quantities in these authors. LATIN Grammar Cresar: Gallic War, four Books Virgil : Aeneid, six Books, with Prosody Cicero : The Orations against Catiline and that for the Poet Archias Prose Composition: Translation into Latin of a passage of connected English Narrative, based upon some passage in Cresar's Gallic War Roman History : Outlines, to the death of Marcus Aurelius Ancient Geography Candidates are also examined at sight upon average passages from Cresar's works and Cicero's Orations and from Virgil's Aeneid and Ovid's Metamorphoses. â&#x20AC;˘ MATHEMATICS Algebra, through Radicals and Quadratic Equations , together with Proportion, Progression, and the Binomial Theorem Plane Geometry ENGLISH Each candidate is required to write a short English composition, correct in spelling, punctuation, grammar, division by paragraphs, and expression, upon a subject announced at the time of the examination. In 1897 the subject will be chosen from the following works: Shakspeare's Merchant of Venice and As You Like It; Scott's /lfarmirm; Longfellow's Evangeline; Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Macaulay's 10
Life of Samuel Johnson; DeFoe's History of the Plague in London: Irving's Tales of a Traveller; Hawthorne's Twzce Told Tales; George Eliot's Silas Marner.
following
Each candidate will also be required to criticise specimens of English composition. NoTE.- The works from which the subject of the composition will be chosen in the following years are : In 1898: Shakspeare's liferchant of Vemce and Julius Ccesar; Goldsmith's Deserted Village; Scott's Marmion; Longfellow's Courtship of Miles Standish; Burke's Speeclt on Conciliation with Amerzca; Macaulay's Life of Samuel Johnson; DeFoe's History of the Plague in London; Hawthorne's Twzce Told Tales; Tha<.:keray's The Newcomes; George Eliot's Silas Marner. In 1899: Shakspeare's Merchant of Venice and Twelfth Night; Goldsmith's Deserted Village; Scott's Lady of the Lake; Longfellow's Courtship of Miles Standislt; The Sir Roger de Coverley Papers in the Spectator; Burke's Speech on Concz'liation with Amerzca; Macaulay's Essay on Lord Clive; Scott's Old Mortality; Hawthorne's House of the Seven Gables; Thackeray's Tlte Newcomes. In 1900: Shakspeare's Merchant of Vemce and Midsummer Night's Dream; Goldsmith's Deserted Village; Scott's Lady of the Lake; Longfellow's Courtshzp of lifiles Standish; The Sir Roger de Coverley Papers in the Spectator; Macanlay's .Essay on Addison; Webster's First Bunker-Hill Oration; Scott's Quentin Durward,路 Hawthorne's House of tlte Seven Gables; Thackeray's The Newcomes.
11.
Cours~
in
拢~tt~rs
and
Sct~nc~
LATIN Grammar Cresar: Gallic War, four Books Virgil: Aeneid, six Books, with Prosody Ci<.:ero : The Orations against Catiline and that for the Poet Archias Prose Composition: Translation into Latin of a passage of connected English narrative, based upon some passage in Cresar's Gallic War Roman History : Outlines, to the death of Marcus Aurelius Ancient Geography MATHEMAT ICS Algebra, through Radicals and Quadratic Equations, together with Proportion, Progressions, and the Binomial Theorem Plane Geometry ENGLISH English Composition, as for the Course in Arts (See previous page)
MODERN LANGUAGES Elementary F rench or German (See below) II
111.
Cours~
in
S~i~n~~
MATHEMATICS Algebra, to the Theory of Equations Plane and Solid Geometry Plane Trigonometry
LATIN Six books of Cresar's Gallic \;l,' ar (or three books of Cresar and three books of Virgil's Aeneid) together with Latin Grammar and the elements of Latin Composition.
ENGLISH AND MODERN LANGUAGES English Composition, as for the Course in Arts Johnson's English Words Elementary French or German (See below)
(See above)
HISTORY Johnston's or Scudder's History of the United States.
BIOLOGY Elementary Biology [If not passed at admission, this must be taken as an extra course (see below, course sr) in the first year.]
IV.
cours~
in
£~ttus
The requirements for admission include Latin, Mathematics, and English as for the Course in Arts (see above), and also Elementary French or German (see below).
12
•
R~quir~m~nts
for Jldmission in tb¢
mod~rn
ÂŁansuasu
Candidates for admission to the Course in Letters and Science, the Course in Science, or the Course in Letters, are examined in either French or German, at their option, as follows:
F RE NCH (I) Grammar, including Syntax (2) One hundred I2mo pages of prose, to be selected by the candidate (3) Pronunciation, simple dictation, and composition
GERMAN (I) Grammar, including Syntax (2) Fifty I2mo pages of prose or poetry, to be selected by the candidate (3) Pronunciation, simple dictation, and composition, with German script Sight reading will be accepted as an equivalent for No. 2 of the above in either language.
Candidates for the Course in Arts may take the examination in either French or German ; and all candidates for any Course who satisfy the requirements for admission in either language will be assigned more advanced work in that language. (See Courses of Instruction.)
13
or
Prosramm~ Cours~
Stuai~s
tn Jlrts
FRESHMAN YEAR: English r hr., French or German 3 hrs., Greek 4 hrs., Latin 4 hrs., Mathematics 4 hrs. SOPHOMORE YEAR: English 3 hrs., and four more courses (3 hrs. each), of which one at least must be taken from each of the following groups: A. French, German, Greek, Latin. B . Chemistry, Mathematics, Physics.
Cours~
in
ÂŁ~tt~rs
and
Sci~nc~t
and in
ÂŁ~ttus
FRESIHIAi\' YEAR: English I hr., French or German 3 hrs., Latin 4 hrs., Mathematics 4 hrs., Nat ural History 3 hrs. SoPHOMORE YEAR: Drawing I hr. (not required in the course in Letters) , English 3 hrs., and four more courses (3 hrs. each), of which one at least must be taken from each of the following groups: A. French, German, Latin. B. Chemistry, Mathematics, Natural History. Physics.
Cours~
in
Sci~nc~
SoPHOMORE YEAR: The same as in the course in Letters and Science, with the addition of a special course in Mathematics r hr., through one term.
Jill
cours~s
JuNIOR YEAR: Themes, Ethics, 3 hrs. one term, Political Science 3 hrs. one term, Electives 12 hrs. SENIOR YEAR: Themes, Metaphysics 3 hrs., Electives 12 hrs. Elective and alternative studies not taken in the earlier years can in general be taken in the later years. A study, when not otherwise specified, extends through the year. The Elective courses must be taken for the year, 3 hrs. a week. These courses will be offered in the following departments: Metaphysics, Ethics, History and Political Science, Latin, Greek, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Hebrew , Sanskrit, Mathematics, Astronomy, Physics, Chemistry, Natural History, and Drawing. Before graduation candidates for the Arts degree must take at least one course in either Latin or Greek in addition to the work of Freshman year, and at least one course in one of the three departments, Chemistry, Natural History, and Physics. For the degree in Science two courses must be taken in either French or German, and six courses from the following group: Chemistry, Mathematics, Natural History, Physics. For the degree in Letters two full courses must be taken in English, and one in each of the two languages, French and German. By a course is meaut a course of three hours through the year. 14
con~s~ Cal~naar
;: 4 hrs., Latin !ach), of which
l896 • l~rs 4
hrs., Mathe-
ters), Englis!J 3 .ken from each
Sept. Nov. Dec.
Thursday 2S /Vednesday 27 Friday 22 Tuesday I7
l897 Jan.
s 2S 26 27 28 29 30
ence , with the
hrs. one term,
Feb. 22 Mar. 3 April I6 23
May
3
s
in general be ttends through
t
These courses History and n·ew, Sanskrit, 11ing. t one course in east one course ysics. For the !rman, and six istory, Physics. . one in each of of three hours
Christmas Term begins Thanksgiving R ecess begins I P. M. Thanksgi ving Recess ends 2 P . M. Christmas Recess begins II A . M.
6 7
8 8
8 IS 20
27
June
3I 4
s 7 8
Christmas Recess ends S·4S P. M. Tuesday JJfo11day Christmas Examinations Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Toucey Scholar appointed " Trinity Term begins Monday Washington's Birthday Oratorical Prize Contest Wednesday Ash Wednesday Friday Good Friday Friday Easter Recess begins II A. M. .Monday Easter Recess ends S·4S P. M. /Vednesday Chemical Prize Essays handed in Thursday Tuttle Prize Essays handed in Friday Douglas Prize Essays handed in Saturday Latin Prize Examination Saturday Greek Prize Examination Saturday History Prize Essays handed in Saturday Mathematical Prize Examination Thursday Prize Version Declamation Thursday Ascension Day 1tfonday Memorial Day Friday Senior Examinations Saturday llfonday Tuesday IS
23
Wednesday Thursday Frzday Satzu路day Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Frzday Sunday Monday Monday Tuesday Tuesday W ednesday Wednesday
24
Th u rsday
Sept.
I4 I6
Dec.
23
Tuesday Thursday Thursday
June
9 10 II I2 13 14 IS I6 I7 IS 20 21 21 22 22 23
Senior Examinations Trinity Examinations Trinity Examinations Senior Standing published Trinity Sunday Trinity Examinations
Award of Prizes Baccalaureate Sermon Annual Meeting of Board of Fellows Examinations for Admission Junior Standing published Examination for Admission Class-Day Annual Meeting of the Corporation (evening) Examinations for Admission Annual Meeting of the Corporation and of the Association of the Alumni SEVENTY-FIRST COMMENCEMENT Trinity Vacation begins
Examinations for Admission begin Christmas Term begins 5路45 P. M. Christmas Recess begins II A. M.
,)!.
S¢natus Jltad¢mitus ,)!.
Visitors CITANCELLOR The Rt. Rev. J oliN 'VILLIAMS, D.D., LL.D., Middletown, C'onn. CIIAIR~IA '
Association of
The The The The
Rt. Rt. Rt. Rt.
Rev. Tuo~tAS MARCII CLARK, D.D., LL.D., Providence, R.I. Rev. HENRY ADAMS NEELY, D.D., Portland, Maine Rev. 'VILLIA~I WooDRUFF NILES, D.D., LL.D., Concord, N.H. Rev. HENRY Cou~IAN PoTTER, D. D., LL.D., D.C.L., New York City.
Corporation CIIA 'CELLOR The Rt. Rev. J oliN 'VILL!AM S, D. D., LL.D. *The Rev. THE PRESJUENT OF TIJR CoLLEGE ex officio PRESlDENT The Rev. GEORGE II. CLARK, D.D. RI CHAIW w. H. JARVIS, M.A. CHARLEs J. H oADLY , LL .D. GEoRGE BEACH, Esq. tThe Rev. GEORGE S. MALLORY, D.D., LL.D. *CHARLES E. GRAVES, M.A., Treasurer The Rt. Rev. WILLIAM \V. NILES, D.D., LL.D. The Hon. WrLLIA~1 HAMERSJ.EY, LL. D. LUKE A. LOCKWOOD, M.A. *The Rev. FRANCIS GoouwiN, M.A. WILLIAM E. CURTIS, M.A. J. PIERPONT MoRGAN, Esq. JOHN H. S. QUICK, M.A. *JACOB L. GREENE, Esq., Secretary The Rev. WILLIAM H. VIBBERT, D.D. J oHN SABINE SMITH, M.A. SYDNEY G. FISHER, B .A. WILLIMt S . CoGSWELL, M.A. *JAMES J . GooDWIN, Esq. W!Ll.!AM J. BOARDMAN, LL.B. *P. HENRY WooDwARD, B.A.
Middletown, Ct. H artford Hartford Hartford Hartford Hartford New York, N.Y. New Haven, Ct. Concord, N.H. Hartford Riverside, Ct. Hartford New York, N.Y. New York, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. Hartford New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. Jamaica, N. Y. Hartford Washington, D. C . Hartford
*These members of the Corporation form the Executive Committee. t Died :March 2 , 1897· 2
17
;a~ult~ .;)
The Rev. GEORGE WILLIAMSON SMITH, D.D., LL.D. President and Hobart Professor of M etaphy sics us Vernon Street (office 13 Seab ur y Hall) The Rev. THOMAS R . PYNCHON, D .D., LL.D. Brownell Professor of Moral PhilosojJ/ty 15 Seabury Hall
The Rev. SAMUEL HART, D .D. Professor of the Latin Lan/{uage and Literature 22
Jarvis Hall
The R ev. ISBON T. BECKWITH , PH.D. Professor of the Greek L anguage and Liter ature '4 Seabury Hall
The Rev. FLAVEL S. L UTHER, PH.D. Seabury Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, and Secreta ry r Columbia Street
The Rev. HENRY FERGUSON, M.A. ,Vortltam Professor of History and Political Science 1 23
Vernon Street
CHARLES FREDERICK JOHNSON, M.A. Professor of English Literature 6g Vernon Street
The Rev. JOHN J. McCOOK, M.A. Professor of Modern Languages u4 Main Street
WM. LISPENARD ROBB, PH.D. Professor of Physics 11 8
Vern on Street
ROBERT BAIRD RIGGS, PH.D . Scoville Professor of Chemistry and Natural Science 35 F or est Street
W. R. MARTIN, LL.B., PH .D . Professor of Oriental a1zd Modern Languages 21
Jarvis Hall
18
The Hon. WILLIAM HAMERSLEY, LL.D. Lecturer on Law 265 Main Street
CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER, L.H.D., D.C.L. Lecturer on l:."nglzsh Literature 37 Forest Street
.D.
CHARLES C. BEACH, M.D. Lecturer OIL Hygiene '99 Main Street
WILLIAM D. MORGAN, M.A., M.D. Lecturer OIL Anatomy and Physiology 108
Farmington A venue
FREDERIC R . HONEY, PH.B. i nstructor in Drawzizg and Descriptive Geometry New Haven, Conn.
W. H . C. PYNCHON, M.A. Instructor in ,Vatural Science 59 Capitol Avenue
The Rev. J. F. BINGHAM, D.D. Lecturer OIL Italian Literature 484 Farmington Avenue
WALDO S. PRATT, M.A. Instructor in Elocution 86 Gillett Street
GEORGE B. VELTE Instructor in the Gymnasium Gymnasium
The stated meetings of the Faculty are held on Wednesday morning at
19
11
o'clock.
Board of
f~llows
.:: Pmid~nt
THE CHANCELLOR 01' THE COLLEGE ;:~news
The Rev. GEORGE W. DouGLAS, D.D. EDWARD D. APPLETON, B.A . JoHN S. SMITH, M A .
CHARLES C. BARTON, LL.B . FRANKLIN H. FowLER, M.A. The Rev. L uciUs WATERMAN, D.D.
junior The Rev. F. W. HARRIMAN, M.A. ROBERT THORNE, M .A. PERCY S . BRYANT, M .A.
;:~news
FRANK E. JoHNSON, M.A. The Rev . Jo liN T. HuNTINGTON, M.A. The Rev JoliN J. McCooK, M.A.
Jlssociation of Jllumni .:: Pmid~nt
The Rev. HENRY M. BARBOUR, M.A.
New York Uit~路Pmid~nt
\Vll .L!AM
c.
SKINNER, M.A.
Hartford s~mtary
FREDERICK E. HAIGHT, l\I.A.
New York
FRANK E. JoliNsoN, M.A.
Hartford
Standing
eommitt~~
THE PRESIDENT THE T REASURER The Rev. WILLIAM H . VIBBERT, D.D. The Rev. SAMUEL HART, D.D. GEORGE H. SEYMS, M.A. 20
R~w
Jlsso~iation
England
Offlms
of Jllumni
1897
Preszdent LUKE A. LOCKWOOD, '55
Vice-Preszdent \V.
B. A. :AN, D.D.
c.
SKIXNER, '76
Secretary
Treasurer P. S. BRYANT, '70
Executive Committee Dr. W. D. MoRGAN, '72
Rev. S. HART, D.D., '66
NGTON , M.A. K,
M.A.
R~w
York
Jlsso~iation Offlcm
of Jllumni
1897
Preszdent Rev. w~(. II. VIJJBERT, D.D., 'sS
Vice· Presidents Rev. C. H. W. STOCKING, D. D., '6o A. S. 1\IuRRAY, JR., '7r FRANKI.IN
H. FowLER, '6r
Rev. NEWTON PERKINS, '6r
Secrdary and Treasurer SAMUEL F. J ARVIS, JR., '89. J~:recutive
Committee
Chairman- RouT. THORNE, 'Ss F. E. HAI GHT, '87 CoLE~tAN, '90
E. L. PuRDY, '84 C. PEDERSO • '9!
v.
G. P.
Pbiladdpbia
Jlsso~iation Offlms
of Jllumni
1897
Prestdent J. EWING MEARS, M.D., 'sS
Vice-President WtLLIA~I
>.D.
DRAYTON, '7!
Secretary SYDNEY G. FisHER, '79, 328 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia
.Erecutive Committee H. GoRDON McCouGu, '75
SYDZ\EY G . FISHER, '79 21
Pittsbursb Jlssodation ot Jllumni Offltm 1897 President L. M. PLUMER, '74 Secretary
Vice-President
M. K. KosTER, '87
l!.xecutive Committee A. P. BURGWIN,
w.
'8 2
R. BLAIR, '75
Hon. Jos. B uFFINGTON, '75
Jllumni Jlssociation for tb~ nistrict of Columbia and Vicinitp Offims 1897
President
IS!
W. J . BOARDMAN, '54
2d Vice-President
Vice-President
E. M. GALLAUDET, '59
GEO. A. WooDwARD, '55
Treasurer
Secretary
WILLIAM EDMOND CuRTis; '75
S. HERBERT Gmsv, '85
California Jlssociation of Jllumni Offitm 1897 President
Secretary and Treasurer
Rt. Rev. W. F. NICHOLS, D.D., '70
Rev. F. H . CH uRCH (now of Tacoma, Wash.)
Boston Jlssociation of Jllumni Offlms 1897
President G.
c.
路riNGLEv, 路s~
Vice-Presidents Rev. L. K. STORRS, '63
C. C. BARTON, '69
Treasurer E.
s.
Rev. E. T. SuLLIVAN, '89
Secretary
CLARK, '66
C. C. BARTON, JR . , '93
Executive Committee R. L. 'VINKLEY, '79
H. G. IDE, '94 22
J.
H . GooDSPEED, '66
~tary
)STER , '87
3 UFFI NGTO , '75
Coii~S~
Colors
11mbia DARK BLUE AND OLD GOLD
ice-President W ooDwARD,
'ss
r URT!S, '75
路rer racom a, Wash.) RAII-RAH-RAII !
TRINITY!
Boo~1-RA11 ! BooM-RAH!
~ - SuLLivAr;,
'Sg
ary S, JR. , '93
GooDSPEED,
'66 23
TRINITY !
THE COLLEGE
CORNER OF CAMPUS
VIEW FROM CAMPUS
THE BISHOP BACK OF COLLEGE
i!P US
R~sid~nt 6raduat~
FREDERICK McDoNALD GoDDARD, B. A., 3 Northam T owers
H. E.
RussELL F E LLOW
25
' COLLEGE
S¢nior Class
C LAss M oTT O
C L Ass CoLoRs ORANGE AND GARNETT
CLASS YELL-
Rah, R ah, Rah I
Sis, Boom, Bah I
Offltm
Christmas Term President
H.
w.
Vice-President
H.
GRINNELL
Secretary and Treasurer
J. R.
ALLEN
B ENTO •
Trinity Term :?I'L F.
H.
J.
J. R.
CHASE G UNDACKER B ENTON
J
)ACKER
ON
History of
Rin~tp=S~u~n
C) UR [;story as a class is well-nigh complete. For the last time we inscribe on the
U
leaves of the Ivv a slight memorial of our successes, our failures, our hopes. After June the class of '97 ceases to exist, except as embalmed on the pages of the ~uinquennial. Additions may, in course of time, be made to the simple Johannes Smith which there appears ; but such a result will arise from personal effort, and will not be the reflected glory of which we all shed some beams when in College life, a member of our class is the strongest man in College, or gets his name in the police reports. To boast of our achievements would be idle, for we should be told that Jones or Brown was the performer of that glorious feat in athletics and scholarship, and that their classmates have no right to plume themselves. Yet, such distinction as we have attained has been largely due to personal accomplishment. There have been times when we thought that Ninety-Seven, as a class, was going to leave a brilliant record behind, but what a vast difference between anticipation and realization! We have not brought any marked reforms to Trinity; though, on the other hand, our pathway is not strewn with shattered idols of former generations. Even as individuals, we feel that we have fallen far short of Freshmen dreams. Probably a dozen of us once cherished hopes of being Valedictorian ; some had dreams of captaining an eleven that should defeat Wesleyan ; others hugged the fond delusion of breaking records on the track ; but instead of that, only one will be Valedictorian, the captain- but enough'' Of all sad words of tongues or pen The saddest are these, It might have been." This is a history only by courtesy Classmates, our history is still to be made. College is but a caricature of the world. Our brief years here are but the first lap in the race of life. Perhaps some of those who have left us poor, ordinary mortals far behind may weary before the goal is reached, while we have still strength to sprint at the finish. And even though we ourselves fail to gain prizes, we shall be proud to say of the winner : ''That man was my classmate at Trinity." W . C. W.
27
S~ntors
, Name
Residence
Room
Henry Woodward Allen
Pittsfield, Mass.
All <I>
Edgar Charles Beecroft 's.)
H ouse
Pelham Manor, N. Y.
All <I>
H ouse
John Robert Benton (L. s.)
Sewickley, Pa.
March Frederick Chase (s.)
Mineral Point, /짜is.
George Edward Cogswell
.Jamaica, N. Y.
Walton Stoutenburgh Danker
Boston, Mass.
Joseph Devine Flynn
Hartford
Henry Grinnell (s.)
Adamsville, R. f.
Henry John Gundacker
New York City
Harry Woodford Hayward
Presque Isle , Me.
Archibald Morrison Langford
Bayonne , N . _f
George Sheldon McCook
Hart.ford
J arius Alpheus Moore (s.) John Henry Page, Jr.
31 ]. H.
5 ]. H . 29]. H.
18]. H.
96 Hudson St.
39 39
Hartford Hoston, .llfass.
Edward Delavan Nelson Schulte (s.)
Utica, N. Y.
H.
H.
4]. H.
Deep River, Conn.
Howard Daniel Plimpton (s.)
J. J.
114 Main St. 2
Fort Snelling, ilh?m.
Herbert Bickford Pulsifer
House
All <I>
All<!> 21
J. H.
House
Marshall St. 26
9
J. H. J. H.
Hermann von Wechlinger Schulte
Utica, N. Y.
Herbert Thomas Sherriff
9]. H.
Detroit, Mich .
7N. T.
William Albert Sparks
Waterville, life.
Robert Sythoff Starr
Hartford
28
5 J. H. r 79 Sigourney St.
N ame
R oom
R esidence
William T aylor Walker
Canton, Mass.
William Curtis White
Utica, N.
Percival Matson Wood
Huntington, N. Y.
Carl Gottlob Ziegler
Detroit, Mich.
8 N. T.
v.
44}. H . IN. T. II
N . T.
loom
House
;ormu ll!~mbus
House
J.
I
H.
5 J. H . :9
J.
H.
IS J.H.
lson St. ~House
J. 39 J. 39
H. H.
4 J. H . \fain St. 2
J.
H.
~House
;hall St.
J. H. 9 J. H.
26
Name
Residence
Dana "'ightman Bartholomew
Ansonia, (.{mn.
S. Irving Benton
South lllanchester, Conn.
Marc Wheeler Cole
Albion, N. Y .
Charles Calvert Coster
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Alfred Lauder Ellis
H artford, Conn.
Ernest Albert Hatheway
Suffield, Conn.
George Trowbridge Hendrie
Detroit, Mich.
Louis Albert Hopkins
Norwich, Conn.
Gilbert Edward Pember
New York City
Samuel Plumer, Jr.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Carl Reiland
llfzddtetown, Conn.
John Arnold Scudder
Chicago, I ll.
Marc Miller Sibley
Detroit, ll'lich.
9}. H . 7N. T.
5 J. H.
rney St.
29
Junior Class
CLASS
l\1 OTTO
CLASS COLORS R OYAL P URPLE AND WHITE
CLASS YELL-<i'YOJLEV
olpKOJLEV, Rip Rap Rah! 'g8 'g8 Sis Boom Ah!
'gS ! 'g8 ! '98 !
Offlcns Christmas Term
President
A . S.
Vice-President
J .
W.
Secretary
J.
H.
Treasurer
L. A.
Chronicler
H.
Trinity Term
WooDLE, J R.
A
LORD
J.
S.
L ECOUR
J.
H.
ELLIS
R. R EMSEN
30
COLE CARTER
D. H.
LECOUR VERDER
W. MeA.
J oHNSON
Residence
Room
Daniel Hugh V erder
R utland, Vt.
16 N. T.
Edgar Francis Waterman
T arrytown, N. Y.
17 S. H.
Walter Beardslee Wildma n
Wallingford, Conn .
16 ]. H .
Allan Sheldon Woodle, Jr.
Altoona, Pa.
14 N. T.
Charles Guilford Woodward
Hartford
Name
742 Asylum Ave.
Sptctal Studtnt not candidatt for a ntsrtt Room
Residence
Name Austin Cole
.pJ. H.
Philadelphia, Pa .
;ormtr mtmbtrs Residence
Name
Pittsfield, Mass.
William Russell Allen, Jr. John Hugh Bissell
West Medford, Mass.
Dana Wightman Bartholomew
Ansonia, Conn .
Edwin Hawley Foot
Red Wing, Mz'?m.
Harry Wilson Hurlburt
il1iddletown, Conn.
Frederic Bulkeley Hyde
New York City
Frederic Albert Lund
New York City
William Yale :Mather
Suffield, Conn.
Roland Henry Mechtold
New York City
Albert Dumond Merwin
ll路filjord, Conn.
Carl Reiland
Middletown, Conn.
Kantaro Takami
Ohayama, Japan
Alfred Henry Timpson, Jr.
New York City
2
33
Sopbomor~
Class
CLASS MoTTO
CLAss CoLoRs
Fortiter, fide/iter, felzciter
C.,HOCOLATE AND LIGHT BLUE
CLASS YELL
Brecky, coax, coax, coax Brecky, coax, coax, coax Hullaballoo, atheta chochine N ulli secundus, ninety-nine !
Officus Christmas T enn
President
w.
Vz"ce-President
A. D .
Secretary
C.
Treasurer
R. N.
A. W.
Trinity Term
WARNER
R. N.
VIBBERT
c.
WILLCOX
B. H EDRICK
HENRY
D. S.
CoRSON
WILLCOX
P. S .
CoRso N
34
s 1:1
L1 .m B
r.
Dtstorp ri)IlllE goes on in the same endless hurry. The seasons come and go; the trees leaf out in the spring of the year, and in just six months again become leafless and dreary; the birds fly away to their Southern home only to return at the first breaking of the wintry bonds; and, after all, in the many walks of life, it makes little dif-
'-F路
ference what men are treading the time-worn paths. When our class came to these revered halls and this "elm-shaded" campus, we were treated, without doubt, in the same way as our predecessors of the last twenty-five years. We were obliged to suffer the same indignities upon our issuing from our first chapel, we underwent, with commendable fortitude, the contemptuous glances of those above us in learning and experience ; we felt the "joys and sorrows" of the push-rush and football game contested with such fierce rivalry ; we had our turn in facing the penetrating glare and startling questions of the various professors; and we felt that our excellent bearing in all these trials and tribulations showed that we were by no means below the average of the aspiring students. Meanwhile, the days and months rushed ou with relentless tread, and too soon the cruel band of Time pointed to September, 1896. Then we returned to college, with numbers slightly diminished, matured by the experience of our Freshman year, and walked the campus with the proud step and haughty glance of Sophomores. \Ve felt our untold superiority to the timid Freshman, who looked upon us with eyes glazed with wonder; and as for those below us who dared to overstep the bounds of propriety and presume upon our dignity,- alas! the tale of woe may never be told. Our numbers were increased by about fourteen science men, and, after the needful training of some of them, they have, for the most part, shown themselves worthy members. Our class bas taken a very active interest in all college organizations, and, in a great many instances, bas accredited itself with honor. In scholarship we have more than come up to the mark, and have reason to feel proud of our record. Now, the question ia, Will our last two years show any depreciation in our value? We certainly hope
DOt. Time will tell.
W. A. W .
., 35
,
,
Sopbomor~s Name
'
R esidence
Room
Thomas Emmett Addis (s.)
Hartford
Ruell Allen Benson (s.)
Oakland, Me.
Cranston Brenton (s.)
Jamaica, N . Y.
J ohn Bowne Bunn
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Harold Loomis Cleasby
Hartford
Orok Paul Colloque
Oxford, N. Y.
7 N. T.
Donald Skelding Corson (L. s.)
Grand Rapids, Mic/1.
36
John Henry Kelso Davis (L. s.)
Fort Monroe, Va.
William Hanmer Eaton (s.)
Pittsfield, Mass.
Francis Henny Glazebrook
Elizabetlz, N.
Harry Daniel Green
Berlin, N. H.
Chauncey Karl Harris (s.)
2r
Woodbine St. 2
N. T.
8
J.
42
H.
J. H.
24 Elmer St.
J. 36 J. n J. 34 J. 32 J.
I
Wethersfield, Comt.
Charles Baker Hedrick
Jacksonville, Fla.
Charles William Henry
Bridgewater, Mass.
George Tallman Kendal (L. s.)
Hartford
H.
H. H. H. H.
Wethersfield, Conn. 38
6
J. H. J. H.
18 S. H.
Elton Gardiner Littell
Wilmington, Del.
Victor Forrest Morgan (s.)
Hartford
37 227
J.
H.
Sigourney St.
J.
Bryan Killikelly Morse
Wilmington, Del.
37
John Williams Nichols
San Mateo, Cal.
4 N. T.
Adrian Holmes Onderdonk
Baltimore, Md.
9 N. T.
Harry Landon Rice
Lansingburg, N. Y.
25
Ernest Albert Rich
Reistertown, Md.
Edmund Kearsley Sterling
D etroit, Mzeh.
12
McWalter Bernard Sutton (L. s.)
New RoL"helle, N. Y.
16 S. H.
Allen Reshell VanMeter
Riverton, N.
I
J.
H.
H.
9 N. T.
J.
H.
Aubrey Darrell Vibbert
New York City
10
William Alfred Warner
Hartford
13
Reginald Norton Willcox
Buffalo, N. Y.
25
Raymond Sanford Yeomans
Andover, Con?t.
43
J. J. J. J. J.
Joseph Warren Ziegler
D etroit, Mzelz.
II
N. T.
36
19
H. H.
H.
H. H.
Sptcial Studtnts not Candidatts for a ntsrtt Room 1
Name Frederick Stanley Bacon
Residence llÂŁiddletown, Ct.
27
Irving Knott Baxter
Utica, N. Y.
17
Lloyd Raeburn Benson
Hudson, N. Y.
Edward Savage Dobbin
Faribault, Minn.
8
Archibald Goldthwaite
Galveston, Tex.
35
7 N. T.
Frederick Clark Ingalls
.!IIi/ford, N. Y.
J. H . 36 J. H. II J. H. 34 J. H. 32 J. H.
Frank Arthur McElwain
BI'Ookfield, Mo.
19
Roland Henry Mechtold
New York, N. Y.
40
Hans Christian Owen
Middletown, Conn.
14 N. T.
Woodbine St. N. T.
2
8 J. H.
J. H .
42
24 Elmer St.
36
lltl~ersfield,
Conn.
J. 6 J.
38
H ."
Sigourney St.
J.
37
H.
4 N. T. 9 N. T. 25
105
J. H.
Name
Residence
Allan Griffith Bodine
Philadelphia, Pa.
Roderick Harrison Fox
Bradford, Pa.
William Robert Golden
Saratoga .Springs, N. Y.
Howard Sinclair Kerner
New York, N . Y.
~orman
South Manchester, Conn.
Milo Loomis
Frederick Albert Lunrl
New York, N. Y.
9 N. T.
Ralph Cutler Mead
J.
Ballston Lake, N. Y.
Alexander Neill, Jr.
Hagerstown, Md.
William James Wood
Hartford, Conn.
12
H.
16 S. H.
J. H. 10 J. H. 13 J. H. 25 J. H. 43 J. H.
19
II
N. T.
37
H.
J. J.
H. H.
Wash. St.
H.
J.
J.
6 "J. H.
;ormu mtmbus
H.
tS S. H.
37
Room J. H.
J. J.
H. H.
;r~sbman
Class
CLASS MoTTo
CLAss CoLoRs
ETO</W< lie aiel
OLD GOLD AND BROWN
CLASS YELL
\Vo-te-widee-wo, te-widee-wire , castire, casto, te-widee-wo, te-wide wish, wish, wish, boom
H)OO!
orrtcus
Christmas Term
President
H .
A.
Vice
D.
RICHMOND
"
HoRNER
Trinity Term R. H. BROOKS
F.
T. BALDWIN
S. L .
ToMLINSON
w.
Treasu r er S. L.
TOMLINSON
F. W.
Secretary
Chronicler
R. H. BROOKS
C . HILL
J. G.
PRINCE
MciLVAINE
E
History "IF we could but see ourselves as others see us," would we not then strive to inculcate the first principles of bravery, docility, and the art of wearing fashionable neckties? This accomplished, then would not this cold, unappreciative world value the existence of us, poor innocent babes? Would we not then be the envy of the aweinspiring Sophomore? But, alas! ah no! our lot is far different. We are merely young, hopeful, and green, Freshmen of the antiquated stamp, quite ordinary beings. But permit the much-abused chronicler to give you, oh martyred reader, some crude idea of the wonderful achievements of the class of " 1900." To begin with, we lost the push-rush to '99. But we didn't mind that-Freshmen never mind being whipped. We have an excuse, of course: You see," if the rabbit hadn't been shot, he would still have been eating gra s." Such was our case, it is a terrible word. As to our track and foot-ball teams, they were a grand success ; '' sapienti sa tis." The next achievement in line is our memorable banquet we gave to '98 on the evening of February 16, '97, at Farmington. It is needless to say that. in the excellent company of '98, we all enjoyed ourselves immensely, and returned , "a jolly crowd of people," in time for the morrow's chapel. Where '99 spent the evening, the chronicler is unable to state, but that isn't his fault. We really have a base-ball team. Although we have played no games as yet, there is no doubt that we will meet with the same phenomenal success that has attended our other enterprises. The chronicler feels that he may now close this brief resume of daring deeds and crowned successes with no more fitting words than those of that cultured gentleman, ''I hev dun." Mr. Artemus Ward, J. G. Me I.
39
Name
Residence
Room
Alexander Arnot
Sout h Manchester, Ct.
So. Man.
Frank Tracy Baldwin
I nwood-on-Hudson , N. Y .
Roelif Hasbrouck Brooks
Pouglzkeepsie , N. Y.
7 17
J. J. J.
H. H.
Thomas Prosser Browne, J r.
New York, N. Y.
Arthur Henry Bryant
Hartwell, 0.
East Hfd.
Percy Leon Bryant
Hartwell, 0 .
East Hfd.
Theodore Grafton Case
Granby, Ct.
Samuel William Coons
Ballston Spa, N. Y.
R oderick Harrison Fox
B1'adjord, Pa.
Samuel Richard Fuller (L. s.)
Buffalo, N. Y.
36
J.
H.
H aslett McKim Glazebrook
Elizabeth, N. .f.
34
J.
H.
Monroe Gleason Haight
Pz'ttsfield, Mass.
II
J.
