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TRINITY COLLEGE. HIS ILLUSTRATION shows the principal building of Trinity College, 653 feet long, in the English Secular Gothic style. At right angles with it, on the south, are the observatory, the new Hall of Natural History, and the Jarvis Laboratories for Chemistry and for Physics . To the north of it are the Gymnasium, houses of the President and Professors, and Chapter Houses of the Fraternities. Below the College Campus to the east, and within three minutes' walk, is the spacious Athletic Field. In beauty of situation, healthful conditions of life, and equipment for its special work, the College
T
is not
surpass~d.
The college bas distinct courses in Arts, in Science, in Letters and Science. and in Letters. The Faculty includes eleven professors , eleven instructors , and five lecturers. Among the Elective studies within the respective courses, there is sca rcely a single important subject for which adequate provision is not made. Pro(>erly qualified candidates not desiring to pursue the whole studies of any course are allowed as Spec1al Students to pursue certain subjects, receiving certificates of satisfactory work. The Library contains 40,000 volumes . Generous contributions of the Alumni are making possible a rapid addition to its resources. A new Reference Reading Room lighted at night by electricity is open not only during the day, but also five evenings of the week. The Jarvis Chemical and Physical Laboratories have every equipment for the most advanced work. The new Hall of Natu{al History contains Biological Laboratories provided with the most modern appliance•. There are about fifty scholarships for the aid of necessitous students. The three Holland Scholarships, yielding each $6oo per annum, are awarded to the three best students in the three lower classes respectively. The Russell Graduate Fellowship of $400 is awarded biennially In the interest of higher graduate study. Prizes to the amount of $soo are also awarded to undergraduates for s uccess in
the work of the Yarious departments. Two examinations for admission are held at the College in each year, the first in the week preceding the Annual Commencement, viz.: June 21-23, and th e second in September, immediately before the beginning of the Christmas Term, September 17-20. For Catalogues, Examination Papers, or information , apply to the President or to the Secretary of the Faculty.
iii
OUR
IMPRINT.
R. S. PECK & CO. Makers of the "OwL ANNUAL" and " TRINITY Ivv."
Designers, Engravers, Printers, Binders.
26 and 28 High Street, Hartford, Conn.
OFFICE ON GROUND FLOOR. iv
THE IVY
As a little sprig of "Ivy," Planted by the College wall, Ever reaches out its tendrils, Till, at length, it covers all; So thy spirit, Alma Mater, P l anted once within our hearts, With its roots of old traditions, vVhich the years gone by impart, n.eaches to ou1路 50Uls its creepers, Tendrils formed of love for thee B inding us to thee foreverLo,路ed :1nd loving T rinity . W. S. T.
.....
,,
---.
DEDlCfiTED TO
THE HON. JOSEPH BUFFINGTON, LL.D. Of THe CLJ\SS Of 1575. BY THE
1903 IVY BOfiRD.
I
.. I
Managing Editors
HENRY Lo rs GooLov~:: 1\JEYER. l\[issou r i EDMUND RA \\' FO IW Tuo:\1.\S, Pennsylvania
Literary Editor
\ i\TM,TER SuTER TR U ~IR U LL, Illinois
Associate Editors
PniLir SAFFORD CL.\RKE, New J e r sey RJcH .\RD RTII UR EDW .\RD , Connecticut KARL HERBERT FENNI G, Washington , D. C. ARTH UR CHADWELL SHORT, Missouri
EDITORIAL.
I
N days gone by, when Shakespeare repeated his own lines it was the duty of a mnse or herald to appear at the beginning of a performance and explain to the audience the drama which was to be given. So this is not an editorial, in the usual sense, but merely a few words of greeting and explanation which the compilers of the book take this chance of expressing. Greeting to you who planted the Ivy; to you, our College mates, who with us have watched it grow, and to you, yet to come, for whom its future leaves hall spring. Our aims are to show the public something of our inner College life; to remind the Alumni of things past and to show them that the Trinity spirit and love for our Alma Mater, which bind them to us is steadily growing with the years ; and, lastly, to give the undergraduates a record of the College year upon which they can rely and to which they can turn for reference. We express our sincerest thanks to those whose literary or artistic ability has aided us in the production of this annual.
9
Trinity College, Hz..rtford, Conn.
HIS college was charte r ed by th e Sta t e of Conn ec ti c ut in 1823. Its first class was graduated in 1827. It was found ed by Episcop a li a ns under the leadership of the Right R ev. Thomas C hurc h Brownell, a nd has been fostered espec ially by m e mbe rs of th a t communi o n, but it is governed by a self-perpetuating Board of Trus t ees not unde 1· ecc les ias ti cal control. Whil e attach ed to the inte1·ests of its church, it is not sectarian. It h as included a mong its stude nts m e n of every faith . It is a g e n e rously eq uipped secular institution, r e ligiou s in sp irit and motives, but not ecclesiasti cal. It gives its advantages to a ll properly qualified candidates, irrespec tive of r eligious affHiations. Th e corps of instru ction con s ists of tw elve professors, fi ve lectu,·e,·s, eight instructors and a librarian .
T
Courses of Instruction The colleg e offers four cou!·ses of instruct ion , viz.: I . A Course in A 1·ts. II. A Cour e in L ett e rs a nd Science. III. A Course in Science. IV. A Course in L etters. Th e courses exte nd over four years. Students completing the course in Arts r ece ive the degr ee of Bachelor of Arts. Students compl eting the Co u1·se in Letter:> and Scien ce or the Course in Science r eceive the degree of Bachelor of Science, and those completing the Course in L etters r ece i\' e the degree of Bachelor of L e tters. Stude nts who do not propose to pur·sue a ll the studies of a ny of th e r egular cours es may be permitted, und e r the name of specia·l s tud e nts , to atte nd a ny class in su c h studies as, upon examination, th ey a1·e found qualified to pursue. Upon honorable dismissal, th e y are entitled to a certificate from th e President, stating the studies which they h ave pursu d. In ·ertain departments th e Coll ege offers also instruc tion for graduate students. Th e departments of instr·u ction in the !Coll ege numbe r twenty-four, in cluding e ighty-two e lective and voluntary courses.
The Principle of Instruction 'l'h e numbe i' of the teaching force, large relatively to the number of those taught, admits of a close relation between instru ctors and students. Each stude nt is held accounta bl e for his work every day, a nd r eceiv es personal e ncourage m e nt and guidance in a degree impossi bl e where the number of the taught is greater. P1·ac ti cal resear c h and laboratO I'Y m ethod s are app li ed wherever possible.
The Library Th e Col·l ege Library, numbe ring 43,000 volumes, is under the superintendence of a profession a l libraria n, who guides the s tude nts in the use of books. They have a lso at th e ir command the W a tkinson R ference Library of 50,000 volumes, the Library of the Connecticut His tm·ical Society, a nd the H artford Public Library, with its well-stocked reading rooms . IO
Le..boratories ~ Observatoey The Jarvis Physical Laboratory contains in ad dition to the lecture and apparatus rooms, a large laboratory for work in the elementary courses, a reference library and several smaller laboratories adapted and devoted to advanced work of a special character. The laboratory has a very complete equipment for work in a.JI the branc~f Physics. Special attention has been given to m a king the facilities for work in electricity as complete as possible. Th e department is provided with standard apparatus for e lec tri cal m easurem e nts, and has a workshop, steam engine and dit·ect c urrent and polyphase a lternating current generators for its special use. Th e Jarvis C hemical Laboratory is well equipped for work in general experimental and organic c hem istry, in qualitative and quantitative analysis, and in assaying and gas analysis. Th e main la boratory has desk space for thirty students working at one time. This room is devoted to work in general expe rim e ntal c hemistry and qualitative ana lysis. For work in quantitative analysis and organic ch e mistry separate laboratori es are provided and properly equ ip ped. A room set apart for assaying is flitted up with suitable furnaces and other necessary material. Th e new Hall of Natural History contai ns biological, botanical, geological and mineralogical laboratories provided with every mod e rn equipm ent. The Observatory contains a six and a half inch ref-ractor, a two and a half inch transit, a standard clock , a c hronograph, a smaller refractor, a portable transit, a sextant, and conven iences for the simpler work in astronomi cal photography. Gymnasium a7W Athletic Field A gymnasium is supplied with the b est apparatus, in the use of which the stu dents are trained by a special instru cto r. An Athletic Field on the College grounds is to be extended and perfected at an expense of $10,000, contributed by fr·iends and alumni of the College. Fellowships, Scholarships a7W Prizes The Russe ll Fellowship, yielding about $400, is awarded bie nnially to a member of the graduating class, of superior ability, who e ngages to pursue an approved course of graduate study at Trinity Coll ege or at some foreign university. The Holland Sc hol a rships, each having an annual value of $600, are awarded to the students attaining the highes t rank in the Junior, Sophomore and Freshman classes t·espectlvely. Prizes of the aggregate value of $490 are award ed in the several departments. Expenses The amount of the Treasurer's bi.Jls each year varies from $177.50 to $242.50. Board can be obtained at $3.50 a week and upw ards, making the cost of board for thirty-seven weeks at the lowest rate $129.50. The amount of the Treasurer's bills can be reduced to hold e rs of beneficiary scholat·ships of whLch there are more than fifty. Situation The buildings of th e co ll ege are situated on a site commanding beautiful views in the southern part of H ar tford, Itse lf one of the most beautiful c iti es of ew England. The largest of the buildings, more than 600 f eet in length, inte nd ed to form th e west side of a great quadrangle, is of stone in the .:English secular gothic style, and is one of the most notable collegiate buildings of t h e country. Th e J a rvis Laboratories. the Hall of Natural History and the Gymnasium, are tasteful and co mmodious structures of brick. ·Six of th e college fraternities have special chapter houses. For catalogues apply to the President or to the Secretary of the Faculty. II
•
1901 Sept. Oct. Nov.
Thursday Saturday Friday 27 Wednesday 29 Friday
Dec.
20
26 26
Christmas Term begins. Stated Meeting of the Corporation. All Saints' Day. Thanksgiving Recess begins at I P. M. Thanksgiving Recess ends at 2 P. M. Christmas Recess begins at 4 P. M.
1902 Jan.
6 23
Feb.
I
12 22
Monday Thursday Saturday
Christmas Recess ends at 5路45 P. M. Christmas Examinations begin. Christmas Examinations end. Trinity Term begins. Toucey Scholar appointed. Wednesday Ash-Wednesday. Washington's Birthday. Oratorical Prize Contest. Saturday 12
March 26 April 7 26 May I 2 3
"
8 IO I8 22 25 30
June
II
"
20
"
22 23
24 25
Wednesday Easter Recess begins at 4 P. M. Monday Easter Recess ends at 5路45 P. M. Saturday Stated Meeting of the Corporation. Thursday Last day for receiving essays for the Chemical Prizes . Friday Last day for receiving essays for the Tuttle Prize. Saturday Last day for receiving essays for the Douglas and Metaphysical Prizes, and for the Prizes in History and Political Science . Greek Prize Examination. Thursday Ascension Day . Saturday Examination for the Mathematical Prizes . Sunda Whitsunday. Thu.sday Prize Version Declamation. Sunday Trinity Sunday . Friday Memorial Day. Wednesday Trinity Examinations begin. Friday Trinity Examinations end. Annual Meeting of the Board of Fellows (evening). Sunday Baccalaureate Sermon. Monday Senior and Junior Standing published. Award of Prizes. Class Day. Stated Meeting of the Corporation (evening). Stated Meeting of the Corporation and Annual Meeting Tuesday of the Association of the Alumni. Wednesday Seventy-sixth Commenr.ement. Trinity Vacation begins.
June
26 Thursday 27 Friday 28 Saturday
Examinations for Adn1ission begin. Examinations for Admission. Examinations for Admission.
Sept.
22 Monday 25 Thursday 25 Saturday 23 Tuesday
Examinations for Admission begin. Christmas Term begins at 5路45 P. 1\f. Stated Meeting of the Corporation. Christmas Recess begins at I P.M.
Oct. Dec.
Senatus Academicus
Visitors THE Rr. REV. THOMAS MARCH CLARK, D .D ., LL.D. THE RT. REv. WILLIAM WooDR FF NILES, D.D., LL.D. THE Rr. REv. HENRY CaDMAN PoTTER, D.D. , LL.D. , D.C.L.
Corporation
t * THE REv. THE PRESIDENT oF THE CoLLEGE ex officio PRESIDENT Hartford THE REV. GEORGE H . CLARK, D .D . Hartford * CHARLES E . GRAVES, M .A. , Treasurer New Haven THE Rr. REv. WILLIAM W. NILES, D .D., LL.D., D.C.L.Con cord , N. H . *i THE HoN. WILLIAM HAMERSLEY , LL.D. Hartford i L uKE A. LoCK WOOD, M .A. Riverside, Conn *i TIIE REv. FRA CIS GooDWI , M.A. Hartford WILLIAM E. CuRTIS, M.A. New York J. PIERPONT MoRGAN, Esq. New York JoHN H. S. Q u iCK, M.A. Chicago * JACOB L. GREENE, M .A., Secretm路y Hartford t THE REv. WILLIAM H . VmBERT, D.D. New York t SYDNEY G. FISHER, L.H.D. Philadelphia ':' }AMES J. GooDWIN, Esq. Hartford \VrLLIAM J. BOARDMAN, LL.B. Washington '~ P. HENRY WooDW ARD, M.A. Hartfo rd t WILLIAM S . CoGSWELL, M.A. Jamaica, K Y. THE RT. R E\'. CHAUNCEY B. BREWSTER, D.D. Hartfo rd ':' V\'jLLIA?-.1 C. SKr 'NER, M.A. Hartford t THE Ho . JosEPH BuFFINGTO , LL.D. Pittsburg, Pa. AMBROSE SPENCER MuRRAY, ]R., M.A. New York *
These 1neJnbers of the Corporation form the Executive Committee.
t Elected by the Alumni.
+These members of the Corporation constitute the Committee on Hono rary Degrees.
14
THE REv. GEORGE WrLLIA:IISON SMITH, D.D. LL.D. , rrs Vernon St. PRESIDENT; and H a bart Professor of lvf etaphysics. (Office 13 Seabury Hall.)
T HE REV. TIWl\L\S RuGGELS PYNCIION, D .D .. LL.D. rs Bmwnell Professor of Moral Philosophy
eabury Hall.
Professo1' of the Latin Langttage and Literature. Trm REv. FL.WEL SwEETEN L UTHER, PH .D., Trinity r Columbia St. Seabury Professor of Jl.1 athe71latics and A strono111y, and Secretary THE REv. HENRY FEI{GUSO , :.LA., LL.D 123 Vernon St. Northam Professo1' of History aud Political Scie11ce CHARLES FREDERICK JoH soN, 'LA. , L.H.D. Professor of English Literature. THE REv. JoHN }AMES McCooK, M.A. P1'ofessor of M adem Languages. W ILLIAM LrsPENARD Ronn PH.D., Berlin P1'ofessor of Physics. .
69
Vernon St.
396 Main St. I r8 Vernon St.
R oBERT BAIRD Rrr.Gs, PH.D., Gi:ittingen 35 For est St. Scovill Professor of Chemistry and Natural Science, and Registrar :路: , WINFORD RonERT MARTIN, LL.B., PH.D., T bingen 21 J arvis Hall Professor of Oriental and Modern Languages.