H.
Amasa Clark Hall (L. s.)
West Hartford, Ct.
Harry Archer Horner
New Orleans , La.
Ig S. H .
David Baldwin Jewett
Rochester, N. Y .
I3 ]. H.
John Gilbert Mcilvaine
Philadelphia, Pa.
Frederick Welles Prince
Hartford
Denison Richmond
Syracuse, N. Y.
41
J.
H.
David Louis Schwartz
Lakewood, N.
J.
35
Elgin, ill.
J. J.
H.
Granville Hudson Sherwood
H.
19 S. H .
7
36
J. J.
H.
H.
\Vest H fd.
24
J.
H.
66 Vern on St.
Ernest Leon Simonds
llartfo1'd
Edwin Pemberton Taylor, J r. (L. s.)
Hartford
Simon Lewis T omlinson
Hartford
Ellsworth Morton Tracy
/,Vaterbury, Ct .
Clifford Knox Wood
Huntington, N. Y. 40
I8
38 II
H.
Ward St.
41 Weth. Av. '
so Buckingham St. 41
J.
H.
IN. T.
Sp~cial Stud~nts
not
Candidat~s
Name
for a
n~sr~~
Reeidence
Room
James Watson Braden, Jr.
Hartford, Ct.
Moses James Brines
W estedy , R. I.
John Dixon Burchard
Sotflh No rwalk, Ct.
IS J . H.
John Kay Clement
Sunbury, Pa.
23 J . H .
Delancey Walker Fiske
Providence, R. I.
24 J. H.
Room
William Cameron Hill
Sunbury, Pa.
23 J. H.
). Man.
Karl Franz Frederick Kurth
De/1-oit, Mich.
8 N. T.
Park Terrace 2
J. H.
7 J. H. 7 J. H.
J.
l
H.
>t Hfu. >t Hfd. J S. H.
J. H. 6 J. H . 6 J. H. ~ J. H. I J. H.
Summary
7
~
Course in Arts
Course in Letters and Science
Course in Science
Seniors
I7
6
Juniors
2I
6
Sophomores
20
4
Fre~hmen
21
3
Course in Letters
Special Students
24
:st Hfd. 9 S. H.
13 :4
J. J.
H. H.
:non St. .I
J. H.
IS
J.
H.
18
J.
H.
vard St. ~th.
Av.
ham St.
P
J.
H.
IN. T.
2
79
8
29
9
33 24
Special Students U ndergrad nates
Total
21
2
17
17
17
12 7
Resident Graduate Total
128
trinity marcbins Sons TuNE-"
Marchi1zg through Georgia."
I
' Q EATH the Elms we gather, boys, to sing the good old song, 1-~ Sung by us when college days seemed infinitely longSing it as we used to sing, with voices clear and strong, While 路neath the Elms we are marching.
CHORUS.
Hurrah! Hurrah! Ring out the chorus free, Hurrah! Hurrah! We'll shout for Trinity. Cares shall be forgotten, every sorrow quickly flee \Vhile 'neath the Elms we are marching. II
How we flocked together when we heard the joyful sound, How the Freshmen trembled that our hazing parties found, How the strains of "Freshman Wake" all other music drowned, While 'neath the Elms we were marching. III
Yes, and there were maidens, too, who lent us kindly ears, When we walked the silent streets with loud mid-nightly cheers, So we kept the music up throughout four happy years, While 'neath the Elms we were marching.
J. 42
C.
UNDERWOOD,
'96.
S~cr~t rrat~rniti~s
T. 1(. Jl. Founded 1829
Epsilon £bapur of
D~lta
Psi
Established 1850
Pbl l(appa
£bapt~r
of Jllpba
D~lta
Pbl
Established r877
Jllpba £bi
£bapt~r
of
D~lta
l(appa Epsilon
Established 1879
B~ta B~ta £bapt~r
of Psi Upsilon
Established 188o
£onn~etieut
Jllpba £bapt~r of Sigma Jllpba Epsilon Established 1892
tau Jllpba £bapur of Pbl 6amma Established 1893
Jllpba £bi
'
~bo
Founded 1895
43
D~lta
I. K. A. HOUSE
tb~ ÂŁo~a1
;ratunttp of
I. K. Jl. Founded J829
Jlt trinitp
45
con~s~
GEOR GE EDWARD CoGs wELL Jo H
RoBERT BENTON
R oBERT WATKINSON GRAY DUDLEY CHASE GRAVES
HENRY J OHN QUICK
CHARLES LuTHER B uRNHAM
FREDERICK STANLEY BACON
rratr~s
JSrb~
in
C. E. GRAVES, 'so C.
J. HOADLY,
J.
H. BROCKLESBY, '65
'sr
W. C. BROCKLESBY, '7o
ARTHUR K. BROCKLESBY, '70 R. G. ERWIN, '74 W. C. SKINNER, '76 G. W. I\EACH. 'So H. LILIENTHAL, '86 E. DEF. MIEL, '88
47
Corporation
President
HoN . JOHN TURNER WAIT, LL.D.
Secretary and Treasurer
ARTHUR COLLINS GRAVES
REv. THOMAS GALLAUDET, D.D . CHARLES EMMET GRAVES JOHN HENRY STEVENS QUICK WILLIAM STERLING COGSWELL WILLIAM CLAIBORNE BROCKLESBY WILLIAM DENISON MORGAN , M.D REv. JOHN HUMPHREY BARBOUR WILLIAM CONVERSE SKINNER EDWARD MANSFIELD SCUDDER REv. ERNEST DEFEMERY MIEL
)
I. K. Jl.
JICK
M.D
MI EL
Graduat~ m~mb~rs Chapin, D. D. '56 Chapin, W. M. '74 .:·chapman, C. R. '47 Clapp, F. '55 Clark, A. M. '77 Clark, E . S. '65 Clarke, R. M. '45 Cle!Dont, P . W. '68 Coggeshall, G. A. '6s Cogswell, W . S . '6r Collins, W. F. '93 *Comstock, J. C. '38 ·•conyngham, C. M. '59 *Cossit, P. S. '45 *Cowling, R . 0. '61 *Curtis, W. E. '43 Daves, G. '57 Davies, W. G. '6o *DeForrest, G. A . 'ss *Delancy, T . J. '40 *Delano, F. R. '65 Deming, W. C. '8+ *DeZeng, E. '40. *Dick, J. M. '54 *Dirickson, L. L. '41 *Dorsey, W. H. I. '36 Downes, L. T. '48 *Driggs, T . I. '48 *Dyer, A. '70 Ellis, G. W . '94 Erwin, J. B. '76 Erwin, R. G. '7+ Evans, S. K. '95 *Faxon, E. '47 *Ferrill, W. C. '78 Foote, I. '42 *Franklin, E. C., '54 *Gadsden, C. E . 'so *Gadsden, J. A . 'so Gallaudet, B. B. 'So Gallaudet, T . '42 *Gardner, H. G. '65
Abbott, C. W . '49 *Abbott, J. P. '49 Adams, G. Z. '39 *Adams, J. R. '49 All'en, E. T. '41 Andrews, C. M. 'S+ ~Anistaki, J. '37 *Ashe, J. B. '30 *Backus, C. A. '52 Bacon, J. W . '46 Bakewell, J. '59 Barbour, J. H. '73 Barclay, R. 'So Bartlet, H. P. '72 *Bayanl, W. H. '41 ·•Bayley, J. R. '35 Beach, E. S. '83 Beach, G. W. 'So *Belden, N. M. '4S *Benton, M . F . 'sS *Bond, J. '40 '*Bondurant, W. E. '63 Bowman, C. W. 'S7 *Brainard, N. L. '43 *Brander, H. M. '45 *Brandt, L. '+9 *Brewer, Vf. L. '38 Brinley, E. H. '49 Brinley, P . '47 Brocklesby, A. K. '7o Brocklesby, J. H. '65 Brocklesby, W. C. '69 *Browell, T. S. '35 *Buchanan, J. '53 Bull, W. M. '39 *Butler, M. N. '44 *Caldwell, C. E . '82 ''·Campbell, C. I. '30 Candee, H. S. '93 Carpenter, J. S. '79 Carpenter, J. T . '88 Carpenter, R. H . '8r 4
49
*LeRoy, A. N. '42 LeRoy, J. '6g *LeRoy, T. 0. '42 Lilienthal, H. '86 Lynch, R. Leb. 'go Mack, J. E. '71 *Mallory, G. S. 's8 Mallory, R. H. 'g2 *Mallory, W. H. '6o Marble, F. P. '82 *Marshall, J. '42 Mason, A. T. '8I *Matthewson, J. '46 McConihe, A . 'Sg McConihe, M. S. 'gz McConihe, W. 'go *Mcintosh, J. H. '53 McKean, T . H. 'g2 McKennan, J. D. '76 McLemore, M. C. '8g •Meech, H. J. '42 Miel, E. DeF. '88 *Millard, A . B. '36 *Miller, N. '47 Moffett, G. H. '78 Moore, C. E. '76 Moore, D. S. '64 :\[organ, G. B. '70 Morgan, IV. D. '72 *Morgan, W. F. '35 Morrill, C. A. '67 *Mowry, D. S. '67 Nelson, H. '87 Nelson, W. B. 'S I icholls, G. H . '3g *Nichols, R. \V. '33 Noyes, A. II. '8g Olmsted, W. B. '87 Olmsted, J. F. '84 *Overfield, J. L. 'ss *Pardee, D. \V. '40 Parks, S . H. 'S2 Paine, J. 'g2 Paine, 0. T . 'g6 *Paine, R. T. '32 ·*Payne, J. W. '6 r *Peake, C. F. '42 Peck, T. M. ' o
Gowen, F. C. '82 Goddard, F. M. 'g6 *Gordon, 0. K. '58 Graves, A . C. 'g r Graves , C . E. 'so Graves, G. '4g Graves , H. S. 'g2 Graves, R . S. 'g4 *Gray, J . W. '72 *H a le, C. F. '47 Hale, C. S. '62 ·*Halsey, A. '37 *Hamilton, H. C. 's I Hamilton, I. K., Jr. 'gr Hardee, C. H. '8I *Harris, T. L. '41 *H asell , B. D . '4g · *Hasell,' L. C. 'so Hawley, F. M. '6 1 *Hazlehurst, G. H. '42 Hazlehurst, J. W. 'SI Hazlehurst, R . '41 *Henry, J . F. '34 Hewlett, S. H. '74 Heydecker, H . R. '86 *Heyward, J. F. '48 Hoadly, C. J. 's I Hollister, J. B. '84 Holly, J . A. 'gi ·*Hopson, E. C. '64 Hopson, G. B. '57 Horton, P. A. '6 Hotchkiss, C. E. '8 2 Hovey, H. E. '66 Hubbard, G. A. '94 Hyde, T. McE. 'go *Ingalls, T. '52 Jackson, R. E. '45 *Jarvis, J. S. '57 *Johnson, E. P. '65 Johnson, W. F. '66 *Jones, C . I-I. '35 *Kellogg, H. L. '36 *Ker, J. '43 *King, H. W. '36 *Lambert, D . '36 *Lansing, C. A. '66 Leaken, W. R . 'So so
*Peck, W. E. '71 *Perkins, L. H. '3+ P e ters, G. E. 'so Peugnet, L. D. '93 ·*Phelps,.J. S. '32 Potter, Louis, '96 *Proctor, C. H. '73 Quick, G. A. '94 Quick, J. H. S. '58 Quick, W . F. '92 Richardson, L . W. '73 Richardson, R. D . '71 *Ripley, P. '47 Robertson, J. A. '54 Rodgers, G. W. '87 Rodgers, R. E . L. '87 *Rogers, R. C. '45 Rowland, E. '57 *Sargent, G. D. 'sr Sawyer, J. L. 'so Scott, E. G. '57 * 'cudder, C. D . '75 Scudder, E. M. '77 *Scudder, H. J. '46 Scudder, H . '91 *Scudder, T. '5 4 Scudder, W. '89 Sedgwick, W. R. '84 Shannon, J. W. '8 7 *Shennan, H. B. '38 Sherman, H. M. '77 *Sherwood, W. B. '36 *Sh ipman, P. W. '82 Short, W . B. '67 *Singletary, G. E . B. '49 Skinner, W. C. '76 Small, E. F. '74 *Smith, C. H. '36 Smith, J. H . '74 ·*Smyth, J. W. '52 Starr, J. '56 *Starr, S. '29 Stedman , R . S. '63 *Stirling, W . H. '44 ·*Stone, J. A. '44 Stone, L H . '87 *Stoughton, N . C. '38
*Sumner, A. E. '6r Sutton, E. B. '76 Taylor, C. E. '92 ·*Taylor, F . L. '43 Taylor, H. E. '96 *Taylor, W. F . '44 *Terry, C. E. 'sr *Thomas, E. H. '41 Thompson , H. W. '83 *Todd, c. J. 'ss Tolles, W. A . '46 *Tracey, W. D. '42 *Tracey, J. R. '39 *Tudor, H. B. 'so Turner, J. H . '38 *Van Zanclt, C. C. '51 *VanZandt, W. '29 "Varley, C. D. '41 Wainwright, F. C. '88 Wainwright, J. M. '95 ·* Waimnight, \ V . A. M. '6+ Wait, J . T. '35 Warner, L. F. '85 *Warren, E . I. 'So \Varren, G. T. '90 Warren, J. M. '32 *\Varren , W . H. '34 \Va rren, V\1. H. '90 ·*Waring, C. M. '36 Washburn , L. C. 'S r *Way, J. A. '37 *Webb, E. C. '75 ·*Webb , W. E. '40 Webb, W. W. '82 W elch, L. E. '86 White, J. G. '54 White, R. A. '8 r Wiggin , A . H. '68 Willard, D. '95 *W olcott, F. H . '86 * W olcott, S . G. '47 *Wood, H . S. '71 \Voodbu ry, T. C. '71 Woodworth, F. A. 'So Woodward, G. A . 'ss Wright, A. E. '89 Wright, M. R. '9 r
*Deceased
51
tb~
rratunitp of D~lta found¢d in
Jlt £otumbia
Psi 1847
£oll~g~
and
Uniu~rsuv
of
n~w
York
){on of fbaptus ALPJIA
Columbia College
DELTA
University of Pennsylvania
EPS ILON
Trinity College
LAMBDA
Williams College
Pm
University of
Ursu .o:--;
University of Virginia
SIGM A
Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University
T AU
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
53
~lississippi
tb~
€psnon Cbapt~r
THOMAS McLEAN ROBERT HABERSHAM COLEMAN
HERMANN voN WECIILII"GER ScHULTE
EDWARD DELEVAN NELSON SCHULTE
WILLIAM MoRRIS AusTIN
FREDERICK ALEXANDER BALCH
ALFRED LAUDER ELLIS EDMUND KEARSLEY STERLII"G
AUBREY DARRELL VIBBERT
WILLIAM HANMER EATON
EDWARD SAVAGE DoBBIN
CRANSTON BREI"TON ARCHIBALD GoLDTll\V AITE
MoNROE GLEASON HAIGHT
V/ILLIAM CAMERON HILL
JoHN KAY CLEMENT SAMUEL WILLIAM CooNs
FRANK TRA C Y BALDWIN
54
Graduat~ m~mb~rs
Of
tb~
€psHon
Cbapt~r
~
DeForest, J . G. '8z DeRossett, A . L . '62 ~·De R ossett, E. S. '64 Devendorf, G. S. '55 DuBois, G. M. '74 DuBois, H. 0. '76 Edson, S. '55 Edwards, A. N. '76 Elbert, W. N. '79 Elton, J . P. '88 Elwell, G. E. '70 Finch, E . B. '9 r Fisher, T. R. '62 FitzGerald, F. '89 F ordney, T. P. '62 Fuller, J . R. '70 *Fuller, S. G. '58 Fuller, S. R. '70 Gardner, C. H. '70 Gibson, B. S. '69 *Glazier, T. C . '6o Goodspeed, J. H . '66 •Goodwin, G. H . '62 Graham, C. M. 'so Grannis, F. 0. '73 Greene, J. H. '9r Haight, F. E. '87 Hall, A. C. '88 Hall, C. L. '92 Hall, F. DeP. '7S H allett, W. T . '62 Harding, N. '73 Harraden, F . S. '67 Harris, W. R. '58 *Hartshorne, E. M. '56 Hayden, R. C. '93 Hazelhurst, G. A . '79 Henderson, E. F. '82 Hendrie, S. '87 Hill, G. H. '9r *Hill, W. C. '93 Hitchings, H. B. '54 Hoffman, C. F. 'sr Hoisington, F. R. '91 Holbrooke, G. 0. '69 Holbrooke, S. '67 Hotchin, S. F. 's6 Hull, A. S. '66 Ingersoll. G. P. '83 *Jardine, H. D. '68 Jarvis, S. F., Tr. '89 Jennings, A. B. '6r Kane, G. '75 *Kerr, E. L. 'ss *Kirby, J. W . '65 Knoblock, A. F. '55
Allen, E. S. '94 Allyn, A. W. '6r Appleton, C. A. 'S2 Appleton, E. D . 'So Appleton, H. C. 'S5 Atkinson, J . G. '64 Bacon, J. R. '92 Barnwell, R. W . '72 *Barnwell, S. E. '72 · Barton, C. C., '69 Barton, C. C. Jr. '93 *Beckwith, C. 111. '8S Beers, G. E. 'S6 Benedict, L . LeG. '88 Bibb, W. A. '75 Blackwell, J., Jr. '66 Bliss, G. H. '64 Bohlen, D. 111. '82 Bowen, A. '63 Brainerd, J. B. '82 Brandegee, J. E. '74 *Brandegee, L . C. '77 Breckenridge, A. E. '70 *Breese, H. L . '57 Brigham, H. H. '76 Brown, T. M. '64 *Buckingham, W. B. '69 Bulkeley, J. C. '93 Bulkeley, W. E. A. '90 Burke, E. F. '95 Burr, W. H. '78 Butler, W. '58 Cady, J. C. '6o Camman, E. C. '96 Carter, C. L. '54 *Cenas, B. C. '56 Chapin, F. W. '79 Chapin, W. V. '78 Chapman, T. B. 'So Cheever, T. D., Jr. '8r Clark, J. 'W. '63 ''Clemson, T. G. '56 Clifford, S. W. '68 Clyde, W. P. '62 Coleman, R. H. '77 Comfort, B. F. '89 Cookson, F. M. '6r *Coxe. J. N. '55 Crane, R. M. '5 5 ·*Curtis , F . R. 'So Curtis, G. M . '8o Curtis, R. H. '68 Curtis , W. E. '75 *Darrell, A S. '59 *Dayton, W . B. '56 Deal, J. A. '72 55
/ *Lamson, W. 's6 Lawrence, C. V. 's6 *Leacock, J. H. '58 Lewis , C. A . '93 *Lewis, E . B. '65 Lewis, E. G. '92 *Lewis, J. I. '62 Lewis, J. W. '93 Lewis, S. S. '61 *Lewis, T. C. '71 Lewis, W. H . '65 Lincoln, F. T. '76 Lincoln, G. \V. '75 Macauley, G . T. '90 Macauley, R. H. '95 *Mackay, W. R. '67 Martindale, H . S. '79 McClorv, H. '51 McCullough, D. H. '73 McCook, E. McP. '9o McCough, H. G. '75 McLean, T . '75 M1ller, H. 'So *Miller, P. S. "64 Miller, S. T. '85 *Mines, F. S. '64 *Mines, J. F. '54 Morgan, B. T. '61 Morse, J. F. '66 Murray, A. S., Jr. '71 Murray, F. W., Yale, '77 Murray, R. '73 Nelson, R. H. 'So Nichols, G. G. '67 *Norris, E. C. '6r Norris . H. '63 ~·Norton, F. L. '68 Nott, R. H. '71 Orton, \V. 0. '92 Owen, F. W. '84 Padgett, P. '76 *Palmer, C. C. '51 Parker, B. '93 Parker, R. P. '94 Parsons, H. 'S3 Parsons, J. R., Jr. 'Sr Pattison, G. B. '8r Paxon, H. C. '51 Pearce, T. S . '62 Pearce, R. '93 Peck , B. D. '96 *Peck, D. L. '62 Perkins, G. E. 'Sr *Pierce, H. H. '5S *Pinckney, F. S. '62 Platt, Chas., Jr. '75 Platt, Clayton '74 *Platt, W. A. '75 Potter, A. H. '92 Read, H. P. '84 *Roosevelt, F. '83 Russell, F. G. 'So
Russell, I. D. '92 Russell, H. '84 Rutherford, H. V. '76 Scott, H . B. '7S Scudder, T. A . '97 Sheldon, W. C. , Jr. '82 *Shreve, W. I. '83 Sibley, A. S. '92 Small wood, S. B. '63 *Smith, H . S. '62 *Smith, I. S. '64 Smith, I. T. '91 Smith, R. H . '69 Smith, W. G. W. '71 Stark, B., Jr. '79 Stark, W. M. '75 *Stedman, T. W. '74 *Steele, H. D. '51 *Stevens, S. '65 *Stillwell, R. M. '70 Strawbridge, J. '95 Strong, C. M. '64 Strong, J. R . "82 Sumner, C. A. '56 Swenson, E. P. '75 Swenson, S . A. '81 Talcott, A. B. '9o Talcott, C. H. '91 Thompson, H . R. '87 Thompson, S. C. '72 Thorne, N . D. '71 Thorne, R. '85 Totten , C. A. L . '69 Trowbridge, C. C. '92 Trowbridge, S. P . B. 'S3 *Underhill, G. B. '73 Yan Zile, E. S 'S4 Vibbert, H. C. '6S Vibbert, W. H. '5S Vibbert, W. W. '94 \Vanzer, C. '66 \Vaterman, L. '71 Waters, G. S. '87 *Watson, \V. C. '63 Watts, E. B. '73 ~·weeks, R . D. '93 Welch, R. F. '95 Whistler, W. G. Me, . '57 *White, F. W. '78 Wilcox, F. L. ·so Wilcox, E. P. 'So *Wildman, T. G. '57 Williams, C. C. '7 1 Williams, C. G. 'So Wilson, W. C. D. '93 Wilmerding, H. 'Sr Winkley, R. L. '79 Woodin, W. R. '58 Woodruff, E. H . '82 Wright, G. E. '74 Young, A . M. '82 • Deceased
tb~
or Jllpba D~lta Pbi
;ratunitv
;:ound¢d In
1&32
Jlt fiamnton ~on
con~s~
of £bapt¢rs
HAMILTO N
Hamilton College
COLUMBIA
Columbia College
YALE
Yale University
AMHERST
Amherst College
BR UNONIAN
Brown University
HARVARD
Harvard University .
H UDSON
Western Reserve University
BOWDOIN
Bowdoin College
DARTMOUTH
Dartmouth College
PENINSULAR
University of Michigan
1832 ! 836 1837 !837 ! 837 !837 1841 1841
R ocHESTER
University of Rochester
1845 1846 1850
'VILLIAMS
Williams College
ISSI
MANHATTAN
College of the City of New York.
MIDDLETOWN
Wesleyan University
18ss 1856
• KENYON UNION .
Kenyon College
ISS
Union College
1859 ! 869 1877 1889 1892
CoRNELL
Cornell University
PHI KAPPA JOHNS HOPKINS
Trinity College Johns Hopkins University
MINNESOTA
University of Minnesota
TORONTO
Toronto University
CHICAGO
University of Chicago
ss
1893 1896
.~,,
Cb~
Pbi Kappa
Cbapt~r
HENRY WooDwARD ALLEN
ARCHIBALD MORRISON LANGFORD
EDGAR CHARLES BEECROFT
JoHN HEKRY PAGE, JR.
HENRY GRINNELL
RoBERT SYTHOFF STARR JARIUS AI.PliEUS MOORE
JuLIAN STUART CARTER
JOHN SIDNEY DAVENPORT,
PHILIP CooK
LLOYD GILSON REYNOLDS
FRANCIS HENRY GLAZEBROOK
ELTON GARDINER LITTELL
CHARLES BAKER HEDRICK
~RYAN KILI.IKELLY MORSE ADRIAN HOLMES
jAMES PRATT ROBBINS
0
3d
DERDO NK
ERNEST ALBERT RI CH
RoDERICK HARRISON Fox
HASLETT McKIM GLAZEBROOK
SAMUEL RICHARD FULLER
DAVID LOUIS SCHWARTZ GRANVILLE HuDSON SHERWOOD
59
;ratr¢s in JSrb¢ Rev. Prof. IsnoN T. BECKWITH, Ph.D., Yale, '68 H on. EDWARD B. BENNETT, Yale, '66 PERCY S. BRYANT, Phi Kappa, '70 CHARLES H . BuNcE, Yale, '6o GEORGE F. CADY, Wesleyan, '69 Hon. DAVIU S. CALHOUN, Yale, '6o FRANK W. CHENEY, Brunonian, '54 GEORGE H. DAY, Geneva, '73 RoBERT E. DAY, Yale, '52 HoRACE S. FuLLER, M .D., Amherst, '58 ARTHUR R. GILLETT, Amherst, 'So MAITLAND GRI GGS, Yale, '96 CHARLES E. GRoss, Yale, '69 E. H. HAMM ON D, Wesleyan, '88 PANETT M. HASTINGS, M.D., Hamilton, '39 EuwARD B. HATCH, Phi Kappa, '86 FREDERICK VAN H. HuosoN, Dartmouth, '6o Rev. JoHN T. HuNTINGTON, Phi Kappa, 'so ALVIN P . HYDE, Yale, '45 RICHARD W. H. JARVIS, Phi Kappa, '48 EDwARD P. KELLEY, Amherst, '90 SoLON C. KELLEY, Amherst, '92 L. P. WALDO MARVI , Yale, '92 LEONARD MoRSE, Amherst, '71 Rev. THOMAS R. PYNCHON, DD., LL.D., Phi Kappa, '41 W. H. C. PYNCIION, Phi Kappa, '90 RoBERT WELLS RooT, Williams, '96 RoBERT H. Sc HUTZ, Phi Kappa, '89 l-Ion. NATHANIEL SHIPMAN, Yale, '48 l-Ion. GEORGE G. SILL, Yale, '52 Rev. CHARLES C. STEARNS, Yale, '72 Rev. SAMUEL M. STILES, Middletown, '6o SAMUEL B . ST. joHN, M.D., Yale, '66 MELANCTHON STORRS, M.D., Yale, '52 HENRY E. TAINTOR, Yale, '65 Prof. WILLISTO ' WALKER, Amherst, '83
6o
Graduat~ m~mb~rs
of tb~ Pbi Kappa
Cbapt~r $
Alroy, S. '92 Andrews, R. '53 Applegate, 0., Jr. '87 Armstrong, D. M. '58 Barber, W. W. '88 Barto, R. V. '82 Bellinger, E. B. '72 Bixby, R. F. '70 Blackmer, W . C. '78 Boardman, W. H. '85 Boardman, W . j. '5~ Booth, T. R. '52 Bowie, C. L. '93 Bowman, J. P. '53 *Brainard, E. W. '42 Brainard, J. '5 r Brainard, J. M. '84 Briscoe, J., Jr. ' 95 Brownell, H. B. '88 Bryan, W. '75 Bryant, P. S. '70 *Bulkeley, C. E. '56 Buxton , J. B. '72 Buxton, J. C. '73 Cameron, J. I. H. '79 Cameron, L. '86 *Capron, A. '45 Cary, H. A. '93 Carter, B. M. '82 Carter, C. H . '8 2 Carter, G. C. '87
Carter, J. R. '83 Carter, L. A. '93 Carter, S. '94 Chase, F. '52 Cheritree, T. L. '90 Cheshire, J. B., Jr. '69 *Chipman, G. C. '45 *Chipman, G. S. '78 Chrystie, T. M. L. '65 Church, S. P. '41 Churchman, C. '93 Churchman, E. G. '95 Clark, A. F. ' 75 *Codman, A. '8s Coe, G. J ., '74 Coit, C. W. '82 Coleman, G. P. '90 *Conklin, H. H. '38 Cooke, G. L. '70 *Cooke, 0. D. '44 Cowl, M. L. '83 Crane, T. '45 Crocker, H. D. '84 *Crosby, D. G. 's r Cullen, J., Jr. '93 Curtiss, H. C. '81 *Dickinson, E . L . '93 Dingwall, E. A. '92 Dingwall, H. R. '95 Drane, H. M. '52 Dyett, W. F. '96 61
Hooker, S. D. ;77 Hooper, G. G. '66 Howell, G. D. '82
Elliott, J. H. '72 Fisher, R. "s6 Flagg, E. 0. '48 Flagg, J. B. ' ~6 *Flower, S. 路~s Foot, E. H. '78
*Hubbell, J. H. '56 *Humphrey, G. F. '85 Hunter, C. '78 Huntington, G. S. '81
*Foote, C. E. '76 Freeland, C. W . '8 [
*Huntington, Huntington, *Huntington, Huntington, Huntington,
*Fuller, F. B. '92 *Geer, G. J. '42 Gilmore, A. P. ' 74 Goodwin, J. '86 Goodwin, W. B. '88 路*Goodwyn, W. S. '38 Gordon, T. H . '71 Graham, H. C. '6 r
H . K. '67 J. T. 'so J. W. '83 R. W . '64
H. '84
Huske, J. '77 Hutchins, R. I-I. '90 Ide, H . G. '94 Ingersoll, C. M. '39 *Ives, A . M. '56 *Jacobs , E. C. '55 *James, C. '6 r Jarvis, R. W . H. '48 *Jewett, P. A. '3? *Kennedy, F. '68 Kerner, H. S. '99 Kidder, H. '92 *Kirtland, J. '70 *Kneeland, G. 'So Kurtz, C. M. '83
Graham, J. '72 Griswold, B. H. '66 Hagar, W. C. '79 Hall, G. R. '42 Hamlin, A . C. '87 Hamlin, E. P. '95 Hamlin, G. N. '91 Harding, A. '79 Hatch, E. B . '86 Hays, J. McC. '86 Hays , W. W. 's8 Hazelhurst, G. B. '77
Kurtz, J. E. '77 Lampson, E. R., Jr. '91 Langford, W. S., Jr. '96
*Heath, J . F. '38 H enshaw, C. H . '53 Heister , I. '76 *Hills, G. M. '47 Hills, J. D. '78 Hills, G . H . '84 Hills, R. '84 Holcomb, B. T. '59 H olley, W. W. '6r
Leaver, H . K. '89 Littell, J. S. '90 Littell, S. H. '95 Lockwood , L . V. '93 Lyman, A. J. ' 78 McGann, J. M. '95 Maddox, W. T. '59 *Mallett, W. P . '40
*Hooff, J . L . '46 62
Middlebrook, L. N. '48 Mock, L. C. '48 Morgan, W. F. 路ss Morrison, P. B. '94
*Smith, P . 'go Smyth, J. D. '74 Snow, A. H. '79 Snyder, E. '72 Stimson, L. B. '48
*Morss, J. R. '47 Newton, E. P . '81
Stewart, G . T. '78
*Norton, G. H. '75 *Olmstead, H. '42
Stewart, W. J. S. '88 Stone, M. 'So
Palmer, N. '45 Peabody, F. B. '45 Perry, J. B. '72 *Perryman, E. G. '55 *Peters, W. C. '48 *Pitts, C. H. '65 Plumb, J. F . '9 1 Plumer, L . M. '74 Plumer, S.,
Jr.
'97
Porter, T. A. '76 Potts, F. H. '68 Prescott, 0. S . '44 Preston, J. A. '55 Putnam, W. T. '88
*Stone, S. 'So *Storm, C. '39 Sullivan, F. R. '66 Thurman, A. W. '67 Tracy, E. 'ss *Vanderpoel, A. M. '89 Yan Schaack, D. '91 Wadsworth, L. F. '44 Warner, A. J. '42 \Varner, D. T . '72 Warner, M. C. '88 Wa!Ohburn, P. C . '96 Watson, S. N. '82 Wesley, P. R. '94
Pynchon, '1'. R. '4 r Pynchon, W. H. C. 'go *Randall, E. D. '92
Whaley, P. H. '74
Richardson, F. W . '84
*Williams, E. W. ' 53
Sartwelle, W. D. '75
*Williams, J. H. '54 Wilson, G . H. '93
Schlitz, R. H. '89 Schiitz, W. S. '94 Sennett, L. F. '89 Sistare, C. G. '47
Wheaton, C. '49 Whitlock, H. R. '70
Woodruff, F. D. '83 *Yale, H. A . '46 *Deceased.
tb~
;ratunitp of D~lta
Kappa â&#x201A;Źpsilon Jlt
Yal~ 15nh,~rsitp
Roll of fbaptns PHI THETA XI SIGMA . GAMMA Psr UPSILON Cur BETA . ETA !CAPPA LAMBDA Pr IOTA ALPHA ALPHA OMICRON EPSILON RHO TAU Mu Nu BETA PHI PHI Cm Psr PHI GAMMA Pill Psr OMEGA. BETA CHI DELTA CHI DELTA DELTA PHI GAMMA GAMMA BETA THETA ZETA ALPHA CHI PHI EPSILON SIGMA TAU
Yale niversity Bowdoin College Colby University Amherst College Vanderbilt University University of Alabama Brown University University of Mississippi University of North Carolina University of Virginia Miami University Kenyon College Dartmouth College Central University. Middlebury College University of Michigan . Williams College Lafayette College Hamilton College Colgate University. College of the City of Iew York University of Rochester Rutgers College De Pauw University Wesleyan University Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute . Adelbert College Cornell University . University of Chicago Syracuse University Columbia College University of California Trinity College University of Minnesota Massachusetts Institute of Technology 64
1844 1844 1845 1846 1889 1847 1850 1850 1851 1 52 !852 !852 1853 !853 ! 854 1855 1855 1855 r8s6 1856 r8s6 r8s6 1861 1866 r867 r867 1868 !870 !870 r88r 1874 1876 !879 r889 r8go
844 .84+ .845 846 889 847 r8so tSso i8SI I 52 t852 !852 r8s3 t853 1854 t8ss 1855 !855 !856 !856 !856 !856 r86r J86q_ r867 r867 1868 f 870 1 870 r88r 1874 1876 1879 !889 1890
Cb~
Jllpba Cbi
Cbapt~r
CuARLES CALVERT Cosn.R
WALTON STOUTE!\ BURG DANKER
MARC WHEELER CoLE
HowARD DANIEL PLIM PTON LOUIS ALBERT H OPKINS
MoRGAN Rou sE CARTWRIGHT
} AMES WAT SON LORD
CARL GEORGE REILAND
DANA WIGHTMAN BARTHOLOMEW
JosEPH HENRY L ECOUR
WALTER BE ARDSLEE WILDMAN
IRVING KNOTT BAXTER
FREDERIC K ALBERT LUND
REUEL ALLAN BENSON
RALPH CUTLER
WILLIAM ALFRED WAR!\ER
REGINALD NORTON 'VILCOX
1EAD
THOMAS PROSSOR BROWNE
D AVID BALDWI N jEWETT
JoHN DI XON BuRCHARD
SIMON LOUIS T OMLINSON
RoELIF HASBROUCK BROOK S
THEODORE GRAFTON CASE
Jllumni Jlssociation or tb~ D~lta Kappa Epsilon rrat~rnitp
Cb~ Conn~cticut
Offlc¢rs President-Col. JA con L. GREENE, Michigan, '61 Secretary and Treasurer-CHARLES P. CooLEY, Yale, '91
The three hundred Alumni of the Fraternity in the State of Connecticut
rratr¢S In Urb¢ Adams, H. C., Williams, '86 Ayres, W. A., Yale, '64 Bacon, W. T., Yale, '68 Barbour, J. H., Amherst, '73 Beardsley, E. R., Yale, '79 Bliss, G. C., Middlebury, '92 *Bull, C. W . , Yale, '63 B"rton, R . E., Trinity, '83 Camp, J. S., Wesleyan, '78 Clark, C. H ., Yale, '71 Coburn, Vv. T., Dartmouth, '82 Collins, A . , Yale, '73 Conant, G. A., Amherst, '78 Cone, J. B., Yale, '57 Cooley, C. P., Yale, '9 1 Cooley, F. R., Yale, '86 Day, A. P., Yale, 'go Davis, F. W ., Yale, '77 Forrest, C. R., Yale, '65 Freeman, H . B., Yale, '62 Freeman, H. B. Jr., Yale, '92 Grant, R. W., Wesleyan, '92 Graves, J. A., Yale, '72 Greene, J . L., Michigan, '6r I-Iine, C. D., Yale, '71
Howe, D. R., Yale, '74 Hubbard, G. H., Dartmouth , 'So Hyde, F. E., Colgate, '63 Hyde, F. E., Ya1e, '79 Hyde, W. W., Yale , '76 Ingalls, P. H., Bowdoin, '77 *L each, J. A., Wesleyan, '93 Matson, W. L., Yale, '62 lVIoseley, G. C., Yale, '74 Owen, C. H ., Yale , '6o Parker, E. P. , Bowdoin, '56 Pattison, Harold, Rochester, '92 Porter, J. A., Yale, '78 P ratt, W. W . , Adelbert, '85 Prentice, S. 0., Yale, '73 R obbins, E. D., Yale, '74 Ryce, L. C., Yale , '86 Starr, P. S., Yale, '6o St. J ohn , W. H . , Yale, '91 Taylor, J. ·M., Williams, '67 Tucker, J.D., Yale, '61 Warfield, F. A, Middlebury, '87 Way, C. L . , Yale, '85 Welch , A. A ., Yale, '82 Yung, Wing, Yale, '54
• Deceased
66
• 6raduat~ m~mb~rs Anderson, Alexander Hopkins 'S7 Barrows, John Chester 'So Barrows, William Stanley 'S4 Bates, Robert Peck '93 Benton, William Lane Hall '89 *Bidwell, Lawson Brewer 'So *Bidwell, Walter Davison 'Sr Birdsall, Paul '86 *Bishop, Nelson Howard '92 Black, Harry Campbell 'So Bowie, William '93 Brewer, Seabury Doane '82 Brown, George Israel '88 Burnham, John Bird '91 Burton, Richard Eugene '83 Chapman, Thomas Bion '83 *Cook, Charles Smith '8r Coster, Martyn Kerfoot '87 Coster, William Hooper '91 Cowles, Arthur 'Voodruff 'Sr Crabtree, Albert '92 *Dauchey, Nathan Follin ·as Davis, Cameron Josiah '94 Deuel, Charles Ephraim '87 Eastman, Roger Charles '8S Fleming, David Law 'So F;-ench, George Herbert '92 *Goodrich, William Sloo '82 Graff, Henry Addison 'S6 Grint, Alfred Poole 'Sr Griswold, Clifford Standish '90 Hall, Gordon '92 Hamilton, Charles Anderson 'S2 Hammond, Otis Grant '92 Holden. Seaver Milton 'S2 Home, Charles Albert '93 Hubbard, William Stimpson 'SS Johnson, Charles Amos '92
Of
tb~
Jflpba £bi
£bapt~r
Johnson, Edwin Comstock, 2d 'SS Johnson, Frederick Foote '94 Leaf, Edward Bowman 'Ss L eonard, Loyal Lovejoy '96 Linsley, Arthur Beach 'S2 Loomis, Hiram Benjamin 'Ss Loveridge, Henry Clarence 'So Mitchell, Samuel Smith '85 McCulloch, William Hugh '91 Olcott, William Tyler '96 Pedersen, Victor Cox '91 Penrose, John Jesse, Jr. '95 Purdy, Charles Edward 'SS Ramsdell, Julian Elroy '92 Reinemann, Adolph ·william 'Sr Reineman, Robert Theodore 'S3 Remington, Charles Hazard '89 Rogers, Wellington James 'So Smart, John Harrow '95 Smith, Joseph Sewall, Jr. '94 *Smith, Oliver Alcott '9+ Stockton, Elias Boudinot '91 Stoddard, Solomon '94 Strong, Albert William '94 Stuart, Albert Rhett, Jr. 'S8 Stuart, William Clarkson '88 Thurston, Theodore Payne '91 Walker, William Dundas '82 Waters, Charles Thomas '87 Weed, Charles Frederick '94 Wheeler, Francis Melville '83 ·williams, Francis Goodwin '89 Wright, Arthur Henry 'S3 Wright, Boardman '89 Wright, George Herman '91 Wright, William George '91 Wright, Frederick Amaziah '94 • Deceased
'I' Y HOUSE
p CJ
Be
ETA'
Tt\u
Mu RHo.
Cb~
;ratunitv ot
Psi JSpsilon Founded in 1833
Jlt ISnion
Coii~S~
Roll of Chapters TH El'l\ -
Union College
l b nl'A *'
New York University
BETA
Yale University
--8H~I A -
Amherst College
ZeTA
Dartmouth College
L AMBDA
Columbia College
K NPPA
Bowdoin College
Psr -
Hamilton College
Xr
I
f
Brown University
GAMNA
-.
.,.
Wesleyan University
UPSILON -
University of Rochester
IoTA ~
Kenyon College
Pm -
University of Michigan
Pr - .
Syracuse University
CHI
Cornell University
~
BETA BETA .
Trinity College
E TA
Lehigh University
TAU.
University of Pennsylvania
Mu
University of Minnesota
RHo .
University of Wisconsin
69
r
J
t:.
•
tb~ B~ta B~ta Cbapt~r
Active Members DoNALD SKELDING CoRSON J oHN HENRY KELSO DAVIS LEONARD AUGUSTINE ELLIS DELANCY WALKER FISKE HARRY DANIEL GREEN FREDERICK CLARK INGALLS WOOLSEY McALPINE J OHNSON GEORGE TALLMAN KENDAL GEORGE SnELDO
McCooK
J oHN GILBERT MciLvAIN E JOHN WILLIAM S NI CHOLS HAN S CHRISTIAN OwEN HENRY RUTGERS REM SEN M cWALTER BERNARD EDWARD SuTToN EDWIN PEMBERTON TAYLOR EDWARD SCHOFIELD TRAVERS EDGAR FRANCIS W ATERMA ' ALLAN SHELDON WO ODLE CHARLES GuiLFORD W ooDWARD
tratr~s
Joshua W. Allen, Beta, '88 James P. Andrews, Beta, '77 John H. Buck, Beta, '91 Hon. John R. Buck, Xi, '62 Clarendon C. Bulkely, Beta Beta, '75 Philip Bunce, M.D., Beta, '88 F. A. Bushee, Zeta, '9-l E. W. Capen, Gamma, '94 William S. Case, Beta, '85 Albert St. Clair Cook, Beta, '89 G. Pierrepont Davis, M.D., Beta, '66 j.Qhn G. Day, Beta, '57 Chas. E. Fellowes, Beta, 's6
.
in
ISrb~
Charles Shiras Morris, Beta Beta,'96 John J. Nairn, Beta, 'So Francis Parsons, Beta, '93 Arthur Perkins, Beta, ' 7 Lewis F. Reid, Beta, '75 Rev. Wm. A. Richard , Xi, '84 Henry Roberts, Beta, '77
Hon. H enry C. Robinson, LL.D., Beta, '53 Henry S. Robinson, Beta, '89 John T. Robinson, Beta, '93 Lucius F. Robinson, Beta, '85 George H. Seyms, Beta Beta, '72 H. P. Shauffier, Gamma, '93 Rev. Prof. Henry Ferguson, Beta Beta '68 Forrest Shepherd, Beta, '92 George H. Gilman, Bej;a, '90 Arthur L. Shipman, Beta, '86 Wilbur F. Gordy, Xi, '70 Hon. Joseph H. Sprague, Alpha, '5r Hon.Wm. Hamersley, LL.D., Beta Beta, '58 Lewis E. Stanton, Beta, '55 Rev. Prof. Sam'! Hart, D.D., Beta Beta, '66 James U. Taintor, Beta, '66 Hon. Joseph R. Hawley, LL.D., Psi, '47 F. H. Taylor, Xi, '84 R. W. Huntington, Beta, '89 Hon. J . .{Iam'd Trumbull, LL.D., Beta, '42 cb Prof. Charles F. Johnson, Beta, '55 James R: Turnbull, Beta, '92 Frank E. Johnson, Beta Beta, '84 Rev. Joseph H . Twichell, Beta, '59 Rev. C. 1\I. Lamson, D.D., Gamma, '64 Chas. Dndley Warner, L.H.D., Psi, '5r Prof. A. R. Merriam, Beta, '77 Lewis-S. Welch, Beta, '89 Simon C. Metzger, Beta, 'So P. H. Wood\vard, Beta, 'ss
7I
Cl
Graduat~ m~mbus
of
tb~
Bda
B~ta
Cba))tU
.;!.
*Alexander , H. W. '57 Backus, B. E. '70 Bailey, M. K. '79 Baldwin, L . B. '6o Barbour, H . M. '70 Barbour, H. G. '96 Beardsley, W. A . '87 *Beaupillier, A . L. '56 *Beckwith, J. W. '5 2 ·*Benedict, S. '47 Benjamin, W . H . '57 *Betts , J . H. '44 Birckhead, J . B. '94 *Birckhead, W. H. '6r *Bishop, H . '61 Blair, W. R. '75 Bolles, E. C. 'ss *Bostwick, H. P : '46 *Bostwick, W. L . '51 Bowdish, J. T. '73 Bowles, J. H. '6o Boylston, C. W. '78 Brady, R. McC . '90 Bredin, W . S. 'So Brevoort, E. R . '68 Brewer, A. L. '53 *Bridge, J. '47 Brinley, G. M. '88 BI'O?ISO?t, M. '.52 Broughton, C. DuB. '95 *Brown, T. M. 'so Brown, J. E. '83 Brundage, R. B. '78 Buffington, J . '75 Buffington, 0. '79 Bulkeley, E. B. '90 Bulkley, C. C. '75 Bulkley, W . H. '73 Bull, F. S. '91 Bull, W. A. '91 *Bull, A . B. '59 Burgwin, G. C. '72 Burgwin, J. H. K. '77 Burgwin, A. P. '82
Burke, E . N. '76 Burrage, F. S. '95 *Cady, D. K. 'ss Cammann, D. M. '72 Campbell, R . M. '78 Carpenter, C. '82 Carpenter, S. B. '73 Carter, H. S. '69 Chase, H. R. '72 Child, C. G. '86 Child, E. N ., J r. 'Ss *Clark, G. '70 *Clerc, C. M. '45 Clerc, F. J. '43 Coggeshall, M. H . '96 Coleman, C. S. '82 ·*Collins, J. B. J. '74 *Colt, W . U. '44
Cotton, D. P. '7I Cotton, H . E. '74 Craik, C. E . '74 Crawford, J. W. R. '88 •Crosby, W. L. 'So
Cummz?zs,A. G.
'.si
Cunningham, J. R . 'Ss *Dashiell, E. F. ' '46 *Dayton. M. B. '63 *Dewey, D . P. '64 Dickerson, E. N., Jr. '74 Dockray, .E. L. '83 Douglas, G. W . '71 Douglas, A. E . '89 *Douglass, M. '46 Downes, L. W. '88 Drayton, W., '71 Drumm, T . J . '74 *DuBois, j. C '53 *Easton, G. C. 's r Edgerton, F. C. '94 Edgerton, J . W. '94 Edmunds, C. C., -Jr. '77 Elmer, W. T. '81 Elwyn, T. L. '42 *Ely, J: F. '64 72
Emery, R. 'sr Emery, W. S. 'Sr Everest, C. S. '71 Ferguson, E. M. '59 Ferguson, H . '68 路"Ferguson, J.D. '51 *Ferguson, S . '57 Ferguson, W. '63 Ferguson, W. Jr. '93 Ferguson, S. '96 Fiske, G . McC. '70 *Flower, Samuel '45 Fogg, T. B . '52 Fowler, F. H. '6r French, G. A . 'Sq French, L. '53 Frye, P. H. '89 Gage, A. K. '96 Gage, W. H. '96 Gallaudet, E. M. '56 Gardiner, E. R . '56 George, J. F. '77 George, J. H. '72 George, T. M. N. 'So Giesy, S. H. '85 *Gilman, G. S. '47 Golden, H. L. '83 *Goodrich, A. B. '52 Goodrich, J. B. '66 Goodridge, E. '6o Goodridge, F. '57 Goodridge, T. W. '92 Gould, C. Z. '82 *Greene, F. H. '82 Greene, G. '83 *Green, V. '6o Greenley, H. T. '94
Hubbard, L. DeK. '93 Hudson, R . '71 *Hugg, G. W. '62 Hurd, A. D. '77 *Hurd, J. D. '74 Husband, C. H. '89 Hyde, E. M. '73 *Isbell, C. 'M. '63 *Jackson, A. '6o 路" Jackson, W. A. '83 ohnson, E. E. '59 Johnson, F. E, '84 Johnson, G. 0. '54 *Johnson, S. W. 'Sr Johnson, F. '94 Jones, C. W. 'Sr Jones, E. P., Jr. '77 Jones, W. N. '88 *Kelley, J. '44 Kempe, E. A. 'Sr
Kennett, L. M . '7o Kissam, E. V. B. '69
Kittrt!d!J,e. A. S. '.s7 Ktoppmburg, H. W. '58 *Knickerbacker, D . B. '53 Kramer, F . F. '89 Krumbhaar, W . B. 'ss Lampher, L.A. 'So Leffingwell, c. s. '54 Leffingwell, E. DeK. '95 Lewis , G. F. '77 Lindsley, C . A. '49 Lobdell, F. D. '85 *Long, W. '43 Loveridge, D. E. 'so *Luther, R . M. 'qo Mackay-Smith, A. '72 *Macklin, R. B. '58 Magill, G. E. '84 Marshall, M. M. '63 Mather, W. G. ' 77
Gregory, H. M. '56 Gwinn, F. W. '72 *H;tll, S. '54 Hamersley, W. 'sS Harriman, F. D. '45 Harriman, F. W. '72 *Hart, G. '7o Hart, S. '66 H artley, G. D. '93 Hayd en, C. C. '66 * H erman n , S. '57 *H ewi tt, S. G . '77 H ickox, G. A. '51 H icks, G. C. '56 H icks, J. M. '54 *H icks, W. C. '48 H icks, W . C., J r. 'g r H icks, De F . '96 H itchcock, W. A. '54 H itchcock, W . H . '84 *H off, H . '8 2 Holway, 0 . 'So Hubbard, E. K. J r . '92
McConihe, S. '56
McCook, P. J. '95 McCrackan, J. H. '82 McCrackan, W. D. 'Ss Mcivor, N. W. '82 Mear.s, T. ~路 'sS Morns, F. 64 :Morris, B. W. Jr. '93 *Morris, J. H. '45 Morris, C. S. '96 Mowe, W. R. '70 *Neely, A. D . '85 Neely, H . R . '84 Nich ols, W. F . '70 Niles, W. W. '57 Niles, E. C. '87 Niles路, W . P. '93 Oberly, H. H. '65 Olmsted, C. T. '65 --1 73
*Olmsted, H. K. '46 *Paddock, B. H . '48 *Paddock, J. A. '45 Paddock, L. S. 'so Paddock, L. H. '88 Paddock, R. L. '9+ Paris, I. Jr. '76 Parker, C. P. '73 Parrish, H. '91 Pattison, A. E. 'So Pelton, H. H. '93 Penfield, W. D. '62 *Pettitt, W. F. '46 Phillips, C. W. '71 *Polk, A. H. '53 *Pond, C. M. 'ss Potwine, W. E. '79 Pressey, E. A . '92 Pressey, 'IV. '90 *Preston, T. S. '43 Purdy, E . L. '84 *Purdy, S. '49 Raftery, 0. H. '73 Rinehart, E. J. '76 Roberts, B. C. '95 *Roberts, W. J. '75 Robinson, E. 'IV. '96 Rogers, L. W. '91 Rogers, W. E. '77 *Rudder, W. '48 Saltus, R. S. '92 Saltus, L . '87 Sargeant, G. W. '90 Scarborough, ]. '54 Scott, E N . '89 *Scott, J. T . '91 Scott, W. G. '88 Sexton, T. B. '6o Seymour, C. H . '52 Seyms, G. H. '72 Shaw, J. P. C. '71 Shermap, S. 'so Short, W. S. '83 Shreve, B. F. H. '78 Smith, C. B. '54 *Spencer, W. G . '53 Stanley, G. M. '68
Stanley, J. D. '77 Stedman, '1'. L . '74 *Steele, 0. R. '53 *Sterling, J. C. '44 Stocking, C. H . W. '(Jo Stoddard, E. V. '6o Stoddard, ]. '71 Storrs, L. K. '63 Stotsenberg, J. H. 'so Stout, ]. K. '70 *Studley, W. H. 'so Sullivan, E. T. '89 Syle, H . W . '67 Syle, L. D. '79 Taylor, E. B. '73 Taylor, J. P. '43 Tibbitts, W. B. '6r Tibbitts, C. H. Jr. '87 Tingley, G. C. '52 *Tremaine, C. H. B. '66 *Truby, J. M. '79 Tullidge, E. K. '76 Tuttle, R. G. '89 *Tuttle, R. H. '46 pson, A. I. '88 Valentine, W. A. '72 *Van Nostrand, C. A. ' 77 *Vincent, S. 's ~ Wakefield, J. 13. '46 Warner, B. E. '76 *Warren , S. B. '59 Webb, W. R. '78 Webster, L. '8o *Webster, W. H '6r Welles, H. T . '43 Welles, L. H. '6+ Whitcome, F. B. '87 Whitney, H. E. '74 Williams, ]. '90 Wilson, C. T. '77 *Wilson, D. B. '79 *Winchester, S . F . '66 *\Vitherspoon, 0. '56 Woodman, C. E. '73 Worthington, E. W. "'75 Yardley, T. H. '92 Ziegler, P. '72
â&#x20AC;˘Deceased.
Names of me mbers to b e initiated , in italicS.
74
tb~ ;rat~rmtl'
ot
Sigma Jllpba â&#x201A;Źpsilon Jlt
tb~
ISnivusitl) of Jllabama
Roll of Chapters
,
'cs.
Ohio State University Franklin College Perdue University North Western University Central University Bethel College Southwestern Presbyterian University Cumberland University Vanderbilt University University of Tennessee University of the South Southwestern Baptist niversity University of Alabama Southern University Alabama A. and M. College University of Mississippi Simpson College University of :Missouri Washington University University of Nebraska Central College University of Arkansas University of Texas University of Colorado Denver University Leland Stanford Jr. University University of California
Boston University Massachusetts Institute of Technology Harvard University Worcester Polytechnic Institute Trinity College Columbia University St. Stephen's College Allegheny College Dickinson College Pennsylvania State College Bucknell University University of Virginia Washington and Lee University University of North Carolina Davidson College South Carolina College Furman University Wafford College University of Georgia Mercer University Emory College Georgia School of Technology Tulane University University of Michigan Adrian College Mt. Union College Ohio Wesleyan University Cincinnati University
75
tb~ Conn~cticut
Jllpba
Cbapt~r
Active Members
HENRY JoHN GUNDACKEK
ERNEST ALBERT HATHEWAY
HARRY WOODFORD HAYWARD
WILLIAM RussELL ALLEN, JR.
HARRY WILSON HURLBURT
AusTEN CoLE
ALEXANDER PRATT, JR. ALFRED HENRY TIMPSON, JR.
JoHN BowNE BuNN
WtLLIAM YALE MATHER
WILLIAM ROBERT GOLDEN
ROWLAND HENRY MECHTOLD ALEXANDER NELLL , JR.
PERCY LEON BRYANT
ARTHUR HENRY BRYANT
HARRY AR CHER HORNOR
Graauat~ m~mbus CoLE, F. B. DEAN, E. B.
or
conn~~tt~ut
'93 '93
Jll))ba Cba))tu
JoBE, S. H .
'93
MILLER, W. J. '92
FORWARD,
J. F. '96 w. T. '93
PRATT, F. E. '95
FRENCH,
PRATT, N. T. '94
HAMLIN,
G.
SMLTH, H. M.
E. '95
'93 -
WoFFENDEN, R. H.
JAMES, H. H. '95
In
'93
ISrb~
C . D. BROWN
REV. J. P. FAUCON
H. H. BURDICK
L.
L.
S. CowLES
REv. G. K . McKNAUGHT
F.
s.
F. E. PRATT
CROSSFIELD, M.D.
J.
DOOLITTLE
Cb¢ ;ratunitp or
Pbi Gamma
D~lta
Jlt wasbinston and ]¢ffuson Coii¢S¢
'
PI IOTA ALPIIA CHI CHI TA U ALPHA Nu DEUTERON THETA Psi. KAPPA Nu. OMEGA UPSILON Nu EPSILON BETA . SIGMA DEUTERON BETA CHI XI DELTA PI ALPHA . GAMMA PHI BETA Mu . OMICRON ZETA Df:UTERO!\ DELTA DEUTERON BETA DEUTERON RHO CIII . EPSILON ETA . . OMICRON DEUTERON RHO DEUTERON. THETA DEUTERON SIGMA. LMIBDA DEt:TERON ALPHA PIII Mu . M u SIGMA. ZETA . LAMBDA P si TA U . . . ALPHA DEUTERON GAMMA DEUTERON KAPPA TAU P1 DE TERON ZETA PHI . DELTA XI . LAMBDA SIGMA
Roll of Chapters Worcester Polytechnic Institute Amherst College Union College Trinity Colle~e Yale Univers1ty . Colgate University Cornell University . Columbia College . College of the City of New York New York University . University of Pennsylvania Lafayette College . Lehigh University . Pennsylvania College Bucknell University . Allegheny College . . Washington and Jefferson College Pennsylvania State College . Johns Hopkins University University of Virginia . . Washington and Lee College Hampden-Sidney College Roanoke College . Richmond College . . . University of North Carolina Marietta College . . Ohio State University . Wooster University . Ohio Wesleyan University Wittenberg College . Denison University . University of Michigan. University of ' ¥isconsin University of Minnesota Indiana University De Pauw University Wabash College Hanover College Illinois Wesleyan University Knox College . . . U niversity of Tennessee Kansas University . . William J ewell College . U niversity of California . Leland Stanford University . 77
1891 1893 1893 1893 1875 1888 1888 1866 1865 1892 1882 1883 r886 I858 1882 r86o 1848 r8S8 1891 1859 1868 1870 1866 r8go 1851 1890 1878 r882 1868 1884 188 5 1885 1892 1890 1871 18 56 1866 1864 1866 1866 r8go ! 881 1886 r881 1891
tau Jllpba
Cbapt~r
Jlctiu~ m~mb~rs WJLLJA~I CuRTIS WHITE
PERCIVAL MATSON W ooD
JO SEPH DE VINE FLYNN
SA -FORD IRVING BE TON
ALBERT D u~IOND MERWIN
PERCIVAL SARGENT SMJTHE
NORMAN MILO LOOMIS
CLARENCE ALEXANDER S~I!Til
RAYM OND SA NFORD YEO~IANS
CLIFFORD KN ox W ooD
Graduat~ ffi~mb~rs CHARLES J UDD,
Of tau Jllpba Cbapt~r
'93
CHARLES ANDREI\' M ON AGHAN,
'93 BoRDLEY, '95 YO UNG, '95
'93
WILLIAM E uGENE CoNKLIN,
Lo u r s I sAAC BELDEN,
MADI SON BRowN
'95 '95 CHARLES H uBBELL STREET, '96 J A~IES 'WALTER G UNN ING, '96 LEROY KILB OURN HAGENOW, '96
FRANK RAYMOND
SMIUEL WILKIN SON MAG U IRE,
ALFRED HALLET WED GE ,
ARTII R FLETCHER MILLER, •95 GEO RGE FRANCIS LANGDON, Jo sEPH HENRY B UELL,
'96
'96
;ratns in ADRIAN W ADSWORTH .
ISrb~
Nu Deuteron
CuARLES A. WA TSON •
Nu Deuteron •
R. J. CLAPP
Pi
SAM UEL S. HOTCHKISS
Nu Deuteron .
WILLIAM E. CoNKLIN
Tau Alpha
Iota
Dr. ARTH UR B. KELLOGG .
Nu Epsilon
N. N. FOWLER
Nu Deuteron
.
KENNETH E . KELLOGG
Omega
JAMES W. GUNNING
Tau Alpha
.
'94
tb~
;ratunitp of
Jllpba Cbi Rbo Founde d in 1895
Jlt trinitp Roll of Cbaptus Pm Ps1
Trinity College
Pill Cm
Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn
PHI PHI
University of Pennsylvania
79
Coii~S~
Cb¢ Pbi Psi Cbapt¢r Jlcth.l~ m~mb~rs PAUL ZIEGLER
1897 CARL GoTTLOB ZIEGLER HERBERT THOMAS SHERRIFF WILLIAM TAYLOR WALKER
1898 FREDERICK EARL BucK ALBERT MOREY STURTEVANT HENRY }ONES BLAKESLEE
1899 ALLEN RESHELL VAN METER
FRANK ARTHUR McELwAIN
LLOYD RAEBURN BENSON
CHARLES WILLIAM HENRY
0RROK PAUL COLLOQUE
HAROLD LOOMIS CLEASBY
H ARRY LANDON RICE
THOMAS EMMET ADDIS VICTOR FoRREST MoRGAN
1900 MOSES JAMES BRINES
KARL FRANZ FREDERICK KURTH
ELLSWORTH MORTON TRACY
ALEXANDER ARNOTT
ERNEST LEON SIMONDS
AMASA CLARK HALL DENISON RICHMOND
Graduat~ m~mbus of tb~ Pbl Psi Cbal't~r WILLIAM APPLEBIE EARDELEY THOMAS FRANCIS HOMER HASTINGS
'96
'96
So
WILLIAM HERMAN RousE
'96
CARROLL CHARLES BEACH
'96
Pbi
B~ta
Kappa
Founded in 1776
Jlt William and mary
Roll Of
ISnit~d
Cbaf)tUS Bowdoin Colby Dartmouth University of Vermont Middlebury Harvard Amherst Williams Tufts Brown Yale Trinity \Vesleyan Union University of City of New York College of City of New York Columbia Hamilton Hobart Colgate Cornell Rochester Syracuse Rntgers Dickinson Lehigh Lafayette University of Pennsylvania Swarthi:nore Johns Hopkins William and Mary Adelbert Kenyon Marietta DePauw State University N ortb western University of Minnesota University of Nebraska State University
ALPHA OF MAINE BETA OF MAINE ALPHA OF NEW HA~IPSHIRE ALPHA OF VERMONT . BETA OF VERMONT ALPHA OF MASSACHUSETTS BETA OF MASSACHUSETTS . GAMMA OF MASSACHUSETTS DELTA OF MASSACHUSETTS ALPHA OF RHODE IsLAND . ALPHA oF CoNNECTICUT BETA OF CoNNECTICUT GAMMA o~路 CoNNECTICUT ALPHA OF NEW YORK BETA oF NEw YoRK . GAMMA OF NEW YORK DELTA OF NEw YoRK EPSILON OF NEW YORK ZETA OF NEw YoRK . ETA oF NEw YoRK . THETA OF NEW YoRK IoTA OF NEw YoRK . KAPPA OF NEw YoRK ALPHA OF NEW JERSEY ALPHA OF PENNSYLVANIA BETA OF PENNSYLVANIA GAMMA OF PENNSYLVANIA. DELTA OF PENNSYLVANIA . EPSILON OF PENNSYLVANIA ALPHA OF MARYLAND ALPHA OF VIRGINIA ALPHA oF Omo . BETA OF OHIO GAMMA OF OHIO ALPHA OF INDIANA ALPHA OF KANSAS ALPHA OF ILLINOIS ALPHA OF MINNESOTA ALPHA OF NEBRASKA ALPHA OF IowA 6
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Chartered 1845
Offic~rs President REv.
T.
Vice-President
R . PvNCHON, D.D., LL .D .
REv.
J.
T.
HuNTINGTON, M.A.
Secretary REv. SAMUEL HART, D.D.
Treasurer GEORGE LEwrs CooKE, M.A.