IS
65 Vernon St.
FRANK CoLE BABBITT, PH.D., Harvard
Professor of Greek Language and Literature. (HARLE LINCOLN
Pn.D., Leipzig
EDWARDS,
Wethersfield Ave.
27
f. Pierpont M o1·ga11 Professor of ]\at ural History. Jarvis Hall.
22
THE REV. CHARLES HARRIS HAYES, M.A.
Associate Professor of Philosophy 4 Trinity St.
HERBERT MULLER HoPKl rs PH.D., Harvard
Instructo1· in chm·ge of the Department of Latin CHARLES CoFFING BEACH, M.D.
199
fain St.
Lectnrer on Hygieue \iVILLIAM DE ISOr MoRGAN, 1.A., M.D.
Io8 Farmington Ave.
Lecturer on Anatomy a11d Physiology SYDNEY GEORGE FrsHER, L.H.D
l!
Philadelphia.
turer on
LllW
FREDERIC RoBERTSON HoNEY, PH.B.
ew Haven.
Instrnctor in Dmwiug and Descripti'i.·e Geomet1")' THE REv. JoEL FooTE BI ' GHAM, D.D., L.H.D.
484 Farmington Ave.
Le-c turer on Italian Literature
86 Gillett St.
\VALDO SELDEN PRATT, 1\I.A., Mus.D.
Instructo1· in Elocution Oyster Bay, L. I.
WILLIAM HARRY CHICHELE PYNCHON, M.A.
Lectnrer in Geology GEoRGE PENDLETON W ATK1N:-, B.A.
4 Northam Towers.
Assistant in the Department of History a11d Political Science HAROLD HuNTINGTON RuDD, B.A.
19 Jarvis Hall.
Assista11t in Physics KARL WILHELM GENTHE, PH.D.
20
Jarvis Hall.
Instrnctor in N atnral His tory 40 Jarvis Hall.
WILLIAM NEWNHAM CARLTON
Librarian and Assistant in English
55 Garden St.
GEORGE BERNHARDT VELTE
Instntcto1· in the Gymnasium JoHN BuTLER McCooK, B.S., M.D.
396 Main St.
Medical Director. The stated meetings of the Faculty are held Monday mornings at 10 o'clock.
16
Board of Fellows P~ESIDENT
THE PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
e-r officio
SENIOR FELLOWS
AMBROSE SPENCER MURRAY, JR., EDWARD MA
SHELD SC UDDER,
M.A.
LA., LL.B.
FRANKLIN HAMILTON FowLER, l\I.A. The Rev. LuciUs W A TERM A , D.D. FREDERICK EvEREST HAIGHT, PH.D . wALTER STANLEY SCHUTZ, M.A. JUNIOR FELLOWS
PERCY Sur ~LEY BRYANT, M.A. FRANK ELISHA JoHNSON, M.A. The Rev. Jor-IN TAYLOR H uNTINGTON, M.A. The Rev.
]oH , ]AMES McCooK, M.A.
GEORGE EMERSON BEERS, M.A ., LL.B. The Rev. FREDERICK WILLIA;\f HARRIMAN, M.A.
Association of the Alumni GEORGE LEwis CooK, M.A., LL.B. FREDERICK EvEREST HAIGHT, PH.D. DAVID VAN SCHAACK, B.A. FRANK ELISHA JoHNSON, M.A.
President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer
Standing Committee THE PRESIDENT
GEORGE HENRY SEYMS, M.A.
The TREASURER HowARD CooK VIBBERT, The REv. SAMUEL HART, D.D.
17
M.A.
New England Association of Alumni Officers, 1902
President A. LocKwooD,
LuKE
'ss
Vice-President
w . c.
SKINNER, '76
Secretary F.
w.
Treasurer
HARRIMAN, '72
P. S. BRYANT, '7o
E :vecutive Committee DR.
w.
D. MORGAN, )2
REV. S. HART, D.D .,'66
New York Association of Alumni Officers, 1902
Presideut T. MASON, '8r
ALEXANDER
/
Vice-Presidents
D . l\1AITL.\ND ARMSTROKG, '58 WILLIAM RoBERT MowE, '70
EoG .\R CIL\HLES BEECROFT, '97 CLEVELAND CADY, '6o
J.
Secretary FREDERJCK EvEREST HAIGHT, '87
Treasurer VvrLLIAM SnMPsoN HuBBARD, M.D.
Executive Committee LUKE VINCENT LocKWOOD, "93, Chairman 1\ l uRRAY HART CoGGESHALL, '96 GEORGE NEWELL HAMLlN,'91 AR CHIBALD MoRRISON LANGFORD, '97 GEORGE EDWARD CoGSWELL, '97
Philadelphia Association of Alumni Officers, 1901
J.
President EwiNG MEARs, M.D.,
'ss
Vice-President WILLIAM DRAYTON, '7I
S ec1'eta1'Y SIDNEY G . FISHER, '79, 328Chestnut Street, Philadelphia
Execntive C 0111111 ittee H. GoRDoN McCouGH, ' 75
SYDNEY G. FISHER, '79 Il)
•
Pittsburg Association: of Alumni Officers, 1901
President
'75
l-ION. ]OSEPII BUFFINGTON,
c.
GEORGE
A.
Vice-President BURGWIN,
P . BuRG\\' IN, '82
Secretary
'72 W.
M.
Executive Co 11L11tittee R. BLAIR, '75 HoN.
K . KoSTER,
JosEPH B uFFINGTON,
'87
'75
Alumni Association for the District of Columbia and Vicinity Officers, 1901
President
E.
M.
rst Vice-President 2nd Vice-Preside11t GALLAUDET, '59 GEo. A. WooowARD, 'ss WM. FELL JoH soN, '66 Secretary Treasurer s. HERBERT GmsY, '8s REV. J. W. CLARK, '63
California Asso iation of Alumni Officers, 1901
President
D.D.,
RT. REv. W . F. N:I.CHOLS,
REv.
F.
'7o
Secretary and Treasurer (now of Tacoma, Wash).
H. CHURCH
Boston Association of Alumni Officers , 1901 REv.
President E. T. S ULLIVAN, '89 Vice-Presidents
W. C.
BROCKLESBY,
'69
].
H. GooDSI'EED,
'66
REv. WILLI AM PRESSEY, '90
Secretary
C. C.
BARTON,
Treasurer
'93
HonTON G. IDE,
'94
Detroit Association of Alumni Officers, 1901
Preside11.t T. MILLER, '87
SIDNEY
C.
Vice-P1路esident '86
Secretary A. K. GAGE, '96
LOVERIDGE,
19
'Ne~th
the Elms
'Neath the elms of our old Trinity, 'Neath the elms of our old Trinity, No more shall "~ m eet. Our classmates to gt路eet, 'Neath the elms of our old Trinity. CHORUS. 'Neath the elms of ou路r old Trinity, 'Neath the elms of our o.Jd Trinity, Oh , it's seldom we'll meet in the moonlight so sweet, 'Neath the elms of our old Trinity. On the hills of our old Trinity, In the halls of out路 old Trinity, There is right merry cheer. There are friends tru e and dear, In the halls of our old Trinity. College days are from care and sorrow free, And oft will we seek in memory The days that are past, Far too joyous to last, 'Neath th e elms of our old Trinity. Then we'll sing to our old Trinity, To our dear old Alma Mater, Trinity, We're toge ther to-day, And to-morrow away, Far away from our old Trinity. -:f. H. K. BURGWIN, '77 20
College Colors DARK BLuE AND OLD GoLD.
College Yell Rah-Rah-Rah!
Trinity!
Boom! Rah, Boom! Rah, Trinity!
21
Gradu~te
Students
NAME
RESIDENCE
John Kay Clement, B.S., 1900 H. E. Russell, Fellow.
Karl Wilhelm Genthe, Ph.D., Leipzig Instruc tor in Natural History.
Woolsey McAlpine Johnson, B. A., 1898 Edward
Jarvi~
ROOM
Sunbm-y, Pa. Gott'gen Germ'ny.
King Ma?On, B.A., 1901
Hartford Hartford
20
J. H.
69 Vernon
Suffield
St.
Suffield
Victor Forrest Morgan, B.S., 1899
Hartford,
Harold Huntington Rudel, B.A., 1901
Knoxville, Ill. 19 J. H.
Assistant in Physics.
227
Sig'ney
t.
Lewis A. Storrs, B.A., Yale r889
Hartford, 36o Farm. Ave.
Charles Hathorn Wheeler, B. A., 190I
Clinton, N. Y.
22
12
J. H.
Senior Class
1902 CLASS MOTTO
CLAss CoLoRs
vuu 7rovo<; vcnepov v CK17
CRIMSON AND GRAy
Cl~ss
Yell
Hnllabaltoo, hooray, hooray! Whoop it up for the Crimson and Gray/ Rah-ray-ri-roo, Trinity, Trinity, 'o2!
Officers CHRIST~fAS TERM
R. WHITE C. C. PECK H.
w. P. BENTLEY w . P. BENTLEY E. J. CLEVELAND
TRINITY T ERM
President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Chronicle?'
• 23
J.
HENDERSON
w . P.
BE TLEY
K. P. MORBA K. P. MoRnA E . J. CLEVELAND
History
F
OUR years looked at in prospect seem a long period; in retrospect, an
amazingly short time. Members of 1902 realize only too well that they are soon to become members of the body of the alumni. New scenes, new problems, new associations will take the place of the many things which have inle l'ested us during our college days.
'l'he Sen.iors feel that theirs has been an honorable record. We have done ou r best to uphold the good name of 'l'rinity, whether in a scholastic, athletic or social way. W e have endeavored to make the term, " Trinity man," synonymous with gentleman. As Freshmen our exuberant spirits often got the better of us, but we were sorry to have caused the suspension of the entire Sophomore class until we realized that the "disgrace" so sUghtly affected that august body, that they had the mistaken idea that they were enjoying a six weeks' vacation. Thus good may come out of evil. The following year we took in hand the underclass discipline, forgetting in the customary way our own needs in that direction: Pipes took the place of cigarettes, and we fully understood how important a part of Trinity College we were. The growth of the fe eling of d ignity and importance was not so great when we became Juniors as it had been the previous year. This was the time that we real ly used our brains by the study of ethics and the compilation of the IVY. Now we are Se< iors! We have reached the goal long sought for! Take our word for it, juniors, sophomores, and freshmen, this sublime state which you aspire to is not altogether ideal; it is too near the end of college life. During our stay at Tr.inity many changes have taken place.
The Natural
History building has been erected, and the library enlarged and made efficient under the present able management. Two fraternities have recently acquired handsome new homes which add greatly to the attractiveness of the college colony. There seems to be no reason why there should not be in a few years a "Double Trinity." It is with great regret that we chronicle the fact that with the departure of 1902, one of Trinity's best instructors also leaves, Dr. WioJiiam Lispenard Robb, a man for whom we have the greatest respect and affection. We wish Professor Robb the
success in his new field which the several members of the class hope for in their new undertakings.
E. J. C.
Seniors NAME
RESIDENCE
ROOM
Phiijp Lockwood Barton, A>楼, Framingham, Mass., 12 J. H. Baseball Team (r, 2, 4) ; Sophomore Dining Club ; Assistant Manager of Track Team (3 ); Executive Committee N. E. I. A. A. (3); rgo2 Junior Promenade Committee; German Club (4); Senior Honorary Society. William Perry Bentley, AKE, <I>BK, Plainville, 27 J. H. Alumni English Prize (3); First History Prize (3); Chemical Prize (3); Holland Prize Scholarship (3); I vy Board (3). Edmund Janes Cleveland, Jr. ,
Hartford,
Jewett Cole, IKA, l:AE, Business Manager rgo2 Ivy.
Chester, Ill.
Saxon Cole, IKA, l:AE,
191
Chester, Ill.,
Sigourney St. SN. T. SN. T.
Waterbury. Conn., 33 J . H. Joseph Baird Crane, AXP, Footbs,ll Team (2, 4); Trac k Team (3); Basketball T eam (2, 3, 4); Captain Basketball Team (4). Robert Burton Gooden, AXP, <I>BK, Santa Barbara, Cal., Glee Club (r, 2, 3, 4); First Goodwin Greek Prize .
19
N . T.
Edward Bruce Goodrich, 'l'T, Littleton, N.H., rs N. T. Sophomore Dining Club; rgo2 Junior Promenade Committee ; President Class (3) rst. term; German Club (4); Manager Basketball Team ( 4); President Athletic Association (4); President N. E. I. B. B. A. ; President Missionary Society (4). Edward Goodridge, Jr., 'l'T, Exeter, N. H., r6 S. H . Baseball T eam (1, 2, 3, 4); Captain Baseball Team (4); Sophomore Dining Club; German Club ( 2, 3, 4); 1902 Junior Promenade Committee ; Senior Honorary Society. James Henderson, AXP, Somerville, Mass., 4J路 H. Football Tea m ( r, 2, 3, 4); Captain Football Team (4); Baseball Team ( r, :2 , 3, 4); Glee Club (3); Pre~ident Class (4) 2nd. term; Senior Honorary Society; Basketball Team (r, 2, 3, 4); Track Team (3, 4). Fred Augustus Higg inbotham, AXP,
Waltham, Mass.,
4J路 H.
Charles Hawley Hill, IKA, Hiawatha, Kas., 路 roN. T. Mandolin Club ( 2, 3, 4 ); Banjo Club (2, 3, 4 ); Football Team (2, 3, 4); German Club (3, 4); Sophomore Dining Club; Track Team (3); Se nior Honorary Society.
NAME
RESIDENCE
ROOM
George Herbert Holden, .AXP, Tablet Board (4): Glee Club (4).
Huntington , N.Y.,
Harry Leslie Howe, 4>1'11., Baske tball Team (4) .
Thompsonville,
I7 N. T.
So. Manchester,
So. M.
William Stewart Hyde, 4>1'11., Jacob Alexander Laubenstein, 4>1'11., 1902 Ivy Board.
Collinsville,
Edward Henry Lorenz, .AXP, <PBK, Hartford, Track Team (2, 3, 4); First Mackay-Smith Prize.
r
32
J.
J.
H.
H.
96 Garden St.
Anson Theodore McCook, 'l''l', <I?BK, Hartford, 396 Main St. Mandolin Club ( r , 2, 3); Hartford Admittitur Prize (r); Holland Prize Scholarship (r, 2); Greek Metrical Ve rsion Prize ( 2) ; German Club l4); Alumni English Prize (4); Valedictorian. Edmund Sawyer Merriam, 'l'T, Hartford, 314 Collins St. President Class (r) rst. t e rm ; Baske tball Team ( r , 2, 3); Track Team; Strength Record (r , 2, 3, 4); Second Goodwin Greek Prize (r); Second Chemical Prize (3). Karl 路 Philip Morba, .AXP. <I'>BK, Hartford. 32 Capitol Ave. Second Goodwin Greek Prize; Alumni English Prize; Salutatorian. Carlos Curtis Peck , IKA, Bridgeport, Conn., roN . T. Sophomore Dining Club ; German Club ( 2, 3, 4); Chairman 1902 Junior Promenade Committee; Manager Baseball Team (3 ); President Tennis Association; Senior Honorary Society. Alfred Burnett Quaile, A'楼 , e w York, 8 J. H. Assistant Business Manager Dramatic Club (2); Dramatic Club (r, 2, 3) ; Art Editor 1902 Ivy. Edgar Martin Rogers, .AXP,
路washington, D. C.,
14 N . T.
Edgar Augustus Sheldon, IK A, German Club (4).