Assistant Secretary
Assistant Treasurer
}Ol-IN ROBERT BENTON
WILLIAM CURTIS WHITE
Class of ' g] } OliN ROBERT BENTON
H ERMANN VON WECIILINUER
IIIARCI-I FREDERICK CHASE
WILLIAM CURTIS WHITE
} OSEPH DEVINE FLYNN
PERCIVAL MATSON Wooo
GEORGE SHELDON M c CooK
CARL GoTTLOB ZIEGLER
82
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Ackley, W. N. '63 Alcorn, E. C. '74 Alling, S. H. 'g2 Andrews, C. M. 'S4 (h 18g6) Andews, S. T. (h 1867) Applegate, 0. '87 Ash, T. R. '64 Atwood, J. M. '4g Bacon, J. W. '46 Bailey, M. K. '7g Bakewell, J. 'sg Barker, F. M. 'gr Barbour, J. H. '73 Barrows, W. S. '84 Barton, C. C. '6g Bates, J. M. '72 Bates, R. P. 'g3 Bates, W. H. '72 *Beardsley, E. E. '32 (h 1S46) Beardsley, W. A. '87 Beers, G. E. 'S6 Belden, H. M. 'SS *Belden, N . M. '48 Benedict, L. LeG. '88 *Benedict, S. '47 Benton, R. A. '64 *Bidwell, L. B. 'So Birckhead, T. B. 'g4 Black, H. C. 'So Bolles, E. C. '55 Bowie, W. 'g3 Brainard, J. '5 1 (h 1856) Brainard, J. M. 'S4 Brewer, A. L. '53 *Bridge, J. '47 Brigham, H. H. '76 Brocklesby, A. K. '70 Brocklesby, T. H. '65 Brocklesby. 'W. C. '6g Bronson, M. '52 Broughton, C. DuB. 'g5 Brown, J. E. 'S3 *Brown, T. M. 'so Bryan, W. '75 Buffington, J. '75 Bulkley, W. H. '73 Burgwin, J. H. K. '77 Burrage, F. S. 'g5 Burton, R. E. 'S3 (h 18g6) *Butler, C. M. '33 (h rS52) *Capron, A. '45 Carpenter, J. S. '79 Carter, G. C. 'S7 Chapin, W. V. '78
*Chapman, C. R . '47 Chase, F. '52 Cheshire, J. B. '6g (h 18g6) *Chipman, G. S. '7S *Clark, G. H. (h 1863) Clark, J. W. '63 Clerc, F. J. '43 Coit, C. W. '82 Coleman, C. S. '82 Coleman. G. P. 'go Collins, W. F. '93 *Colt, W. U. '44 Colton, C. (h 1S54) Conklin, W. E . 'g3 Conover. T. A. 'go Cooke, G. L . '70 Coster, M. K. 'S7 *Cowling, R. 0. '61 Crabtree, A. '92 Crawford, J. W. R. 'SS *Crosby, D. G. '51 Cummins, A. G. '51 *Curtis, F. R. 'So Curtis, R. W. '96 *Curtis, T. W. T. (h 1858) *Curtis, W. E . '43 ~cushing, J. T. '37 (/z 1845l Davies, W. G. '6o Davis, C. J. '94 Dean, E . B. 'g3 Dickerson , E . M. '74 Dockray, E. L. 'S3 Douglas, G. W. '71 Douglass, A. E. 'S9 *Driggs, T. I. '48 DuBois, G. Mel. '74 DuBois, H. 0. '76 *Dyer, A . '70 Edmunds, C. C. '77 Emery, R. '54 Evans, S. K. '95 *Everest, C. \V. '3S {lz 1848) Fairbairn, R. B. '40 (h 1S45) *Faxon, E . '47 ' Fell, J. W. 'Sg Ferguson, H. '1)8 *Ferguson, J. D . '5 1 Ferguson, S. 'g6 Fischer, C. L. '6o Fiske, G. McC. '7o *Flower, S. '45 Frye, P. H. 'Sg Gallagher, J. D. 'g5 Ga\lauclet, B. B. 'So
Gallaudet, T. '45 (It 1851) George, T. M. I . 'So George, J. H. '72 路*Giddings, G. W. '49 Gilbert, G . B. '9f> 路禄Gilman, G. S. '47 Goddard, F. M . '96 Golden, H. L. '83 Gordon, T. H. '7r Gowen, F. C. '62 Gower, H. B. '49 Graham, J. '72 *Gregg, D. '54 Gregory, H. T. '54 Grennell, J. S. (It 1858) Griswold, C. S. '90 Gunning, J. W. '96 *Hale, C. F. '47 Hall, G. '92 *Hall, S. '54 Hallam, G. R . '59 Hamersley, W. 'sS (It 1896) Hamilton, C. A . '82 Hamlin, G. E. '9 5 Harding, A. '79. Harraden, F . S. '67 Harriman, F. D. '45 (h 1896) Harriman, F. W. '72 Hart, S. '66 Harwood, E. (h 186r) *Hawkes, W. W. (lz 186r) Hayden, C. C. '66 *Haydn, 'f. L. '56 Henderson, E. F. '82 Herman, S. '57 Hickox, G. A. '5 r Hicks, G. C. '56 Hicks, J. M. '54 Heister, I. '76 Hills, J. D. '7S Hoadly, C. J. 'sr Holbrooke, G. 0. '69 *Holcombe, D. E. 's6 Holcombe, G. H. '96 Holden, S. M. 'S2 Holway, 0. 'So Hooker, S. D. '77 Hopson, G. B. '57 Hotchkin , S. F. '56 Hovey, H. E. '66 *Howard, H. '91 Hubbard, G. M. '75 Hubbard, W. S. '8S *Hugg, G. W . '62 Hughes, I. W. '91 Hull. A. S. '66 Humphries, R. F. '92 *Hunt, E. K. (h 1S51) Huntington , G. S. 'Sr (It 1896)
Huntington, J. T. 'so *Huntington, J. W. 'S3 *Hurd, J. D. '74 Buske, J. '77 Hutchins, R. H. '90 *Jackson, A . '6o *Jacobs, E. C. '55 Jennings, A. B . '6r Johnson, C. A. '92 *Johnson, E. E. '59 *Johnson, E. P. '65 Johnson, F. E. 'S4 Johnson, F . F. '94 Johnson, G. D. '54 Jones, C. W. 'Sr *~ones, L. H. '52 udd, C. '93 * elley, J. '44 Ker, G. '43 *Kerfoot, T. B. (It 1865) Kissam, E. V. B. '69 Kittridge, A . S. '57 *Knickerbacker, D. B. '53 Lanpher, L. A. 'So Lawton, E. F. '91 Lilienthal, H. 'S6 Lindsley, C. A. '49 (It 1S96) Linsley, A. B. 'S2 Lockwood, L. A. '55 Lockwood, L. V. '93 Loomis, H. B. '85 Loveridge, D. E. 'so Luther, F. S. '70 Mackay, J. (It 1854) *Mackay, W. R. '67 路*Mallory, G. S. '5S *Marble, N. E. (It r 86 r) Mayo, M. C. '93 McCook, T. J. '63 McCook, P. ] . '95 McCrackan, J. H. 'S2 Metcalf, H. A. '66 *Miller, P . S. '64 Miller, W. J. '92 Mitchell, S. S. '85 Moffett, G. H. '7S Moore, C . E. '76 Morgan, W. F. '88 Mulchahey, J. '42 (It r 882) Murray, J. B. '62 Neely, H. R. 'S4 Newton, E . P. 'Sr :-Jichols, W. F. '7o Niles, E . C. 'S7 Niles, W. P. '93 Niles, W. W. '57 *Norton, F. L. '6S Olmsted, C. T. '65 *Paddock, B. H. '4S
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Symth, J. D. '74 *Somers, J. B. Y. (It 1 57) Spencer, U. H. '90 *Spencer, W. G. '53 *Stevens, S. '65 Stocking, C. H. W. '6o Stone, M. 'So Stotsenburg, J. H . 'so Street, C. H. '96 *Studley, W . H. 'so Tate, W. J. '86 Taylor, E. B. '73 *Taylor, T. B. '49 *Taylor, 'W. F . '44 (h 185 1) *Terry, C. E. '5 r (h 1856) Thorne, R . '8 5 Tibbits, C. H. '87 Tibbits, W. B. '6 r *Toucey, I. (h 1846) *Tremaine, C. H. B. '66 Valentine, W. A. '72 *Van Nostrand, C. A. '77 Vibbert, H. C. '68 Vibbert, W. H . '58 *Vinton, F. (h 1854) Walker, D . B. '6r Warner, D . T. '72 (h 1896) Warner, M. C. '88 *Warren, S. B. '59 Washburn, L. C. '8r Waterman, L. '71 Watson, S. N. '82 Webster, L. 'So Weed, C. F. '94 Welles, H. T. '43 Whitcombe, F. B. '87 White, R. A. '8r *Whiting, S M . '46 *Whitlock, H. R . '70 Whitney, H. E . '74 Williams, A. J. '96 Williams, C. C. '71 *\¥illiams, E. W. '53 Williams, F. G. '89 Williams, J. '9o *Williams, H. '54 Williams, . W. '78 Winkley, . L. '79 *Witherspoon, 0. '56 Woffenden, R. H. '93 *Wood, H. S. '71 Woodman, C. E. '73 Worthington, E. W. '75 Wright, A. H. '83 Wright, G H. '91 Wright, W. G. '91 Yeomans, E. M. '95 Young, C. H. '91 Ziegler, P . '92 IIHonorary
*Paddock J. A. '45 Paddock: L. H . '88 Paddock, L. S. 'so (It 1896) Page , D. C (It 1851) !'arsons, A. 'f. '71 Parsons, H . '83 Parsons, J. R . 'S r Pattison, A. E . 'So Pattison, G. B. '81 *Payne, W. '34 (It 1854) P eabody, F. B. '48 Pedersen, V . C. '9 1 Perry, J. B . '72 *Pettit, W. F. '46 Phair, P. D. '94 *Pierce, H. H. 'sS Plumb, J. F. '91 Potts, F. H. '68 Pressey, W. '90 *Preston, T. S. '43 Prout, J. '77 Purdy, C. E. '88 ·*Purdy, J. S. '49 Pynchon, 'f. R. '41 Pynchon, W. H. C. '90 Raftery, 0 . H. '73 "Randall, E . D. '92 Reineman, R. 'f. '82 Remington, C. H. '89 Richardson, F. W. '84 Richardson, L. W. '73 *Rogers, R. C. '45 *Rudder, W. '48 Russell, F. F . '85 Russell, G W. '34 (h 1851) *Sands, 0. A. '87 *Sanford, D. P. '44 *Sanford, H. S. '36 (h 1861) Scarborough, J. '54 Schutz, W . S. '94 *Scudder, C. D. '75 Scudder, E. M. '77 Scudder, H. '91 *Scudder, H. J. '46 (It 1850) Scudder, W. '89 Selden, F. C. (h 1859) Sennett, L. F. '89 Seyms, G. H. '72 Shepard, C. N. '91 *Shipman, W. D. (h 1871 *Short, D. H. '33 (h 1856) Short, W. '69 Small, E. F. '7+ Smith, C. B. '54 Smith, G. W. (h 1885) Smith, H. M. '93 *Smith, H. '62 Smith, J. S. '63 Smith, S . E. '75 •Deceased
j·
ss
r
Cb~
01<1 Gym"
[i1HE memory of the" old gym" has not
yet faded into the retrospective dimness of tradition, like Professor Jim and Apples and the former beautiful cite of the college, when they were young together- that is, the college was yot ng, and possibly the Professor and Apples, though anything like youth or newness is hardly to be asserted of the '' old gym." Its earliest stage of existence must merely have been a period of comparatively less decrepitude. So its memory is still more fresh and green than ever was the building itself, and from year to year grows more pleasantly vague, as its site, sending up a diversified harvest of weeds and long grass, is less clearly to be distinguished from the neighboring part of the campus. How vividly one recalls those walls of a seedy green-an indescribable old cotton-umbrella effect- whose original hue was a matter of pious belief to some, and corresponding doubt to many more. This subdued coloring was here and there diversified by the numerals of successive years, which clashed quite as uncompromisingly in inharmonious shades of green, as did ever their respective classes. The grass grew long at the base of the walls, which were charred all
'-p
87
round by its annual burning, when, withered and dry, someone set it alight with the halfformed purpose of seeing how near it would come to set the building afire. The rows of windows, with small panes of unevenly refracting glass, were thought to offer a fair mark to all who passed along the walk, and in consequence were usually minus a number of panes. A record of these was scrupulously kept, and when it so happened that a culprit was detected in actu, he paid for all broken since the last conviction, "'rhich. as these occurred only at long intervals, might seem a somewhat 'wholesale form of justice. At some remote period the "old gym" served the purpose indicated by its name. Alone of the old buildings it was selected to ornament the present site of the college, whether that its unique and peculiar architecture might be a foil to the new structure, or that its simplicity might inculcate the lesson of humility in an otherwise too much elated college -like the slave in the Roman chariot- only a trustee can say. Possibly it was moved, without any ulterior purpose, simply because movable, being of wood, while its fellows were constructed more substantially, though not more permanently, of stone. At all events it was transported and to economize set up on several piers of brick-work in lieu of a continuous foundation, the intervals being partially closed by an embankment. which gave free access to the wind, and with draft from broken windows reduced the possibility of heating in winter to little more than zero- its usual temperature. When the present Senior Class entered college, the melancholy appearance of the old building was enhanced by its isolation and seeming remoteness from conte:nporary affairs. There was not even any obvious means of approach, for the preceding class, with the contempt of youth for conventionalities and prece<lent, had destroyed the steps, thus early evincing an iconoclastic tendency. Later, this deficiency was supplied by a long plank with cross-pieces nailed at intenrals, along whi ch the Freshmen climbed to French recitations like chickens into a coop, lamenting the inconsistency with which the study of that language was divorced from the amiable civilitieg it suggests. As might be supposed, the plank soon shared the fate of the steps, and was replaced successively by a heap of ashes, a pile of sods secured with gas pipe, and finally, when these had disappeared, we completed the circle, like a metaphysical argument, and returned to steps, now of stone,- a somewhat commonplace, but on the whole satisfactory means of entrance. It is often wise to leave well-enough alone, even in matters of steps and situations. At this time the "old gym" contained, besides the French room, apartments for the storing of rubbish and lodging of the commons waiters, and a reading-room, which contained periodicals on the infrequent occasions when the college could be coerced into a subscription. Its organization presented nothing unusual; conversation was permitted then as now, though wrestling and destruction of the papers were endured rather than countenanced. Two old-fashioned stoves plentifully supplied the rooms with coal gas, though often red-bot and smelling like burnt rubber, diffused barely enough heat to make a draft. Fuel was stored in a bin outside, and the ashes were dumped near by, or. when the janitor was tired, immediately before the door, in which event professor and student waded resignedly through them, as though bowing to an invincible power. The French room served also for instruction in drawing, and annually on St. Patrick's day was decorated by a symbolic frieze on th e plaster above the blackboards, in which succeeding generations of Freshmen vied in depicting in vivid green the a chievements of the Hibernian saint. The room was also on occasions the theater of the gambols of a calf, smuggled in among tb.e Freshmen; and the low windows were conveniently situated for 88
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hasty exits from class. But all that and much more has passed away with the " old gym," be it propter or post, whether we call it advancement or with some of the Faculty bewail these signs of degenerating vitality. Long as the " old gym" was successful in defying art and time, at length it was forced to succumb to the compelling logic of fire, and, truth to tell, its memory thus purged is quite as attractive as ever was its actual presence. The 13th of May, r896, was a day of rejoicing at the college. A Bostonian might have fancied himself at home during the State Fast. In the evening there was a gathering to welcome a successful team and the customary bonfire had been kindled in their honor, and an express wagon borrowed from which they might address their enthusiastic supporters. A spark from this fire, it has been thought, wafted against the wind to the far corner of the opposite side of the "old gym," caused its destruction. Other theories have been advanced with eq ual inherent improbabilities, so hard is it for our slow-moving conservatism to accept such an improvement, without postulating an interruption of the laws of nature, of a miraculous or at least mildly cataclremic character. But secure of the advantage, it is perhaps as wise to conclude with the Faculty to be vaguely grateful, and not attempt to fix on a single circumstance or individual an h onor that might prove embarrassing. Be that as it may, the college was awakened toward the small hours by cries of "All out, the old gym's afire," and promptly turned out in various stages of deslzabille and sentiments even more diverse than costumes. The "old gym" burning like tinder, there was no question of that, and the flames rose high above its chimneys. The glare of the fire on eyes half awakened from sleep, the confused shadows of the background above all the picturesque attire and abandon of the onlookers combined, in the brilliant but unsteady light, to produce the bewildered sensation one has in gazing upon an impressionist painting of unknown lith, but which might equally well be taken for a vision of judgment or the Amazon march . In the confusion but little was accomplished; indeed , there was little to do beyond preventing the spread ofthe flames to neighboring structures, so the groups of spectators were left free to follow the impulse of the moment. According as their varying instincts directed. some rushed into the burning building to rescue the French sentences and the sleeping waiters; many more undertook the direction of the firemen; while others, with inopportune levity, rendered musical selections, like Ne.ro, on a similar occasion at Rome, to the scandal and disgust of the more sober-minded among the bystanders. Thanks to the efforts of all, and more especially the firemen, who with ropes pulled down the walls not yet consumed, morning found the " old gym" level with the ground, beyond hope of reconstruction. But how these old landmarks pass away, seemingly for all time! A few short years and they are gone. Up here on the ridge we are apt to forget that 1ravra p<< is more than a figure of speech, until the disappearance of some familiar object-the" old gym" or a section of fence- brings us to a realization. No~ are they ever to be quite replaced; barbed-wire is undoubtedly a triumph of ingenuity, but it lacks many of the qualities of cedar rails; and the remote architectural affinities of Martin Hall may rival, but can never reproduce, its predecessor. And so they go; a light space in the grass marks the site of the "old gym;" two unevenly placed stone posts emphasize the absence of the college gates, which have been disposed of to an iron foundry in two- thank heave we have still the sun-dial and the Bishop. But where is many another landmark, ¡many a pleasant association, tradition, good oldcustom-mazs on son! les neiges d'antan. 7
~HE
College year has passed,- a most prosaic statement to most of us, perhaps, but to others fraug-ht with tragic terrors. They hover before show called the Mysteries of Life, where the staid President plays the part of the curtain-raiser, and already the anxious graduate, peering through the peep-hole, sees the dim shapes of the actors on life's stage. On the right stands the leader of the Amazonian march- Miss Question of an Occupation- grim, and like the fabled Mademoiselle of all shows, old and hardened looking. Next to her comes the" premier danseur" of the company, so alluring in her make-up- Courtship- sometimes attended by one and sometimes by two more syrensMarriage and Divorce- while the chorus of many '' \Vills and Heirs" fill in the stage with eager gesticulations. So it is a serious season, and quickly should it be reviewed as the person who is about to drown recalls, in the flash of time, all the deeds of his life. "The College opened September 17th with forty-five new men," we read in the Tablet, but like the Indians, some, alas, have folded their tents and left for other huntinggrounds in search of other pursuits. The foot-ball season opened with a great brilliancy -Yale being able but to score six points against us , and this only after a fierce struggle. The next step in order of primogeniture was the decision of the Faculty to abolish evening service in the afternoon, and their changing the Sunday service to g. 1s a. m . , thus allowing time for those who wished it to go down town to church afterwards. A new building, to take the place of the old Gym., which lost its life under su<.:h sad circumstances, bas been erected on the south of the college building, making another advance in collegiate architecture of the decadence school. The pleasautest memory Of the fall was the parade in which the college, almost to a man, turned out to rectify the general impression held down town as to the soundness of our financial basis, and as a proof that we intended to pay our creditors in a sound and honest dollar. The gh'ost of
路 -(j_@l路
the reading-room again rose from its ashes of oblivion and demanded a slight donation, and many promises to pay before it settled down to its pristine simplicity of Tablet exchanges and a few daily papers. This year saw the beginning of basket-ball league between Yale, Trinity, and Wesleyan. The first game resulted in the score of 24 to 22 in our favor, beating Wesleyan 24 to 2, and being beaten by Yale r6 to 14. The third game was not played off on account of a disagreement as to location. On the night of February 16th the College walks were more deserted than usual. No light glimmered from Jarvis to Seabury, except where a few studiously-minded Seniors pored over their books. Stealthy forms of Sophomores were seen creeping from one Freshman's room to another, bearing a few battered cuspidores and other trophies of their midnight excursions. In Farmington Inn the scene was one of joy and wild festivity,- toasts to all college institutions were drunk again and again, and, with the early hours, the special trolley-car brought the Juniors and Freshmen back to Hartford,- back to the realities, in the case of the Freshmen, of lost door-knobs, bed-clothes, and stuffed key-holes. The next event of importance was Trinity Week. On Monday evening the Prize Oratoricals; Tuesday, the fourth Trinity German; on Wedn esday afternoon, the College Reception; on Thursday, the Musical Dramatic Organization, giving "Leave it to me," with informal dancing afterwards; and Friday the Junior Ball. Not only did the success warrant its continuance as a permanent feature of other college years, but, by bringing the College into closer touch with the people of Hartford, gave an opportunity for many of the men to realize the great kindnesses received from the friends of the College. The Dramatic Organizations have never been so successful as during the past year. There is a dash in all the plays worthy of far larger achievements, and it was due to the practice gained in acting by the men that made "Prince Nit" so great a success. The Annual Indoor Gymnasium Meet, held on Friday evening, March 12th, proved one of the most successful ever held. Two records were broken by Baxter, '99 . the high kick being placed at 9 feet, and that for the high jump being raised to 5 feet I rl-( inches . In the musical line, this year, the College has made a new departure in the giving of a comic opera - a stupendous task, and one which for weeks lay heavy on the college world. The success of the performance was marked from its outset. Favorable criticisms, especially of the music, were received from every place in which" Prince I it" was gi\'en. Even the "highest lady of the land" viewed the opera from her box in the Lafayette Street Theatre, according to a 路washington paper, "with marked enthusiasm." And lastly, the base-ball team made its appearance on the campus. As yet, clue to the weather -it rained in torrents on each day set apart for a collegiate game- the averages of most men on the team are near the thousand mark. The only cloud cast on the athletic life of this year is a cloud of disappointment felt at the failure of the negotiations between Wesleyan and ourselves to renew the Dual-Track-Game-Agreement satisfactory to both sides. In the Academic life, the Prize versions, the Historical prizes, the Chemical prizes, the Holland Scholarship, and the 路whitlock prizes, with the voluntary, announced for next year, in the Art L eague, have kept men busy; and it is, perhaps, with a sigh of relief from most, but a sigh of sadness from some, that the days of the college year have slipped away and have become part of the treasure stored in the room called, in our hearts, "College Life Days," and which will be the asylum in times to be, in troubles to come, from the hurry and fret of our after life. 91
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â&#x201A;Ź1ijab I ~
E dwelt by Cherith's tumbling stream Pl In years of long ago, At morn he heard the eagle's scream, At eve, the torrent's flow; And often, down the distant height, When foes were thick behind, A trumpet-call, by day or night, Came faintly on the wind. II The wild birds hushed their tuneful breath Where that dark streamlet ran, The desert seemed to dream of Death Around the lonely man ; But, throug h the dark and sullen rift, A thousand feet in air He saw the cloudy billows drift And knew that God was there. III The heavy silence of a calm Wrapped gloomily the scene, And held, entranced, one specter palm Above the deep ravine ; Gaunt Famine, like a horror, lay Along the barren pass, And sicklier-hued grew, day by day, The tufts of withered grass.
IV But, when, from Moab's peaks of snow, At each returning morn, There came, with ruddy flush and glow, The coy, cool breath of dawn; Or, when, at twilight, deep and drear, All purple grew the glen, God sent a message to the seer Beyond the dreams of men. 92
v From those wild cliffs, remote, unknown, Whence Cberitb drew its springs, Where Bethel's woods waved wild and lone, There came a sound of wings. Majestic, with his streaming hair The mournful Prophet stood, And called the ravens of the air To bring his daily food. VI He saw their circlings, wide and wild, Above the mountain-brow, And felt God led him like a child That lives, it knows not how ; And while, with trembling hand, be took The bread which heaven gave, Tears, as he bowed to drink the brook, Were mingled with its wave. VII 'Vhat were his thoughts, his dreams sublime, His wrapped, ecstatic prayer, His visions of a nobler time, A purer earth and air? O'er these no grand Isaiah-hymn Of triumph throws its ray, But, veiled from mortals, vague and dim, The record dies away. VIII He passed from Cherith's wasted stream, And, o'er his footsteps rolled The storm, the night, the sunlight gleamA drama half untold. To-day, beside that lonely flood, The pilgrim bares his brow, And prays, "Is there. no man of God To warn the nations now?"
IX Oh, streamlet! born in desert-wild And nursed in gleu and cave, In memory, still, dark mountain-child, I hear thy waters rave. I ride along thy dark ravine, And dream I watch again Thy torrent flowing, faintly seen Across the Jordan plain! ALEX. 93
MACKAY-SMITH, '72.
cast
Dallow~' ~n
' ~WAS
but a year last Hallowe'en, Thou stoodst beside me on the stair, All silver Ia y the moon's pale sheen In the dark tangles of thy hair, And surely, dear, thine eyes confessed That love bad rule of thy white breast.
· -!.£¥
'Twas but a year last Hallowe'en, That loud thy father's watch-dog bayed, Thou trembled as at specters seen, Thy lips grew cold, thy face afraict, Yet surely, dear, thine eyes confessed, Love only ruled thy lily breast. 'Twas but a year last Hallowe'en, A step ; a start ; one sharp wild cry ; Deep sank the jealous blade as keen As serpent's tooth- one sobbing sigh. Yet surely, dear, thine eyes confessed, That love still ruled thy crimsoned breast. HENRY R. REM >E:-1.
94
Ru Iota tau " "\'7ES, gentlemen," said the Professor to his class, "this whole subject of the 1 influence of the mind on the body is o_ne of extraordinary interest. All these cases that I have cite:i are well attested by reliable witnesses; but one most curious instance occurs to me which took place at this very institution. "A number of years ago when this college, and I may say all colleges, were in a semi-barbarous condition, and that atrocious and cowardly custom of hazing was practiced in its most virulent forms, there existed several of those most detestable of all fraternities, Sophomore hazing societies. The case in point occurred at the initiation of one of them-the best, I may venture to assert-Nu Iota Tau. The ceremony of branding was in progress and the last candidate had been reached. He was a delicate, nervous, imaginative chap, and for that reason he had been reserved for the last as the members of the society anticipated having great fun with him . And well they might, for with so great verisimilitude was the operation conducted that even the most imaginative were terrified. First, having bared his arm they held near it a red-hot poker for the purpose of intimidation, then simultaneously they applied the poker to a piece of raw meat, and to the arm a bit of ice. The fumes of the burning flesh and the sudden sensation, I assure you, gentlemen, are well calculated to deceive the senses of the vit:tim, and he conjectures with a good deal or" plausibility he is really undergoing the ordeal. As I previously remarked, this particular student was of a singularly sensitive temperament, and not unnaturally he fainted away. Of course, he was at once carefully attended to and taken to his room. The next day he experienced all the sensations of a severe burn, and more than that, the brand actually appeared, and from that day to this he has borne on his arm the letters, N. I. T. It will surprise you to learn that this happened to Prof. Flunkem, and I doubt not he will consent to exhibit his arm to you if you ask him. All, gentlemen, all the result of imagination." "But, Professor," said the man who was supposed to take an interest in the subject, which reputation he thought himself bound to sustain by means of the intelligent question. "But, Professor, is it not probable that he was actually branded, and that this story was trumped up to shield the culprits?" "A very natural supposition, but not true in this case. That he was not branded, I can vouch, for I was present at the ceremony myself."
95
J.
H . L.
11 "F
Back=Wooas
Romanc~r
ISHING Parties Accommodated wzrlt Large and Small Boats" is the modest
sign which greets you as you suddenly emerge from the darkness of the â&#x20AC;˘â&#x20AC;˘ loggin '' road, and, with a rush and a whirl, if your horses be spirited, turn up into the broad dooryard, which serves apparently as a living-room for the extensive family of Mine Host Brickett, popularly known to his friends as Asy. Asy is one of those scrawny-looking down-easters who never seems to grow old or change in any way, least of all in his clothing, and who bears a resemblance to nothing unless it be one of the stunted hackmatack trees which grow so plentifully on his farm. He is a notorious talker and story-teller, and his fish stories are common property throughout Eastern Maine. He usually finds some excuse for dropping in at the camp about eight in the evening, just as we have become comfortably settled for a quiet game of ---whist (bless me! but I almost said poker, which would never do, since our party includes a student of divinity). After a few general remarks, Asy tilts his chair back against the wall, inserts a cedar chip between his teeth, and waits patiently for an opening, which is soon offered by the innocent divinity student, who makes some inquiry concerning the fishing. ¡ "Fishin'?" begins Asy, "why, Lor' bles,; ye, man. this 'ere pond hez got more perch in it than all the rest o' the ponds put together. Ye know ole man Stevens thet lives up here to the Corner, don't ye? Wal', he hed a saow last summer thet wuz runnin' round loose on the farm, an' the fust thing he knew, thet saow begun ter grow fat an' plump ez a bar'!, which beins he wuzn't feedin' of 'er anything but dish-water, wuz mighty cur'us-like. Wal', one day Bill's boy, him thet married a Holmes, wuz fishin' daown on the p'int, an' what d'yer s'pose he see thet saow do? \Vhy, she jest rolled daown over the hill inter the water, opened her mouth an' waited till a perch swum in, an' then she chawe!i 'im daown an' laid fer another, an' she et twenty-seven perch afore she got enough. Yes, sir, an' thet saow dressed off five hundred an' ninety-two an' a half paounds last fall when Bill killed 'er." I heard the divinity student groan a little under his breath, but I knew that this was only a "curtain-raiser,'' so I was prepared for the worst, and I got it. "East Pond hain't what it useter be, though," he continued, with a reminiscent air. "Naow, when I wuz a boy, we useter use white perch fer dressin', an' we did git some
g6
cedar by the
master good crops. Two perch in every hill o' corn an' about every row we boys useter put in a trout so's ter git red ears." "Did it always work?" I asked. "Never know'd it to fail but once, an' thet wuz the year we bed the big hail storm. It hailed so thet day thet it - -- " " Broke every window in your house, and the stones were as large as hen's eggs," broke in Bob. "Choke it off, Asy; I've heard that story seven times." "I wuz thin kin' I'd told ye about it afore. But, es I wuz sayin', it useter be gTeat days fer huntin' and fishin' when I wuz a boy. I recklect once, when I wuz a youngster 'bout r8 or 19, thet I wuz goin' over ter help Lije Stevens, hayin', an' I took a short cut daown 'cross the shore o' the cove. All on a suddin I happened ter look at the cove, an' ez sure ez you're born, they wuz so many perch thar thet ye couldn't see the water. The bass wus drivin' 'em in, an' it looked like a silver mine a glistenin' in the sun. I wuz quite a sperited boy in them days, an' o' course it set my blood b'ilin' ter see so many fish ter once, so I waded in an' begun throwin' 'em out on the shore. But they'd flop back 'bout ez fast ez I could git 'em out, so 'twasn't much use tryin'. Then all on a suddin I bed a bright idee. I jest waded out up to my middle, an' when I gut thar, my pants, which wuz considerable loose an' baggy, wuz filled chuck full o' perch. Then I tied 'em round the bottoms an' started for shore with 'bout a bushel o' perch floppin ' round each leg. When I got 'bout two-thirds o' the way in, I happened to look up an' right thar on the beach, boys, thar wuz a standin' the prettiest deer you ever see, a buck with three pronged antlers. I wuz a cussin' myself for not bringin' a gun, when all to once- slap - hang- off come my last gallus button, an' I had ter grab fer my breeches ter keep from loosin' my fish. When I looked up ag'in, what d'ye s'pose I see? Thar was thet buck layin' on the sand, stun dead, shot through the breast by thet button which wuz a brass one thet my gran'father wore in the Revolution. "An' if you don't believe it , which I shouldn't blame no man for not doin', why, all's ye got ter do is ter come up to the house an' I can show ye the very identical button; an' the Widder Gage, her thet wuz a sister ter my fust wife, hez gut that deer's .hide in her best chamber over ter Smithfield Village, where yer kin see it any time. "Speakin' o' the village, though, reminds me o' the time I wuz hit by lightnin' in the leg. Ye see 'twuz this way. I'd jest been over to the village with a load of---" "Good-night, boys; I'm going to bed," interrupted Bob, as he made a jump for the stairway which leads to the upper regions ; and, before Asy had time to get started on another of his remarkable tales, his audience had vanished. And in the privacy of his chamber I heard the divinity student remark, "If I were addicted to profanity, I should say that Asy Brickett was a ---liar." REUEL ALLAN BENSON,
97
'99.
Str~~•
€asy
t:\ H, have you heard of Easy Street lJ That winds its downward length away, \Vhere Prince and Pauper passing, greet Each other with a glad "good-day"? Ah Easy Street ! Fair Easy Street ! All lit with lights that gleam and glare, Where every passer-by you meet Bespeaks you soft, bespeaks you fair, Until aweary with your face And form that pleased the moment past, He turns to win another's grace, And wooes her while her beauties last. Now once there walked a girl that way, A maid with face divinely sweet; Her laughter floated far that day Along- the length of Easy Street. Ah Easy Street! Fair Easy Street 1 Soon sadly did her footsteps stray Among the tramp of heedless feet, Before the dying of that day! For once a stranger by hE:'r side Gazed on her face with sudden awe; Her helpless heart for yearning cried, She surely knew his face before ! But no, be turned," You look like oneBut she was fair, divinely sweet. I knew her when my life was young ; Not torn with tramping Easy Street. •· She called him, choked with rising tears; She stopped and softly spoke his name. Off fell the mantle of passed years; She felt her heart was still the same. Alas ! be beard, or heeded not, But turned another face to greet.
So soon are purer days forgot And early loves in Easy Street I HENRY R. REMSE ' .
9
"She called him, choked with rising tears, She turned and softly spoke his name."
Cb~
Snow
Brid~
DEATHLESS Love! would that the task were mine T o wreathe for thee a zone of myrtle pale, To burn rich incense 'fore thy votive shrine In hallowed grotto or sequester'd dale, Thrice brighter would thy tripods ever burn, Thrice whiter would thy misty douds arise, And though I weary grew I could but learn That love is echoed in heart rending sighs. For love would die if sorrow never came To kindly breathe upon its smoldering flame. Oh! I, who utter but a sad complaint, Like some lone nightingale at eventide ; Whose doleful heart for very love doth faint, And seeks a leafy tree where it may hide; I. too, of yore have knelt before thee dumb; Upon my lips fair vows have burned to thee. My heart, grown sick with longings, now is numb; Each hour becomes a long eternity. Oh, bathe me with thy restful love to-day; Oh, cro wn me with thy rosy flo11路er, I pray! Come, halo me with thy soft arms, so white; Oh, prithee, shroud me with thy velvet form; But not too late. for silently one night, The Snow-Bride, leaning on the arm of Storm, Anci heralded by nymphs from elf-Jafid. fl.eet, Came smiling down the stairs in silver sheen,Drinking the net:tar of her flowers sweet Which she bad garlanded with ferns of green. " Ring! ring, 0 bells!" cried nymphs in wild delight, " The Snow-Bride pure will wed the Earth to-night. " See ! see her lover with his hoary hair, " And visage ever constant as a dial, '' Yet wrinkled by his yearning and his care; " For since he first beheld his Love's sweet smile. " And heard her words that fall like summer rain " Upon the bosom of a listless lake, " His fleecy -woven life by mothy pain " Has fretted been. Awake! 0 mirth, awake! " And shed a multitude of sunny beams " Into his heart- the haunt of love-tuned dreams.路路 100
A fainting love-song in her veil has wrought, And it was fringed with violets of blue. Oh, to her softly-tinted brow it brought That loveliness which flowers gain from dew. Her mother, Moon, did kiss her with a tear, When, o'er her silken tresses gleaming bright, She gently draped the bridal-veil; while near Her lingered flower-girls in pink and white, As humming-birds a blushing rose revere, For it is sweeter far than tulip, hale, Or blue verbena, never growing pale. Sweet bridal-strains dissolved themselves in air, And all was hushed as in a room where Death , With silent tread, doth enter, - claiming there That no one speak save with a muffled breath. 0 bridal-strains !-sweet, silver-flowing strains! The Earth's ecstatic soul leaped up to hear Thy liquid songs, while through his dark-hued veins His blood grew cold, as though beside the bier Of some young friend he motionless did stand, And in deep grief did hold an icy hand. The bridal-veil was lifted from her face. 0 sprite of love, how weak is life's thin thread ! Its pulsing fibres how we each embrace; But how death's shadow fills us with its dread ! Her lips then crowned his for a moment brief. H e swooned, and lifeless fell where, tier on tier, The heliotrope was weeping in its grief'.rhe bridal-strains became a death-dirge drear ! While o'er his form her bridal-veil- his pallShrouded the lover and his bride from all. 0 deathless Love ! come halo me to-night; Come, speak one word in accents quick or slow. Oh, prithee, twine thine arms, so lithe and white, About my neck. Oh, say, clast not thou know H ow sobs the Snow-Bride o'er her lover, dead, Till, in her wild despair, she swoons to rest? 0 deathless Love ! crown with thy flower my head, And lull me to a calm upon thy breast Ere thou wilt hear these words from black-robed Fate : "Thy love was wanted, but it came tuo late." DANIEL H UG H VERDER.
IOI
CWO C~tt~rs HARTFORD, Nov. 3, 1895路 told me rightly, when we last met, that some day I should ~Tl be most unhappy, and to-day I feel that your predictions have come true. And why? To-day, for the first time, I know the wretchedness of my own life, and it was through her whom you have always blamec.l and hated as the loac.lstone \vhich was dragging me down into a course leading to death. You know how beautiful she is! Those large eyes looked scorn on me to-day, and that auburn hair burned like a halo around her white forehead. I know Eleanor is what you would call a bad woman, but to me she is purer now and brighter than those angels you continually seem to live with. It was this way-for I must tell you all. My heart will break unless I seek absolution from your confessional. I do not remember how I first visited that house, but I believe that it was early in my junior year-a house one is seldom seen going into. and never leaving; and although it has the sign "Cafe Royale" blazoned plainly above the door, no carriages are ever standing by its pavement. Outside, it is inoffensive enough, plain enough, and like other houses ; inside it holds the secrets of many tragedies, and mine also. I do not know why I went there last evening. I was alone, and, as I stood in the porch and turned to look down the street, I saw but a solitary figure, muffled- for the weather was cold. The free, even step seemed strangely familiar, and the imperious holding of the head recalled to me one I dearly loved. She seemed in a hurry, and Iremember plainly how queerly my hearl fluttered and stopped as the sharp raps of her heels on the pavement came nearer and nearer. The man was a long time opening to my ring, ant!. I was turning to pull the bell again, when she came below me. A sharp ray of light struck my face, and I heard a sound of recognition full of surprise and pain ; and, as the door opened, she came up quickly, and, slipping her gloved hand into mine, whispered" Jack!" and I turned and saw Eleanor. The door closed behind us both, as, arm in arm, the waiter, a personification of discretion, ushered us in. His eyes are always cast down, his head is bent, his shoes are felt, yet he recognized us, although be seemed intently interested in the heavy flowered carpet. He glided before us with the softness of a cat that is about to spring, up the stairway I knew so well, past the public dining-room; the tables laid with scrupulous care; ice-water and olives awaiting fifty purely imaginary guests, for there are no public dinners at the "Cafe Royale." I knew this all, yet all seemed fain t and far- au ''Arabian Night's" tale, read in early and unspotted infancy. The waiter might have been a silent genii, and I and Eleanor a fairy
my
DEAR }01!!'1,- You
102
prince and bride. I felt her eyes steadily watching me, and her arm trembled violently, with love for me, I thought,- and I was happy. Past closed doors, in endless number, the magic genii led us, but, at last, with a deprecating murmur, which sounded far away, ushered us into one of these- a room, with a table set for two, and a curtained window opening into a dark court-all as I knew the many others were. The menu was ready, and I laughed when the silent waiter brought the champagne and closed the door behind him. One glass, and then another, and I felt like myself again. "Eleanor!" I noticed that she did not answer, but what did I care ! " How nice this is ! Smoking dishes, and no "butler standing behincl. us, like a sentinel, to promote indigestion ! Come, Eleanor, shall we begin?" How odd she looked ! Her eyes seemed all pupils and glowed with a brilliancy strange to me. Her cheeks, which were, ordinarily, so full of color and life, seemed deadly pale. I was frightened . "For God's sake, are you ill?" I cried, and ran to her, catching hold of her hands. At the touch of my fingers she seemed to awake and come to herself again. "What was the matter?" said I. â&#x20AC;˘Âˇ Nothing," she laughed, "nothing. Only sometimes everything seems changed. 1y present life is a dream far away, and my early past comes back so true and sweet." This sad mood passed quickly, and, as the wine moun ted to my head, her presence held new fascination. I noticed the voluptuous curves of her firm arms and shoulders, and the way her rosy neck melted into them. Her bright eyes shone naturally, and her stories sparkled with humor and good fellowship. I know that I must have been drunk last night or I never should have dared do it. Bnt her warm breath, as I kissed her, thrilled me and made me wild. In an instant I was on my knees, maudlingly (oh, how I hate myself!) telling her my love, and.vowed to marry her. And she laughed . Yes, I hear it still. It struck and pierced me like the cold blade of a knife. It ran through me like an icy shiver. "You love me. Oh, that is too good! How pleased your saintly brother would be!" And again she laughed: "You know what I am ! Still there was a time when your sister might have known me, and loved me too- but now-" Her laugh this time was sad. Again that fixed look began to settle on her. She swayed slightly, and I ran to catch her. With a visible effort, she turned and looked at me, and, drunk as I was, it sobered me. Love, hope, resignation, and despair shone there, and, clutching the table to steady herself, with one hand she pointed t the door. "IE you love me, leave me." And I, like a whipped cur, left her, loving her forever and ever as long as my life remains. ,And now, dear brother, I can say no more to night. I have written till the fire is dead, and the wick is flickering in my student's lamp. Good night, clear brother, and come to me soon.
II. HARTFORD, Nov. 6, 1895¡ DEAR JoliN,- I was sitting last night at my desk, writing a note to her, when my door was opened and a man brought me a letter. He said that he was not to deliver it for half an hour yet, but that as he had business near here. I took the letter from him, and . recognizing the writing, tore it open quickly. It was from Eleanor. "Dear Jack," it read, "I know that you will find nothing unwomanly in me, when you have finished reading this. And so I tell you, dear, that I too love you. I love you 103
_.r:;::.
more than I shall ever be able to tell you now. But perhaps. if people like me have a future, and if I am not cutting myself off from my last chance for it by this my premedi路 tated act, there without shame on either side, I shall tell you face to face that I have loved you and love you still, better than ever you can know. Do you think that I could ever be happy with the knowledge every time I saw you that through me you had los t the love of your family, of your brother of whom you have often told me, and your dead sister, and that you ruined on my account the whole of that future, so bright and happy for you. Oh, no. I know that you would ask me again and again as you did last night, until I yielded- And so, good bye- God keep you! It is so easy, and I love you better than my life." The messenger was still stumbling in the dark on the last steps of the stairs, as I passed him, hatless. He heard me coming and made way for me. Outside, the night was clear and cold, and the stars shone like bits of burnished steel in the sky. I, fortunately, just got a car. "Hurry!" I said to the conductor as I looked at my watch. "You are full two minutes late." " Oh, that's nothing," he laughed, and went on ringing up the fares. I could have choked him. "Nothing!" when every second meant more to me than all the endless years of my life. We got there at last, without any definite plan on my part. How long and dingy was the alley, and from a bar-room carne the sound of a guitar and a woman's coarse voice, singing the song I had heard Eleanor sing. And I cursed her, by all that I held holy, all the way up the rickety stairs, until I came to her door. It stood half open, and showed the interior clean and neat. An empty bottle and broken glass still lay on the floor. Beside the bed on which she was lying an old dirty woman kneeled, motherly chafing Eleanor's hands. "Poor thing, poor thing!" she \Vas crooning, as softly as if she were lulling a fretful child to sleep. I pushed her aside. "Tell me-Is she dead-0 God, is she dead?" " Tot quite. Now don't yer take on so, sir. I have seen it often- so often. Poor thing, poor thing !" Then my voice must have reached those senses, fluttering about her dying heart, for Eleanor opened her eyes. But at the same instant a fearful shudder passed over her, her hands clutched the bedclothes, and, as I stooped to her, a froth ming led with blood came over her lips ; and as my mouth touched Eleanor's, I believe my spirit and hers were wedded for all eternity. And now, dear brother, often when I wake at night I see her standing by me, and with her, arm in arm, my sister, and they seem calling and calling me. I wonder if God will let me go - soon. H. R. R.
104
ve a nedibave 路ould lost dead lppy ight, etter
Jl
fi
as I
sons
LONG the line the battle rolled,
The clang of swords, the crash of spears, And deeds of valor manifold, Such as ne'er grace degenerate years, Were waged by him whose heart grew bold At thought of one face wan with tears.
~ght !rtu-
liou 1the :han
She sat alone the livelong day Where bright her lord's large armor hung, And watched each scar of fiercer fray , Each bite of spear, each mail-link sprung In border-strife or fierce foray Fought for her sake, when love was young. A ruddy stain began to creep Between the lions on his shield, And ran, in crimson furrows deep, Across its gold and azure fieldWhile, where the waves of passion sweep, One valiant heart lies hushed in sleep.
hers
and God
HENRY R. REM SEN
Quit~
Ratural
' $ IS queer that trees aren't scarce in spring,A fact quite past believing, For how could this be otherwise, When all the trees are leaving? W. T. 0.
8
105
rna misnon A Song
Q' I'XG
to me from that far off land,
W
Ma Mignonne, The song that you sang in the days of yore, Ma Mignonne, When you walked with me by the river's marge, Where the fays set sail in their leafy barge, Sing sweet and low to me, Dear-heart, Sing Love to me, Mignonne. Sing to me from the land of Love, Ma Mignonne, The song of sighs that you sang to me, Ma Mignonne, When we sat at ease in a woodland dell, While the shades of twilight 'round us fell, Sing sweet and low to me, Dear-heart, Sing Love to me, Mignonne. W. TYLER
Jl
OLCOTT.
triol~t
Q H,
who would deceive her, That maiden, so fair? I'm sure none would grieve her, Oh, who would decdve her? Yet one could relieve her, Of kisses and care,
lJ
Though he'd not deceive her, That maiden, so fair. DANIEL H UG H VERDER.
106
coo~
not
Is
Jill
f F love were all, if love were all, I would not hear the warrior's call But linger in my stately hall To hear the strains of music fall, That I might feast my heart, ah yes, On lovely melody's excess, Which rouses with its powerful might My heart athirst for wild delight, But love's not all when honor ~>tands Pleading his cause with outstretched hands. That love were all, could I but think I would not linger at the brink Of love's bright ocean deep and wide But dive beneath its surging tide, And lose myself beneath its foam Within its depths to live and roam; But love's not all when virtue sweet Looks up a kindred face to greet, For love falls helpless at her feet. Nor is love all when sacrifice Begs for a life with saddened eyes. The young monk immaturely old Within his cloistered cell so cold, With trembling hands fingers his beads Praying for others and their needs. By discipline his soul is taught, And wanton love is not his thought, The world and all its hopes forsooth He sacrificed when but a youth That other men through him might be Made better for eternity. The mural Christ with age grown dim Beholds the monk and blesses him. DANIEL HUGH VERDER.
ÂŁiu~
Wiru
~ OME
CR.
wires are called alive, no doubt, Because they have a way Of getting hold of current news And topics of the day.
..
107
W. T. 0.
Cb~
trinity
Cabl~t
Published Every 7'/zree f!Vuks during Term Time by the Studmts of Trim"ty College
Board of €dHors for 1sg6= 1sgz managing Editor HENRY R
Buslnm managn
TGERS REMSEN,
'98
.WALTON STO UTENBURGH DA NKER,
t:ltmry Editor HERMAN VON WECHLINGER S CHULTE,
HOWARD DA NIEL PLIM PTON,
'97
'97
J oSEPH HENRY L ECOUR,
'98
REUEL ALLEN BENSON,
108
'99
'97
'97
/
Jl B_s
sons
I sit and thrumb on the sounding strings The songs my sweetheart taught me, I feel the sway Of that summer's day When first in her toils she caught me.
l feel again the throb of the sea, And the salt of the spray blown over, While some soft strain Recalls again The breath of the thyme and clover.
Ill
tb~
trinity lop
Founded by t he C lass of 1874
€dUors '74 '75 '76 '77 '78 '79 'So '81 '82
'83 '84 '85 '86 '87 '88 '89 'go '91
'92 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98
P. H. Whaley, G. M. Dubois, S. H. Hewlett, H . E. Whitney W. D. Sartwelle, H. M. Hooper, C. D. Scudder, G. W. Lincoln, E. W. Worthington I. Hiester, E. N. Burke. H . V. Rutherford, W. W. Gillette, W. C. Skinner A.M. Clarke, R. H. Coleman, W . E . Rogers, J. E. Kurtz, G. H. Norton W. C. Blackmer, R. M. Campbell, G. H. Moffett, J. C. Duell, H. B. Scott W . N. Elbert, A£anaging .l!.liitor; Orr Buffington, A. Harding, J . S. Carpenter, S. G. Fisher G. Kneeland, W . R. Leaken, W. L. Crosby, C. G. Williams, J. C. Barrows G. B. Pattison, Managing Editor; L . C. Washburne, A. W. Reineman, W. T. Elmer, G. S. Huntington C. Carpenter, Managing .l!.ditor; C. H. Carter, C. E. Hotchkiss, D. M. Bohlem, R. T. Reineman F. Rossevelt, Afanaging Editor; H. L. Golden, H . W. Thompson, A. H . Wright, J. R. Carter E. L. Purdy, lvfanaging Editor; W. R. Sedgwick, W. S. Barrows, F. D. Bulkley, E. S. VanZile, E . S. Hills S. T. Miller, Managing .l!.ditor; H. Nelson, J r., H. B. Loomis, A. Codman, J. R. Cunningham H. R. Heydecker, Managing Editor; G. E. Beers, E. C. Niles, E. B. Hatch , A. H. Anderson, '87, W. j. Tate A. H . Anderson, Managing Editor; G. C. Carter, G. S. Waters, C. W. Bowman, F. B. Whitcombe, 0. A . Sands M. C. Warner, Managing Editor ; J. P . Elton, L. W . Downes, A. McConihe, R. C. Eastman, H. M. Belden C. H. Remington, Managing Editor; R. H. Schutz, S. F. Jarvis, J r, A. E. Wright, A. Millard, R. C. Tuttle G. P. Coleman and G. W. Miner, Managin.r; 1-..aitors; G. T. Macauley, Litera1-y Editor; G. T . Warner, C. S. Griswold, R. McC. Brady, R. H. Hutchins E. B. Finch, Managing Editor; J. B. Burnham, Literary Editor; A. C. Graves, I. W. Hughes, j . F. Plumb, E. F. Pressey H. S . Graves and W. 0. Orton, Managing Editors; T. H. Yardley , Literary Editor; R. F. Humphries, C. A. Johnson, Ernest Randall Reginald Pearce, Managin.r; Editor; R. P. Bates, Literary Editor; W. F. Collins, W. E . Conklin, James Cullen, Jr., J. W. Lewis, W. P. Niles W. W .. Vibbert and ~· F. Weed, Managinf{, Editors; P. R . Wesley, Literary Edztor; G. W. Elhs, H. T. Greenley, N. r. Pratt R. H. M~c:;tuley and F. S. ~urrage, Mana.r;in!{ Editors; David Wil!ard, Literary .l!.dztor; E. P. Hamhn, W. W. Reese, S. K . Evans, A . F. Mtller, E . M. Yeomans L . Potter and E. Parsons, Managinf Editors; P. T. Custer, Litera1-y l:.aitor; M. H. Coggeshall, W. F. Dyett, \\. T. Olcott, C. H. Street, S. K. Zook H. W. Allen and G. S. McCook, Mana.r;ing Editors; W. S. Danker, Literary F:ditor; G. E. Cogswell, G. T. Hendrie, H. W. Hayward, P . M. Wood, H . T . Sherriff. M. F. Chase. M. R . Cartwright and Philip Cook, Managing Editors; H. R. Remsen, Literary Editor; W . M. Austin , H. J. Blakeslee , D. C. Graves, T. H. Parker, Alexander Pratt, J r., P . S . Smithe 1!2
•
'
"'"' "'"'< ..J
VI
1ington
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penter, !-< :I:
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'-'
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ulkley,
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7.
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Liter E. M. iitO?~ ;
erary H .T. erary ander
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(.!)
Cibrary
Committ~~
THE PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE PROFESSOR SAMUEL HART
CHARLES J . HoADLY, LL.D .
Assistants H ERIJERT BICKFORD P ULSIFER, '97 WILLI AM TAYLOR WALKER, '97 PERCIVAL SARGENT S~!ITHE, '98
Librm-y Hou rs IO to I I A.M. and I2 M.-I P.M., 3 to 4 P.M. Monday, IO to I I A.M. and I2.~1 . -I P.M., 3 to 4 P.M. Tuesday, . II A .M . to I P.M. Wednesday, IO A.M. to 12 M., 2 to 3 P.M. Thursday, IO to II A.M. and I2 M.-I P.M., 2 to 3 P.M. Friday, . IO A.M. to I P.M . Saturday,. The whole number of volumes now registered as in the library IS 36,762, besides about 3.400 duplicate volumes, about 24,000 pamphlets, and about 6,000 duplicate pamphlets. The number of volumes received during the year, exclusive of some soo pamphlets and unbound college catalogues and convention journals, is 590. Of this number 172 were purchased, and 4I8 were added by gift.
Statisti~s
of
Cir~ulation
General Works, Philosophy and Sociology, ( Theology, f Philology and Classics, Science and Art, Periodicals, English Fiction, English Essays, Poetry, and Drama, Other Literature, History, Biography, and Travel,
9
j I 55 ( 95 135 205
I77 I 57 247 321
Total,
1,534
Cir~ulation June, September, October, November; December,
99
123 I91 2IO
45 87 IS6
I39 II8
j 113 3I 24I
1
_1__1,267
bp montbs January, . February, March, April, May,
Total,
I23 203 â&#x20AC;˘ 190 I23 83 .
liS
I
,267
Cbirtp=fi«b
Priz~ V~rsion D~clamation Cont~st
MORAL PHILOSOPHY R OOM THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1897
Cice?'O De Fuga Sua et Reditu
WILLIAM ALBERT WARNER, CT.
(PI'O Sestio, 2o-29, 49-52) Cz'ce?'O De Fortitudz1ze
HAROLD LooMIS CLEASil Y, CT.
(De Officiis, Lib. I, ex cnjJta) Cicero D e Catilinae ConsjJiratzim e
THEODORE HENRY PARKER , CT.
(Pro Murena, 3 7-4I) Cz'cero De Laudilms Reguli
AunREY DARRELL VIBBERT, N .Y.
(De 0/}iciis, Lib. III, excerjJta) Ct'cero De Causa Milom's
ALEXANDER PRATT, JR .
(Pro Mz'lone, 34-38)
..
]UdS~S MR. CHA S. D. ALLEN REV. JAMES
,V,
BRADIN
MR. WILLIAM
Prz'ze awarded to
E.
A. BULKELEY
ALEXANDER PRATT, JR., '98
116
Cb~ Bacb~lor's M 1C::. l
Coast
ANY maidens fair I've knownGirls with soft and potent eyes
That would melt a heart of stone, Every maid a lovely prize. I have worshiped at their feet, Yielded to their charms, and yet Is the best of them as sweet As the girl I've never met?
Shall I meet her ? Who can tell ? Life is short, the world is wide, While I wait I realize She may be another's bride. Fate has kept us two apart, We may never meet-and yet Here's a toast, I pledge my heart To the girl I've never met.
w.
(
Jlssociation of Jltbl~t~s of Jlm~rica
Cb~ lnt~r=Coii~Siat~
Jlmat~ur
President,
J ISt, c. F. }ELLINGH O USE 1 2d, J. D. CLARK
Vice-President,
R. W. AB BOT , N.Y. u. P. C. MARTIN, Princeton
Secretary, Treasurer,
Ex~cutl\1~ ÂŁommltt~~
S. K . Gerard, Yale ; W. H. Fearing, Columbia; J.D . Winsor of Penn.; H. W . Howe, Harvard.
tb~ Jlsso~iation Amherst College Boston University Brown University College of City of New York Columbia College Columbian College Cornell University Dartmouth College Fordham College Georgetown University Harvard University Hobart College Iowa University Lafayette College Lehigh University Princeton University Rutgers College
Stevens College Swarthmore Colleg e St. John 's College Trinity College University of California University of City of New York University of Pennsylvania University of Michigan University of Rochester University of Syracuse University of Vermont University of Wisconsin Union College Washington and Jeff. College Wesleyan University f Williams Colleg e Yale University II9
cw~nty=first
Jlnnual of
;t~Jd m~~ttns
tb~
I. Jl. Jl. Jl. Jl. may Ioo
30, 1896,
at manbattan
Yards Daslt
'ti~Jd,
220
Record - WE FEns, Georgetown, 9 4-5 sec.
WEFER , Georgetown, 9 4-5 sec. PATTERSON, Williams BowEN, Cornell
B uRKE, Boston Univ., so 2-5 sec. FISHER, Yale CoLFELT, Princeton
r-s sec
Haif-Mzle Run Record- H OLLISTER , Harvard,
1
min. 56 4-5
H oLLI STE R, H a rvard , 1 min. 56 4-5 sec. HI NCK LEY, Yale SCHAFF, Columbia
ll:fz"le Run
Mz"le Walk Record - BORCHERLI NG, Princeton, 6 min. 52 4-5 sec.
Record- ORTON, U. of P., 4 min. 23 2- s sec.
] AkVJS, U . of P., 4 min. 28 4-5 sec. ORTON , U. of P. GRANT, Harvard
THRALL, Yale, 6 min . 54 2-5 sec. FETTERMAN, U. of P. DARRACH, Yale
Yards Hurdle
220
S. CHASE, Dartmouth, l R ecord: { WILLI AMS, Yale, f rs 4-S sec.
PERKINS, Yale, 16 r-s sec. HATCH, Yale B!JUR, Columbia
Yards Hurdle
Record- BR EMER, Harvard, 24 3-5 sec.
..
BRE~IER,
Harvard, 25 sec. SHELDON, Yale PERKINS, Yale
Rumu1zg Hz;f{h Jump WJNSOR, U. of P., 6ft. 1 in . P o wELL, Cornell CRAIGHEAD, Wash. and J e ff .
21
WEFERS, Georgetown, 21 1-3 sec. pATTERSON , Williams DENH OLM , Harvard
Record- SHATTUCK, Amherst, 49U sec.
R ecord - WI NSOR, U. of P., 6ft.
Yards Dash
Record - W EFERS, George town,
Quarter-Mile Run
I2o
n. Y.
1
R1t1zmizg Broad Jump
in.
Record-V. MAPES, Columbia, 22ft. u }( in.
L. P. SHELDON, Yale, 22ft. 37-1' in. MASON, Harvard BUCHHOLZ, U. of P. 120
'
Pole Vault
Throwz'ng r6-lb. Hammer
Record : {BUCHHOLZ, U. of P.,} 11 {t • 2 :Ji'~- ln . . H OYT, H a rvard, ALLI S, Yale, II ft. 1¥ in. STEWART, U. of P. { SMITH, Yale, and VAN WINKLE, Georgetown
Record - HI CKOK, Yale, ' 35ft.
in.
Bz'cyc!e Races
Puttz'ng r6-Pound Shot Record-HICKOK, Yale, 44ft.
n~
rr.Vz
in.
R. SHELDON, Yale, 41ft.
7~
CHADWICK, Yale, 132 ft. 6 Yz in. WOODRUFF, U. of P. CRoss, Yale
Columbia, 5 points Yale, 2 points U. of P., Y. point Columbian Univ., Yz point
in.
WooDRUFF, U. of P. KNIPE, U. of P.
Summarp p.; EvENTS
r.l
..l
<
~
roo yards dash 220 yards dash Quarter-mile run Half-mile run Mile run. Mile walk 120 yards hurdle 220 yards hurdle High jump Broad jump Pole vault Hammer-throw Shot-put . Bicycle races Totals
0 0 2 2 0 6 7 3 0 5
5.V.
"' 0
~ 0 0 0 0 7 2 0 0 5 2 2 3
6 5 2
Yz
43.V.
22
.v.
0
~
< > 0: <
:r: 0 0
0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 14
z > 0 ,... r.l <.!>
0: 0
r.l
c.!:l 5 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
> <
;; :0
::::>
..l
0
u 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 5
10 Yz
7
.v.
z
;_::,
z
c
r
"'0
~
0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
;:;; "'
<
:J..l
~
z
..l ..l
r.l
z
0: 0
u
2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0
4
3
0 ,...
"'
"'r.l .......
z
<
;;
o(!
;;::
r.l
u
z
~ p..
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
::::>
"' < ~ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
..l
0
u 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0
.v. Yz
' 9
121
.
Cb~ R~w
England lnt~r=Coii~Siat~ Jltbl~tic Jlssociation Off1C¢fS
/'resident, Vice-President, Secretary , Trea surer,
J. H. PRtNGLE, Dartmouth J. G. Ht CKS, Brown I. R. KENT , Tufts H. W. JoNES, l\1. I. T.
Executl\le Committee Chairman,
J.
H. Pringle, :Oartmouth; H. vV. Allen, M. I. T. ; C. N. Borth, W. P. I.; J. H. LeCour, Trinity; T. L. Pierce, Bowdoin.
tb¢ Jlssoc1at1on Amherst College Bowdoin College Brown University Dartmouth College Massachusetts Institute of Technology
122
Trinity College Tufts College Wesleyan University Williams College Worcester Polytechnic Institute
•
C¢ntb Jlnnual Cbampionsbip ffi¢¢tins Wort¢St¢r.
mass.. may
Prosramm~ Ioo Yards Dash Record -PATTERSON, Williams,
1-5 sec.
I2o Yards Hurdle
S. CHASE, Dartmouth, 16 I-S sec. HoRNE, Bowdoin MOSSMAN, Amherst 410 Yards Dash Record - SII .\TTUCK, Amherst, 49 1-2 sec.
STEilBINS, 1\I. I. T., 52 3-s sec. ELioT, Amherst HAM, Dartmouth
Yards Hurdle
S. CHASE, Dartmouth, 26 I-S sec. HoRNE, Bowdoin MossMAN, Amherst
Two-Mile Run
1te
to
min.
1
2 ~ 5 sec.
T wo-i/lfile .Bicycle Record- MORRISON, M. I. T., 5 min. 27 4-5 sec.
GARY, Dartmouth, 6 min. 28 sec. DoNAHUE, Tufts FARNUM, M. I. T.
011e-ilfile R zm R ecord- ] ARVIS, Vvesleyan, 4 min. 32 1-5 sec.
220
Yards Dash
Record -IDE, Dartmouth,
22
3-5 sec.
O'BRIEN, Brown, 23 I-S sec. ELLIOTT, Amherst C. F. KENDALL, Bowdoin
Mile Walk min. 8 2-5 sec.
TowER, \Vesleyan, Io min. 27 4-s sec. BEAN, Brown SrNKINSON, Bowdoin
Pole Vault Record - T OWNE, Williams,
2
PRI NGLE, Dartmouth, 4 min. 42 4-5 sec. T owER, Wesleyan F URBISH , Amherst
Record-IDE, Dartmouth, 26 sec.
Record - ]ARns, Wesleyan,
Record-DADMUN, ,V. P. I.,
BOTSER , Dartmouth, 2 min. 3 sec. H . P . KENDALL, Amherst BosTON, Dartmouth
Record- CII.\SE, Dartmouth, 15 3-5 sec.
220
€v~nts H aif-Mile Run
to
O'BRIEN, Brown, Io 2-5 sec. SEARS, Dartmouth CHRISTOPHER, Dartmouth
P. I.;
or
23. 1896
R ecord-HOUGHTON, Amherst, 7 min. '5 3-5 sec.
Ho uG HTON, Amherst, 7 min. 16 4-S sec. TY ZZER, Brown BARTLETT, Brown
Putting I 6-Pound Shot to
ft. 9 in.
WYATT, Wesleyan, IO ft. 8 3-4 in. WJDER, Dartmouth, Io f t . 6 in. MoRGAN, Amherst, ~ ft . ScoTT, W. P. I. f 10 · 3 m.
Record- GODFREY, Bowdoin, 38ft. 6
GoDFREY, Bowdoin , 38ft. 6 I-2 in. F. E. SMITH, Brown TYLER, Amherst
t
2 in.
Running Broad Jump
Running High Jump
Record- CHASE, Dartmouth, 22ft. 3 in.
Record- BAXTER, Trinity, 5 ft. 9 3-4 in.
S. CHASE, Dartmouth, 20 ft. 5 in. HORNE, Bowdoin T. W. CHASE, Dartmouth
BAXTER, Trinity, 5 ft. 9 3-4 in. LITTELL, Trinity TYLER, Amherst
Throwing I6-Pound Hammer Record - SMITH, Brown, 123ft. 8 1-2 in.
F . E. SMITH, Brown, 123ft. 8 1-2 in. CooMBS, Brown HEALY, Tufts
R~cords â&#x201A;Źstabltsb~d Putting I6-Pound Shot- E. R. GoDFREY, BowDOIN, 38 feet, 6 1-2 in. Rumu?zg High Jump-I. K. BAxTER, Trinity, 5 ft. 9 3-4 in. Throwz?tg I6-Pound Hammer- F. E. SMITH, Brown, 123 ft. 8 1-2 in.
Summarp ::;:
"''"'
100 yards dash, Half-mile run, I 20 yards hurdle, 440 yards dash, Mile run, . Two mile bicycle, 220 yards hurdle, . 220 yards dash, Mile walk, Two-mile run, Pole vault, Putting I6-pound shot, Running high jump, . Throwing 16-pound hammer, Running broad jump, Totals,
"'~ ~
0 3 3 0
z 0
Q
"
0
C!:i
0 0 3 0 0 0 3
3 5
0
0
t
0
0 5 0 0 3
19~
16
I o
f.<
z:.0
"'
C!:i
5 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 4 3 0 3 0 8
0
:::> 0
::<
f.<
"'
< 0 4 6 5
z
E-< ....; ..,.;
""0 0 0
5 0 5
0 0 0 3 0 0 0 6
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
28 40 6 Champions- Dartmouth 124
>
f.<
z
~
< >
:3 "'Ol
....<
"'
f-o
"'"'
0..:
~
E-< 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0
~ 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 5 5
0
0 0 0 0
t
0 0 0
0 0 0 0
8
13
4
t
E-< 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
p.;
~ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
t 0 0 0 0
D. C . GRAVES
A. S. WOODLE
(Base Ball)
(Foot Ball) J.D.FI.YNN (Basket Ball)
W. A. SPARKS (Track)
Crlnltp
Coii~S~ Jltbl~tic
J1ssoclat1on
Uit~·Pmilt~nt
A. 1f.
LANGFORD,
w.
'97
A.
M . R.
PHILIP CooK, '98
'97
SPARKS,
CARTWR!Gll'f,
'98
Ex~tutiu~ £ommitt~~
A. M.
LANGFORD,
w.
SPARKS,
A.
'97
H.
M. R.
'99
l. K.
Pi!ILIP CooK, '98 J.
H.
LECOUR, Jr.,
E. P.
'98
tropby Room H.
w.
HAY\\ARD,
'97
W.
M. R.
HAYWARD,
'97
CARTWRIGHT, BAxTER,
'98
'99
TAYLOR, Jr., 1900
£ommitt~~
CARTWRlC: liT,
'98
J. H.
LECOUR,
'98
•
127
Graduat~ Jltbl~ttc Committ~~ £hairman Prof. F. S. LuTHER m~mbm
Prof. F . S. LUTHER, '70, term expires in 1899 PERCY S. BRYANT, '70, term expires in 1898 EDWIN S. ALLEN, '94, term expires in 1900 \T7 HE chief duties of the Committee are to act as advisers to the undergraduates on
-=>1 !9 all important athletic matters, to endorse such appeals to the alumni for the support of athletics as may meet with their approval, to take entire charge of and manage the Athletic Field, and to act through its Secretary· Treasurer as auditors of the accounts of the various athletic treasurers of the College. They also have power to demand the resignation of any athletic officer who, in their judgment, is incompetent to fulfill the duties of his position.
JSnd~rsraduat~ Jltbl~ttc £ommttt~~ £hairman PRESIDENT T.
c.
A. A.
m~mbm
A . M. LANGFORD, '97, President of the Athletic Association. N. M. Ausn:-<, '98, Manager of the Foot-Ball T eam. A. S. WooDLE, '98 , Captain of the Foot-Ball Team. M. R. CARTWRIGHT, '98, Manager of the Base-Ball Team. W . A. SPARKS, '97, Captain of the Track Athletic Team. \T7 HE duties of the Committee are to elect the Graduate Athletic Committee (such election to be ratified by the College), to consult the Graduate Committee on all importaut athletic matters, to determine the amount each athletic organization shall contribute for the support of the Athletic Field, and to decide all questions as to the use of the Athletic Field on any particular date.
ell !9
128
m pid te
to ;o
trinity Coii~S~ Jltbl~tic Jlssociation Tnt~r-£oll~glat~ Jltbl~tit
t¢am - 1897
Captain
w.
A.
'97
SPARKS,
The team will probably be selected .from the .following men: IOO
and
220
yards dashes-SPARKS, '97,
'99,
LITTELL,
HEXRY,
'99,
RICHMOND,
1900,
SCHWARTZ, rgoo
440 yards dash
SPARKS,
'97.
HENRY,
Hal.f-mile run
LECOUR,
'98,
BRADIN, rgoo
One-mile nm
LECOUR,
'98,
REM SEN
'98
Two-mz'/e run
WHITE,
I2o
yards lmrdies
220
yards hurdles
'99
'97
BAXTER,
'99 ,
LITTELL,
'99
High jump
BAXTER,
'99,
LITTELL ,
'99
Broad jump
BAXTER,
'99,
ScuwARTZ,
Pole Vault
L.
Shot and Hammer
JOHNSON,
Bicycle
L.
A.
A.
ELLIS,
'98,
ELLIS,
'98,
BAXTER,
WOODLE,
'98,
1900 '99
'98,
IN GALLS,
WOODWARD,
IJI
'98,
'99
DOB BIN ,
'99,
EATON,
'99
Wint~r m~~ttns Jltbl~tic
of tb~ trinitY Jlssociation
FRIDAY, MARCH 12,
I897
WINNERS
FVE T
j 1St SPARKS, '97
9 seconds W ooD , 1900 B AXTER, '99 3} seconds S PAR KS, '97 WoonwARD, '9q 12 짜 points BROWN, 1900 BAXTER , '99 4 ft., 6_% in. LITTELL, '99 12 )/z points. W ooDwARD, '98 WooDLE, '98 BAXTER, '99 (record broken) 9 ft. ELLIS, '98 GUNDACKER, '97 27 짜 points. BAXTER , '99 (record broken) 5 ft. , 11}{ in . LITTELL, '99 DANKER, '97 6 ft., 3){ in. WooDLE, '98 BA XTER , '99 36ft. , 3 in. j 1St INGALLS, '99 l2d JOHNSON, '98 j 1St FLYNN, '97 l2d SPARKS, '97
Rope Climbing 20
con~s~
( 2d 1St { 2d j 1St 1 2d j 1St I 2d j 1St 1 2d j 1St 1 2d 1St { 1St
yards dash
Parallel bars Standzizg high jump Horizontal bars Higlz kzi:k Tumbling Rumting hig h jump
{
Fen ce vault Putting ;6-pound shot Potato race
McCrackan Cup for best all-round athlete won by Baxter, '99 Tumbling Cup won by Gundacker, '97 Parallel Bars Exhibition Cup won by Woodward, '98 Record Cup won by Baxter, '99 Points won by '98, 7 ; by '99, 17 ; by 1900, 2; Class Cup won by '99
Referee, Prof. F. S. LuTHER, '70 Judges Mr. PERCY S. BRYANT, ' 70
Judges
Prof. J. J. M cCooK , '63
Dr. JoHN B. McCooK, '90
of Horizontal and Parallel Bars S . H. ELMER
\VILLIAM WINKLEMAN
Starter, Mr. R. E. F osTER Gymnasium Instructor
132
Sixt~~ntb
Jlnnual Of
trinity
fi~ld m~~t
tb~
con~s~ Jltbl~tic
Jlssociation
CH ART ER OAK PARK, MAY 8,
track
I
897
Ell~nts
One-Hundred Yards Das/z W. A . SPARKS, '97, ISt
D. L. ScHWARTZ, I900, 2d
Time, 11 s.
D. L. ScHWARTZ, 1900, rst
Yards Das/z C. W. HENRY, '99, 2d
Time, 25 s.
w.
440 Yards Dash C. W . HENRY, '99, 2d
Time, 53 3-5 s.
220
A. SPARKS, '97, ISt
H alj-mile Rtm J. H. LECOUR, JR ., '98, ISt
J. W. BRADIN, JR., 1900, 2d
Time, 2m. IO s.
J. H. LECOUR, JR., '98, ISt
A. M. STURTEVANT, '98, 2d
Time, 6 m. I2 s.
W. C. WmTE, '97, rst
Two JI!Hle Run T. E. ADDIS, '99, 2d
Time, ro m. 39 1-5 s.
One Mile Rtm
I20
E . G. LITTELL, '99, rst
E . G. LITTELL, '99, Ist
L. A.
ELLIS,
路98, Ist
Yards Hurdle
w.
A. SPARKS, '97, 2d
Time, IS r-s s.
220
Yards Hurdle A. SPARKS, '97> 2d
Time, 28 I-S s.
w.
Two Mile Bicycle Race E. S. DoBBIN, '99, 2d I33
Time, 7 m. 29 s.
..
'fltld E\ltnts Higlt Jump E . G. LITTELL, '99, 1st
J. D. FLYNN, '97. 2d
L. A.
W. S. DANKER , '97, 2d
Height, 5 ft.
5Yz
in.
Pole Vault ELLIS,
'98, ISt
Height, 8ft. 8 in.
Broad Jump D. L. SCHWARTZ, 1900, 1St
Distance, 19ft. 8Yz in.
J. D. FLYN N, '97, 2d
F. C. IN GALLS , '99, 1St
Tltrowing Hammer W. M eA . J oHNSON, '98, 2d
F. C. I NGALLS , '99, rst
W. MeA. J oHNSON, '98, 2d
Distance, IIO ft. ~~ in .
Puttzizg Sltot Distance, 34ft. 4 in.
Rttords by £lams FIRSTS '97 '98 '99 1900
SECONDS 5 3
3 4 5 2
~
2
TilE LEFFINGWELL CUP WON
Two Mile Run Tltrowzitg Hammer
w.
C.
'\VII!TE,
BY TilE
'97
F. C. INGALLS, '99
POINTS II II 14 6 CLASS OF '99
Record, 10 min. 39 4-5 sec. Record, no ft. 1Y, in.
Officials Referee Track Judges Field Judges Tziners Starter Scorer of Field Events Measurers Scorers Announcer Clerk of Course
F. W. DAVIS Pro£. H . FERGUSON E. S. ALLEN L. W . ALLEN G . B. VELTE J. R. B uRTON M . F. CHASE H. W . HAYWARD W. M. A usTIN E. C. BEECROFT
134
Prof. R. B. RIGGS F. R. STURTEVANT S . DM.Y
E. D. N. S cHULTE A. M. L ANGFORD
'
SECOND ANNUAL FIELD-MEET OF
trinity us. W¢SI¢yan tuudavt mav 12t 1sg6t at
mtddl~town
I St, RoBINS, (w.) II I-S Sec. 2d, SPARKS, (T.) 3d, MEEKER, (w.) Joo-yards daslz, One-lzalf mile run, Ist, BENNETT, (w.) 2 min., I2 2-5 sec. 2d, TowER, (w.)
Two-mile rtm, 22o-yards dash, 44-o-yards daslz, One-mile walk, 22o-yards hurdle, Two-mile bicycle,
3d, L ECOUR, (T.) ISt, T OWER, (w.) II min. , IO sec. ISt, SPARKS, (T.) 25 sec.
2d, WHITE, ('r.)
2d, LITTELL, (T.)
ISt, HicKs, (T.) 57 4-5 sec.
2d, SPARKS, (T.)
ISt, CHANDLER, (w.) 8 min., I8 sec. 3d, WooDWARD, (T.) ISt, SPARKS, (T.) 28 I-S sec.
3d, BRAGDON, (w.)
3d, RoBINS, (w.) 3d, RoGERS, (w.)
2d, \VAR:-IER, (T.)
2d, BAXTER, (T.)
Ist, ANDREWS, (w.) 6 min., 9 4·5 sec. 3d, R ocKWELL, (w.)
3d, NORTH, (w.)
2d, P owERS, (w.)
2d, LITTELL, (T.)
3d, WYATT, (w.)
I2o-yards hurdle, One-mile run,
ISt, BAXTER, (T.) I7 4-5 sec.
Pole vault,
Ist, WYATT, (w.) 9ft., ro in. 2d, BAXTER, (T.) 9ft., 7 1-2 in. 3d, HINKLEY, (w.) 9ft., 4 I-2 in.
I St, BRADFORD, (w.) 5 min., IO Sec. 3d, REMSEN, (T.)