Chateaugay , N . Y.,
gN. T.
Marshall Bowyer Stewart, .AXP, <PBK, Linden, Md., 14 N. T. Toucey Scholar ; Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Leader Glee Club (4); Mandolin Club (3, 4); Leader Mandolin Club (4); Alumni English Prize (3); Secre tary and Treasurer 1902 Junior Promenade Committee. Thomas McBlain Steele, A拢1.4>, Geneva, N.Y., 42J. H. Alumni English Prize (4); Banjo Club (4): E ntered from Hobart (4) ; Whitlock Prize (4). Joseph Pembe rton Taylor, 'l'T, Plainfield, N.J., Sophomore Dining Club; German Club (4).
r6 S. H.
NAME
RESIDE N C E
ROOM
Charles Edward Tuke, AXP, Philadelphia, Pa., 4 J H. Track Team ( r, 2, 3, 4); Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Football Team (2, 3, 4); 1902 Ivy Board; President Musical Organizations ( 4). John White Walker, AXP, Hartford, President of Class ( 3) 2nd. t erm; Track Team (3 ) .
3 J . H.
Richard Nicks Weibel, All<f>, Riverhead, L . I., 36 J . H. Sophomore Dining Clnh; Preside nt Class ( 2) rst term; German Club (3, 4); rgo2 Jnnior Promenade Committee ; Manager Track Team ( 4 ); College Marshal ; Senior Honorary Society . Willia m Hardin Wheeler, 'YT, Little Fall s , N. Y., rs N . T. German Club ( 3, 4) ; Mandolin Club ( r, 2, 3, 4); Banjo Club ( 3, 4) ; President Cl ass (2 ) 2nd. term ; Manag ing Editor 1902 Ivy; Assistant Manager Footba ll Team (3) ; Man ager Football Team (4 ); Manag er Musical Organizations (4); Senio r Honorary Society ; Assist an t Manager Baseball Tea m ( 2). Howard Russell White, All<f>, Michigan City , Ind. , 36 J. H . Sophomore Dining Club; Lite rary E ditor 1902 Ivy; President of Class (4) rst. term.
Former Membe.-s
James Whiting Allen, Harold Simeon Backus, <l>rA, Herbert Stanley Bradfield, AA<I>, Nathaniel Julius Cable, AKE, Edwin Schively Carson, AXP, William Lawrence Carter, Fred Raymond Clapp, AA<I>, Samuel Walden Cooke, 'i''l', John Henry Maginnis, A-짜, Charles Heald Lane, Anthony Toomer Porter, Jr.,_IKA, Otis Jewett Story, IKA, . Theophilus Minton Syphax, AXP, Arthur Henry Weed, AKE, Albert Lincoln Wyman, .
Richfield Springs, N.Y. Andover, Conn. Buffalo, N. Y. New Haven, Conn. Chestnut Hill, Pa. Hartford, Conn. Albion, Ind. Stamford, Conn. New Orleans, La. Freeport, Ills. Charleston, S. C. Chillicothe, 0. Philadelphia, Pa. Claremont, N.H. Hartford, Conn.
Junior Class
1903 CLASS COLORS
CLASS MOTTO
OLIVE GREEN AND WHITE
NON lNSTRENUI LABORAMUS
Cl~ss
Yell
Bim-boom-brama-kootra, Hip-ki-dra, Hullabaloo-ltullabaloo Ralt-ralt-rah, Ricktty-ax t-coax-coax, Ricktty-ax e-coax -coa:x, Ralt-ralt-ree, rah-ralt-ree, '.Trinity I90.J /
Officers TRINITY TERM
CHRISTMAS TERM
E. c. A. c.
THOl\IAS
c. c.
GOLDEN
H. C. GOLDEN
Prtsidmt Via-Prtsidtnt
w. w.
Secrttary Trtasurer
H.
Chronicler
R. H. HUTCHINSON
G.
R.
D.
RANKIN
LARCHER LARCHER H. H u TCHINSON
H.
SHORT
GOLDEN
"'THE
History of Class of 1903 eJ
more we live, more brief appear our life's succeeding stages," says Campbell m his "River of Life," and we are in a position to feel, perhaps for the first time, the impressive truth of his words. Each year of th·e college cours e possesses distinct characteristi cs more or less pleasing in their nature.
In fact som e of them are felt at times to be agreeable in versely as their distance from the point of application. For instance, when a pitcher of ice water is pour·ed down the inverted trouser leg of one who cannot see why he shou ld not smoke a pipe on the walk. But twelve months brings a c h ange, and next year it is the victim who hold s the pitcher, and he is thus enabled to view his sunoundings from a more elevated standpoint. So it is a ll through the sophomore year; having learned to obey, the second year men are q ualified to exercise control , and they enjoy a sphere of distinct usefulness in the coll ege wor·ld . How much s horter seem the terms now! Midyear's past, baseball here, and bef01·e he h as fully awak ened to the fact the man of two college winters finds himself permitted to don the dignified mien of an upper classman. He leaves college in Jun e to be gone three months. During this time he com es to a more comp lete understanding of his position in coll ege. and the universe i:r general; a very distinct change has unconsciously been wrought within him which i~ noticeable in the mann e r of taking his seat in c h apel for the first time after his return. I think every graduate will concede his junior year to hav e been the fullest and most completely satisfactory of the four that constituted the joyous period of his college existence. To us who are just comp let ing our third year it is, of course, impossible to describe the feelings of those in the senior class, but it is easy to appreciate their emotions as they see the days go quickly by, and the time of their departure drawing near. We men of Naughty-'.rhree shall have the mutual pleasure of assoc iation for yet another year, though it is the shortest of them a ll , and feel open to congratulation on this fact above all else. At the end of that time will co m e the consummat ion of our youth, and we may say in the words of Browning, " Thence shall I pass, approved A man, for aye r emoved, From the developed brute; a god though in the germ." Th e crit ical point in our history as a class has long si nce been safely passed. We are just in the prime of life, o to speak, and as we stop for· a few moments of r etrospective contemp lation, a quiet glow of satisfaction pervades our being. The train of memory carries us swiftly backward. EYents of the months just past shine brightly, adding their lustre to the achi evements of our earlier days, until we see as clearly as if it happened yesterday our fir·st gr·eat struggle. It was that same contest and final victor·y in maintaining our numer·als on the gymnasium roof, at risk of life and limb for two full hours that taught u s the great truth; in union their is strength . How well that lesson was lear·ned our subsequent history illustrates. Th e tale of Naughty-Three's freshman banquet will make the hearts of n ew men beat faster for years to come. Trinity's track team found an elixir of life in the men who wtm for us the und e r c lass meet, and from our ranks are chosen the corn er stones of other· athletic structures. The success of the Junior Promenade exemplifies the social attainments of Nineteen Hundred and Three, and her stt·ong representation on the musical and literary organizations bear witness to the earnest fulfillment of the sentiment expressed in her motto, "non instrenui laboramus." R. H . H.
Juniors ROOM
RESIDEKCE
NAME
6J. H.
Boston, Mass.,
Arthur Muirson Bellamy, -Y'l', First Mackay-Smith Prize.
Percival Hawtrey Brad in, At.<!>, Hartford, 30 J. H . Football Team (z); Baseball Team (z ) ; Sophomore Dining Club; 1903 Junior Promenade Committee. Henry Day Brigham, t.-Y, East Orange, N.J., Baseball Team ( r, 2, 3) ; Sophomore Dining Club; President of Class ( 2) znd . term; German Club (3); Represe ntative N. E. I. Tennis Association; Secretary and Treasurer Junior Promenade Committee; College Tennis Champion ( 2) .
II
J. H.
Charles Erastus Bruce, Jr., t.-¥, Elmira, N.Y., Sophomore Dining Club; Junior Promenade Committee ; Football Team (3); Glee Club ( 3 ) .
II
J. H .
5 N. T.
Brooklyn, N. Y.,
Henry Bernard Carpenter, -Y'l', Mandolin Club ( 2, 3) ; Banjo Club (3).
Philip Safford Clarke, AXP, Point Pleasant, N . J., 28 J. H. Tablet Board (2, 3 ); Managing Editor Trinity Tablet ( 3); Mando lin Club (2); Glee Club (3 ) ; 1903 Ivy Board. Ora Wilfred Craig, AXP,
Ashland, N . H.,
r N. T.
Richard Arthur Edwards, Ll.KE , 1903 Ivy Board.
Portland,
Clark Thompson Falknor, <J>rt. , Second Mackay .Smitb Pri ze ( 2) .
Hartford,
Karl Herbert Fenning, <l>l'.£1., 1903 Ivy Board .
\Vashington, D. C .,
James Philip Garvin, -Y'l', Football Team ( 3) .
Sanborndlle, N . H .,
39 J . H.
502
Hfd. Fire Blcl. 39
J.
H.
5 NT .
Kittanning , Pa., 18 S. H. Harry Cliford Golden, -Y'l', Holland Prize Scholarship ( r , 2); S econd Goodwin Greek Prize (r); Alumni English Prize ( 3 ). Suffield,
Hubert Dana Goodale, <Prt., ·
Suffield .
Re eve Huntington Hutchinson, Ll.-Y, Highland Park, Ill. , 7J H. Track Team (2); Tablet Boa rd (3); German Club (3); Sophomore DiniugCluh. 31
NAME
R ESIDE NCE
llOOM
Jarvis McAlpine Johnson , 'i'T, Hartford, 69 Vernon St. Football Team (r, 2, 3 ); Track Team (2); Sophomore Dining Club; German Club (3 ). William Larchar, Jr., 'i'T, Providence, R . I. 41 J. H. Sophomore Dining Club; Mandolin Club ( r) ; Banjo Club ( r, 2, 3); Leader Banjo Club (3); Assistant Manager Musical Club (2, 3); Assistant Manager Track Team (3); Tablet Board (3). Henry Louis Godlove Meyer, A'楼, St. Louis, Mo., 8 J H. Football T eam (r, 2, 3 ); Class President ( 1) 2nd. term; Sophomore Dining Club; Managing Editor 1903 Ivy. Samuel St. John Morga n, 'i'T, Hartford, 19 J. H. Assistant Manager Baseball Team p ); Manager Baseball Team (3); Class President (2) rst. t e rm; Second Mackay-S mith Prize ( 2); Sophomore Dining Club; Hartford Admittitur Prize ( r); R e presentative N . E. I. Tennis Association (2); Junior Promenade Committee. Arthur Chadwell Short, IKA, St. Louis, Mo., 31 J. H. Sophomore Dining Club; 1903 Ivy Board; Junior Promenade Committee. Ed mund Crawford Thomas, AA<I>, Tamaqua, Pa., 27 J. H Table t Board (3); Glee Club (3); Assistant Manager Football Team (3); Manager Football Tea m <4 ); Track Team ( 2); Class President (3) 2nd. term; Alumni E nglish Pri ze (3); Managing Editor 1903 Ivy; Whitlock Prize ( 3). Theophilus Minton Syphax, AXP, Philadelphia, Pa., I I N. T . Footba ll Team (r, 2, 3); Captain Football Team (4) ; Tablet Board ( 2, 3); Business Manager Trinity Tablet ( 2); Track Te!lm (r, 3 ). Robert Wight Trenbath, AXP, Glee Club (2, 3) ; Mandolin Club (2 , 3).
Somerville , N.J.,
Hervey Boardman Vanderbogart, AXP, Troy, N.Y. , Toucey Scholar; Tablet Board ( 2, 3); Literary Editor Trinity Tablet.
28 J. H'9]路 H.
Harold Clifton Van Wee lden, AXP, Babylon , N. Y. , 33 J. H . Football Team (3) ; Basketba ll Team ( 2, 3) ; Track Team ( 2, 3); Captain Basketball Team ' 4) .
Speci~l George Douglas Rankin, 'i'T, Sayb rook Point, 17 S . H. Track Team ( 2, 3); Baseball Team ( 1 l; Captain Track Team (3); Cl ass President (3) rst. term; Sophomore Dining Club; Junior Promenade Committee; College Tennis Champion (3). Walter Slater Trumbull, 'i'T, Chicago, Ill. , 17 S. H. Track Team (2, 3 ); Sophomore Dining Club; German Club (2, 3 ); Literary Editor 1903 Ivy; Chairman Junior Promenade Commi~tee. Hartford ,
Samuel D. Lindsay, 32
6 Morris St.
Former Members
Duncan Hodge Brown, llKE,
New York, N.Y.
Stuart Harold Clapp, ll-짜, Harry Grey Cozzens, IKA, Noel Gilbert Cunningham, ll-짜, Edgar Johnson Dibble, llKE, Edward William Fothergill,
Pittsfield, Mass. Chicago, Ill. Watertown. Bethel. Hartford.
Robert Ashley Gaines, Adkins Henry, All<l>, Malcolm Appleton MacLean, AKE , Robert Carey McKean, llKE, Robert Lincoln McKeon, .Ailct>, Christopher Carson Thurber, AXP, Charles Townsend, Jr., IK.A, William Winton Tucker, .Ailct>,
West Hartford . Cambridge , Md . Minneapolis, Minn. Washington, D . C. Brooklyn, N.Y. Norwich. Elizabeth, N. Y Buffalo, N. Y.
James Rogers Veitch, <t>rll, Howard Bell Ziegler, AXP,
So. Manchester. Detroit, Mich.
33
Sophomore Class
1904 CLASs CoLons
CLAss MoTTo
T pchro<; UK a to<; K T?} ,ua
n,uuf)TaTO v
DARK BLUE i\ND WHITE
Class Yell Trinity I Trinity I rah-rah-mh, Trinity I Trinity I wah-who-wah, Boom-a-lacller, boom-a-laclur, Roar, roar, roar, Smnus popnli, '041
Officers TRINITY TERM
CHRISTMAS TERM
H. E.
Tow NSEND
\f{. B. ALLEN
R. L.
McKEoN
R. L. T. N.
McKEoN DENSLO W
President Vice-Presidc11t Secretary Treasnrer Historian
35
E. H. MADDOX P. L. LrGHTBOURN H. R. MciLVAI E H. R. MciLVAINE T. N. DENSLOW
HiJtory JIJ ACH year of our coljege course some poor fellow- some one who is look e Ll upon as a "mark"-is asked to write a " history " of the class. It is general ly understood that for the first two years this so-called " history" will cons ist of as large a mass of gaseous. boasting material as will fill one page or "Th e Ivy," interspersed with two or three facts, to give some reason for caH ing the composition " history." In othe t· words, the m a n who h as the misfortune to become a c lass "historia n " is , in r eality, expected to b e class trumpeter and the man of the two lower classes who blows his trumpet the loud e r is looked upon by all as the better " historian." Last year we aHowed a mass of con ce ntrated nonsense, mingled w ith con ceit, such as that referred to above, to go to print. We were f reshmen then. and kn ew no better ; now we are sophomores, a nd should be above such things. Wha t honor is there in r ecording how we d ef eat ed fres hm e n ; or in blowing our ow n trump et? None whatev e r ; and, therefore, we ask to b e a llowed to give ourselves up to a f ew r efl ections. As w e look into the mirror which is b efor e u s - we m ean the freshman class we see what mann e r of men we were last yeat·, a nd \YOpder how we c ould hav e b ee:1 so fresh, without knowing it. W e wonder how we co uld h ave thought so mu ch of ourselves with so littl e a ppa r e nt r eason. W e are surprised th at it did not occur to u s tiH this y ear - as it proba bly wi ll not to th e present fr eshm a n class until n ext year - that we were refe rred to in th e psa lm where it says, "All ye green things of the earth ," but some how we n ever thought of it until we looked into our mirror. Truly then we saw, "thro' a glass darkly," but now " face to face." All our faults are brought b efor e us, and we see ourselves as others saw us when we were freshm e n. Now we are sophomores. What a diffe re n ce there is in us! Ah, yes, but i.· it. r eally in us ? Is it not rathe r in the nam e by which we are known ? H ave we not turned away from our mirror a nd straightway forgotte n what m a nner C> ' men we were, a nd proba b•ly are, ex cept for th e greenness? W e a r e just as fresh, or even fr es he r , but we are not call ed so now. W e a r e, if possible, more con cei t ed than ;we we re last year, but it is not noti ced h a lf so mu ch . And in m a n y other 11·ays WI'> are just as we w er e last year. Y et the m ere fact th a t we are sophomores c h a nges us comp! e t e ly in the eyes of the coll eg e, a nd greater respect is given to us, whether we h ave improv ed since our first year or not. Yet we mus t not despair. W e have learned so m e things. We can get. a long with mu c h less study now than we could last year. Some of us h ave made rapid progress in th e art of "fussing," whil e others h ave formed a strong friend~hip 11·ith our good old fri end Bacchus. N early a ll h ave found out th at a coll ege student is never expec t €d to pay hi s bills , a nd , f earing lest some of th eir creditors should have h ea rt troubl e, rigidly k ept th e mse lv es from a ll s u ch follies. Oh, yes! W e h ave advanced! As we re fl ect on th ese things, th e fr esh spring a ir blows in upon us . a nd we think how fas t the time is app ro aching when we shall b e sophomor·~ s no longe r . Y et whatever we may be caJoled for the time, we a r e always of the ::las;; of lVOJ, and nothing . ex cep t f a ilure to do our duty. ca n m a k e u s a nything else: The n we should be unworthy of th e c la ss, and God. forbid that such should b e the case. L ~t us rather, in the tru e s pirt of 1904, do our duty an d strive that it may b e said of each one of us when we have compl e t ed our cours e, " H e was a m a n, take him for a ll in a ll , I shall not look upon his like again."
E
I
'J' . N . D .
Sophomores
NAME
RESIDENCE
Walter Best Allen Frederick Bethune Bartlett Frank Seiders Brown Morgan Hyde Buffington Stewart Harold Clapp Theodore North Denslow Edgar Johnson Dibble George Henry Heyn Philip Llewellyn Lightbourn Robert Lincoln McKeon Edward Hugh Maddox Edward James Mann Bayard Quincy Morgan William George Wherry
ROOM
Bayonne, N. f. 9 J.H. So. Manchester I4 J. H. Salmon Falls, N. H. 29 J. H. Kittauning, Pa. 23 J. H. Pittsfield, Mass. 9 J. H. Mnncie, Ind . 3I J. H. Bethel I3 J. H. Sparllill, N. Y. I8 J. H St. Georges, Bermnda 44 J. H. Brooklyn, N. Y. 30 J. H. Brooklyn, N. Y. IS J. H. Oneonta, N. Y. II N . T . Hartford 227 Sigourney St. U11ion Hill, N. J. 35 J. H.
Special Students NAME
RESIDENCE
Herbert Robinson Mcilvaine Raymond Drinckerhoff Van Tine
Philadelphia, Pa. Bayonl!e, N. f.
ROOM
43 J. H. 37 J. H.
Former Members Pau l Henry Mallet Prevost Brinton Ralph Charles Belcher Moore Mather Ingraham Rankin Winter Hamilton Everest Arthur George Humphries Abner Packard F rank Howard Ensign Robert Glenney George Franklin Seymour Moore Herman Edward Townsend
Phi ladelphia, Pa. Chatham, N. J. Saybrook Point, Ct. West Haven, Ct. New York, N. Y. Quincey, Mass. East Hartford, Ct. So. Manchester, Ct. Quincy, Ill. Washington, D . C. 37
â&#x20AC;˘
HARTFORD FROM THE COLT,EGE GROUNDS The Capitol on the fo rm er site of the College
FreJhm~n
Class
1905 CLASS MOTTO
An
OMNIA
CLASs CoLORS
P ARA'l'US
0RAr GE AND BLACK
Class Yell
•
Bricl~i
go-ax go-ax go-ax
Bricl~i
go-ax go-ax go-a:c
H ollabola all alive
T1'inity! Trinity!
'os
Officers CHRISTMAS TERM
B.
D.
c.
B. WYNKOOl'
FLYNN
R. N. R.N.
c. ].
GRAHAM GRAHAM
HARRIMAN
TRINITY TERM
President Vice-P1'esident Secretary Treasurer Clwonicler
39
c. F.
F. CLEMENT
c.
l\IEREDITH
c. w. REMSEN c. w. REMSEN c. .r. HARRIMAN
Hi.rtory
T
HIS hi story business is rather unpl easant, don't you think?
For even when
you've a lot you can boast of, as in the present instance, it isn't very nice work. goes.
Sti-ll it's got to be done, however reverse we are to blowing, so here
Nineteen hundred and five is a remarkable class, as it was in the beginning, Is now, and ever shrull be, coll ege without end. It is a large class, in response to the "Doubl e Trinity" movement, the beginning, we hope, of a steady growth.
Never-
theless, it is not size alone, but spi rit, which tells. Our pious, yet manly and athletic attitude was shown at the first.
For ow· first act as a c lass was attendan ce on
divine service; our second W!Ul participation in an athletic game, akin to the original football, but somewhat rough- on us.
The next afternoon we posted five challe nges
for a push-rush, despite the somewhat unusual removal and attempted secretion of the bulletin board. Rather to ow· disappointment, only one of these was accepted. Although we won two of the three rushes, the judges wisely gave the decision to our opponents, to prevent a "head" from intemperan.ce in victo1·y. It had the de-
•
sired effect of warding off conceit. After the rush we marched and sang awhile, and later •r esponded to the song "Give us a drink, bartender." A class is judged laJ·gely by ath letic standards. and this is our record.
We
won the Underwood C up by a large score, a lthough more competition would haYe been desirable.
Three of us played on the football team, one winn.ing his "T." Our
class team tied the Sophomores. Two of our men have played on the basketball team. We lost, of course, to the other classes, but ranked second in points scored. We won three out of five outside games, defeating Wesleyan freshmen once. At present writing, baseball and track history is making, not made; but 1905, "Ad Omnia Paratus" will do its best. In brief our musical history is: three each on the glee, mandolin and banjo clubs, one in the quartet, a piano soloist, and the substitute organist. Socia•lly we hope we are doing \\'ell. We are in modest evidence at all the fun.ctlons. We even gave a dinner, which we h ope the juniors enjoyed as much as we did. Lastly, but of no small importance, there are some fine scholars, among us, who will prove of great credit to college and class. We thank you for you r attention, and w ill endeavor to offer a much longe;:a nd proportionately more creditable list of doings each succeeding year of our course. Gentlemen, let us drink to "Trinitas et MCMV:
40
Floreant!"
C. ;r, H .
Fre.rhmen
NAME
Edwin Lathrop Baker Roger Heaton B lakeslee Harry Clayton Boyd William F rancis Bulkley Francis Georg-e Burrows Edmund Samuel Carr Charles Francis Clement Charles Henry Curry Edward Llewellyn Duffee Robert Le Roy Eaton R obert Mosley E uwing Benedict Devine Flynn Allen Reed Goodale Charl es Edward Gostenhofer Richard Niles Graham Charl es Jarvi Harriman Frederick Thomas Hill Philip T homas Ken nedy George Bartow Lewis Henry J ame Nolan John William O'Connor Charles Ham li n Pelton Cornelius Wagstaff Remsen Charl es 1\li lton Rhodes William B lair Roberts ·walter Beach Sherwood William Perry Steelman Charl es Burton Walsh Henry Lee Watson Philip Tu rn er Welles Carlile Patterson W in slow Charl es Barton 'i\T ynkoop
RESIDENCE
ROOM
Pittsburg, Pa. I6 .T. Hartford 79I Park St. U nion City, Pa. 7 . T. Alpe11a, Mich. I I . T. Sunbui"J', Pa. 6 J.H. St. J ohnsbw"y, V t. I6 . T. Sunbnry, Pa. 9 J. H. P1:ttsburg, Pa. I8 J. H. Fall River, Mass. I8 I . T. Northford 18 N. T. Peoria, II/. I9 S. H . Hartford 96 Hudson St. Suffield Suffield West Ne·w Brighton, N . Y. 6 J. H Austin, Tex. 10 J. H. Windsor ·windsor Hiawatha, Kan. 6 N. T. Hartford 83 Edwards St. Bridgeport 18 ]. H. TholllfSOnc•ille Thompsonvi ll e New Yorl?. N. 1·. 10 J. H. Jl!iddlcto<vn 31 J. H. Babylon, L. !. 38 J. H. SteubCII''i 'l'fle. 0. 44 J. H. Hart ford 3 I Town ley St. Hartford 182 Bellevue St. TV ate1·bu ry I3 ]. H. Brooldyn, N. Y. IS J. H. Ne·w Yor!?, N. Y. I6 J. H. Nor·wich 41 J. H. Hartford 488 Prospect Ave. Utica, N. Y. 38 J. H. 41
Speci~l
NAME
Students
RESIDENCE
ROOM
Howard Emory Bushnell
Hartford
r6 J. H.
James Thomas Grady
Hartford
6N.T.
Carlos Eugene Jones
Independence, Iowa
Frederic Charles Meredith
Boston, Mass.
Clement Griscom Randle
Chester, Pa.
43
J. H.
William Seward Wyman Wallace
New Y01路ll, N. Y.
20
J. H .
':'John Hart Chamberlin
Hm路tford
27 Hudson St.
tEdward Simpson Everett
So. Man chester
So. Manchester
':'Robert Ashley Gaines
West Hartford
West Hartford
*Michael Francis Owens
Hartford
*Not regularly matriculated, t Of the Connecticut League of Art Students , v. p. 57路
31 J . H.
7 N.T.
85 Hawthorne St.
Summary
Course in Arts
Cours e in Course Letters and in Science Science
Course in Letters
Special Students
Total
Seniors
19
4
6
29
Juniors
13
3
4
20
Sophomores
IS
2
Freshmen
I3
8
IS
I
I9
2
38
Special Students . Undergraduates .
6o
I7
Graduate Students
26
3
I7
I7
I7
I23 8
Total
I3I
43
Secret Fraternitie.r
I. K. A. Founded 1829
Epsilon Chapter of Delta Psi Established r8so
Phi Kappa Chapter of Alpha Delta Phi Established 1877
Alpha Chi Chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon Established 1879
Beta Beta Chapter of Psi Upsilon Established r88o
Tau Alpha Chapter of Phi Gamma Delta Established 1893
Phi Psi Chapter of Alpha Chi Rho Founded 1895
The Local Fraternity of I. K. A. FOUNDED 1829 AT TRINITY COLLEGE
47
Active Members
CARLOS CuRTIS PEcK CHARLES HA \VLEY HILL EDGAR AUGUSTUS SHELDON JEwETT CoLE SAxON CoLE ARTHUR CHADWELL SHORT FREDERICK THOMAS HILL, CARLOS EuGENE JoNES CHARLES HAMLIN PELTON
49
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President Jou N HENRY STEVENS Qu1c1.;:
Secretary a11d Treasurer C n A J{LES L uTHE R BuRNH.\~1