2d, TOWER, (w.)
Putting 16-lb . shot, rst, WooDLE, (T.) 35ft., II in. 2d, NoYES, (w.) 34ft., 2 1-2 in. 3d, SINGER, (w.) 33ft., 8 I-2 in. Rumzing highjttmjJ, rst, BATXER, (T.) 5 ft. , 3 1-2 in. 2d, LITTELL, (T.) 5 ft., 3 I-2 in. 3d, WooDLE, (T.) s ft., 3 r-2 in.* Throwing 16-lb. hammer , r st, NoYES, (w.) 93ft., 2 1-2 in. 2d, j OHNSON, (T.) 88ft., 5 1-2 in.
Running broad jump,
3d, SINGER, (w.) 88ft., 5 in.
Ist, BAxTER, (T.) 19ft., 4 in. 2d, \VYATT, (w.) 18ft., 5 in. 3d, RoBINS , (w .) 18ft., 2 3-4 in.
• Each jumped 5 ft., 3 •·• ln.
Tie not jumped off.
s~or~ First place counts 5
Second place counts 3
Third place counts I.
Wtsltyan, 66
trinity, 69 I35
•
Jltbl~tic R~cords
trinity
Indoor
R~cords -
---
--
E\"ENT
RECORD
Rope Climbing
7 s.
Applegate, '87 McCook, ' go Davis, '94
Standing High Jump
4ft. 81i in.
Baxter, '99
March, 1896
Running High Jump
s ft .
Baxter, '99
March, 1897
Baxter, '99
J\Iarc h, 1897
High Kick
11~
NAME
I
in.
9ft.
Fence Vault
6ft. 8 in.
Putting 16-Pound Shot
36ft. 4 in.
DATE
-
Applegate, ' 87
April, 1885
---
--
----
S. Carter, '94 - - - r
T8Q3
----
Outdoor
R~cords
r--路 EV ENT roo-yards dash n o-yards dash 44o-yards dash ~ -mil e
run
RECORD
NAM E
DATE
s.
A. V'l. Strong, '94
May, 1892
3-4 s.
H. S. Graves, '92
May,
10 1-4
22
51
2 min .
s. 8~
s.
t 8Q2
W. A. Sparks, '97
May, 1897
R. H . Hutchins, 'go
May, 181)0
--r-mile run
4 min. 54 s.
E. S. Allen, '93
May, 1892
2-mile run
to min. 39 1-5 s.
\Y. C. White, '97
May, 1897
12o-yards hurdle
17 4-5 s.
I. K. Baxte r, '99
May, 1896
no-yards hurdle
27 I-Ss.
E . DeK. L e ffingwell, '95
May, 1895
I. K. Baxter, '99
October, 1895
R. M. Campbell, '78
May, r878
I. K. Baxter, '99
1896
Running high jump Running broad jump Pole vault Putting 16-pound shot
s ft.
9~
in.
20ft. 11 in.
9ft.
7~
in.
39 ft. 7 ~ in.
S. Carter, ' 94
1893 ---
Throwing 16-pound hammer 2-mile bicycle race
no ft. 6 min.
1~ 11
in.
F. C. Ingalls, '99
2-5 s.
L. A . Ellis, 'g8
May, 1897
I
May, 1897
;oot=Ball Captains '83,
s.
H. GIESY
'84,
s.
T. MILLER
'85, W. W. BARBER
'86, W. W. BARBER '87, W. W. BARBER '88, E. McP. M c CooK
=-I
'89, E. M c P. McCooK '90, T. P. THURSTON W. C. HILL '9I,
1
H.
s.
GRAVES \
'92, G. D . HARTLEY '93. J. W. EDGERT0:-1 '94, J. STRAWBRIDGE '95.
w.
S. LANGFORD, JR.
'96, A. M. LANGFORD '97, A. S. WOODLE
IO
137
trinity Coii~S~
root=Ball
€1~u~n
Dlmtors H . W . H AYWARD, '97, Mana/{er PHILIP CooK, '98, Assz'sta11t llfanager and Treasurer F. s. BACON, '99
eaptaln A. M. LANGFORD, '97
J:in~
Left end
L. A . ELLIS , '93
Left tackle Left guard Center
G. S. McCooK , '97 w . B. SUTTON, '99 E . CoGSWELL, '97 J. W. LoRD , '98
Right guard F. Rz'gltt tackle Right end
c.
F. S . A. l\1 . E . A. E. C.
I NGALLS, '99 BACON, '99 LANGFORD, '97 RICH, '99 BEECROFT, '97
Quartn-back F. H . GLAZEBROOK, '99
'f\iglH ijalf-back
full-back
J:dt ijalf-back
J . D. BURCHARD, 1900 '
E . G . LITTELL, '99
0 . S . WooDLE, JR., '9
Substltut~s
BROWN, I900
TRAVERS, '98
STERLING, '99
eaptaln for
BALDWIN, 1900
1897
A. S. WooDLE, '98
eaptaln
E.
s.
Left end Left tackle
Left guard Center
tb~ Consolidat~d
TRAVERS, '98
tb~ J:in~
Rz'gltt guard Jom>SON, '98 Rz'gltt tackle BLAKESLEE, '<;j
RICHMOND, 1900 CoRsoN, '99 GREEN, '99 FULLER, 1900 BALCH, '98 CooK, '98 0NDERDUNK, '99
Right end
Quart~r
J:dt ijalf-back
MooRE, '97 JEWETT, , I900 N ICHOLS, '99 MoRSE, '99
Back OwENS, '99
LECOUR, '98 WATERMAN, '98
managn PHILIP CooK, '98
full-back
'f\igbt Jlalf-back
TRAVERS, '9S VIBBERT, '99
DAVENPORT , '98 RoBBINS, 1900
The substitutes on the regular team also held positions on the consolidated. 138
~
00
LORD
8 :ow :o:' ~
BURCHARD BACON BALDWIN
LITTELL
8
"'.
,., :o:-
S禄 .___, n
"'....,.
\,/,.)
....,. "'
"'
_d "' "'-
.......... 路-
-
HAYWARD ( Mgr.) MCCOOK I NGALLS COGSWELL LANGFORD (Capt.) BEECROFT ELLIS GLAZEBROOK RICH BROWN
-----
STERLING WOODLE T RAVERS
SUTTON
trinity's ;oot=Ball
R~cord
Following is a record of the history of Trinity in foot-bali from r878 to r895路 season's games are also appended : GAMES WON FROM Yale Amherst Harvard Wesleyan . Columbia. Williams . Stevens Lafayette. Amherst Aggies Boston Tech. . Dartmouth Worcester Tech. St. John's Vermont University University of Rochester. University of Pennsylvania Brown University West Point Tufts Laureates St. Stevens University of the City of New York !\ew Jersey Athletic Club
0
2 0
3
0
2 0
s~ason SEPT. OcT. Ocr. OcT. OcT. OcT. N ov.
26 3 7
17 28 31 7 I OV. 14 Nov. 26
Hartford tVorcester Cambrzdge Hartford Hartford Amherst Hartford Middletown Troy
GAMES LOST TO Yale Amherst. Harvard. Wesleyan Columbia Williams Stevens . Lafayette Amherst Aggies Boston T ech .. Dartmouth . . Wcrcester Tech. St. John's Vermont University University of Rochester University of Pennsylvania Brown University West Point Tufts Laureates St. Stevens University of the City of New York New Jersey Athletic Club
Last
9
5 3 7 0
0
2
3 0 0 0
3 2 0 0 0 0
or 1Sg6
YALE 6 WORCESTER 0 HARVARD 34 M. I. T. 6 TL'FTS . 2 AMHERST. 0 N. Y. UNIVERSITY . 0 WESLEYAN 24 LAUREATE BoAT CLuB 0 72 141
TRINITY TRI NITY TRINITY TRINITY TRINITY TRINITY TRINITY TRINITY TRINITY
0 12 0
r6 r6 12 40 12 0
IO'
,
trinity's
Bas~= Ball
Captains
'67, E. R. BRE VOO KT
'84, F. E . } OHlSSON
'68,
'85,
'69.
A.
J. w.
SHAN NON
'86 ,
B ROCK LESB Y
'70,
'87.
'71' E . B. WATTS
'88, G. W. BRINLEY
'72,
'89, T. L . CHERITREE
'73.
'go, R. M eC . BRADY
'74. C. E . CRAIK
'91, H .
s.
GRAVES
'75, F. T. LINCOLN
'92 ,
'76. G. S. HEWITT
'93, G . D. HARTLEY
'n,
W. E . R oGER s
'9+.
'79. 'So,
w. N. ELBERT w. J. R oDGERS '96,
' 81, G. D. H o w ELL '82,
A.
}. J.
P ENROSE
'95. H. R. DI NGWALL
'78, F. W. WHITE
J. J. PENROSE c. D uB . BROUGHTON A. J. WILLIAMS M . H . CoGGESHALL
H . WRIGHT
'97. D.
'83, C. M . K URTZ
c.
GRAVES
}
14 2
I
Scb~dul~
or
Bas~=Ball
Gamu
Play~d
tb~ S~ason
in
of 18g6
~
APRIL I I
at
Hartford
HARTFORD
TRINITY
3
APRIL 16
at
Hartford
HARTFORD
r6
TRINITY
3
APRIL 18
at
New York
MANHATTAN
IS
TRINITY
14
APRIL 20
at
New York
N . Y.
13
TRINITY
14
APRIL 21
at
New Brzmswick
RUTGERS
I7
TRINITY
17
APKIL 22
at
P /ziladelphia
U.
10
TRINITY
APRIL 23
at
Charlottesville
U. OF VIRGINIA
6
TRI ' ITY
6
APRIL 25
at
South Bethlehem
LEIIIGII
9
TRINITY
10
APRIL 27
at
Fordham
FORDHAM .
7
TRINITY
8
APRIL 29
at
Hartford
A~;I-IERST AGGIES
4
TRINITY
MAY
2
at
Hartford
DARTMOUTH
14
TRINITY
MAY
9
at
Hartford
A~Il!ERST .
20
TRINITY
2
MAY
13
at
Hartford
N.Y.
UNIV.
7
TRINITY
20
MAY
14
at
Worcester
HoLY CRoss
19
TRINITY
4
MAY
16
at
West Point
WEST POINT
6
TRINITY
10
MAY
20
at
Middletown
WESLEYAN
21
TRI ' ITY
3
MAY
23
at
Ha?路tford
MANIIATTA
28
TRINITY
19
JUNE
2
at
Hanover
DARTMOUTH
14
TRINITY
JuNE
3
at
Williamstown
WILLIA~IS .
9
TRINITY
JUNE
20
at
East 01路ange
ORANGE A. C.
17
TRINITY
UNIV.
OF PENN.
143
6
7
trinity
con~s~ Bas~=Ball c~am
Dim tors G.
M . R.
CARTWRIGHT,
E.
CoGSWELL,
'97, Senior Director
F. S.
'98, Manager
BACON,
'99, Treasurer
'Ctam for 1897 Captain, D.
C. GRAVES,
'98 GLAZEBROOK, S. S.
LANGFORD, C. WooDLE, 1B
GRAVES}
GRINNELL, 2B.
BURNS
COLE,
38.
P.
DAVIS, L. F. FLYNN, R. F.
WATERMAN, C. F.
Substitutes SuTTON,
c. &
AusTIN, 3D.
L. F.
VIBERT,
BALCH, C.
s. s.
Stbtllult for 1897 April
14,
Trinity vs. Hartford
at Hartford
21.
May
12,
13, 2 0, 21, 22,
27, 29,
â&#x20AC;˘'
31,
Williams Amherst N. Y. University Manhattan West Point Wesleyan Orange Athletic Clnb Wesleyan
" Williamstown '' Amherst "New York " '' " "
West Point Hartford Orange, N. J. Middletown.
••
VIBBERT
COLE
---
W OODLE FLYNN
"--
DAVIS
BURNS
AUSTIN
WATERMAN
GLAZEBROOK CARTWRIGHT {Mgr.)
BACON (Asst. Mgr.) GRAVES {Capt.)
LANGFORD GRINNELL
';
"' ~
...
BALCH
Bask~t
S'b~dul~
Ball
of 6amu for 1Sg()-g] 6am~s
Dec. 12 Dec. 19 Jan. I I Jan. 16 Feb. Feb . 2 Feb. 20 Feb. 22 March 2 March 10
Hartford Y. M. C. A. Hartford Y. M. C. A. Hartford CITY GUARD Hartford TIIOMPSONVILLE ThomjJsonvzUe TII O~ IPSO:<IV ILLE Ha rtford CoMPANY B, C. ~South Manchester Y. M. C. A. Y. M. C. A . Hart.ford Y. M. C . A. Hartford BATTALION CoRPS , Hartford
G.
G
12
T RINITY
8
TRINITY
7 16 17
7
TRI NITY
2I
TRI NITY
7
r6 7 2
T RINITY
12
TRINITY
24 18 9 13 6
TRINITY TRINITY
IS
TRINITY
6
TRINITY
188
149
triangular Y~l¢
New Haven New Ha ven Hartford Hartford
trinity YALE YALE . WESLEY A:-< YALE
£~asu~ W¢SI¢y~n
. 32
16 5 22
WESLEYAN TRINITY TRINITY TRI NITY
.
4 14 26 . 24
trinity
con~s~ Bask~t
c~am
Ball
.:J.
eaptain
J.
D.
H.
w.
FLINN,
'97
manag~r
'97
ALLEN,
'forwards A. M.
LANGFORD,
'97
P, M. Wooo, '97
H. W .
ALLEN,
'97
e~nur
E. G.
.99
LITTELL,
~lgbf e~nt~r
H. McK.
GLA ZEBROOK,
e~nt~r
[df
J.
1900
D.
FLYNN,
Batks E. K.
G. S. McCooK, '97 ~- A. ELLIS, '98
P. Substitut~
R. N.
WILLCOX ,
STERLING,
S. SMITH,
'99
'98
'99
'97
i
Class 'gz Ca t cher , L ANGFORD IS! Base, FLYNN Short -Stop, McCooK Center Field, DANKER,
c~ams
Bas~ = Ball t~am Captaziz,
LANGFORD
Pitcher, GRIN ' ELL 2d Bau, CoGSWELL 3d Base, STARR Lift Held, ALLEN
BEECROFT
Right Field,
l
S~or~s
of
PAGE
Gam~s
'9s- 7; '97 - s '96- 2; '97- IS (5 innings) '98 - I 5 ; '97 - 8
'gs
Bas~=Ball t~am
JIJana;;er, CART\YRIGIIT Captain, Catcher, I V A TERMAN IS! Base, LORD Short-Stop, CARTER Center Field, WooDLE Righi Field, Au sTIN Substz"tutes, L ECOUR , J oiiNSON
'gs ;oot=Ball Manager, CooK Line, CoLE, LoRD, Quarter-Back, TRAVERS
t~am Captain, Half-Backs,
TRAVER S
PORT \VooDLE, ELLI S
GRA VES
'gg ;oot=Ball
t~am Captain,
SuTTON
W ARNER, ONDERDONK, BACON, RI CI!, OwEN
ffalj-Backs, Full-Back,
SUTTON
S~or~ '98-6; '99 ISI
!路
Pitcher, GRAVES 2d !lase, REYNOLDS 3d Base, CoLE L e.ft Field, SMITHE
CooK, J OHNSON, BuRNHAM, DA\' E
Fitll-Back,
Manager, BACON Line, NI CH OLS , W ooD, Quarter-Back , GLAZEBROOK
GRAYES
6
ST ER LING, LI TTELL
Cb~ c~rnnsw~n
cup
Was presented by Ernest De Koven Leffingwell, '95, and is to be competed for at each field meeting. At both college field meets since its presentation the cup has been won by the
Class or 'gs
COMPETING IN THE
Captain, H.
J. BLAKESLEE
A.
COLE
P.
CooK
L.A.
ELLIS
\V.
L ORD
J.
J.
'95
AND
'96
MEETS
H . LEcouR, ]R.
A. M. STURTEVANT E. H. FooTE H. J. QUICK E. F. WATERMAN W. Me A. Jo HNso:-~
152
H . R.
RE~ISEN
A. S. WooDLE C. G. WooDWARD
•
.... ....
ELLIS
STI/RTEV ,\ NT
LORD
COLE QUICK
WATERMAN
WOODLE LECOUR (Capt.)
COOK jOH NSON REMSEN
BLAKESLEE WOODWARD
I
. l
trinity
£awn Jlssociation
Coii~S~
c~nnis President,
J.
Secretary, E. G. LITTELL, '99
S. CARTER, '98
Treasurer, D. C. GRAVES, '98
m~ mb m
DR. ROBB D. C. GRAVES, '98 DR. RIGGs W. MeA. JoHNSON, '98 PROF. F ERGUSON J. H. LECOUR, '98 PROF. LUTHER A. H. TIMPSON, JR., '98 H. W. ALLEN, '97 D. S. CORSON, '99 J. R . BENTON, '97 J. H. K. DAns, '99 G. S. McCooK, '97 E. G. LITTELL, '99 H. D . PLIMPTON, '97 B. K. MORSE, '99 H. VONW . SC!JULTE, '97 H. c. OWEN, '99 w. A. SPARKS, '97 M. B. SUTTON, '99 R. S. STARR, '97 J. K. CLEMENT, rgoo W. T. WALKER, '97 R . H. Fox, 1900 P. M. WOOD, '97 H. M cK. GLAZEBROOK, 1900 W. M. A USTIN, '98 W. C. HILL, rgoo J. S. CARTER, '98 D. B. JE\\'ETT, rgoo
ISS
lnt¢r=COII¢Siat¢ £awn C¢nnis Jlssociation Organized at Trinity College April I7, I883
President, C. R. BuDLONG, Brown Univ.
Vice-President, R. N. WILLSON, U. of P.
Secretary and Treasurer, N. A. SMYTH, Yale
SJxtb Jlnnual
tournam~nt
for
U~w
Cup
Held at New Haven, October, I895 Represented- Amherst, Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton. Trinity, University of Pennsylvania, Wesleyan, Williams, and Yale Slngl~s
rst- M. G. CHACE, Yale zd- A. E. FooTE, Yale Doubl~s
rst- CHACE and FooTE, Yale zd- WREN and READ, Harvard
Offtcns 18glf- gs Preszdent,
]AME S
DwiGHT
Vice-Preszdent, ]. S. CLARK Secretary, ]. T. WHITTLESEY Treasurer, V. G. HALL rs6
lion
Winn~rs
in
tb~ tnt~r=Coii~Siat~
cawn
Jlssociation
t~nnis
Since its Organization at Trinity Col~ege, April, I883.
I SINGLES, Spring, l883
~
DOUBLES,
L
f
, U. ofP. Fall, l883
SINGLES,
LDouBLES, SINGLES,
Fall, J884
DouBLEs,
{
I SINGLES,
Fall, l885 'rinceton.
Fall, l886
l I i
DOUBLES, SINGLES, DOUBLES, SINGLES,
Fall, l887
{ DouBLES,
I SINGLES,
Fall, l888
t
f Fall, l889
DouBLES, S INGLES,
LD ouBLES, (S INGLES,
Fall, l890
I \.
DOUBLES,
1st, 2d, 1St, 2u, rst, zd, rst , 2d, 1st, 2d, 1St, 2d, 1st, zd, 1st, 2d, 1St, 2d, 1st, 2d, 1st, 2d, 1st, zd, 1st, 2d, 1St, zd, 1St, 2d, 1st, zd, 1st, 2d, 1st, 2d,
J.
E. CLARKE, '83, Harvard G. L . SARGEANT, Yale CLARK and TAYLOR, '86, Harvard GARDNER, '84, and HILL, '85, Brown TAYLOR, '86, Harvard THORN, '86, Yale PRESB URY , '85, and T AYLOR, '86, Harvard KNAP P, '86, and T HORN, '86, Yale KNAPP, '86, Yale BRINLEY, '88, Trinity KNAPP, '86, and THORN, '86, Yale BRINLEY, '88, and WRIGHT, '88, Trinity KNAPP, '86, Yale BRINLEY, '88, Trinity KNAPP, '86, and SHIPMAN, '86, Yale CHASE and PRATT, Amherst BRINLEY, '88, Trinity THACHER, '8 7, Yale KNAPP, '86, and THACHER, '87, Yale BRINLEY, '88, and PADDOCK, '88, Trinity SEARS, '89, Harvard CAMPBELL, '9 1, Columbia SEARS, '89, and SHAW, '9r, Harvard HALL, '89. and CAMI'BELL, '9 1, Columbia SEARS, '89, Harvard CAMPBELL, '91, Columbia HALL, '89, and CAMPBELL, '91, Columbia SEARS, '89, and SHAW, '91, Harvard HUNTINGTON, '91, Yale HovEY, '90, Brown CAMPBELL, '91, and WRIGHT, '91, Columbia HuNTINGTON, '91, and HuNTI NGTO , '91, Yale HovEY, '91, Harvard HowLAND, '93, Yale CHASE and SHAW, Harvard pARKER and pARKER, Y ale
路.HALL 157
{Smcm, Fall, !89!
DOUBLES,
{S>Ncm, Fall, !892
Fall, !893
Do uBLES,
{S'NGm, Do uBLEs,
~SINGLES,
Fall, !894
Fall, !895
trtnttv
l Do uBLES,
{s'""'"·
Do uBLES,
to Jnt~r = Coii~Siat~ £awn Jlssociation
'87, G . M. BRINLEY L. H. PADDOCK '88, E. M. ScoTT M. R. WRIGHT '89, R. H. MALLORY HAMLI N M. R. WRIGHT BRAINARD P URDY 90. R. H. MALLORY BRINLEY, secoud prize sinj{les 'qi, R. H. MALLORY E . P . HAMLIN HAMLI N BRINLEY t '92, E. P. HAMLIN . second prize doubles , E · p . H AMLI ' WRT GI11 1I 93, BRI "LEY, second prize singles '94, D. C. GRA \"ES PADDOCK '95. D. c. GRAVES WRIGIIT J. s. CARTER BRINLEY, first prize singles E. G. LITTELL WRIGHT '96, No representatives from Trinity BRI NLEY PADDOCK f se<wzd prize doubles
M. KURTZ E. L . PuRDY G . H . HILLS
'83, A.
c.
J.
M. E. L. '84, G. M .
A.
t~nnis
FALL
c.
FALL
HovEY, '91, Harvard LEE, University of Pennsylvania HovEY, '91, and WRENN, '95, Harvard PARKER, '92, and HowLAND, '93, Yale LARNED, '94, Cornell CHACE, '96, Brown M UNN and WIN SLOW, Harvard . . . . . . Yale M. CHACE, '96, Brown 0. E . TooLE, '96, Yale CHACE and B uDLONG, Brown HowLAND and TooLE, Yale M. CHACE, '96, Yale C. R. B uDLONG , '96, Brown CHACE and FoOTE, Yale TALMAGE and SHAW, Yale M. CHACE, Yale A. E . FooTE, Yale CHACE and FoOTE, Yale WRENN and READ, Harvard
R~pr~s~ntatiu~s
SPRING
'83,
rst, 2d, rst, 2d, rst, 2d, rst, 2d, rst, 2d, rst, 2d, rst, 2d, ISt, 2d, rst, 2d, rst, 2d,
c.
G. M.
A• E • '85, G. M. L. H.
A. E. '86, G. M.
A. E. G. M. L. H.
t
W~sl~yan=Crinity t~nnis tournam~nt at Wul¢yan, Oetob¢r 10,
1396
Wesleya1t
Trz?zity
G.
E.
ANDREWS
D.
c.
G.
H.
TRAFTON
E.
G . LITTELL
SMITH
J. s.
B. H.
SMITH VS. LITTELL: 6-3 ; 4-6 ; 6-2 GRAVES VS. TRAFTON: 6-3; 6-2
nnis
LITTELL VS. ANDREWS : SMITH
vs.
7-5 ;
6-1
CARTER : 6-2 ; 3-6 ; 6-2
GRAVES VS. ANDREWS: 6-4; 6-r TRAFTON VS. CARTER: 2-6; GRAVES
vs.
7-5;
6-3
SMITI!: 6-4; 6-4
LITTELL VS. TRAFTON: 6-3 ; 3-6 ; 6-3 ANDREWS VS. CARTER, 6-4; 6-3
totals Trinity Wesleyan
4
159
GRAVES
CARTER
. ..
musical orsantzattons tb~
trinuv
con~s~ 61~~,
BanJo, ana manoaun Clubs
Offlms President, iVfa1Za/{er,
DUDLEY CHASE GRAVES,
} ULIAN STUART CARTER,
'98
'98
Assistant Manager,
161
ELTON GA RDINE R LI TTELL,
'99
trinity
con~s~ 61~~
Director,
first w.
S~tond t~nors
H.
'97
J.
SPARKS,
W. C . WHITE,
E.
'98
'99
F. H. GLAZEBROOK, J.
K.
CLEMENT, 1900
GoLDTHWAITE, 1900
C.
K.
WooD, 1900
S~tond
Hams
D. PLIMPTON, '97 W. M. AusTIN, '98 E. s. TRAVERS, '98 w. A. WARNER, '99 D. L. ScHWARTZ, 1900
'97
H .
'97
WOODLE, JR.,
'99
'99
A.
first Hams A. 8.
Fox,
J. W. NICHOLS,
BRINES, 1900
H. J. GUNDACKER,
J. BLAKESLEE,
R. H.
'97 w. T. WALKER, '97 D. c. GRAVES, '98 J. w. LORD, '98
M.
A.
JoHN HENRY PAGE, JR.
t~nors
J. H. PAGE,
Club
'98
G. LITTELL, '99
H. A. HORNER, 1900 8. R. FULLER, JR., 1900
162
Nov . 22, ALt!MNI HALL Feb.
4,
CoLT's HALL
Feb.
9,
EAST HARTFORD
Feb. 26,
ALmiNI HALL
The Glee Club and Dramatic Association combined to produce the comic opera " Prince Nit," and, instead of the regular spring trip of the musical associations, the opera was given in the following cities:
Aprilrg
20,
PARSONS' THEATER, Hartford, Conn.
April
28,
CARNEGIE LYCEUM, New York
April
29,
GRAND OPERA HousE, Wilmington, Del.
April
30,
LAFAYETTE SQUARE, Washington, D. C.
May
&
I,
LYCEUM THEATER, Baltimore, Md.
r6s
Cb~
Coii~S~
trinity
mandolin Club
Dim tor GEORGE SHELDON McCOOK,
'97
'first mandolins G. S. M c CooK ,
L. A.
ELLIS,
'97
'98 S~tond
H.
A.
HoRr<ER,
P. l\1.
WooD,
A. D.
VIBBERT,
'97 "99
mandolins
J.
1900
G. MciLVAINE, 1900
mandola B. K.
MoRsE,
'99
Ulolln D. L .
S CHWARTZ, 1900
Guitars E. D. N.
ScHULTE,
'97
A.
L. R.
BENSON,
S. WooDLE,
'98
'99
{
166
r
Cb~
con~s~
trinity
Banjo Club
Dlmtor HOWARD DANH:L PLIMPTON
first Banjos H . D.
PLIMPTON,
'97
Banjolln A. D.
VI BBERT,
S~cond
H. T.
SHERRIFF,
'99
Banjos F . A.
'97
BALCH,
'98
mandolin B. K.
MoRsE,
'99
6ultars E.
D.
N.
S c HULTE,
A.
'97
L . R.
BENSON,
S. WooDLE, JR.,
'99
£~110
C. L .
B URN HAM ,
I68
'
'98
'98
12
Royal Egyptian String Oct~tt~ -- '-----~.......___ .:... ~~ ~
-----:--.:.::
-- - -- --- -·-~
0
1879
ORGANIZED A. D.
J)onorary HoFFMAN MILLER H.
R.
Tl! O~IPS ON
m~mbm
S . B. P. TROWBRIDGE
w.
H. S . MARTINDALE
C. A_ APPLETON
H . BOARDMAN
G. P. IN GERSOLL
W . D. M cCRACKAN
C.
A . P . B URGWI N
R. E.
G. H . HILLS
J.
R.
BACON
B URTON
W.
R. H.
NELSON
• B.
BOWMAN
BULKELEY
S. SALTUS H. T. GREENLEY
H. PARRI S H
T. H . YARDLE Y
c.
C. C.
}. W. LEWI S
w. c. D.
F. P. J oHNSON
w.
F. M. VERMILVE
P.
J.
PARSONS
E.
F. BURKE
DEF. HICKS
G. S . M cCooK,
'97
TROWBRIDGE WILLS ON
H. TALCOTT
C. A_ L EW IS
IV.
VIBllERT
M cCooK
E. 0.
DEK. LEFFIN GWELL
R.
H_ MACAULE Y
T. PAINE
E.
l\L
M. S IBLEY
H. G. BARRO UR
G.
E.
Banjos CoGSWELL,
'97
E.
C. BEECROFT,
'97
H. D. PLIMPTON, '97
Dulclm~r
P.
CooK,
'98
Satkbut
Psllawms
L . G. REYNOLDS,
'98
Bug I~ J.
H. PA GE, } R. ,
M. R .
CARTWR!Gll'f,
'97
Freshmen may come and Seniors may go But yet there remains the R. E. S . 0.
'98
' 57 Presenter, W. H. BENJAMIN, '57
Receiver, G. R. H ALLAM, '59
lnvenian viam aut faciam Presenter, G. R . HALLAM, '59
Receiver, W. S. CoGSWELL, '61
' 61 P er aspera ad astra Presenter, W. H. 路wEBSTER, '61
Receiver, N. B
AYTON, '63
' 63 Ne tentes aut perfice Presenter, R. F. GooDW IN, '63
Receiver, C. W. MuNRo, '65
' 65 Facta non verba Presenter, H. G. GARDNER, '65
Receiver, RoBERT SHAW, '68 173
'68 Semper crescens R eceiver, E. V . B. KISSAM, '69
Presenter, F . L . NoRTON, '68
'69 Nunquam non paratus Presenter, JACOB LEROY, '69
Receiver, D. P. CoTTON, '71
'7J Nulla vestigia retrorsum Receiver, F. 0. GRANNISS,"'73
Presenter, WILLIAM DRAYTON, '71
'73 AUv 'Aa-yEs
Presenter, C. E. WooDMAN, '73
Receiver, C. E. CRAIK, '74
'74 Ou 1rapa
~rxo1r6v
Presenter, R. M. EDWARDS, '74
Receiver, H. V. R UTHERFORD, '76
'76 Inservit honori Presenter, C. E. MooRE, '76
Receiver, W. C. BLACKMER, '7S
'78 AviJp£ !;EtriJE
Receiver, D. L. FLAMING, 'So
Presenter, J. D. HILLS, '7S
ov
'80 M-y'~' o.n· ~P'Y'~'
Presenter, W. R. LEAKEN, 'So
Receiver, A. P. BuRGWIN, '82
'82 Respice finem Presenter, A. P. BuRGWIN, 'S2
Receiver, S. H . GIEsY, '85
'85 Duris non frangi Presenter, A. D. NEELEY, '85
R eceiver, G. S. WATERS, '87
'87 Multa in dies addiscentes Presenter, A. H. ANDERSON, '87
Receiver, E. C. J oHNSON , 2d, '88
'88
Per angusta ad augusta Presenter, E. C. JoHN SON , 2d, '8S
Receiver, E. McP. McCooK, '90
'90
Semper agens aliquid Receiver, I. D. RussELL, '92
Presenter, T. A. CoNOVER, '90
'92 To KaMv tp£J..ov
Presenter, G. HALL, '92
Receiver, F. F. JoHNSON, '94
'94
Agere pro viribus Presenter, J. W. EDGERTON, '94
,
Receiver, J. STRAWBRIDGE, '95
'95
En avant/ Presenter, E. P. HAMLIN, '95
Receiver, G. E. CoGSWELL, '97
'97
Ka/i' OUVa!J.LV ~pOELV
Ob. pro Patria et l:.cclesia 174
Bicpcl~
trinity
Club
3 Pmllt~nt DR. LUTHER
trmum and
Pbotograpb~r
R. H. MECHTOLD, '99
m~mbm DR. MARTIN
PROF. FERGUSON
DR. RIGGS
DR . BECKWITH
MR. F. R. H ONEY
MR.
W .
'88
S.
DANKER
w.
J.
H. C. PYNCHON
J.D. FLYNN
H.
H. W. HAYWARD
H. D. PLIMPTON
w.
w.
D. N. SCHULTE W. C. WHITE
A. SPARKS
T. WALKER
GUNDACKER
E.
W. M. AusTIN
F. A. BALCH
H. J. BLAKESLEE
J . S. CARTER
A. H.
A.L.ELLIS
R.
w.
GRAY
A.M. STURTEVANT
s.
BACON
J.
E. F.
c.
F.
CoLE QuiCK
L.A. ELLIS
W ATERMA
P.
s. SMITHE
G. WOODWARD
V. F. MoRGAN
MeW. B. SuTTON
F. C. INGALLS
c.
A. SMITH
E.
H. L. RI CE
C. BRENTON
l:f.
L. R . BENSON
B.
K.
MoRsE
s. DOBBIN c.
OWEN
. R. VANMETER
A. D. VIBBERT
17
- K.
F. T. BALDWIN
T. P. BROWNE
J.
s.
w. c.
S. L. TOMLINSON
R. FULLER
HILL
CLEMENT
D. B. JEWETT
175
fionorarp
s~nior
soci~tp
Active Members WILLIAM ALBERT SPARKS,
President
EDGAR CHARLES BEECROFT,
Secretary and Treasurer
GEORGE EDWARD COGSWELL
ARCHIBALD MORRI SO N LANGFORD
'V ALTON
GEORGE SHELDON McCooK
STOUTENBURGH DANKER
JoHN HENRY PAGE, JR.
Graduate Members '94
ALLEN, EDWIN STANTON,
LANGFORD, WILLIAM SPAIGHT, JR.,
BARBOUR, HENRY GROSVENOUR,
'93
BARTON, CHARLES CLARENCE, BATES, RoBERT PECK,
'91)
'93
'95
'93
BuLKELEY, JoHN CHARLES ,
'94
CHURCHMAN, CLARKE,
NILES, VliLLIAM P ORTER,
'95
'93
PAINE, OGLE TAYLOE,
'96
'66
PARSONS , EDGERTON, '86
'93
PEARCE, REGINALD,
'96
COGGESHALL, M URRAY HART,
COLLINS, WILLIAM FRENCH, '<)3 CULLEN, JAMES, JR.,
'93
LOCKWOOD, L UKE VINCENT,
OLCOTT, WILLIAM TYLER,
'93
CARTER, LAWSO N AVERELL ,
'96
'93
MACAULEY, RI CHARD HENRY,
BRoUGHTON, CHARLES D u B o rs ,
CARTER, SHIRLEY,
LEWI S, JoHN WILLIAM,
'93
DAVIS, CAMERON JOSIAH ,
'93
PELTON, HENRY HUBBARD,
'93
PENROSE, J OH N }ESSE, JR.,
'95
'94
S C HUTZ, WALTER STANLEY,
'9.:1-
STRAWBRIDGE, J OHN ,
'95
DINGWALL, HARRIE RE Z,
EDGERTON, FRANCIS CRUGEJtt. EDGERTON, JOHN WARREN, ELLIS, GEORGE WILLIAM,
'94
VI BBERT, WILLIAM WELSH,
'94
WAINWR! G IIT, JONATHAN MAYHEW,
'94
WEED, CHARLES FREDERICK,
'95
HARTLEY, GEOR GE DERWENT, H uBBARD, Louis DEKovEN,
'94
TAYLOR, CHARLES EDWARD,
'94
GREENLEY, HowARD TRESCOTT, '9+ HAMLIN, EDWARD PERCY,
'95
WILLSON, WILLIAM CROSWELL Do WILSON, GEORGE HEWSON,
'93
'93
'94
'93
WOFFENDEN, RI CHAR D HENRY,
'93
'95
trinity COII¢S¢ G¢rman Club Pm14tnt G.