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Tli1ET GRAVES
WlLI ~ I.\~[ CL .\IIJORNE BROCKLI':SJ:Y \iVtLLL\~1 DE:-.;
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SI
I. K. A. Graduate Members
Abbott, C. W., '49 • Abbott. J. P., '49 Adams, G. Z., '39 • Adams, J . R ., '49 Allen, E . T., '41 And erson , A. H. W., '01 Andrews, C. M . '8~ • Anistaki, J., '37 Arvedson, A. E.. '01 • Ashe, J. B., '30 • B ackus, C. A., '52 B acon, F. S. '99 Bacon, J. W., '46 Bakewe ll , J., '59 • Barbour, J. H. , '73 Barcla y, R., '80 Bartl ett, H. P., '72 • Bayard, W. H., '41 • Bayley, J. R., '35 Beach, E. S., '83 Beach, G. W., '80 * Belden, N. M., '48 • Benton, M. F., '58 Benton, J. R., '97 • Bond, J ., ' 40 • Bondurant, W. 'E., '63 Bowman, C. W., '87 • Br·ainard, N. L., '43 • Brande r, H. M .. '45 • Bra ndt. L., '49 • Brewe r, W. L ., '38 B rinley, E. H., '49 B rinl ey, G., '01 Brinl ey, P., '47 Brocklesby, A . K. , '70 Brocklesby, J. H., '65 Brocklesby, W. C., '69 • Browell, T . S., '35 * Buchanan, J ., '53 Bull , W. M., '39 Burnham C. L. , '98 • Butler·, M. N., '44 • Caldwe ll, IC . E., '82 • Campbell, C. I., '30 Cand ee, H. S., '93
Carpe nte r , J. S., '79 Ca rp e nte r , J. T. , '88 Ca r pente r, R. H. , '81 C h ap in , D. D .. '5~ Chapin, W. M ., '74 • C h :tpman , C. R. , '47 Clapp, F., '55 C lark, A. M., ', : C lark, E . S., ' 65 C la rke, R. M ., '45 C le mont, P. W. , '68 Coggesh a ll , G . A ., '65 Cogswe ll. G. E., '97 Cogswell , W. S., '61 Collins, W. F., '93 • Comstoc k, J . C., '38 • C onyngham, C . M. , '59 • Cossit, P. S., '45 • Cowling, R. 0., '61 Cozzens, H. G., '03 • C urti s, W. E. , '43 Daves, G ., '57 Davies, W. G ., "60 • D e Forrest , G. A., '55 • D e la n cy, T. J ., '40 • Delano, F . R., '65 D e ming, W . C., '84 Dewell, F. W., '01 • D e Zeng, E. , '40 • Di c k, J. M. , '54 • Diric kso n, L. L. , '41 • Dor Eey, W. H . I. , '36 Dow nes, L. T., '48 • Driggs, T. I., '48 • Dye r·, A ., '70 Ellis, G . W., '94 Erwin, J . B., '76 Erwin, R. G ., ' 74 Evans, S. K. , '95 • F a xon, E., '47 • F e rrill , W. C., '78 • Foote, I. , ' 42 • Fran klin, E . C., '54 • Gadsden, <C. E ., '50 • Gadsden, J . A., '50
52
Gallaudet, B. B ., '80 Gallaudet, T., '42 • Gardner, H. G., '65 Gowen, F. C., '82 • Goddard, F. M., '96 • Gordon, 0. K., '58 Graves, A. C., '91 Graves, C. E., '50 Graves, D. C., '98 Graves, G., '49 Graves, H. S., '92 Graves, R. S., '94 • Gray, J . W., '72 Gray, R. W ., '98 • Hale, C. F., '47 Hale, C. S., '62 • Halsey, A., '37 • Hamilton , H. C., '51 Hamilton, I. K., Jr., '91 Hardee, C . H., '81 • Harri s, T . L., '41 • Hasell, B. D., '49 • Hasen, L . c., '50 Hawley, F. M., '61 • Hazl ehurst, G. H ., '42 Hazl ehurst, J. W. , '51 Hazlehurst, R .. ' 41 • Henry, J. F., '<s4 • Hewlett, S. H., '74 Heydecker, H. R., '86 • H eyward, J. F., '48 • Hoadly, C. J. , '51 Holli ste r·, J. B., '84 Holly, J. A., '91 • Hopson, E. C., '64 Hopson, G. B., '57 Horton, P . A., '68 Hotchkiss, C. E., '82 Hovey, H. E., '66 Hubbard, G. A., '94 Hyde, T . McE., '90 • Inga lls, T ., '52 J ackson, R . E., '45 • Jarvis, J . S., '57 • Johnson, E. P., '65 Johnson, W. F., '66 • J ones, C . H., '35 * Kellogg, H. L., '36 • Ker, J ., '43 * King, H. W., '36 • Lambert, D., '36 • Lansing, C. A., '36 Leaken, W. R., '80
" LeRoy, A. N., '42 LeRoy, J ., '69 * LeRoy, T. 0 ., '42 Lilienthal, H., '86 Lynch, R. Leb., '90 Mack, J . E., '71 • Mallory, G. S., '58 Mallory, R. H., '92 • Mallory, W. H., '60 Marble, F. P., '82 • Marshall, J. , ' 42 Mason, A. T., '81 • 1\l[atthewson, J ., '46 McConihe, A., '89 McConihe, M. S. , '92 McConihe, W., '90 • Mcintosh, J. H., '53 McKean, T . H., '92 McKennan, J. l.J., '76 McLemore, M. C., '89 • 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 Morgan, G. B., '70 Morgan, W. D., '72 • Morgan, W. F., '35 Morrill, C. A., '67 • Mowry, D. S., '67 Nelson, H., '87 Nelson, W. B., '81 Nicholls, G. H., '39 • Nichols, R. W., '33 Noyes, A. H., '89 O lm sted, W. B., '87 Olmsted, J. F., '84 • Overfield, J. L., '55 • Pardee, D. W., '40 Parks, S. H ., '82 Paine, J. , '92 Paine, 0. T., '96 • Paine, R. T., '32 • Paine, J. W., '61 • Peake, C. F., '42 Peck, R. E., '01 Peck, T . M. , '80 * Peck, W . E., '71 • Perkins, L . H., '34 Peters, G. E., '50 Peugnet, L . D., '93
53
• Phelps, J. S., '32 Potter, Louis, '96 • Powel, E. F., '01 • Proctor, C. H., '73 Quick, G. A. , '94 Quick, J. H., '98 Quick, J. H. S., '58 Quick, W. F., '92 Richardson, L. W., '73 Richardson, R. D., '71 • Ripley, P. '47 • Robertson, J . A. , '54 Rodget·s, li. W., '87 Rodgers, R. E. L., '87 • Rogers, R. C., '45 Rowland, E. , '57 • Sargent, G. D., '51 Sawyer, J. L., '50 Scott, E. G., '57 • Scudder, C. D., '75 Scudder, E. M., '77 • Scudder, H. J ., '46 Scudd e r , H. , '91 • Scudder, T., '54 Scudder, W., '89 Sedgwi c k , W. R., '84 Shannon, J. W ., '87 • Sherman, H. B., '38 Shet·man, H. M., '77 • Sherwood, W. B. , '36 * Shipman, P. W., '82 Short, William, '69 • Singletary, G. E. B., '49 Skinner, vV. 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 Story, 0. J ., '01 • Summ er, A. E., '61 Sutton, E. B., '76 Taylor, 0. E ., '92
• Taylor, F. L., '43 Taylor, H. E., '96 • Taylor, W. F., '44 • Terry, C. E ., '51 • Thomas, E. H., '41 Thompson H. W., '83 Titus, A. S., '00 • Todd, C . J., '55 Tolles, W. A., '46 Townsend, C., Jr., '03 • Tt·acey, W. D., '42 • Tracey , J . R., '39 • Tudor, H. B., '50 Turner. J. H., '33 • Van Zandt, C. C., '51 • Van Zandt, W ., '29 • Varley, C. D., ' 41 Wainwright, F. C., '88 Wainwright, J . M., '95 • Wainwright, W. A. M .. '64 * Wait, J. T. , '35 Warner, L. F., '85 • Wan·et:t, E. I., '80 Warren, G. T., '90 Warren, J . M. , '32 • Warren, W. H., '34 Warren, W. H., '90 • Waring, C. M., '36 Washburn, L. C., '81 * Way, J. A ., '37 * Webb, E. C., '75 * W e bb, W. E. , '40 Weob, W. W., '82 W e lch, L. E. , '86 White, J. G., '54 White . R. A., '81 Wiggin, A. H. , '68 Willard, D., '95 • Wolc ott, F. H., '86 • Wolcot t , S. G., '47 • Wood, H. S., '71 Woodbury, T. C., '71 Woodward, G . A., '55 Woodworth, F. A., '80 Wright, A. E., '89 Wright, M. R.. '91 • D ec eased
54
The Fraternity of Delta Psi FOUNDED IN 1847 AT COLUMBIA COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
Roll of Chapters ALPHA
Columbia College
DELTA
University of Pennsylvania
EPSILON
Trinity Col ege
LAMBDA
Williams College
PHI
University of Mississippi
UPSILON
Univer ity of Virginia
SIGMA
Sheffield Scientific School of Yale
TAU
Massachu etts Institute of Technology
55
ni vcrsitv
The Ep.rilon Chapter
Active Members wALTER BEST ALLEN PHILIP LocKwooD BARTON HENRY DAy BRIGHAM CHARLES ERASTUS BRUCE, JR HowARD EMoRY BusHNELL STUART HAROLD CLAPP CHARLES FRANCIS CLEMENT RonERT I-L<\UERSHAM CoLEMAN CHARLES EDWARD GOSTENHOFER RICIL\IW NrLES GR .\H AM REEVE H uNTINGTON HuTCHINSON GEORGE B .\R TO\V . LEWIS HENRY Lo u rs GoDLOVE MEYER JonN WrLLIAM O'CoNNER ALFRED
B 路 RNETT
QuAIL拢
Eo wARD DELEV.\N NELSON ScnuLTE HENRY LEE Vl ATSON
57
Gr~duate
•
•
• •
• •
Members of the Epsilon
Allen, E. S., '94 A ll yn, A. W. , '61 Appleton, C. A., '82 Appleton , E. D., '80 Appleton, H. C ., '85 Arundel, W. B. Von H., '00 Atkinson, J . G., '64 Austin, W. M., '98 Bacon, J . R., '92 Balch, F. A., '98 Baldwin, F. T ., '00 Barnwell, R. W., '72 Barnwell, S. E ., '72 Barton , C. C ., '69 Barton, C. C., Jr., '93 Beckwith, C. M., '88 Beers, G. E., '86 Benedict, L. LeG., '88 Bibb, W. A., '75 Blackwell, J. , Jr ., '66 Bliss, G. H., '64 Bohlen, D . M., '82 Bowen, A., '63 Brainerd, J . B., '82 Brandegee, J . E., '74 Brandegee, L . C., '77 Breck enridge, A. E. , '70 Breese, H. L., '57 Bren to n, C., '99 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. , '60
Ch~pter
Camman, E. C. '96 • Carter, C. L., '54 • Ce n as, B. C., '56 Chapin, F . W., '79 C h apin, W. V., '78 C h apman, T. B., '80 Ch eever, J . D., Jr ., '81 C lark, J. W., '63 Clement, J. K., '00 C le m e nt, M. W ., 'Ol • Clemson, T. G., '56 C lifford, S. W., ' 68 Clyde, W. P., '62 Coleman, R . H., '77 Comfort, B . F., '89 Cookson, F. M., '61 Coons, S. W., '00 Cunningham, N. G. , '03 • Coxe, J . N., '55 C r a n e, R . N., '55 • Curtis, F . R., '80 C urti s, G. M., '80 Curtis, R. H., '68 Curtis, W. E. , '75 • Darrell, A. S., '59 • Dayton, W. B., '56 Deal, J . A ., '72 DeForest, J. G., '82 DeRossett, .A.. L., '62 • D e Rossett, E. S., ' 64 • Devendorf, G. S., '55 Dobbin , E . S., '99 DuBois, G. M., '74 DuBois, H. 0., '76 Eaton, W. H., '99 Edson, S., '55 Edwards, .A.. N., '76 Elbert, W. N., '79
ss
Ellis, A. L., '98 Elton, J . P., '88 Elwell, G. E., '70 Finch, E. B., '91 • Fisher, T. R., '62 FitzGerald, F., '89 Fordney, T . P., '62 Fuller, J. R., '70 • Fuller, S. G., '58 Full er , S. R., '70 Gardner, C. H., '70 Gibson, B. S., '69 • G lazier, T. C., '60 Go ld thwaite, A. C., '99 Goodspeed, J . H., '66 ' Goodwin, G. H., '62 Graham, C. M., '50 Grannis, F. 0.,'73 Greene, J . H., '91 Haight, F. E., '87 Haight, M.G., '00 Hall, A. C., '88 Hall, C. L., '92 Hall, F. DeP., '78 Hallett, 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, G. T., '97 Hendrie, S., '87 Hill, G. H. , '91 * Hill, W. C ., '93 Hill, W. C. , '00 Hills, J. S., '01 Hitchings, H. B. , '54 • Hoffman, C . F., '51 Hoisington, F. R., '91 Holbrooke, G. 0., '69 Holbrooke, S., '67 Hotchin , S . F. , '56 Hudson, J. M., '01 Hull, A. S ., '66 Ingersoll, G. P., ' 83 • J a rdin e, H. D., '68 • J arvis, S. F., J r ., '89 J en nings, A. B., '61 Kane, G., '75 • Kerr, E. L., '55 • Kirby, J . W., '65
Knoblock, A. F., '55 • Lamson, W ., '56 Lawre n ce, C. V .. '56 • Leacoc k, J . H., '58 L ewis, C. A ., '93 • L ewis, E. B., '65 L e wis, E. G ., '92 • Lewis, J. I., '62 Lewis, J . W., '93 L e wis, S. S ., '61 • Lewis, T. C., '71 L ewis, Vl. H., '65 • Lincoln, F . T. , '76 Lin coln , G. W., '75 Mac auley, G. T ., '90 Maca ul e y, R. H., '95 • Mackay, W. R. , '67 Maginnis, J. H., '02 Martindale, H. S., '79 M c C lory, H., '51 M c Cu ll ough, D. H., '73 M cCook, E. McP., '90 McCough, H. G ., '75 M cLean, T., '75 Mill e r, H., '80 • Miller, P . S., '64 Mill e r, S. T. , '85 • Min e s , F. S., '64 • Min e s, J. F., '54 Morgan, B. T., '61 Morse. J . F., ' 66 Munay, A . S. , J r., '71 Murray, F. W ., Yale, '77 Mur·ray, R., '73 Nel son, R. H., '80 · N ic ho ls , G. G. , ' 67 • Norris, E. C ., '61 Norris, H. , '63 • Norton , F. L .. '68 Nott, R. H., '71 Orton, W . 0., '92 O~en, F . W., '84 Padgett, P., '76 • Palm e r, C . C ., '51 Parker, B. , '93 Parker, R . P ., '94 Parsons, H. , '83 P a rsons . J . R., J r., '81 Parsons, W. W. , '96 Parsons, E., ' 96 P a ttison. G. B. , '81 .l:'a.xon, H . C. , '51 P ea r ce, J. S., '62
•
59
Pearce, R., '93 Peck, B. D., '96 * Peck, D. L., '62 Perkins, G. E., '81 * Pierce, H. H., '58 * Pinckney, F. S., '62 Platt, Chas., Jr., '75 Platt, Clayton, '74 * Platt, W. A. '75 Potter, A. H., '92 Reed, H. P., '84 * Roosevelt, F., '83 Russell, F. G., '80 Russell, I. D., '92 Russell, H., '84 Rutherford, H. V., '76 S c hulte, E. D. N., '97 Schulte, H. vonW., '97 S cott, H. B., '78 Scudder, J. A., '&1 Sheldon, W. C., Jr., '82 • Shreve, W. I., '83 Sibley, A. S., '92 Sibley, M. M., '97 Smallwood, 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 Sterling, E. K., '99 * 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., '90 Talcott, C. H., '91 Thompson, H. R., '87 'l'hompson, S. C., '72 Thorn e, N. D ., '71 Thorne, R.. '85 Tott e n, C. A. L ., '69 Trowbridge, C. C ., '92 Trowbridge, S. P. B., '83 • Underhill, G. B., '73 Van Zile, E. S ., '84 Vibbert, A. D ., '99 Vibbert, H. C ., '68 Vibbert, W. H., '58 • Vibbert, W. W., '94 W a nzer. C., '66 Waterman, L., '71 Waters, G. S., '87 • Watson, W. C., '63 Watts, E. B., '73 • Weeks, R. D., '93 Wel sh, R. F ., '95 Wheeler, C. H ., '01 • Whistle r, W. G., M eN., '57 • White , F. W., ' 78 Wi lcox. F . L., '80 Wilcox, E. P., '80 • Wildman , T. G. , '57 Willi a ms, C . C. '71 Williams, C. G., '80 Wilson, W. C. D., '93 Wilmerding, H., '81 Winkley, R. L., '79 Woodin, W. R., '58 Woodruff, E. H ., '82 Wright, G. E., '74 Young, A. M., '82
*Deceased.
• 6o
The
Fr~ternity
of Alpha Delta . Phi
FOUNDED IN 1832 AT HAMILTON COLLEGE
Roll of Chapters HAMILTON CoLUMBIA YALE AMHERST BRUNONIAN HARVARD HuDSON BowDOIN DARTMOUTH PENINSULAR RocHESTER WILLIAMS MANHATTAN MIDDLETOWN KENYON UNION CORNELL PHI KAPPA JoHNs HoPKINS MINNESOTA TORONTO CHICAGO McGILL
Hamilton College Columbia College Yale University Ainherst College Brown University Harvard University Western Reserve University Bowdoin College Dartmouth College . University of Michigan University of Rochester Williams College College of the City of Jew York \iVesleyan University Kenyon College Union College Cornell University Trinity College Johns Hopkins University University of Minnesota Toronto University University of Chicago McGill University
I832 I836 I837 I837 I837 I837 I84I 1841 1845 1846 1850 1851 I855 I856 I858 I859 186<) 1877 I889 I892 1893 I896 !897
The Phi Kappb. Chb.pter
Active Members PERCLV .\L HAIVTHEY BL{i\DlN THUJJ)ORE NORTH DENSLOW J .\MES THOMAS GRADY PLIJLLIP LLE\\"ELLYN LIGI-ITBOURN Ro13ERT Lt FREDERL
coLN NlcKEON
CHARLES l\lEREDLTli
Cu :\RLES MILTON RHODES TnoMAS McBLAJN STEELE EDl\lUND CRAWFORD THOMAS R .\YJ\lOND BRLNCKERHOFF VAN TINE RICII.\RD
l iCKS WEfBEL
How .\RD RussELL WntTE CII.\HLES BARTO ' WYNKOOL'
J
Fratres in Urbe
Samuel M. Alvor I, Yale, '96 Hon. Edward B. Bennett. Yale, '66 Percy S. Bryant, Phi Kappa, '70 Charles H. Bunce, Yale, '6o George F. Cady, Wesleyan, '69 David S. Calhoun, Yale, '48 Walter H. Clark, Yale, '96 T. Weston Chester, M.D., Hamilton, '92 George H. Day, Geneva, '73 Rev. E. S. Ferry, Wesleyan, '82 Horace S. Fuller, M.D., Amherst, 's8 Rev. Arthur L. Gillett, Amherst, '8o Charles A. Goodwin, Yale, '98 Rev. James Goodwin, Yale, '86. Wa1ter L. Goodwin, Yale, '97 Charles E. Gross, Yale, '69 Frederick H. L. Hammond, Wesleyan, '88 Panett M. Hastings, M.D., Hamilton, '39 Edward B. Hatch, Phi Kappa, '86 Frederick Van H. Hudson, Dartmouth, '6o Harwood Huntington, Phi Kappa, '89 Rev. John T. Huntington, Phi Kappa, 'so William C. Johnson, Middletown, '94
Solon C. Kelley, Brunonian, '86. Thomas F. Lawrence, Yale, '99 E. R. Lampson, Jr., Phi Kappa, '91 Rev. William DeLoss Love, Hamilton, '43 L. P. Waldo Marvin, Yale, '92 Leonard M:orse, Amherst, '71 Rev. Kingsley F. Norris, Amherst, '73 Eel ward C. Perkins, Yale, '98 Henry . Perkins, Yale, '96 Rev. Thomas R. Pynchon, D.D., LL.D., Phi Kappa, '41 Robert H. Schutz, Phi Kappa, '89 Walter S. Schutz, Phi Kappa, '94 Han. Nathaniel Shipman, Yale, '48 Han. George G. Sill, Yale, '52 Robert S. tarr, M.D., Phi Kappa, '97 Rev. Charles C. Stearns, Yale, '72 C. M. Stearns, Johns Hopkins, '98 Rev. Samuel M. Stiles, Wesleyan,
'6o Samuel B. St. John, M.D., Yale, '66 Melancthon Storrs, M. D., Yale, '52 Henry E. Taintor, Yale, '65 Arthur R. Thompson, Yale, '96 David C. T,\richell, Yale, '98 David Van Schaack, Phi Kappa, '91 Philip . Washburn, Phi Kappa. '96 Arthur C. Williams, Yale, '98
Gradu~te
Members of the Phi Kappa Chapter
Allen, H. W., '97 Almy S., '92 Andrews, R., '53 Applegate, 0., J r ., '87 Armstrong, D. M. , '58 Barber, W. W., '88 Barto, R. V., '82 Beecroft, E. C., '97 Bellinger, E. B., '92 * Bixby, R. F., '70 Blackmer, W. C., '78 Boardman, W. H., '85 Boardman, W. J ., '54 Booth, T. R., '52 Bowie. C. L ., '93 Bowman, J . P., '53 Bradfield, H. S. , '02 Bradin, J. W., '00 • Brainard, E. W. , '42 Brainard, J ., '51 Brainard, J. M. , ' 4 Briscoe, J ., Jr. , '95 Brown, W. P., ' 01 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 Car ter , B. M., '82 Carter, C. H. , '82 Carter, G. C., '87 Carter, J . R., '83 Carter, J. S., '98 Carter, L. A., '93 Carter, S. , '94
Chase, F., '52 C h eritree. T. L ., '90 Cheshire, J . B., Jr., '69 Chipman, G. C .. '45 • Chipman, G. S., '78 Chrystie, T. M. L., '63 C hurch, S. P., '41 • Churchm an, C., '93 Churchm an, E. G., '95 C lapp, F. R., '02 C lark, A . F., '75 Codman, A., '85 Coe, G. J. , '74 Coit, C. W., '82 Coleman, G. P. , '90 Col ey, J. , '62 • Conklin, H. H., '38 Cook, P., '98 Cooke, G. L., '70 Cook e, 0 . D., '44 Cowl, M. L., '83 Crane, T ., '45 Crocker, H. D ., '84 • Crosby,D. G-., '51 C ullen, J. , J r .. '93 Curtiss, H. C., '81 Davenport, J . S., '98 • Dickinson, E. L. , '93 Dingwall, E. A., '92 Dingwall, H. R., '95 Drane, H. l\1., '52 Dyett, W. F., '96 Elliott, J . H. , Fisher, R., '56 Flagg, E. 0., '48 • Fl agg, J. B., '46 * Flower, S. , '45 Foot, E. H., '98 Foote, C. E., '76 Fox, R. H., '00
:n
Freeland, C. W., '81 • Fuller, F. B., '92 Fuller, S. R., '00 • Geer, G. J., '42 Gilmore, A. P., '74 Glazebrook, F. H., '99 Glazebrook, H. McK., 'OJ Goodwin, J., '86 • Goodwyn, W. S., '38 Gordon, T. H., '71 Graham, H. C., '61 • Graham, J., '72 Grinnell, H., '97 Griswold, B. H., '66 Hager, W. C., '79 * Hall, G. R., '42 Hamlin, A. C., '87 Hamlin, E. P., '95 Hamlin, G. N., '91 Harding, A., '76 Hatch, E. B., '86 Hays, J. McC., '86 Hay3, W. W., '58 Hazelhurst, G. B., '77 • Heath, J. F., '38 Hedrick, C. B., '99 Henshaw, 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 Holley, W. W., '61 • Hoof, J. t.., '46 Hooker, S. D., '77 Hooper, G. G., '66 Horner, H. A., '00 Howell, G. D., '82 Hubbell, J. H., '56 • Humphrey, G. F., '85 • Hunter, C., '78 Huntington, G. S., '81 • Huntington, H. K., '67 Huntingtou, J. T., '50 Huntington, J. W., '83 Huntington, R. W., '64 Huntington, H., '84 Huske, J .. '77 Hutchins, R. H., '90 Ide, H. G., '94 Ingersoll, C. M., '39 • Ives, A. M., '56
• • • •
Jacobs, E. C., '55 James, ' C., '61 Jewett, P. A., '37 Kennedy, F., '68 Kerner, H. S., '99 Kidder, H., '92 • Kirtland, J., '70 • Kneeland, G , '80 Kurtz, C . M., '83 Kurtz, J. E., '77 Lampson, E. R., Jr., '91 Langford, A. M., '97 Langford, W. S., Jr., '96 Leaver, H. K., '59 Littell, J. S., '90 Littell, S. H., '95 Littell, E. G., '99 Lockwood, L. V., ·93 Lyman, A. J. , '78 McGann, J. M. . '95 Maddox, W. T., '59 • Mallett, W. P., '40 Middlebrook, L. N., '48 Moore, J. A., '97 Mock, L. C., '78 Morgan. W. F., '88 Morrison, P. B., '94 Morse, B. K., '99 • Morss, J. R., '47 Newton, E. P., '81 Norton, G. H., '75 • Olmstead, H., '42 Onderdonk, A. H., '99 Page, J. H., Jr ., '97 Palmer, N., '45 Peabody, F. B., '45 Perry, J. B., '72 • Penyman, E. G., '55 • Peters, W. C., '48 * Pitts, C. H., '65 Plumb, J. F., '91 Plume,·, L. M., '74 Plumer, S., Jr., '97 Porter, T. A., '76 Potts, F. H., '68 Prescott, 0. S., '44 Preston, J. A., '55 Put!lam, W. T., '88 Pynchon, T. R., '41 Pynchon, W. H. C., '90 • Randall, E. D ., '92 Reynolds, L. G., '98 Rich, E. A., '99
66
•
•
•
• •
Richardson, F . W., '84 Robbins, J. P., '69 Sartwelle, W. D., '75 Schutz, R. H., '89 Schutz, w. s., '94 Schwartz, D. L. , '00 Sennett, L . F., '89 Sherwood, G. H., '00 Sistare, C. G., '47 Smith, P., '90 Smyth, J. D., '74 Snow, A . H. , '79 Snyder, E ., '72 Starr, R. S., '97 Stimson, L. B., '48 Stewart, G. T., ' 78 Stewart, W. J. S., '88 Stone, M., '80 Stone, S., '80 Storm, C., '39 Sullivan, F. R., '66 •Decea sed.
•
• • •
•
Thurman, A. W., '67 Tracy, E .. '55 Vanderpoel, A. M., '89 Van Schaack, D., '91 Wadsworth, L. F., '44 Walker, J. M., '01 'Varner, A. J., '42 Warner, D. T., '72 Warner, M. C., '88 Washburn, P. ~ .• '96 Watson, S. N., '82 Wesley, P. R., '94 ~aley, P. H., '?4 Wheaton, C., '49 Whitlock. H. R., '70 Williams, E. W., '53 'Villiams, J. H., '54 Wilson, G. H., '93 'Voodruff, F. D., '83 Wynkoop, A. T., '01 Yale, H. A., '46
The
Fr~ternity
of Delta
K~pp~
Epsilon
FOUNDED IN 1844 AT YALE UN IVERSITY
Roll of Chapters Phi Theta Xi
Sigma Gamma Psi Upsilon Chi Beta Eta Kappa Lambda Pi Iota Alpha Alpha Omicron Epsilon Rho Tau Mu Nu Beta Phi Phi Chi Psi Phi Gamma Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi Delta Chi Phi Gamma Gamma Beta Theta Zeta Alpha Chi Phi Epshlon Sigma 'l'au Delta Delta A lpha Phi Tau Lambda Delta Kappa Tau Alpha, Sigma Rho,
Yale University Bowdoin Co ll ege Colby University Amherst ollege Vanderbilt University University of Alabama Brown U niv e rs ity U niv ers ity of Mississippi University of North Carolina University of Virginia Miami University Kenyon College Dartmouth COI!Iege Central University Middlebury College University of Michigan Williams College Lafayette Coll ege Hamil ton Coll ege Colgate University College of the City of New York University of Rochester Rutgers College De Pauw University Wesleyan University Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute Adelbert Co llege Corne ll University Syracuse Univer路sity Columbia College University of Cal ifornia Trinity Coll ege University of Minnesota M assachusetts Institute of Technology University of Chicago . University of 'l'oronto Tulane U nivers ity University of Pennsy,!vaniu McGill Univet路sity Leland Stanford, Jr. 6g
1844 1844 184!\ 1846 1847 1847 1850 1850 1851 1852 1852 1852 1853 1853 1854 1855 1855 1855 1856 1856 1856 1856 1861 1866 1867 1867 1868 U!'tO 1871 1874 1876 1879 1889 1890 1893 1898 1898 1899 1900 1902
Alpha Chi Chapter
Active Members V/ILLlAM PERRY BENTLEY HARRY CLAYTON BoYD EDGAR JoHNSON DIBBLE RrcnARD ARTHUR Euw ARDS JoHN DAULBY EvANS BENEDICT DEVI E FLYNN FRANK HALSEY Foss Enw ARD HuGH MADDOX \iVILLl :\M PERRY STEDMAN
Corporation
Pn:sident J OHN
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HARBISON)
Vice-President H OWARD
D.
PLIMPTO
)
AX
Treasurer CHARLES
A.
Jon
so~ ,
AX
Secretary J OHN
D.
EvANS,
AX
Board of Directors J. P . H ARBISON, H.
c.
B. A.
AX速
FREEMAN, J R . , J OHNSON,
H.
<I>
J .
AX
E .
72
D. Pu 1PTON, AX D . EVANS, AX H . MADDOX, AX
The Connecticut Alumni A.r.roci~tion of the Delt~ Kappa Epsilon Fraternity
Officers L. GREENE, Michigan, '61, President. P. CooLEY, Yale '91 Secretary and Treasurer.
CoL. }ACOB CHARLES
Members The four hundred and seventy-tlveAJumni of the Fraternity in the State of Connecticut.
Fratres in Urbe Allen, H. B., Yale, '01 A l temus, H. B., Tl'inity, '04 A lden, H. W., M. I. T., '93 Ayres, W. A ., Yale, '64 Bacon, Dr. W. T., Yale, '68 Baldwin, H . S., M . I. T ., '96 Beardsley, E . R., Yale, ' 79 Bennett, M. F., Yale, '98 Camp, J . S., Wesleyan, '78 Case, T. G., Trin ity, ' 00 C lark, C. H ., Yale, '71 Collins, A., Yale, '73 Conant, G. A ., Amherst, '78 Cone. J . B., Yale, '57 Cooley, C. P., Yale, '91 Coo ley, F. R., Yale, '86 Day, A. P., Ya le, '90 Davis, F . W., Yale, '77 For rest, C. R., Yale, '65 Freeman, H. B .â&#x20AC;˘ Yale, '62 Freeman, H. B., J r., Yale, '92 Gates, A. F., Yale, '87 Goddard, G. S., Wesleyan, '91 Greene, J . L., Michigan, '61 Harbison , Gen, J. P., (H)
Hicks, L. H., Yale, '70 Hine. C. D., Yale, '71 Howe, D. R., Yale, '74 Hyde, W. W., Yale, '76 Ingall s, Dr. P. H. Bo\vdoin, '77 Knight, F. H ., Amh erst, '83 Matson, W. L., Yale, '62 Parker, Rev. E. P., Bowdoin, '56 Pattison, Rev. Haro ld, Rochester, '92 P li mpton, H. D ., Trinity, '97 Pratt, W. W., Adelbert, '85 Prentice, Hon. S. 0., Yale, '73 Robbins, E . D ., Yale, '74 Rowley, A. M. , Amherst, '95 Ryce, L. C., Yale. S., '86 Sm iley, E. H., Colby, '75 Sm ith, E. H., Yale, '01 Starr, Dr. P. S., Yale, '60 St. John, W. H. , Yale, '91 Taylor, J. M., Williams, '67 Tucker, J . D., Ya le. '61 Way, C. L., Yale, '85 Welch, A. A., Yale, '82 Williams, Rev. H. D., Amherst, '91 vVoodman, Charles, Colby, '98
73
Graduate Members of the
Alph~
Chi
Ch~pter
Honorary Member, Gen. John P. Harbison.
• • •
•
•
•
Altemus, Harry Beebe, '04 Anderson, Alexander Hopkins, '87 Barrows, John Chester, '80 Barrows, '\'Villiam Stanley, '84 Bartholomew, Dana Wightman, '97 Baxter, Irving Knott, '99 Bates, Robert Peck, '93 Benson, Reuel Allan, ' 99 Benton, William Lane Hall, '89 Bidwell, Lawson Brewer, '80 Bidwell, Walter Davison, '81 Birdsall, Paul, '86 Bishop, Nelson Howard, '92 Black, Harry Campbell, '80 Bowie, William, '93 Brewer, Seabury Doane, '82 Brooks, Roelif Has·brouck, '00 Brown, George Israel, '88 Brown, Thomas Prosser, '00 Brown, Duncan Hodge, '03 Burchard, John Dixon, '00 Burnham, John Bird, '91 Burt, Luther Harold. '00 Burton, Richard Eugene, '83 Cable , Julius Nathaniel, '02 Cartwright, Morgan Rouse, '98 Case, Theodore Grafton, '00 Chapman, Thomas Bion, '83 Cole, Marc Wheeler, '97 Cook, Charles Smith, '81 Coster, Martyn Kerfoot, '87 Coster, William Hooper, '91 ~oster. Charles Calvert, '97 Cowles, Arthur Woodruff, '81 Crabtree, Albert, '92 Danker, Walton Stoutenburg, '97 Dauchey, Nathan Follin, '85 Davis, Cameron Josiah, '94 Deuel, Charles Ephraim, '87 Eastman, Roger Charles, '88 Fleming, David Law, '80 Forrester, Henry Townes, '01 French, George Herbert, '92 Goodrich, William Sloo, '82 Graff, Henry Addison, '86 Grint, Alfred Poole, '81 Gris\Yo ld, Clifford Standish, '90 Hall, Gordon, '92 Hamilton. Charles Anderson, '82 Hammond, Otis Grant, '92 Holden, Seaver Milton, '82 Hopkins, Louis Albert, '97 Horne, Charles Albert, '93 Hubbard, William Stimpson, '8 Humphries, Harry Richard, '94 Humphries, Arthur George, '04
•
•
•
• •
*Deceased.