E.
CoGswELL, '97
Smttary an4 trtasurtr
Ultt·Pmhttnt
J.
H. PAGE, ]ll-., '97
D.
Jl. W. ,ALLEN, '97
c.
GRAVES, '98
A . L. ELLIS, '98 H. J. QuiCK, '98 L. G. REYNOLDS , '98 F. S. BACON, '99 J. H. K . DAVIS, '99 F. H . GLAZEBROOK, '99 G. T. KENDAL, '99
HENRY GRINNELL, '97 G. S. McCooK, '97 R. STARR, '97 W . M . AUSTIN, '98 J. S. CARTER, '98 PHILIP CooK, '98
s.
B. K. MoRSE, '99
First German Second German Fuurth German Fifth German Sixth German
D. C. GRAVES, '98 S . CARTER, '98 R. PHILIP CooK, '98 G. S. McCooK, '97
J.
I78
s.
H. J. QUICK, '98 F. S. BACON , '9q STARR, '97 L. G. REYNOLDS, '98 W. M. AusTIN, '98
trinity
w~~k
m
HE establishment of Trinity Week was innovation in the college life. With the exception of the college tea there was no new entertainment introduced but to devote an entire week to college festivities with an entertainment of some sort, or a dance every evening was something entirely new, for the suggestion and capable management of which credit must be given to the Junior Ball Committee. The programme of the week was as follows :
1
<!l Is
Monday, Feb. 22, W ASl-IINGTON's BIRTHDAY
Prlzt oratorlcals W. MeA. JoHN SON, '98 H. R. REMSEN, '98 PHILIP CooK, '98 J. R. BENTON, "97 w. c. WHITE, '97
Popular D elusions Popular Delusions, Religious and Political Popular Delusions jolm Wycliff Political Effects of the Black Death
The speakers were chosen according to themes written in competition on prescribed subjects by the members of the two upper classes. After the speaking W. C. White was presented with first prize and J. R. Benton with second. TUESDAY , Feb. 23
'fourth trinity 6trman Leaders G. T. KENDAL. '99
B. K. MORSE
WEDNESDAY, Feb. 24
ÂŁolltgt tta From four to six P. M. Held under the management of the Junior Ball Committee. THURSDAY, Feb. 25 Special concert in Alumni Hall by musical club, followed by the dramatic association presenting the one act
ÂŁomtdV "LEAVE IT TO ME" I8I
FRIDAY, Feb. 26
Junior Ball GIVEN BY THE CLASS OF NI NETY-EIGHT
Committee WILLIAM MoRRIS AusTIN,
Chainnan
JAMES WATSO ' L oRD ,
Sec. and Tre,zs.
H EN RY RUTGE RS REM SE N
EDGAR FRANCIS WATERM AN
LLOYD GILSON REYN OI.DS
DUDLEY CHA SE GRAYES
.
AusTIN CoLE
Patron¢SS¢S Mrs F. B. Allen
Mrs. L. A . Barbour
Mrs. J. L. Barbour
Mrs. M. G. Bulkeley
Mrs. C. J. Burnell
Mrs. J. C. Day
Mrs. G. H. Day
Mrs. Henry Ferguson
Mrs. Francis Goodwin
Mrs.
J. L.
J.
J . Good win
Mrs. C. R. Forrest Mrs. C. C. Goodrich
Mrs. J. W. Gray
Mrs. Havemyer
Mrs. C. H . Lawrence
Mrs. F. S . Luther
Mrs. G. Perkins
Mrs. J . A. Porter
Mrs. P. S. Starr
Mrs. HenryS. Redfi eld
Mrs. R. B. Riggs
Mrs. Lucius Robinson
Mrs. J. H. Root
Mrs. W. L. Robb
Mrs. G. R . Shepherd
Mrs. S. B. St. John
Mrs. E . P. Taylor
Mrs. C. D. Warner
Mrs. E. G. Westcott
Mrs. P . H. Woodward
Mrs.
Greene
Mrs. C. W. Johnson Mrs. J.
J. McCook
!82
t
1r
ch
0
~
0
....l
u
rard
trinity
missionary Soti¢ty.
Coii~S~
Founded 1832.
"Pro Christo et Ecclesia"
£bristmas term, 1896 Pruidmt
W. S. DANKER,
Viu-Pruidmt
H .
Secretary
D. H. VERDER,
Treastwer
R.
Senior Chaplai"
R EV.
Junior Chaplai"
13
T.
trinity
'97
SHERRIFF,
H.
J.
'97
B.
t~rm , 1897
PuLSIFER,
W. LORD,
'97
'98
'98
C. B.
HEDRICK,
'99
N. WILCOX, '99
E. G.
LITTELL,
'99
T.
R. PYNCHON, D.D., '41
REV. SAMUEL HART,
D.D.,
'66
18 5
REV.
T.
R. PYNCHON,
REV. SAMUEL HART,
D.D.,
D.D.,
'41
'66
£haplain OF THE COLLEGE
Ordu of
suuic~s
Obligatory Daily: Morning Prayer,
8.30 A.M.
Sunday: 9.15 A.M. Ash Wednesday and Good Frzday: 9.15 A.M. Ascension Day: 8.30 A.~l.
Uoluntary Sunday: Holy Communion, 8 A M . Lent: Daily, 11.55 A.M . (Litany). Holy W eek: 11.55 A.M., 9 r.~l. Thanksgiving Day: ro.30 A.M . Daily: Morning or Evening Prayer
Cbapd Cboir Prmntor
WILLIAM ALBERT SPARK S
£antoris w.
A. SPARKS
L. R. S. R.
D.
W.
H. B. PULSIFER
BENSON
] . K.
FULLER
H. A. HORNER
CLEMENT
L. SCHWARTZ
Organist c. WHITE
H.
J.
GUNDACKER
J. W . LoRD A. S. WooDLE, ]R. M. ]. BIRNES £hap~!
Jlssistant Organist w. T. WALKER
H. T. SHERRIFF
D. c. GRAVES E. s. TRAVERS E . G. LITTELL C. K. WooD
monitors P.M. WooD
. 186 .
Cb¢ Conn¢tticut £¢aSU¢ of Jlrt Stu<l¢nts Its r¢lation to trinity COII¢S¢ :oLLEGE
A. M. \.M.
).
~RK S
RAVES .AVERS
TTELL DOD
11. WooD
Twenty-five years ago, art schools were almost unknown in this country, and in those which did exist, like that connected with" The National Academy of Design" in New York, the instruction was of an almost primitive kind. To procure scientific instruction one was obliged to go abroad. All that has been changed, and the result is directly due to the efforts of the young men who studied abroad, and, returning, became teachers. All the large cities now have schools modeled somewhat after those in Paris, and which are distinctly organized for the instruction of persons wishing to become professional artists. One of the most important night schools of this kind in the country is •' The Connecticut League of Art Students." Charles Noel Flagg is director of Instruction and teacher of the antique, life, and painting classes, which are conducted in such a manner as to effectually develop those qualities in the pupils which are necessary to a professional career as distinct from that of an amateur. The laws of form, values, and color are insisted upon rather than a display which is misleading to the uninitiated. Anatomy lectures are given by Dr. E . K. Root, and the forms of bones and muscles and possible movements of the human figure are explained and illustrated with a living model, a skeleton, an ecorche, and anatomical plates. The instruction in perspective is given by Mr. G. B. Rogers, and from the beginning to the end of the course architectural forms are employed, so the principles of governing the different styles of classic architecture are incidentally taught. NOTE. The class in perspective will be under the charge of Prof. Frederic R. Honey of Trinity College, after October 1, 1897· The class in architectural and decorative ornament has for its object to teach in a practical manner the meaning and use of antique and modern ornament. Pupils draw and also model the ornament in clay. This class is under the direction of Mr. C. Henry Meyn. and is of especial benefit to young architects and professional modelers. The league occupies large studios on the top floor of the Batterson Building, corner Asylum and High streets. It was first started in Charles Noel Flagg's studio, in the winter of 1888 and '89. It was incorporated by the state in 1895 with a president, vicepresident, treasurer, corresponding secretary, and recording secretary, as 6fficers, and is perfectly independent and self-supporting. The teachers make no charge for instruction, and the expenses of rent, light, models, casts, etc., are met by initiation fees of five dollars each, and weekly dues of fifty cents from such pupils as can afford to pay. There is only one non-paying pupil at present, and at the close of the school year, about June 15, 1897, there w1ll be a balance in the treasury sufficient to pay the rent of the studio during the summer months. Louis Potter of '96, who is now pursuing his art studies in Paris, was a member of the league during the last three years of his college course. The artistic ability which he displayed contributed largely to the decision made by the faculty of Trinity College in r895, that a course of study in the Connecticut League of Art Students might be taken as an elective in connection with the college curriculum, and, under this ruling, Potter received marks at the league which were credited to him with the marks received by him in his other regular college studies. Thus the precede nt was established, and the same opportunity is now open to any Trinity College student. The league feels flattered by this connection with an old and honored institution, and gladly extends to all its students a cordial invitation, and the assurance of a hearty welcome to those who may choose to join its classes. WM. SHERMAN POTTS, Corresp01zditzg Suretary of The Cmnecticut League of Art Students.
MATIC
tb~ J~st~rs
Staff Jlssistant Buslnm
Businm managu ALFRED L. ELLIS,
manag~r
JAMES W. LoRD,
'98
Jlsslstant HERBERT
B.
PttJ. !FER,
'97
'98
Stag~ manag~r
EDWARD
S.
TRAVERS,
'98
E.
S.
TRAVERS,
'98
Ex~cutlu~ eommltt~~ H.
B.
PULSIFER,
'97
H. C.
W.
S. DANKER, '97
OwEN,
'99
A. L. ELLI S,
w.
'98
A. WARNER,
'99
B¢tW¢¢n tb¢ Jlcts ALUMNI HALL, THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY
Jl
Com~dp
in
tbr~~
14, 1897
Jlcts
~
£ast of £1)arattm .
Dick Comfort
.
.
M. J. Brines, 1900
Married, yet single
.
George Merrigale
.
.
.
.
H. A. Horner, 1900
An unfriendly friend Alexander Meander
.
.
Dick's Uncle.
.
Harris .
.
Blamed, but blameless
.
.
Comfort's man servant Mrs. Clementina Meander . . . . . Dick's Aunt. Blameless, but blamed Edith Comfort . . . . . . . Dick's wife. Unknown, unhonored, and unsung Sally . . . . Mrs. Meander's French maid A cT
I
A cT
W. S. Danker, '97 W. A. Warner, 99 H. B. Pulsifer, 97 H . C. Owen , '99
T.
W . Nichols, '99
AN D I I - M o RNI NG I I I - AFTERNOON
" C¢aU¢ It to I»¢." ALUMNI H ALL, THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 2),
1897
Bp Colin fi. fiazl¢wood and Jlrtbur WHiiams ~
SCENE -Apartment in house of Mr. Easy Mr. Easy
£1larattm
.
.
.
.
.
A superstitious old gentleman
. . . H. C. Owen , '99 In love with Amelia . . . . . . . . H. A. Horner, 1900 A costermonger, after wards disguised as Dr. Blinks . . . . . M. J. Brines, 1900 A matter-of-fact old gentleman J. H . Lecour, Jr. , '98 Daughter to Mr. Easy . J. W. Nichols, '99 In love with Joe
Adolphus Courtney Joe Sprouts Mr. Grimes Amelia Easy Susan Muggins
H. B. Pulsifer, '97
•
•
•
190
0
'0 •
'99
ls, '99
7
er, '97 ~ n,
'99
·, 1900 ; , 1900
fr., '98 Jls, '99
A COMIC OPERA IN THREE ACTS Musrc BY
A.
L. ELLis,
'98
LIBRETT O BY
LYRI CS BY
c.
S.
OLCOTT,
D.
PARSONS GooDRICH
'96
The action is supposed to occur at or near Tehuantepec, the Capitol of San Pe<lro, an Island off the coast of Mexico
nramatis
pusona~
KING MAGOOSYLUM, Monarch of San Pedro, and a bicycle" crank," H . A. HoRNER, 1900 D. C. GRAVES, '98 PRINCE NIT, his eldest son and heir to the throne, CRASTON BRENTON, '99 BILL FAKE, l two tramps from the United States, t s. R. F ULLER, 1900 WEARY FRITZ, ) "traveling for their health," ) G. E. CoGSWELL, '97 PRINCE WILLIE, the youngest son, a good little boy, H . B. PuLSIFER, '97 Miss CLARISSA H oPE, in search of a husband, w. S . DANKER, '97 DR. B uGGS, a naturalist, in Jove with Miss Hope, J. H. PAGE, Jr., '97 BETTY SwEET, a village beauty, w. M. A USTIN, '98 SENOR PoMPERO, the royal herald, . J. K. CLEME TS, 1900 - SENOR T ANTARA, the trumpeter, Peasants, Courtiers, Prisoners, Amazons, Servants, etc., etc.
£borus First Tenors LoRD, '98 GRAVES , '98
BRINES, 1900 WALKER, '97
SPARKS, '97 PAGE, '97
Second Tenors CLEMENT, '99 GoLDTHWAITE, 1900 P RINCE, 1900
NrcHOL , '99 BLAKESLEY, '98 GLAZEBROOK, 1900
L. A. ELLIS, '98 SHERWOOD, 1900 W OODLE, '98
VIBBERT, '99 BALDWIN, 1900
WooD, 1900 Fox, 1900 MciLVAINE, 1900
First Basses GuNDACKER, '97 ONDERDONK, '99 OWEN, '99
Second Basses SCHWARTZ, 1900 PARKER, '98 HEDRI CK, '99
CASE, 1900 MORSE, '99
The following GLAZEBROOK, 1900, WoODLE, '98 MORSE, '99
FLYNN, '97 BENSON, '99 TRAVERS, '98
men composed the Amazon March : OWENS, '99 WooD, 1900, BLAKESLEY, '98 RrcE, '99 GOLDTHWAITE, 1900 SHERWOOD, 1900 L. A. ELI.IS, '98 BALDWIN, 1900 ONDERDONK, '99 CLEMENT, '99 HrLL, 1900 FLYNN, '97 G. T. KENDAL Ballet Dancer, The musical organizations and Dramatic Association combined to produce this opera under the management of A . L. ELLIS, '98 JuLIAN S. CARTER, '98 192
,
1900 '98 <TON, '99 .ER , 1900 IVELL, '97 !FER, '97 IKER, '97 >,Jr., '97 JSTIN, '98 NTS, 1900 IER ,
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IS, '99 WIN, 1900 ENT, '99
luce this
Jllpba of
conn~cttcut
Charter ed r 88g
OffiCUS Pmid~nt
Uic~路Prtsid~nt
A RCHIBALD MORRISON L ANGFORD
HowARD DA 路1EL PLIMPTON
s~mtary EDGAR C H ARLES BEECROFT
GEORGE EDWARD COGSWELL
Class or 1sgz E DGAR C HARLES BEECRO I'T
ARCHIBALD MoRRISON LANGFORD
GEORGE EDWARD CoGSWELL
JOHN HENRY PAGE, JR.
H ARRY WooDFORD H AYWARD
H owARD DANIEL PLIMPTON MARK MILLER SIBLEY
6raduat~
and J;onorary
m~mbm
SEE QU INQUENNIAL CATALOGUE TO BE PUBLISHED IN 1900
'69 Club Ult~路Pmld~nt
Pmld~nt
E. S. TRAVERS, 'g8
G. E. CoGswELL, 'g7 s~mtary
and
tr~asur~r
H. GRINNELL, 'g7 /
Qraduatt mtmbm A.
GFORD
c.
J.
HALL, '88 C. I. MAURY, 'gr G. T. MACAULEY, 'go G. P. CoLEMAN, 'go D. VAN ScHAACK, 'gr A. H. SIBLEY, 'g2 s. F. JARVIS, '8g M. R. WRIGHT, 'gr w. E. A. BULKELEY, 'go R. H. H UTCHINS, 'go E. B. FINCH, 'gr F. B. FuLLER, 'g2 R. s. SALTUS, 'g2 W.P . JILES , 'g3
C. B uLKELEY, 'g3 C. L. BowiE, 'g3 J. W. LEWIS, 'g3 J. CULLEN, JR., 'g3 B. PARKER, 'g3 w. c. D. WILSON, 'g3 R. P. BATES, 'g3 G. w. ELLIS, 'g4 W. W. VIBBERT, 'g4 R. s. GRAVES, 'g~ c. F. WEED, 'g4 F. C. EDGERTON, 'g4 J. W. EDGERTON, 'g4 R. P. PARKER, 'g4
G. E. CoGSWELL, 'g7 E . C. BEECROFT, 'g7 J . H. PAGE, JR., 'g7 H. GRINNELL, 'g7
M. M. SIBLEY, 'g7 H . w . WAYWARD, 'g7 PHILIP CooK, 'g8 A. S. WooDLE, 'gB
Jlttl\lt
E. C. WAGNER, 'g4 E. F. BuRKE, 'g5 D. WILLARD, 'g5 R. F. WELSH, 'g5 F. S . BURRAGE, 'g5 H. R. DINGWALL, 'g5 R. H. MACAULEY, 'gs JOHN STRAWBRIDGE, 'g5 F. R. You G, 'gs E. P . HAMLIN, 'g 5 F. MACD. GODDARD, 'g6 C. S. MoRRis, 'g6 E. PARSONS, 'g6 L. L. LEONARD, '96
m~mbm
I g7
E. s. TRAVERS, 'gS D. c. GRAVES, 'g8 J. s. CURTIS, 'g8 M. R . CARTWRIGHT, 'g8
'
Nu te poenitcat ca/amo trivisse label/um
1856 H . M . GRI':GoRv, 's6
J.
T . BOWDITCH, ;73
F. B.
S. M cCoN rHE, '56
c.
E. CRAJK, '74
J.
H.
J.
Vv.
KLOPPENBURG, •5s
E. MEARS, '58
T. L. STEDMAN·, '74
WHITCOMB, '87
W. R. CRAWFORD, '88
L. H. PADDOCK, '88
H. E. WIIJ TNEY, '74
E.
T . B . SEXTON, '6o
w.
R. BLAIR,
E. B . BULKELEY, ' 90
W . H. T IBBITS, '6 1
W.
J.
L. K. STORRS, '63
E. N. BURKE, '76
'75
R oBERTS,
'75
G.
N.
S coTT, '89
\V. SARGENT, '90
T. L. ELWYN, '92
N. B. DAYTON, '63
B. E. WARNER, '76
T.
G. M. STANLEY, '68
\V. E. RO GERS , '77
L. D. H UBBARD , '93
H. S. CARTER, '69
B.
H. VAN B. KISSAM, '69
0. BUFFINGTON, '79 0. HOLWAY, 'So
13. E. BACKUS , '70 J. K. STOUT, '70 \'1[, DRAYTON, '71
D.
P.
G.
C . BURGWIN, '72
COTTON, ' 71
F.
H. SHREVE, '78
H. YARDLEY, '92
G. D. HARTLEY, '93
F.
C. EDGERTON, '94
H. T. GREENLEY, '94
C. CARPENTER, '82
F.
J.
R . CUNNINGIIAM, '8S
C. D u B. BROUGHTON, '95
c.
G. CHILD, '86
DE
C.
H. TIBBITS, '87
E.
Present Kupers, H. R. R EMSEN, '98
E.
F.
S. BURRAGE, '95
F. HICKS, '96 W. ROBINSON, '96
W ATERMAN, '98
SOJ)bomor~
Dining Club
Founded by the Class of '99
m~mbm
J.
W. NICHOLS A. H. ONDERDONK
D. S . CoRSON J. H. K. DAVIS
17 .D, 'SS
C. B. HEDRICK G. T. KENDAL
H. C. OwEN
E. G. LITTELL
E. K. STERLING
E. A. RICH MeW. B. SuTTON
B. K. MoRSE A. D. VnmERT
w.
H. D. GREEN
H. EATON
Dlnnm at Hotel Hartford
1st, February 22d
at Hotel Hartford
2d, May wth 4
at Hotel Hartford
3d, J une 18th
14
JN,
'95
199
Banqu~t mVEN TO THE
Class of
'gs
bv tb¢ Class of 1goo
FEBRUARY 16, 1897
€1m Cr¢¢ Inn, ;armtnston m~nu
Tomato aux Crauton Broiled Shad, Brown Butter Sauce Spanish Olives Celery Saratoga Chips Roast Turkey with Dressing, Cranberry Sauce Mashed Potatoes French Peas Sweet Corn Lobster Salad with Mayonnaise Roman Punch White Mountain Ice Cream Angel Cake Walnut Cake Fruit Cake Raisins Malaga Grapes Bananas Oranges Apples Crackers Eton Cheese Coffee Mixed Nuts Cigarettes Wines Cigars Soup,
toasts FRANVILLE HuDsON SHERWOOD " From his tongue flowed words sweeter than honey." To THE CLASS OF '98, . . . . . HARRY AR HER HORISER " 0, for a muse of fire that would ascend The brightest heaven of invention." . . . . . . DUDLEY CHASE GRAVES ATHLETICS, " Line up, stand up ! Don't yez hear me call ; The audience is waitin' and we cannot find the ball." PHILIP CooK THE L ADIES, "A thousand blushing apparitions." THE FACULTY, I J AMES WATSON LoRD "Some have happy faculties, but none as happy as our Faculty." To THE CLASS OF 1900, LLOYD GILSON REYNOLDS " Worth makes the man, and want of it the fellow. The rest is all but leather or prunello." IMPROMPTUS
Toastmaster,
•
•
•
0
Committee on Arrangements SIMON LEWIS TOMLINSON, Chairman SAMUEL RICHARD FULLER, JR. PERCY LEON BRYANT 200
D~croiOSP
+ CHARLES GRAHAM, M.A., '30 Died 25 February, 1&}7
'32
HoN. JosE PH MABBETT WARREN, B.A., Died 9 September, 1896
'36
REv. IsAAC HENRY TuTTLE, D.D., Died 20 November, 18q6
~lery
REV. EDWARD TABB WALKER , B.A., Died 21 October, 18q6
1aise
HENRY FLAVEL GILLETTE , Died 25 April, 1&}6
'39
'41
.isins REv. SANFORD JAcKsoN H oRTON, D.D., Died 7 June, 18q6
'43
REV. FREDERICK D URBIN HARRIMA ' , '45 Died 18 May, 1897 HENR Y KING OLMSTED, M.D . , '46 Died 30 November, 1896
l'iER
Ho N. CHARLES RicHARD CHAPMAN, M.A., '47 Died 25 January, 1897
fAV ES
REv. LEVI BuRT STIMSON, M.A., Died 27 April, 1897
~OOK
'48
J oHN LANGDON SAWYER, M.A., '50 Died 9 March, 1897 DARIUs GEoRGE CRosBY, M.A., Died 2o January, 1897
'sr
REv. CHARLES FREDERICK HoFFMAN, D.D., LL.D., D.C.L . , Dieq 4 March, 1897 R Ev. ALFRED BAYLEY GooDRICH, D. D., " 52 Died 16 December, 18q6
14
201
'sr
JoHN GARD ' ER WHITE, M.A., '54 Died 7 Septembe r, 1896
D Avm KNI GHT CADY, M . A., '5 5 Died 27 N ovembe r, 1896
FREDERIC GooDRIDGE, '57 Died 28 April, 18g7
R Ev. GEoRGE Scov iLL MALLORY, D . D., LL.D., '58 Died 2 March, 1897
PHILIP SMITH MILLER, M.A. , '64 Died 10 May, 18g6
HENRY KENT HuNTINGTON, M.D., '6 7 Died 28 F e bruary, 1897
REV. WILLIAM RI CHARD MACKAY, D.D. , '67 Died '3 May, t8g6
R EV. CHARLES H EN RY GARDNER, '70 Died 8 August, 18g6
"WILLIAM E DWA RD PECK , M.A., '71 Died 7 February, 1897
R Ev. ORI N ARNOLD S AN Ds , B.A., '87 Died 30 December, t 8g6
CHARLES MILLER BECKW ITH , '88 Died 4 June, t8g6
PHILI P SMITH, B.A .• '90 Died , 4 Octobe r, 1896
FREDERICK BEECHER F u LLER, B.S., '92 Died 4 Dece mber, t8g6
+ Rr. REv. ARTH UR CLEVELAN D CoxE, D.D., LL. D . , sometime L ecturer Died 20 July, I 8g6
REv. JAMES RAN KINE, D.D., LL.D . , sometime Professor and Librarian Died t6 Decen1ber, 1896
AUSTIN STICKNEY, M.A., sometime Professor Died 30 November, t 8g6
202
Coii~S~
marsbals ~
1836. 1837·
I86 7.
HOWARD C. VIBBERT
ALBERT DODD
I868.
J oSEPH
1869.
GEORGE E . ELWELL
BEERS
!838.
GEORGE W.
I839·
THOMAS T. GUION
1840.
-
PLINY A . JEWETT
C. B. VARLEY
B.
C HESH IRE
1870.
D. PAGE COTTON
1871.
JNO.
w.
GRAY
1841.
GEORGE R. HALL
1872
RussELL MuRRAY
18-l 2.
FRANCIS J. CLERC
1873.
L.
CHARLES D. S cuDDER
M. PLUMER
1843·
JOliN G. STERLING
1874·
1844.
SAMUEL FLOWER
1875·
HENRY H. BRIGHAM
1845·
JAMES
B.
1876.
J. ELLIS KuRTz
1846.
DAVID F. LUMSDEN
1877.
R. B . BRUNDAGE
1S.n.
WILLIAM C. PETERS
1878.
WM. N. ELBERT
WAKEFIELD
1848.
EDWARD H. BRINLEY
1 879·
HE RY C. LOVEBRIDGE
1 849·
SAMUEL SHERMAN
188o.
WM . B. NELSON
r85o.
CHARLES E. TERRY
188 I.
CHARLES H. CARTER
r882.
J . ELDRED BROWN
w.
185 I.
JAMES
I852.
A. HAMILTON POLK
SMYTH
1883.
E . S. VANZILE
1853·
J. GARDINER WHITE
1884.
s. s.
1854·
\V. BUTLER KR UMBHAAR
r885 .
E. B. HATCH
MITCHE LL
1855·
JARED STARR
I8S6.
w.
1856.
!'lONEY HALL
I887.
W. F. MOR GAN, J R.
I857·
JNO. H . S. QurcK
I888.
E. N. ScoTT
I858.
SAMUEL B. WARREN
1889.
E. McP. McCooK
I859·
w~r. G. DAVIES
18go.
T . P. TH URSTON
B.
OLMSTED
I86o.
WM. B. TIBBITS
I89I.
WILLIAM JOSEPH MILLER
1861.
G. W. HuG G
1892.
WILLIAM FRENCH COLLINS
1862.
JNO. J . McCooK
!893·
ROBERT PRESCOTT PARKER
1863 .
T11o~IAS R. A s H
1894·
J OHN MOORE McGANN
1864.
C. T. OLM STED
1895·
WM. S PEAIGHT LANGFORD , JR.
r865.
CHARLES WANZER
I 896 .
JAMES \X/ATSON LORD
-
I866.
HENRY K. HUNTINGTON 203
ana Salutatorians in trinity Coii~S~
Val~aictorians
.JJ.
v. S.
v. S.
1827 Isaac E. Crary v. Samuel C. Goldsborough S.
1838 Charles Gillette Cyrus Munson
v.
1828 Henry G. Smith William H. Walter
v. s.
1839 Isaac G. Hubbard Nathaniel 0 . Corn wall
v. S.
1850 John T. Huntington Daniel E. Loveridge
v. s.
1840 Robert B. Fairbairn Vandervoort Bruce
v. s.
1851 Charles J. Hoadly Alex. G. Cummings
v. s.
1852 Lucius H. Jones Francis Chase
v. s.
1853 Alfred L. Brewer William G. Spencer
S.
1849 John M. Atwood George W . Giddings
S.
1829 Joshua G. Wright Samuel S. Lewis
v. s.
1830 Augustus F. Lyde Isaac W. Hallam
v. s.
1831 Nathaniel E. Cornwall Joseph R. Eccleston
v. s.
1842 George Rossiter Henry C. Preston
v. s.
1832 E. Edwards Beardsley John W. French
v. s.
1843 Thomas S. Preston George Ker
v. S.
1854 George D . Johnson James H . Williams
v. s.
1833 Hugh L. Morrison Edward Hardyear
v.
1844 David P. Sanford Tilton E. Doolittle
v. s.
1855 Luke A. Lockwood Edwin C. Bolles
v. s.
1834 William Payne Solomon G. Hitchcock
v. S.
1845 Robert C. Rogers John A. Paddock
v. s.
I856 Daniel E. Holcomb Samuel F. Hotchkin
v. s.
1835 Robert Tomes Edward VanDeusen
v. s.
1846 John W. Bacon Samue 1M. Whiting
v. s.
1857 Samuel Herman George B. Hopson
v. S.
1836 James H. Elliott Isaac H. Tuttle
v. s.
!847 Samuel Benedict GeorgeS. Gilman
v. s.
1837 Abner Jackson John T. Cushing
v. s.
1848 Benj. H. Paddock Nath. N. Belden
v.
1841 V. {William H. Frisbie Henry_D. Noble s. Thomas R. Pynchon
S.
204
1858 George S. Mallory S . William H. Vibbert
v.
v. s.
1859 Samuel B. \Varren Edwin E. Johnson
v. s.
186o Charles H. W. Stocking V. s. Augustus Jackson
1873 Leonard W. Richardson V. Oliver H. Raftery s.
1885 H. B. Loomis Robert Thorn
v. s.
1861 Arthur W. Allen A. B. J ennings
v.
1874 Edward N . Dickerson James D . Smyth
1886 Herman Lilienthal William J. Tate
s.
1862 James B. Murray George W. Hugg
v.
on lge
v. s.
gs
JgS
:er on ms
S.
v. s.
S.
1875 George M. Hubbard v. Edward W. Worthington S.
1887 Orin A. Sands William A . Beardsley
1863 JohnS. Smith W. N. Ackley
v. s.
1876 Isaac Heister Charles E. Moore
v. s.
1888 Lewis H . Paddock Charles E. Purdy
v. s.
1864 Robert A. Benton Joseph F. Ely
v. s.
1877 Charles C. Edmunds, Jr. John Prout
v. s.
1889 Willard Scudder Joseph W. Fell
v s.
1865 Charles T . Olmsted EdwardS. Johnson
v. s.
1878 John D. Hills John G. Williams
v.
1890 Clifford S. Griswold William H. C. Pynchon
v. s.
1866 Samuel Hart Henry A. Metcalf
v. s.
1879 Alfred Harding James S . Carpenter
v. S.
1891 Harry Howard Charles Herbert Young
v. s.
r88o T.M. N. George S. Lorin Webster
v. s.
1892 Albert Crabtree Romily F. Humphries
v.
J. Russell Parsons
1893 March Chase Mayo Robert Peck Bates 1894 Nathan Tolles Pratt Cameron Josiah Davis
v.
v. S.
r867 William R. Mackay George G. Nichols
s.
S.
r868 FrankL. Norton Frank H. Potts
S.
Charles W. Jones
v. s.
:nb tki n
v. s.
1869 George 0. Holbrooke Arthur McConkey
v. s.
r882 Seaver M. Holden John H. McCrackan
v. s.
on
v. s.
1870 George McC. Fiske Harlow R. Whitlock
v. s.
r883 R. T. Reineman J. E. Brown
>ry bert
v. s.
1871 George W. Douglass Chauncey C. Williams
:en ;on
v. s.
1872 Paul Zeigler James H. George
10d
v.
r881
v. S.
1884 Henry R . Neely William S. Barrows
205
S.
1895 Edward Myron Yeomans Sydney Key Evans
v. s.
1896 George ahum Holcombe George Blodgett Gilbert
v.
tb~
Class Day of
Class of 1sg7
Pmid~nt GEORGE SHELDON M c CooK
ljlstorlan HE ' RY W ooDWARD A L L EN
HERMAN
VON WECHLINGER SCHULTE
Orator \VILLI AM CuRTIS WHITE
Prmnt~r
Statistician
J oHN R oBERT BE 路To:-~
H ARRY 'WoODFORD HAYWARD
Committ~~s
拢lass Day CoGSWELL
E.
GRINNELL
SCHULTE
CHASE
GUNDACKJ;R
"Rmptlon M c CooK
STARR
SPARKS
BEECROFT
Tn11itations PLIMPTON
D ANKER
LANGFORD
MOO RE
tpuslt PAGE
\VHITE
FLINN
\VooD
Pbotograpbs \fiTAl.KER
SHERRIFF
PULSIFER
ZEI G LER
'Finane~ ALLEN
L ANGFORD
BENTON
206
S CHULTE
Hartford DiSb Scbool Club Offitm Vice-President, A. M. ST URTEVANT, '98
P1'esident, H. P. PLIMPTON, '97
Secretary and Treasurer, G. S. McCooK, '97
EX¢tUtl\1¢ £ommitf¢¢ H. D. PLIMPTON
iULTE
WARD
8 KEil
S. FERGUSON
A. M. STURTEVANT, '98 H . L. CLEASBY, '99 W. A. W ARNER, '99 T. E. ADDIS, 1900 V. F. MoRGAN, 1900 F. \V. PRINCE, 1900 E. L. S IMONDS, 1900 S. L. To~ILINSON, 1900
J . D . FLYN N, '97 G. S. McCooK, '97 H. D. PLIMPTON, '97 R. S. STARR, '97 H. J . BLAKESLEE, '98 c. L. BURNI!A~I, '98 A. L. ELLIS, '98 L. A. ELLIS, '98 W. M eA. J oHNsoN , '98
trinity
A. M. ST URTEVANT
con~s~
Brancb of tb~ St. Paul's Scbool Jllumni Jlssociation Offltm President, Prof. HENRY FERGUSON D. S. CoRSON, '99 C. B. H EDRICK, '99 G. T. KENDAL, '99 E. G. LITTELL, '99 D L. S cHwARTZ, 1900 G. H. SHERWOOD, 1900
Prof. HENRY FERGUSON E. D . N. ScHULTE , '97 H. voN W. ScHULTE, '97 H. w. ALLEN, '97 H. J. QUICK, '98 A. S. WooDLE, '98
207
trinity Jllumni Jlssociation of of St. Jam~s
tb~ Coii~S~
m~mbm JuLIUS
S.
CARTER, '98
ADRIAN H. ONDERDONK, '99
ERNEST A . RICH, '99
McK.
HASLETT
FRANCIS H. GLAZEBROOK, '99 GLAZEBROOK, 1900
trinity Jllumni Jlssociation of Cburcb Jlcaa~my H.
T.
SHERRIFF, '97
D~ V~aux
C. G. ZIEGLER, '97
J.
W.
ZIEGLER, '99
tb~ D~troit
K. K.
F. KuRTH, 1900
.JIIumni Jlssociation of trinity Coii~S~ J.
H. PAGE, JR., '97,
M.
R . CARTWRIGHT, '98,
L.
G. REYNOLDS, '98,
R. H. Fox,
1900,
President Vz'ce-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Sergeant-at-Arms
m~ mb m J. H. PAGE, JR., '97
R. H. Fox,
1900
M.
s.