74
Jewett, David Baldwin, '00 Johnson, Charles Amos, '92 Johnson, Edwin Comstock, 2d, '88 Johnson, Frederick Foote, '94 Leaf, Edward Bowman, '85 Lecour, Joseph Henry, '98 Leonard, Loyal Lovejoy, '96 Linsley, Arthur Beach, '82 Loomis, Hiram Benjamin, '85 Lord, James Watson, '98 Loveridge, Henry Clarence, '80 Lund, Frederick Albert, '99 Mead, Ralph Cutlet·, '99 Mitchell, Samuel Smith, '85 McCulloch, William Hugh, '91 McKean, Robert Carey, '03 McLean, Malcolm Appleton, '03 McNeil, William John, '01 Olcott, William Tyler, '96 Pedersen, Victor Cox, '91 Penrose, John Jesse, Jr., '95 Plimpton, Howard Daniel, '97 Purdy Charles Edward, '88 Ramsdell, Julian Elroy, '92 Ree e, \Yard Winters, '95 Reiland, Car l George, '97 Reineman, Adolph William, '81 Reineman, Robert Theodore, '83 Remington, Charles Hazard, '89 Rogers, Wellington James, '80 Smart, John Harrow, '95 Smith, Joseph Sewall, Jr., '94 Smith, Olive" Alcott, '94 Stockton, Elias Boudinot, '91 Stoddard, Solomon, '94 Strong, Albert William, '94 Strong, Charles Henry, '01 Stuart, Albert Rhett, Jr., '88 Stuart, William Clarkson, '88 'l'hurston, Theodore Payne, '91 Tomlinson, Simon Lewis, '00 \"Valker, William Dundas, '82 Warner, William Alfred, '99 Waters, Charles Thomas, '87 \Veed, Arthur Henry, '02 \Yeed, Charles Frederick, '94 Wharton, William Parker, '01 Wheeler, Francis Melville, '83 Wildman, Walter Beardslee, '98 Willcox, Reginald Norton, '99 Williams, Francis Goodwin, '89 Wilson, Hugh Demster, '01 Wright, Arthur Henry, '83 Wright, Boardman, '89 Wright, George Herman, '91 Wright, William George, '91 Wright, Frederick Amaziah, '94
The Fraternity of Psi Upsilon FOUNDED IN 1833 AT UNION COLLEGE
Roll of Chapters THETA
Union College
DELTA
New York Univer ity
BETA
Yale University
SIGMA
Brown University
GAMMA
Amherst College
ZETA
Dartmouth College
LAMBDA
Columbia College
KAPPA
Bowdoin College
Psr
Hamilton College
Xr
Wesleyan U niversity
UPSILON
Un iversity of Rochester
IOTA
Kenyon College niversity of Michigan
PH!
Pr
Syracuse Un iversity
CHI
Cornell U niversity
BETA BET/\
Trinity College
ETA
Lehigh University
TAU
U niversity of Pennsylvania ' niversity of Minnesota
Mu RHO
Un iversity of Wisconsin
OMEGA
University of Chicago 75
f
'
The Beta Beta
Ch~pter
Active Members ARTHUR :r-,,IUIRSON BELLAMY MORGAN HYDE BUFFINGTON HENRY BERNARD CARPENTER RoBERT MosBY EwiNG }AMES PI-IILIP GARVAN HARRY CLIFFORD GoLDEN EDWARD BRUCE GooDRICH EDwARD GooDRIDGE, JR. CHARLES JARVIS .HARRIMAN JARVIS Me
LPINE JoHNSON
WILLIAM LARCHAR, JR . ANso
THEODORE McCooK
HERBERT RoBI
soN MciLVAINE
EDMUND SAWYER MERRIAM SAMUEL ST. JoHN MoRGAN CLEMENT C~ISCOM RANDLE GEoRGE DouGLAS RANKIN CORNELIUS WAGSTAFF REMSEN WILLIAM BLAIR ROBERTS HAROLD H u
TI
GTON RuDD
JosEPH PEMBERTON WELLES TAYLOR HERMAN EDWARD TowNSEND WALTER SLATER TRUMBULL PHILIP T URNER WELLES WILLIAM H :\RDlN WHEELER
77
,
Fratres
James P. Andrews. Beta, '77 Rt. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster, Beta,'68 Hon. John H. Buck, Beta, '9 1
•
10
Urbe
Prof. Charles F. Johnson, Beta, '55 W. M eA. Johnson , Beta Beta, '98 Frank E. Johnson, Beta Beta, '84
Hon. John R. Buck, Xi, '62
Prof. A. R. Merriam, Beta, '77
Clarendon C. Bulkely, Beta Beta, '75, P!-li!ip D. Bunce, M.D ., Beta, '88
Charles Shiras Morris, Beta Beta, '96 John J. Nairn, Beta, '80 Francis Parsons, Beta, '93
C harles "'"'· Burpee, Beta, '83 B. W. Capen, Gamma, '94 William S. Case, Beta, '85 Albert St. Clair Cook, Beta, '89 \Villiam H. Corbin, Beta, '89 G. Pier-repont Davis. M.D., Beta, '66. J. H. Kelso Davis, Beta Beta, '99 John C. i.:ay, Beta, '57 Louis N. Denniston, Xi, '02 L eonard A. Ellis, Beta Beta, '98 C harles E. Fellows, Beta, '56 Rev. Prof. Henry Ferguson, Beta Beta, '68
Arthur Perkins, Beta, '87 Edward L. Pollock, Beta, '84 Henry Roberts, Beta, '77 Henry S. Robinson, Beta, '89 John T . Robinson, Beta, '93 Lucius F. Robinson, Beta, '85 Edward W. Robinson, Beta Beta, '96 E. F. Sanderson, Gumma, '96 George H. Seyms, Beta Beta. '72 Henry P. Schauffler, Gamma, '93 'Forrest Shepherd, Beta, '92 Arthur L. Shipman, Beta, '86
Samuel Ferguson, Beta Beta, '96
Lewis E. Sta nton , Beta, '55
George H. Gilman, Beta, '90
James U. Taintor, Beta, '66 Franklin H. Taylor, Xi. '84
T. Welles Goodridge, Beta Beta, '92 L. E Go rdon. Xi, '90
*
*Eo • B B t B
B B B B
Wilbur F. Gordy, Xi, '70
J a m es 1R. Turnbull , Beta, '92 Rev. Joseph H. Twichell, Beta, '59
Hon. Wm. Hamersley, LL.D., Beta Beta '58
Edgar F. Wate.-man, Beta Beta, '98 Lewis S. Welch , Beta, '89
• B
Hon, Joseph R. Hawley, LL.D., Psi. '47 R. W. Huntington, Beta, '89
Chal"les G. Woodward, Beta Beta, '98 P. Henry Woodward, Beta, '55
t
E E
• E E
E
Graduate Members of the Beta Beta
Ch~pter
Buffington, 0., '79 Bulkley, C. C .. '7 5 Bulkley, W. H., '73 Bul l. 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., '55 ammann, D . M ., '72 Campbell, R. M., '78 Carpenter. C ., '82 Carpenter, S . B., '73 Carter, H. S., '69 Chase, H. R., '72 C hild, C. G ., '86 Child, E. N. J r ., '85 • Clark, G ., '70 • Clerc, C. M. , '45 Clerc, F. J., '43 Coggesh a ll, M. H ., '96 Coleman , C. S., '82 • Collins, J. B. J., '74 * Colt, W. U., '44 Cook, S . W ., '02 Corson, D. S ., '99 Cotton , D. P., '71
• Alexander, H. W., '57 • Backus, B. E., '70 Bail ey, M. K., '79 Baldwin, L. B ., '60 Barbour, H. M., '70 • Barbour, _{. G., '96 Beardsley, W. A., '87 • Beaupillier, A. L., '56 • Beckwith, J. W., '52 Bellamy, R. B., '01 • Benedict, S., '47 Benjamin, W. H., '57 • Betts, J. H., '44 Bi•·ckhcn.d, J. B., '94 • Birckhead, W. H., '61 • Bishop, H., '61 B lair, W. R., '75 Bolles, E. C., '55 • Bostwick, H . P., '46 • Bostwick, W. L., '51 Bowdish, J. T. , '73 t Bowles, J. H ·.. '60 Boyl ton, C . W., '78 Brady, R. McC., '90 Bredin, W. S., '80 Brevoort, E . R., '68 * Brewer, A. L., '53 • Bridge, J. , '47 Brinley, G. M ., '88 Brinton, P. H. M. P., '04 Bronson, M. , 'o2 Broughton, C. DuB., '95 • Brown, T. M., '50 Brown, J. E., '83 Brundage, R. B., '78 Buffington, J ., '75
Cotton, H . E ., '74 Craik, C. E., ' 74 C rawford , J . W. R ., '88 • Crosby, W. L., '80 Cummins, A. G., '51
79
• Cunn in gham, J. R., '85 • Dashiell, E. F., '46 Davis, J . H. K., '99 • Dayton, M. B., '63 • Dewey, D . P., '64 Di ckerson, E. N ., Jr., '74 Dockray, E. L., '83 Douglas, G. W., '71 Douglas, A . E .• '89 • Douglas, M ., '46 Downes, L. W ., '88 Drayton, W., '71 Drumm, T. J ., '74 • DuBois J. C., '53 • Easton , G. C., '51 Edgerton, F. C., '94 Edgerton, J. W., '94 Edmunds. C. C., Jr. , '77 Ellis, L. A., '98 Elmer, W. T., '81 Elwyn, T. L., '92 • Ely, J. F ., '64 Emery, R., '54 Emery, W. S., '81 Everest, C . S., '71 Ferguson, E . M., '59 Ferguson, H., '6 • Ferguson , J. D., '51 • Ferguson, S ., '57 Fer·guson, W. , '63 Ferguson , 'i¥. Jr. , '93 F e rguson , S., '96 Fiske, D. W., '00 Fiske, G. McC ., '70 Fiske, R., '01 • Flower, Samuel, '45 * Fogg, T. B ., '52 Fowler, F. H., '61 Fr·e nch, G. A .. '89 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., '80 Giesy, S. H., '85 • Gilman, G. S., '47 Golden, H . L., '83 • Goodrich , A. B., '52 Goodrich, J . B., '66
Good ridge, E. , ' 60 • Goodridge, F., '57 Goodridge, T. W., '92 Gould, C. Z., '82 • Greene, F. H., '82 Greene, G., '83 Green, H. D. , '99 • Green, V., '60 Greenley, H. T., '94 ·j· Gregory, H. M., '56 Gwinn, F. W., '72 • Hall , S., '54 Hamersley, W., '58 * Harriman, F. D., '45 Harriman , F. W., '72 • Hart, G. , '70 Hart, S., '66 Hartley, G. D., '93 Hayden , C. C., '66 • Hermann , S. , '57 • Hewitt, S. G., '77 H ickox. G. A. , '51 Hicks, G. C ., '56 H ic k s. J . M., '54 • H ic ks, W. C., '48 Hi c ks, W. C ., JL, '91 Hicks, DeF., '96 • Hitchcock, vV. A. , '54 Hitchcock, W. H., '84 * Hoff, H., '82 Holway, 0.. '80 Hubbard, E. K., Jr., '92 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 Hyde. F. B., '9 Ingalls·, F. C., '99 • Isbell , C. M. , '63 • Jac kson, A ., ' 60 • J ackson. W. A., '83 • Johnson , E. E., '59 Johnson, F. E., '84 Johnson, G. D. , '54 • Johnson, S . W., '81 Johnson, F. F., '94 John son . W. M eA., '98 Jon es, C. W. , '81 Jones, E. P., Jr., '77 Jones, W . ., '88
8o
• K el
• Kelley, J., '44 Kempe, E. A., '81 Kendal, G. T., '99 Kennett, L. M., '70 Kissam, E. V. B., '69 • Kittredge, A. S., ·57 Kloppenburg, H. W., '58 • Knickerbacker, D. B., '53 Kramer, F. F., '89 • Krumbhaar, W. B., '55 Lanpher, L. A., '80 • Leffingwell, C. S., '54 L effi ngwell, E. DeK., '95 Lewis, G. F., '77 Lindsley, C. A., '49 Lobdell, F. D., '85 • Long, W., '43 Loveridge, D. E., '50 • Luther, R. M., '90 Mackay-Smith, A., '72 • Macklin, R. B., '58 Magill, G. E., '84 M3rshall, M. M., '63 Mather, W. G., '77 • McConihe. S., '56 McCook, P. J ., '95 • McCook G. S ., '97 McCrackan, J. H., '82 McCrackan, W. D., '85 Mcilvaine, J. G., '00 Mcivor, N. W., '82 Mears, J. E., '58 Morris, B. W., Jr. , '93 Morris, C. S., '96 Morris, F., '64 * Morris, J. H., '45 Mowe, W. R., '70 * Neely, A. D., '85 Neely, H. R., '84 Nichols, W. F., '70 Nichols, J . W., '99 Nichols, W. M., '01 Niles, W. W., '57 Niles, E. C., '87 Niles, W. P., '93 Oberly, H. H., '65 Olmstead, IC. T., '65 • Olmstead, H. K., '46 Owen, H. C., '99 • Paddock, B. H., '48 • Paddock, J. A., '45 Paddock, L. S., '50 Paddock, L. H., '88
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•
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•
* •
8r
Paddock, R. L., '94 Paris, I., Jr., '76 Parker, C. P., '73 Parrish, H., '91 Pattison, A. E., '80 Pelton, H. H., '93 Penfield, W. D., '62 Pettitt, W. F., '46 Phillips, C. W., '71 Polk, A. H., '53 Pond, C. M., '58 Potwine, W. E., '79 Pressey, E. A., '92 Pressey, W., '90 Preston, T. S., '43 Purdy, E. L., '84 Purdy, J. S., '49 Raftery, 0. H., '73 Rankin, M. I., '04 Remsen, H. R., '98 Rhinehart, E. J. , '76 Roberts, B. C., '95 Roberts, W. J., '75 Robinson, E. W., '96 Rogers, L. W., '91 Rogers, W. E., '17 Rudder, W., '48 Saltus, R. S., '92 Saltus, L., '87 Sargeant, G. W., '90 Scarborough, J., '54 Scott, E. N., '89 Scott, J. T., '91 Scott, W. G., '88 Sexton, T. B., '60 Seymour, C. H., '52 eyms, G. H., '72 Shaw, J. P. C ., '71 Sherman, S., '50 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, T. L., '74 Steele, 0. R., '53 Sterling, J. C., '44 Stocking, C . H. W., '60 Stoddard, E. V., '60 Stoddard, J., '71 Storrs, L. K., '63 Stotsenberg, J. H., '50
Stout, J. K., '70 • Studley, W . H., '50 Sullivan, E . T., '89 Sutton, MeW. B. E., '99 • Syle, H. W., '67 Syle, L. D., '79 Taylor, E . B., '73 Taylor, E . P., '00 Taylor, J. P., '43 Tibbits, W. B., '61 Tibbits, C. H ., '87 Tingley, G. C., '52 Travers, E. S., '98 • Tremaine, C. H. B., '66 • Truby, J. M., '79 TuiJidge, E. K., '76 Tuttle, R. C., '89 • Tuttle, R. H ., '46 Upson, A . I., '88 Valentine, W. A., '72 Van D eWate r , A. 'R ., '01 • Van Nostrand C . A., '77 • Vincent S., '58 • Deceased.