R. CARTWRI G HT, '98 R. FULLER, 1900
DENISON RICHMOND, 1900 208
s.
G. REYNOLDS, '98
D.
B.
JEWETT, 1900
:, '99
Dit
itp
. r1u' 路~ -.
209
=
TND 路
fOil
ALL
lcCUSTRATIVE
ldURI?OSES 211
• I
-
·
•
GALLUP & METZGER,
music, Banjos, 6uitars, man·
20J, 203, 205 Asylum Street,
Pianos anll Organs, Sb~~•
HARTFORD.
llolins, anll Strings Jl Sp~tlalty •
•
INSTR UME TS TO RENT.
Base Ball, April 11. Hartford, s. Trinity, 3·
ELM TREE INN, Farmington, Conn.
April 16. Sophs fired out of English.
J. B. RYAN,
P roprietor.
ROBERT GARVIE, (SUCCESSO R TO WILLIAM
A.
GARVIE.)
~f)Lt:IMBER: · AN D GAS FITTER. No. 12 MULBERRY ST., HARTORD, CONN. 212
HENRY KOHN & SONS, )
~ J~w~I~rs ~
"-t
April '7 · Easter Recess begins.
360 Main Street.
DIAMONDS, Our Specialty.
R. SPIEGEL. GENTS'
r
@ fet ~e.s @ e.~!ile.<!l ~li)_<!l
N.e.)!'eti re.<!l .
. . . SUITS MADE TO OR.DER. . . . Perfect Fit Guaranteed.
2 Kinsley St.
(Near Main St.),
Hartford, Conn.
MARTEL'S LAUNDRY. L.
J. MARTEL, Proprietor .
H. J. MARTEL, Manager.
prietor,
Troy Domestic Finish on = = Collars and Cuffs a Specialty. Work called for aud delivered promptly.
l72 MAIN STREET, .J1. HARTFORD, CONN.
' .. \
JACOBS, AVERY & COMPANY H AVE A COMPLETE LINE OF
fia~nana
£bina ana
otb~r D~coraua Dinn~r war~. April2o.
RIC H CUT GLASS AND ART POTTERY suitable for Wedding Presents. . ·.
~ • ..... ,..,.
RO CHESTER BANQUE T .riND STUDE/IT LA .IfPS in Great Variety. . ·. . ·. . ·.
366 Asylum Street. 213
. Y. U., 14 vs. Trinity, 14.
April 2r. Rutgers V .".
Trinity, at New Brunswick, 17-7.
~RINITY
(~
11)~
STUDENTS who desire good suits a t reasonable prices will find it to their interest to call on
{D)~ \Y7 ~{D)
l ()Vii
f)
MERCHANT TAILO R, 6o ASYLUM STREET.
Rot to
A full line of Fi ne Grade Woolens for Spring and S u mmer now in stock.
b~ Sn~~z~d
JH
f F I had been dallyi ng in snuff-taking avails it I should not have been pleased that My friends should consider me quite up to snuff, And yet but a one to be sneezed at. W. T. 0.
April 22 . U. ofP. vs. Trinity, at Philadelphia,
COLLATERAL LOAN COMPANY, 7 I Asyl um St r eet, Room I 0 .
I0-5路
--路~路--
M oNEY L oA
ED o 2 14
WATCHES AND Dr AMo
D s.
)
.
Conn~ttitut
/ ttCe:>.
trust and
Saf~ D~posit
Co.
CORNER OF MAIN AND PEARL STREETS .
I
~I
~I
II
tits at :est t o
April 23. University of Va. vs. Trinity, at Charlottesville,
6-+
CAPITAL, $300,000. SURPLUS, $200,000. BANKING BUSINESS
Conducts a General Banking Business. Accounts opened and Deposits received subject to check at sight. Accounts solicited. Also
SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT liens lor
â&#x20AC;˘tock.
The m ost capacious and impregnable in the City. r,ooo safe b oxes for rent at from to to S roo per annum, according to size .
TRUST DEPARTMENT Is authorized by its charter to act as Trustee for individuals and corporations, Executor or Administrator of Estates, Guardian of minors, etc.
Y,
April 25. Lehigh vs. Trinity, at South Bethlehem,
M. H. W HAP LES, Preszdent
J.
P. WHEELER, Treasurer
H. P. REDFIELD, Asst. Treas. H. S. ROBINSON, Sec'y. and Mg'r. of Trust Dept. DS. 215
9- 10 .
April 2. Base ball team as well as other students, returns.
SEIDLER & MAY Manufacturers and Dealers in all kinds of
FURNITURE STUDENTS' PATRONAGE SOLICITED.
April 29. Amherst '' Aggies" vs. Trinity, at Hartford, 4-5路
PLEASE CALL AND EXAMINE.
AprilJo. First straw hat appears.
Nos. 306 to 318 Pearl St., Hartford, Opp. the Soldiers' Memorial Monument.
2!6
I
HEUBLEIN'S
l\Iay 2 . Sophs fi red out of English again.
~~ OPERA HOUSE
.E
CAFE
€{~
393 Main Street F. BARBY, Manager
HARTFORD, CONN.
fAIR. PR.ICES
fiNE WOR.K
-~
CLARK & SMITH ~-"
~ Book and Job Printers W 362 Main Street
~I
HAR.TfOR.D, CONN.
Dealer in Barbers' Supplies. Cups Decorated, Razors Ground, Concaved and Honed , Skates, Scissors, Shears, Cutlery and Lawn Mowers ground and repaired. Locksmithing.
HENRY CO WLISHA W ford,
Razor Manufacturer and Cutler. Dealer in . . all kind s of
p•toe Cut( ery.
Factory and Store, 160
HARTFORD, CONN.
IS
and
162
Pearl Street,
May 5, Fire on the campus.
GEORGE F. WARFIELD
LEVERETT BELKNAP
May7 . Dramatics, '' Poison '' and ''Bicyclers" in Alumni Hall.
BELKNAP & WARFIELD PUBLISHERS
-路* { t l
BOOKSELLERS AND
77 and 79 ASYLUM ST.,
STATIONERS HARTFORD, CO
N.
DREKA Fine Stationery and Engraving House 1121 Chestnut Street , Ph i ladelphia
College Invitations Stationery Programmes Banquet Menus Fraternity Engraving Visiting Cards
Wedding Invitations Reception Cards Monograms Coats of Arms Address Dies Heraldry
Coats oi Artns painted ior iratning
W. E. BAKER & SON MaY9路 Annual Field Meet at Charter Oak Park. '98 wins Leffingwell Cup.
fiR..E. MAR..INE AND PLATE GLAss
Insuranc垄
Gas Company ' s Office Buildil)g 236 Mail) Street,
218
1-JAR..TfOR._D, CONN .
~ RF l ELD
RICHMOND )
Straight Cut No. I
May 1 2. Wesleyan-Trinity Field Meet, 66-6<).
CIGARETTES BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
0 N.
And observe tbat tbe firm name as below is on every package.
,1'
~ar~tt~ Smok~rs Who are willing to pay a ~ '-' '-' '-' little more than the price charged for the ordinary trade Cigarettes, will find TI-llS BRAND superior to all others. T hese Cigarettes are made from the brightest, most delicately Aavored a nd h ighest cost GOLD L EAF grown in Virgin ia. T his is the OLD AND 0 RIGI:'-IAL B RAND 01' STRA IGHT CUT Cigarettes, and was brought out by us in the year r875 .
I) USe
ALLEN & Th e
.ions
GINTEQ,
A.-n e rican Tob acco Successor, Manufacturer,
Co.-npany,
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA •
• • • • t-iA VE Tt-iE •••• g
/@
¥( artfora i)¢corating co. J. Alex. McCiunie, Proprietor, •• •• DO YOUR ••••
Gollege Qecorating,flags, .[3unting, etc. NN. 177 Asylum St. , t-jartford, Coni). 2 19
May '3· at 3.30 A.M . , old gym accidentally ( ?) took fire and burned to the ground. '' Loud applause by student body."
1\Iay ' 3路 N.Y. Universtty vs. Trinity, a t Hartford, 7-20.
t897
The
t846
CoNNECTICUT MuTUAL Life Insurance Company. The assets of this Company,January l, 1897, were $62,952,348.88, its liabilities by its own standard- more conservative than that of any other company, or than that of any Insurance Department- were $55,799,05!.84, and its surplus $7,153,297.04.
It is submitted that this Company is especially deserving of consideration by those who seek for their families protection of the most absolute character, on terms alike the most favorable and the most just, at the lowest cost attainable by care, prudence, and economy. JACOB L. GREENE, President. JOHN M. TAYLOR, Vice-P resident. May 14Holy Cross vs. Trinity, at Worcester, l<;-4 路
EDWARD M. BUNCE, Secretary.
DANIEL H. WELLS, Actuary.
A. T. RICHARDS, General Agent, Room No. to, 220
Company's Building.
!897
WHOEVER WINS May 16. West P oint vs. Trinity, at West Point,
THE TROPHY It will be doubly prized if it
1897, own
6--to.
bears the stamp of the ROGERS " ANC H OR " BRAND
: any ranee
S IL V E RWA RE.
; sur-
1f the committees on condally
tests will com e to our sales-
seek
rooms we will show them
:olute
original and novel designs
eand
le by
that will be ''just the thing wanted." PLEASE REMEMBER THIS.
:tuary.
WM. ROGERS M 'F 'G Co.
.ding. MARKET S T REET-
2 21
HARTFORD .
May 20 . Wesleyan v s. Trinity, at Middletown . Alas!
Established March 20, J854. May 22, '97 Ivy comes out.
T HE
M~rcantn~ ~ational ~ank OF HARTFORD 5 6 PEARL S T REET _ _ _ _.._
C a pita l , Surplus
SSOO, OOO
a nd Profits,
!676 , 000
JA MES B. POWELL, President. J OHN H. MITCHELL, Vice-President . EDWIN BROWER, Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
路WI LLIAM T. PARKS, of Parks
c'
Savage.
J AMES B. PoWELL, Preside nt . CHARLES E. CHAFFEE, Treasurer of the Medlicott Co. ERNEST CADY, Trea urer of the Pratt & Cady Co. NATHAN T. PULS IFER, Treasurer of the Oakland P aper Co. WILLIAM WALDO HYDE, of Gross, Hyde & Shipman. JoHN H . MITCHELL, Vice-President, of the Phcenix In s. Co. May 27, I.-C. A. A. A . A. Athletic meet at Mott Haven
RICHAR D 0. C HEKEY, of Cheney Brothers.
Open for Business from 10 o'clock, A. M. , to 3 o'clock, P.M. CLOSE ON SATURDAYS AT 12 O' CLOCJ< , NOON .
222
]
Coal
tnk
J une 6.
wood ..... nay be had at J. J. PooLE & Co.,
Class Base Ball Game. '97-8. '98-15.
and
272 Main Street.
tb~ Stud~nts = = = = = = = =
Hilliard Parlors mat.
= = = = = = Jj. Jj~wins,
262 main
Str~~t.
Propn"etor.
shier.
MARWICK'S DRUG STORE. ~'[...
~·~ "'1"" "1"" '1"'
~ Op~n
~'!'~
~.~
...!...
f..,......,....
~'t.
'1"' 1" '1"" ~·~
Hll ]'iight. ·
~
..Jc ....k ..Jc '!l::.. ..Jc ..Jc ....!.... ..J..., ~'!'1!
~·~
.--! • .1/arwick, Jr.
377 Asylum St., Cor. Ford, Hartford, Conn.
:o.
HURLBUT'S BUILDING.
Co.
THE HARTFORD COAL CO., for tb~ Old Com))anl)'S £~= biSb coal. = = = = =
Jl P.M.
g~nts
2 78 MAIN STREET. 223
June 8, Senior Examinations
begin.
THE
185 1
189 7
路Phrenix Mutual
Jun e r8. '98 Ivy board organized.
Gife Insurance Gompan~, OF HARTFORD , CONN. ,
~ AS
had a successful business experience of almost half a Century, and is stronger, safer, better, and more progressive than ever before.
n
All of its Policies are incontestable after two years, and have Extended Insurance, Loan, Cash, and Paid-up values endorsed thereon. We call particular attention to our new 5 per cent. 20-Year Income Bond, under which contract a stated income is guaranteed for 20 years, and we then pay the face value of the policy. If you are contemplating insurance, we invite an inspection of our contracts, 路 and also comparison with those offered you by any other company. For sample policies, terms, etc., address the Home Office, Hartford, Conn. Jun e 2o-27. L azy Week.
J O NATHAN B. BUNCE, PRESIDENT. JOHN M . HOLCOMB, V IC E-PRESIDENT. CHARLES H . LAWRENCE, SECRETARY. 224
85th Semi-Annual Financial Statement June 25 . 70th Commencement.
phami~ Inmi~aqce Company OF HARTFORD, CONN. JANUARY 1, 1S97.
CASH CAPITAL, $2,000,000.00 ASSESTS AVAILABLE FOR FIRE LOSSES,
$5,320,265.42 AS FOLLOWS: Cash on Hand , in Bank, and with Agents, State Stocks and Bonds, . Hartford Bank Stocks, . Miscellaneous Bank Stocks, . . . Corporation and Railroad t ocks and Bonds, . County, City, and Water Bonds, Real Estate, . Loans on Collateral, Real Estate L oans, . . . Accumulated Interest and Rents, TOTAL CASH ASSETS,
$ 70I, 7<XJ路3 I 28 ,750.00 6oo,68o.oo 400,259路00 2,48 1,225.00 356,887路50 49B,<)06.04 JI 12VO.OO
r 88,3o6.9r .12,J.II.66
$ 5,320,26:>.42
LIABILITIES. Cash Capital, . . . R eserve for Outstanding Losses, Reserve for Re-Insurance, . ET SURPL US,
$2,<XXJ,<XXJ.OO
392,412.39 2, 197.341.46 730,5 11.57
TOTAL ASSETS,
$5,320,265.42
Surplus to Policy- holders,
$2,730,511.57
Total Losses Paid since Organization of Company,
$39,739,174.81 D. W . C. SK ILTON, PRESIDENT. EDW. MILLIGAN, SECRETARY. June 26. College deserted.
J. H. MITCHELL, VJ CE-PRESIDENT. JOHN B . KNOX, A ss'T SECRETARY.
H. M. MAGILL , General Agent W estern Department, Cincinnati, Ohio. THEO. F. SPEAR, Ass't Gen'l Agent West'n Department, Cin cinnati , 0. A. E. MAGILL, General Agent Pacific Department, San Francisco, Cal. SMITH & TATLEY, Managers Canadian Department, Montreal, Can. 226
TRINITY MEN
WHO ARE
DECORATING THEIR ROOMS Should procure their
Fall, 18¢-7. Sept. 17. College opened. Freshmen run the Gauntlet.
RUGS ~ SHADES ~ DRAPERIES And Other Furnishings of
CHAS. R. HART & CO. J.JI
The $ Largest .JI. Carpet .JI. and Furnishing $ House .JI. .JI. $ In .JI. the .JI. City $ .JI. $ .JI.
~ . oo
:>.00
J.OO
364 Main St.,
Hartford, Conn.
).00
7·50 5.04 ).00
;,91 r.66
42
C. B. BOARDMAN, 1-fACI(
•.oo '·39 ·46 ·57
LIVER.,Y
12
BOAR.,DING
57 fiND
SALE
STABLES fT.
,y,
io.
Carriages may be
Bills Payable Mol)thly.
Ordered by Telephone .
0.
104 Main St. , liAR.TfOR.D, CONN . 227
Sept. 18. Push-rush. '99 wins rush.
C. C. KIMBALL & CO.
VERY Description of Fire,~ Marine, Lightning, and }.\ Tornado Policies written " at this office. Agents of the . American Surety Company of NewYork. Bondsfurnishedfor persons in positions of trust, contractors, etc.
E
t
Q_ TRONG CoMPANIES, Fair
@) Rates. Call at our office before insuring elsewhere. Telephone Connection. lEtna Life Building, 222 Main Street. C. C. KIMBALL, W . B. McCRAY. : : : : : : :
MOULD\"GS,
ETCHINGSI
P\C1UR£-rR~li\£S ,
WATER-COLORS
HS£LS,
ARTOTYPES
H~GRT\~mGS,
ETo., ETc.
l
@EXTRAI.LY LO CATED, ~ corner Asylum and Trumbull Streets, in business center of the city. Two blocks from railroad tttttt station. Electric cars ROBERT ALLYN, Proprietor pass the door to the tttttt depot every three minutes. Rooms Single, with Bath, or en Suite. Elevator and all modern improvements. Fine new Cafe attached. Best Sample Rooms in the city for commercial men.
HARTFORD, CONN.
228
I
u AMERICAN" DIARY PUBLICATIONS
"PEERLESS" DAILY CALENDARS
·~ ~
·~~~ ~
The ase, Lockwood & Brainard Co.
Printing """--
Bookbinding ~
EI¢~trotyping ~
PAPER
BLA K ~
~
BOOKS
~
RULING
·~~
·~~
a-._
a-._
Historical Biographical Commercial.~
-
AND
Genealogical Poetical Works
Laz •, and Miscellaneous Business Printing
Illust-rated Catalogues for Manufacturers
+
Tl]e C:ase, l_oe~wood 8 Braii)ard c:o. HARTFORD, CONN.
Cor. Pearl and Trumbull St. 229
..
0
...,
ll>
..;
r• ~ >-3~
7 ~ ~ l'l-
g
~vc1es
Rova1 WoPcesteP
'<
g 5·;::::. .0. .....-·
~
::q
s
>-3(")
El >-3. gg~ ::I ...... u;·
::1(1)'0 ll> .....
..., aq "'
r:;:(O"Ul
0
.fo
.fo
..,.ot,
.fo
.fo
.fo
.fo
.fo
' .fo
New ideas in bearings have reduced friction fully one-half.
.fo
Each wheel is most carefully tested and thoroughly tried before ,it is sent out •
.fo
Ladies or children can now care for their wheel, because they can easily understand its simple mechanism•
.fo
correct adjustment.
for perfect construction and
Embody : all of the best known devices
'
Send for Catalogue. WORCESTER CYCLE MANUFACTURING CO., t7 Murray St., New York.
So Easy Running
So True-
So Simple -
~be
ll>
M-(D~(/) t! ~
~
33d Annual Statement
~
OF
...
~
z... :-
Cb~ Crao~l~rs
V)
Chartered 1863.
...
:3
=s
Paid-up Cap ital , ASSETS LIABILITIES
Ci2 :::::> E-o
SU~PLUS
u
~
~
;a c:::I e.)
c:::
:)
~
~
w
d t; ~
Life and Accident Insurance .
$1,000,000.00 $20,896,684.63 I 7 ,920,260 .27
to Pol icy Holders
Life De partm e n t.
Number Life Policies written,
-
Life Insurance in force,
90.479 88,243,207.00
New Life Insurance written in 18q6,
II,941,012.00
Insurance issued under the Annuity Plan is entered at the commuted value thereof as required by law. Returned to Policy Holders in 1896,
tJ tJ
.9o$ ~
u
...
0
" '0
c:C>)
V)
u ,914, 765.18
Acc i d ent De partm e n t.
Number
:3 00
1,228,07].90
Returned to Policy Holders since 1864, Number Accident Policies written,
0 ~
$2,976,424.36
STATISTICS TO DATE.
E-o V) ~
PRESIDENT.
January I, 1897.
~
z
(Stock.)
JAM ES G. BATTERSON,
['..
u
Company
OF 1-fAIFfOR.D, CONN.
~ ...
d
Insuranc~
Sept. JO. Under Class Meet. '99 Wins Underwood Cup.
Accid~nt Claims paid
2,338,!86
in 1896, -
Whole number Accident Claims paid,
1..1,163
-
292,379
Returned to Policy Holders in 1896,
1,373,936.96
Returned to Policy Holders since 1864,
19,828,189.13
Returned to Policy Holders in 1896,
2,002,014.86
Returned to Policy Holders since r864,
3 1,742,954路31
See1路etar;/ J oH E. MORRIS, Ass't Secretary. V. PRESTON, Sup't of Agmciu .
GEORGE EL LIS, EDWARD
J.
B.
LEWIS,
cr12.
M. D., Surgemt and Adjuster. SYLVESTER
C.
DUNHAM,
231
Oct. J. W. P. I. vs. Trinity at Worcester.
Cozmse/.
conn~cticut fir~ lnsuranc~ Oct. 8. S uch of the team as can retur n to college from H arvard.
co.
OF HARTFORD
CASH CAPITAL
$1 ,000,000.00
CASH ASSETS
$3,192,001.69
Oct. '7· J\I. I. T . z•s. Trini t y a t Bost on. 6--16.
SUMMARY
C ash C ap i ~a l, f1ese rve for f{ e- l nsura n c"', lJn paid L:osse s, All o~h e r Cl airlJ , .Nd urplus, Oct. 15. R oehm & Son make their annu al v isit. A ll g lad to see th e " badge rnan ," and he g oes a wa y happy.
'J!) 1,000,000.00
1,4)0,0 1-.1 7 142,27 1.2 1 ~ 9,4 0.00
668, 3 L50 $ ) ,JOO,O17.o8
o ta l .:zs;.ss e ts , J. D . BROWNE, P RESIDENT. • CHARLES R . BURT,
SEC R ETARY.
L. W. CLAR K E ,
ASS ' T S ECR E T A RY .
W. E. BAKER & SON, Local Ag'ts, 236 Main St., Hartford, Conn. 23 2
OR.GANIZED 1866.
0.
Oct. 24. Tufts vs. Trinity at Boston.
THE
0
Pioneer companu or Jimerica Tt-JOR.OUGt-1
2-16.
INSPECTION
Insurance against Joss or damage to property )
al)d Joss of life and injury to persons
7
caused by
Steam Boiler Explosions Oct. 31. Amherst vs. Trinity at Amherst.
J. M . ALLEN, Pres ident W. B . FRANKLIN , Vice- Pres i d e nt
f.
B . ALLEN, 2d V i ce - President
J. B . PIERCE, Secretary and Treasurer
16
233
o-12.
Nov. 7路 N. Y. University
JEtna National Bank
vs.
OF HARTFORD.
Trinity at Hartford. G-40.
Capital,
Surplus,
$525,000
$360,000
A. G. LOOMIS,
PRESIDENT.
A. SPENCER,
JR . , CASHIER.
LEVERETT BRAINARD,
Ex-Mayor of Hartford;
President Case, L ockwood & Brainard Co .
M. G. BULKELEY,
Ex-Gov. of Connecticut; President A!:tna Life Insurance Company. A . R. HILLYER,
Formerly President this Bank. JAMES B . CONE ,
Capitalist. A. G. LOOMIS,
President. Nov. g. First Trinity German.
Accounts
of
Individuals,
Firms,
Corporations solicited.
234
and
lDk FOil l!Ri1ISES,
CA'l'AIWt,
Sl'RAINS, IS,
000
ltOAUSENESS,
!1l'RNS,
SORE 'l'lmOAT,
SORE FEET•
'NEi1BALGIA,
:PILES,
TOOTHACHE,
QliAFING,
DIAlmHIEA,
ttc., Etc.
SORE EYES.
ond's
xtrac blbum in tltt ohu1, a.nd our
Ca uti6n. ·-POND•s EI• 1'R4CT .llcu tum imitG.Ltd. 'J'ht genu.iJU .Aa..t the 'V>brd•
· ~& Ct:t._7J~e... 'trad!._lJUlri' em
~ uJf -•PX'•
"J.>0ND'8 LZZ'IU CZ' "'
·
Toke:
110
lanD-
t'k'n'wnrt•nl
otArt prepa:ra.U.o11.
inard Co.
:ompany.
CHARLBS H. BBLL
·-w
213 Main Street and
23 5
Nov. 14. Wesleyan vs. Trinity at Middletown. Too bad ! Too bad !
t~ Shawmut Coal mining Co. Miners and Shippers of Bituminous
COAL 6~nual Offi~~
:
St. Mary's, Pa. mtnu at
Shawmut, Noble, and Centerville, Pa.
Nov. 24. Holiday.
B. E. CARTWRIGHT, Gen. Mgr., St. Mary's, Pa.
...
When you want to have a good
~~PHOTO~~
Dec. 14. Second Trinity German.
taken call at
Harney's Photo Studio 281 Main St., Cor. Pearl. ~~~
Reduced rates given to Clubs. ~~~
Interior and Exterior of Homes Photographed at Low Prices.
f\.llyR ~®tJSe Pa.
l?>@.F~e~ ~ft®~
Jlnd Batb Rooms. 77 Trumbull Street. €"up workman Jln Jlrtist.
Jan . 14. BaskC't Ball. Yale vs. Trinity. 16-14.
nanager.
W. L. HENNING, 237
_ Jan. 2 1. Basket Ball. Wesleyan vs. T rinity.
Stroh's
Detroit
BonemJan Beer
5-26.
Pfaffon-Brau A Pure Malt Beer of sufficient Age, Brewed after the old German method.
The finest Beers on the American market. Depot with
G.
f. JiEUBLEIN
& BR_O.,
liAR.TfOR.D, CONN .
!he Proper Dress for till Occlisions the recognized leading Metropolitan EVEN Men's Outfitting Establishments cannot boast of more correct styles, greater abundance of them, larger variety or more attractive prices, than are at your disposal here. Many departm ents and each complete in itself. Dec. 23. Christmas recess began.
THIL06 JIIRDE CLOTHES, PHTS, ODTFITTINGS, TRUNKS and sun CRSES.
HORSFALL & ROTHSCHILD,
And re m e mber We' re SlilR.T MAK.ER.S .
Asylum Street, Hartford.
SIDNEY F. SOUTH, 路oit
~er Age, :thod.
ket.
(l'AILOR AND DRA.PER, n
P~arl Str~~t.
f{EEPS constantly on hand a full assortment of the Finest Imported Woolens. The latest Styles for Spring and Summer have just arrived.
pa~~ ~n~een Boa~ding, Live~g,
and Fac~ ~nable.
-路~ FRANK H. LANDON. ~路路 Double and Single Teams and Saddle Horses to let.
0.,
212 Park St.t fiartrontt Conn.
~
IF Hartford Line
You are going to New York for a day or two on business or for pleasure, why not go by the
tan not ldIve
my f.
steamers
?
They leave Hartford from foot of State street, daily (except Sundays) at 5 p.m., arriving in New Y ark early next morning; thus giving a long day in the Metropolis, for those going for one day only.
for round trip, good for six days, including two meals, - - $3.25 STATE ROOMS, accommodating two or three persons, $l.OO each way. ,tP- ,tP- ,tP- ,tP-
FARE
The Steamers of this line are new and are fitted with all the modem appliances for the comfort and convenience of patrons.
D,
For further particulars apply at office of the company, foot of State street, or telephone, 6o6=2.
I.
239
Jan. 7, 1&)7. College reassembled.
SALOMON & DELEEUW, Gigars, Pip6s,
Pipe 1'epairing a specialty . .:1- Will's Englisb Tobaccos. New Location, 69 Asylum Street, Betweel) Main and Trutl)bull Sts.,
t-JAR.TFOR.D , CONN.
THE ERNST SCHALL CO., Corner rlain and Asylum Street,
Manufacturing Feb. 6. Basket Ball. Yale vs. Trinity.
Jewelers
And Importers of
niamonds and Watcb¢S. Agent for Arundel Spectacles and Aguste Saltzman Celebrated Watches.
S
TOP at the S ouTH END PHARMACY on your way to Trinity College for ANYTHING to be found at a .路 .. .
rirst=class Drug Stor~ :os . Rlue and Green Cars pass the door.
Feb. r6. Banquet at Elm Tree Inn. '98 from ~900-
Drugs, Chemicals, fancy Goods, fine Cigars, Best Liquors, bottled and in bul1t, Sponges, Chamois, etc. Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty, Brushes. etc., etc. ~ ~ ~ ~
J. J. SEINSOTH, 12 llaple Avenue. 43 Congress Street.
RINITV MEN WHO ATTEND GERMANS A D OTHER SOCIAL FUNCTIONS
SHOULD GET THEIR GLOVES CLEANED AT
~ rs
H. E. PATTEN'S D YE H ousE AND C ARPET C LEAN ING W oRKS LACE CURTAI NS CARPETS, KID GLOVES, ETC. CLEANED OR DYED
thes.
No. 37 WELLS STREET
Feb. 22-27. "Trinity Week." Monday, 22. Prize Oratoricals.
M. M. BACON T uesday, 23. Fourth Trinity German.
BOTTLING DONE ~' Ott
podaWaneJ.1 ManufacnoPy iliBonnling E$nabli$Timen n
l'AJ!UUES
Bottled Ale Porter Cider and Soda Water Tonic Lemon and Orange Phosphate
~~~
BOTTLES BOUGHT AND SOLD
-
Henry Elias' Prize Medal Bottled Lager Beer
13 Morris Street
Hartford, Conn.
T. SISSON & CO.,
D!~~~.i~!~ Ch¢mical 'and Physical Hppantus, Spong¢s, /¥Chamois, /¥- /¥- f¢ath¢1' Dust¢1'6, ¢tc., ¢tc. !¥- !¥-
150° Security Oil.
259 Main St.,
HARTFORD, CONN. Wednesday, 24. College Tea.
Proprietors
if The Hartford Smellin;; Salts .
GEO. P. RAYMOND, 路
Thursday, 25. Dramatics in Alumni Hall.
l7 Boylston Place,
BOSTON, MASS. Theatrical and Masquerade Costumes.
massas~ tr~atm~nt
f KNOW a man who has to treat onn.
With many people every day, W ho never gets in trouble, for H e strokes each person the right way. W. T. 0 .
LLOYD'S D
Oil.
Leading Photograph Gallery. Only ji1路st-class work dom at this establishmmt.
You are cordially invited to call and inspect the work always on exhibition at the Studio. Friday, 26. J unior Ball.
No. 3 PRATT STREET
HARTFORD, CONN. 243
March 17. St Patrick's Day. Where is '99 ?
April 19 and 20. Prince Nit.
June 2. Base-Ball. Ninety-eight, 5· Ninety-seven, 4·
G IS THE PRINTED MATTER YOU DISTRffiUTE; IT IS Y 0 U R REPRESENTATNE, WHETHER IT IS GOOD OR BAD. THE FIRST IMPRESSIONS DO THE BUSINESS FOR THE MOST OF US, AND NO MATTER WHAT WE DO SUBSEQUENTLY THEY ARE BOUND TO RETAIN THEIR INFLUENCE - THEREFORE THE ENGRAVING OF CUTS, ARRANGEMENT, PRINTING, AND BINDING OF YOUR CATALOGUES SHOULD BE FAULTLESSLY PRODUCED.- UNLESS IT IS, THE WORK WILL NOT AROUSE THAT INTEREST WHICH IS INTENDED AND FAILS IN ITS PURPOSE. - MORAL : R. S. PECK & CO. ARE PRODUCERS OF THE BEST WORK.- ORIGINAL IN DESIGN- CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE. H FORD ST. - ASK THEM FOR PRICE.
: : : F. E. GR.AVES : : : ~~PHARMACIST ~ ~ 31 main St. (Cor. park)
fiartfordt Conn.
HEUBLEIN BARBER SHOP. Nile~:::: 25.
•
••
GOULET BROTH ER.S ...
Naughty Naught, 4·
Mulberry St.
Five Fi r st- Class Work m en.
244
/
' Gemmill, Burnharl) & Co.,
['ED
· IT
1-fave all th e La test Styl es In
ivE,
fiNE SUITS
.AD.
DO OST BSE:AIN RANG, ULD trHE
Prices from $10 to $30.
.EST >UR>ROJ
IN
ORD
Jl Good fiang . out
rM
really getting envious, And will to you the cause betray : My sweetheart's skirt usurps my place, And hangs around her every day. W. T. 0.
onn.
P. • • •
~J.
H. Eckhardt Co.
FINE ARTS, PICTURES, AND ARTISTIC FRAMING. 231 to 237 matn St.
fiartrord, Conn. 245
COLT'S REVOLVERS HAVE BEEN ADOPTED BY THE UNITED STATES ARMY AND NAVY, AND ARE
- ~
THE BEST COLT'S NEW POCKET
32 CALIBRE.
Coifs Hammerless Guns -
AND
Lightning Magazine Rifles TAKE THE LEAD
Colt's
Pat~nt rir~=Jirms
man'f'S
HARTFORD, CONN.
co.
@...s.
;HE PLIMPTON
MFG. Co.
HARTFORD, CONN.
€nU¢10J)¢S: : Printing: : :
Blank=Books €nsrautns :
" €ng1"a\7ed ln\7itations FOR ALL SOCIAL : : OCCASIONS : :
€~ecuted
in a 8upe.1"i01" j\iannel"
@
~~~~~
252, 254, and 256 PEARL STREET
HIGH ART FURNITURE AT FAIR PRICES.
es
l
tJA.T'S OU~ STUDY. We're sf6clel)fs of fl;e f6rl)if6re W€ l;aV€ o6r lesSOI) wdl.
lsl)'f if a pleas6re to l;ave at yo6r dbo\1\) a sfoel<; wifl;o6f limif-s6el; as o6rs, eoveril)g S€V€1) great floors.
We're ba.sy all ±be ±iil)e.
C. C. FULLER & CO.,
Wba± do yoU. 'spose is ±be reasol)?
14=16 Ford St.,
HARTFORD.
ESTABLISHED 1818.
BROOKS BROTHERS, NEW YORK CITY.
Broadway, corner 22d Street,
Clothing~~ and
Furnishing Goods
READY MADE AND MADE TO MEASURE
In our department of Clothing to order will be found a complete assortment of Scotch and English Suitings in " all the year round" seasonable and tropical weights, and a large variety o£ other goods, giving the fullest opportunity for selection. In recognition of a general desire for appropriate dress for Outing purposes we have given special care to the selection of all articles embraced in this class. They include Knickerbocker Suits,
Red Golfing Jackets,
Scotch hand· knit Stockings in suitable colors and designs, Golfing Caps and Gloves,
Highland Gaiters, Etc., Etc.
Our Furnishing Department contains an exceptionally rich and handsome line representing the best Foreign Makers and selected in London for t.his .season's use. WE HAVE ADDED 'J'O OUR DEPARTMENT OF READY M<\DE CLOTHING A LINE OF CLERICAL GARMENTS, SUBJECT TO THE USUAL DISCOUNT TO CLERGYMEN.
Catalogue, samples and rules for self-measure sent on application•
.I
.
I
II
THE
HARTFORD .LIFE jnS'uranc~ ~mpanp
OF HARTFORD, CONN. CHARTERED, 1866. ./
SAFETY FUND SYSTEM, 1880.
RECORD OF GAINS IN 1896.
IN INSURANCE IN FORCE. IN NU.JIJBER OF POL ICY-HOLDERS. IN SURPLUS ON POLICY-HOLDERS' ACCOUNT. IN GROSS ASSETS. I N I NCOME.
Insurance in Force, Members' Safety Funds, Paid Beneficiaries,
$92,000,000 I, 180,857 12,500,000
~ LL desirable forms of Up-to-
路" Date life policies are issued by this company.
prs contracts are replete with 路 the latest and most liberal features, and are sold at the lowest price consistent with safety.
~HE
most advantageous ' terms are offered to bright, energetic men to act as mana.gers, general, special, or local agents. Many college men are upon its staff of Held workers.
FOR INFORMATION, ADDRESS THE HOME OFFICE.
STEPHEN BALL, Secretary. R. B. PARKER, President. GEORGE R. McCHESNEY, Superintendent of Agencies.