•
• •
• • •
Wake fi e ld, J . B., '46 Warner, B. 1E., '76 Warren, S. B., '59 Waterman, E. F., '98 Waterman, F. E., '01 Webb, W. R., '78 W e bster, L ., '80 Webster, W . H., '61 Welles, H. T., '43 Welles, L. H ., '64 Whitcome, F. B., '87 Whitney, H. E., '74 Williams, J. , '90 Willson, C. T., '77 Willson, D. B., '79 Winchester, S. F. , '66 Witherspoon, 0 ., '56 Woodle, A . S., '99 Woodman , C. E., '73 Woodward, C. G., '98 Worthington, E . W ., '75 Yardley, T. H ., '92 Ziegler, P. , '72
The Fraternity of Phi Gamma Delta FOUNDED IN 1848 AT WASHINGTO N AND }EFFERSON COLLE GE
Roll of Chapters Omega Mu Iota Mu Pi Iota Alpha Chi Chi Tau Alpha Nu Deuteron The ta Psi Kappa INu Sigma Nu Omega Upsilon Nu Epsilon Beta . Sigma D e uteron Beta Chi Xi Del ta Pi Alpha Gamma Phi Beta Mu Omicron Ze t a Deuteron Delta Deute ron Beta D euteron Rho Chi Theta Omicron Deuteron Rho D euteron Theta Deute ron Sigma L a mbd a D e ute ron Mu Mu Sigma Ze ta L a mbda Psi Tau .AJipha D e ute ron Gamma D euteron K a ppa T a u Nu Pi D e uteron Ze ta Phi Tau D elta Delta Xi Chi Iota Pi Delta Chi Mu Sigma Tau
University of Maine. Massachusetts Institute of T echnology. Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Amherst Coll ege. Union !College. Trini ty College. Yale U ni vers ity. Colgate University. Corn ell University. Syracuse University. Columbia College. â&#x20AC;˘College of the City of New York. N ew York University. University of P ennsylva nia. Lafayette College. L ehigh U nivers ity. Pennsylvania College. Bucknell University. Allegheny College. Washington and J efferson College. Pennsylvania State College. John s Hopkins University. University of Virginia. Washington and Lee Universn;y. Hampden-Sidney Coll ege. Roanoke College. Richmond Coll ege. U nive r sity of Alabama. O hio State University. Wooster University. Ohio Wesleyan Un iversity. Wittenberg College. Denison Un iversity. University of Wiscon s in. University of Minnesota. Indiana University. De Pauw University. Wabash College. H a n over College. Illin ois Wesleyan University . Knox College. U ni versity of T ennessee. Bethel Coll ege. Kansas University. Willi a m J ewell College. University of T ex as. University of California . Univers ity of Illinois. University of N ebrask a. Universi ty of Missouri. Universi t y of Washington.
Tau Alpha Chapter
Active Members FREDERICK BETHUNE BARTLETT CLARK TOMPSON F ALKNOR KARL HERBERT FENNING HuBERT DANA GooDALE HARRY LESLIE HowE WILLIAM STEWART HYDE }ACOB ALEXA
DER LAUBENSTEIN
EDWARD JARVIS KING MASON MICHAEL FRANCIS OwENS
J:.rd..'<ll-ntla
I
i
Gradu Charles Willia m Eu Mad is on Br Frank RaY Arthur George Joseph He Willi a mC Joseph De
.
Herman Percival Norman Charles Louis Is samuel
R. J. Clapp,
Joseph D.
Graduate Members of Tau Alpha Chapter Alfred Ha,llet Wedge, '95 Charles Judd, '93 William Eugene Conklin, '93
Charles Hubbell Street, '96
Madison Brown Bordley, '95
LeroY Kilbourn Hagenow, '96
Frank Raymond Young, '95
Percival Watson Wood, '97
Arthur Fletcher Miller, '95
Sanford Irving Benton, '97
George Francis Langdon, '96
Albert Dumond Merwin, '98
Joseph HenrY Buell, "96
Clarence Alexander Smith, '99
William Curtis White, '97
Raymond Sanford Yeomans, '99
Joseph Devine Flynn, '97
Clifford Knox Wood, '00
Herman E. Tull, '97
Arthur Paul Kelley, '01
Percival Sargent Smithe, '98
Edward J arvis King Mason, '01
Norman Milo Loomis, '98
Harold Simeon Backus, '02
Charles Andrew Monaghan, '93
James Rogers Vetich, '03
Louis Isaac Belden, '94 Samuel Wilkinson Maguire, '95
Robert Glenney, '04
James Walter Gunning, '96
Fr~tres'j,_in Urbe Frederick T. J arman, Nu Deuteron, '02 R. J. C1app, Pi Iota, '93 Dr. Arthur B. Kellogg, Mu Epsilon, '90
James N.H. Campbell, Nu Deuteron '03
Kenneth E. Kellogg, Omega, '93
Edgar C. Lynn, Pi, '86 G. C. Soderstrom, OJnicron Mu, '04
Carl W. Davis, Nu Deuteron, '02
James W. Gunning, Tau Alpha, '96 Joseph D. Flynn, Tau Alpha, '97
ss
The
Fr~ternity
of Alph~ Chi Rho
FOUNDED IN I895 AT TRINITY COLLEGE
Roll of Chapters PHI Psr . PHrCHI. PHI PHI . PHI UPSILON PHI OMEGA
Trinity College Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn University of Pennsylvania Iowa State University Columbia University
86
The Phi Psi Chapter
Active Members James Henderson John White Walker Robert Burton Gooden Charles Edward Tuke Fred Augustus Higginbotham George Herbert Holden Karl Philip Morba Edgar Martin Rogers Joseph Baird Crane Marshall Bowyer Stewart Edward Henry Lorenz 路 Philip Safford Clarke Harold Clifton Van Weelden Robert Wight Trenbath Ora Wilfred Craig Hervey Boardman Vanderbogart Theophilus John Minton Syphax Edward James Mann William George Wherry Bayard Quincy Morgan George Henry Heyn Frank Howard Ensign, Jr. Frank Seiders Brown William Francis Bulkley Edwin Lathrop Baker Walter Beach Sherwood Philip Thomas Kennedy Roger Heaton Blakeslee William Seward Wyman Wallace Edmund Samuel Carr Edward Llewellyn Duffee
Fratre.r in Urbe F . H. Hastings, Phi Psi, '96 Carroll C. Beach, M.D., Phi Psi, '96 A. M. Sturtevant, Phi Psi, '98 H. J. Blakeslee, Phi Psi, '98 V. F. Morgan, Phi Psi, '99 A. C. Hall, Phi Psi, Ex, 'oo E. L. Simonds, Phi Psi, 'oo M.P. Walker, h.
Alumni Members of The Phi Psi Chapter Addis, Emmett, '99 Arnott, Alexander, 'oo Beach, Carroll Charles, '96 Benson, Lloyd Raeburn, '99 Blakeslee, Henry Jones, '98 Brines, Moses James, 'oo Buck, Frederick Earle, '98 Buckley, Frederick Dashiels, h '84 Rev. Burbanck, George Graham, '01 Carson, Edwin Schively, Ex '02 Cleasby, Harold Loomis, '99 Colloque, Orrok Paul, '99 Derby, Aubrey Henry, '01 Eardley, William Applebie, '96 Hall, Amasa Clark, Ex 'oo Hastings, Francis Homer, '96 Henry, Charles William, '.99 Kurth, Karl Franz Frederick, Ex 'oo McElwain, Frank Arthur, '99 Moore, George Seymour, Ex '04
Morgan, Victor Forrest, '99 Morehouse, Frank Stephen, '01 Rice, Harry Landon, '99 Richmond, Denison, Ex 'oo R_ouse, William Herman, '96 Sherriff, Herbert Thomas,_'97 Simonds, Ernest Leon, 'oo Smart, Charles Thomas, 'oo Stacey, Everett Eugene, Ex '01 Sturtevant, Albert Morey, '98 Sturtevant, Francis Raymond, '01 Thurber, Christopher Carson, Ex '03 Tracy, Ellsworth 짜orton, 'oo Van Meter, Allen Reshell, '29 Wales, James Albert, 'oi Walkcr, Millidge Penderell, h. Walker, Robert, h '91 ':'Walker, William Taylor, '97 Ziegler, Carl Gottlob, '97 Ziegler, Howard Bell, Ex '03 Ziegler, Paul, h '72
* Deceased. 88
Phi Beta Kappa. FOUNDED IN I776 AT WILLIAMS AND MARY COLLEGE
+ Roll of United Chapters Alpha of Maine Beta of Maine . Alpha of New Hampshire 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 of 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 Ohio Beta or Ohio Gamma of Ohio Alpha of Indiana Alpha of Kansas Alpha of Illinois Alpha of Minnesota Alpha of Nebraska Alpha of Iowa
Bowdoin Colby Dartmouth University of Vermont Middlebury Harvard Amherst "\Villiams Tufts Brown Yale Trinity Wesleyan Union University of City of New York College of City of New York Columbia Hamilton Hobart Colgate Cornell Rochester Syracuse Rutgers Dickinson Lehigh Lafayette University of Pennsylvania Swarthmore .Johns Hopkins William and Mnry Adelbert Kenyon Marietta DePauw State University Northwestern University of Minnesota University of Nebraska State University
Beta of Connecticut
Officer.r REv. T. REV.
J.
R.
PYNCHON, D.D., LL.D.
President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Assistant Secretary Assistant Treasure?'
T. HUNTINGTON, M.A.
REv. SAMUEL HART, D.D. GEORGE LEwis CooKE, M.A. WILLIAM PERRY BE TLEY
.
ANSON THEODORE McCooK
Cl~ss
of
1902
WILLIAM PERRY BENTLEY RoBERT B URTON GooDEN Eow ARD HENRY LoRENZ ANSON THEODORE McCooK KARL PHILIP MoRnA MARSHALL BOWYER STEW ART
',
,
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Be • Bil Bi Bil Bo Bo
Br Br • B
• Br Br Br Br Brc Brc Brc Bn • Bn
Brl Bu: Bu.
Graduate ano Honorary Members
•
•
•
• •
•
* •
•
Ackley, W. N., '63 Alcorn, E. C., '74 Alling, S. H., '92 Andrews, C. M., '84 (h '96) Andrews, S. J. , (h '67) Applegate, 0., '87 Ash, T. R., '64 Atwood, J . M., '49 Bacon, J. W., '46 Bailey, M. K., '79 Bakewell, J., '59 Barber. F. M ., '91 Barbour, J . H., '73 Barrows, W. S., '84 Barton, C. C., '69 Bates, J. M., '72 Bates, R. P., '93 Bates, W. H ., '72 Beardsley, E. E., '32 (h '46) Beardsley, W. A., '87 Beers, G. E., '86 Belden. N. M., '88 Belden, N. M., '48 Benedict, L. LeG., '88 Benedict, S., '47 Benton, J. R., '97 Benton, R. A ., '64 Bidwell, L. B., '80 Birckhead, J. B., '94 Black, H. C ., '80 Bolles, E. C., '55 Bowie. W., '93 Brainard, J., '51 (h '56) Brainard, J. M., '84 Brewer, A . L., '53 Bridge, J. , '47 Brigham, H. H., '76 Brocklesby, A. K., '70 Brocklesby, J . H., '65 Brocklesby, W. C., '69 Bronson, M., '52 Broughton, C. D ., '95 Brown, J. E., '83 Brown, T. M., '50 Bryan\ W., '75 Buffington, J., '75 Bulkley, W . H ., '73
Burgwin, J. H . K., '77 Burrage, F. S ., '95 Burton, R. E., '83 (h '96) • Butler, C. M., '33 (h '52) * Capron, A., '45 Carpenter, J. S., '79 Carter, G. C., '87 Chapin, W. V., '78 * Chapman, C. R., '47 Chase, F.. '52 Chase, M . F ., '97 Cheshire, J. B., '69 (h '96) • Chipman, G. S., '78 • Clark. G. H., (h '63) Clark, J . W., '63 C leasby, H . L., '99 C lerc, F. J ., '43 Coit, .C. W., '82 Coleman, C. S ., '82 Coleman, G. P., '90 Collins, W. F., '93 • Colt, W. U., '44. • Colton, C . (h '54) Conklin, W. E., '93 Conover, T. A., '90 Cooke, G . L., '70 Coster, M. K., '87 • Cowling, R. 0., '61 Crabtree, A ., '92 Crawford, J. W. R., '88 • Crosby, D. G., '51 Cummins, A. G ., '51 • Curtis, F. R.. '80 Curtis, R. W., '96 • C urtis, T. W. T ., (h '58) • Curtis, W. E., '43 • Cushing,J. T., '37 (h '47) Davies, W. G., '60 Davis, C. J ., '94 Dean, E. B., ? • Derby, A. H., '01. Dickerson.E. M ., '74 Dockray, E. L., '83 Douglas, G. W., '71 Douglass·, A. E., '89 • Driggs, T. I., '48 DuBois, G. Me. I., '74
91
])uBois, H. 0., '76 • Dyer, A., '70 Edmunds, C. C., '77 Emery, R ., '54 Evans. S. K ., '95 * Everest, C. W .. '38 (h '48) * Fairbairn, R. B., '40 (h '45) * Faxon, E., '47 Fell, J . W., '89 Ferguson, H., '68 • Ferguson, J . D., '51 Ferguson, S., '96 Fischer, C. L., '60 Fiske. G. McC., '70 * Flower, S., '45 Flynn, J. D., '97 Foss, F. H., '01 Frye, P. H., '89 Gallagher, J. D ., '95 Gallaudet, B. B., ·so Gallaudet, T ., '45 (h '51) George, T. M. N., '80 George. J . H., '72 * Giddings, G. W., '49 Gilbert, G. B., '96 * Gilman, G. S., '47 • Goddard, F. M., '96 Golden, H. L., '83 Gordon, T. H., '71 Gowen, F. c., '82 Gower, H. B., '49 Graham. J., '72 Green, H. D., '99 • Gregg, D., '54 Gregory, H. T., '54 Grennell, J . S., (h '58) Griswold, C. S., '90 Gunning, J. W., '96 * Hale, C. F ., '47 Hall, G., '92 *Hall. S., '54 Hallam, G. R., '59 Hamersley, W., '58 (h '96) Hamilton, C. A., '82 Hamilton, G. E., '95 Harding, A., '79 Harraden, F . S., '67 * Harriman. F. D., '45 (h '96) Harriman, F. W ., '72 Hart, S., '66 Harwood, E., (h '61) * Hawkes, W. W., (h '61) Hayden, C. C., '66
• Haydn, T . L., '56 Hedrick, C. B., '99 Henderson, E. F., '82 HenrY• C. W ., '99 Hermann, S., '57 Hickox, G. A ., '51 Hicks·, G. C., '56 Hicks, J . M ., '54 Hiester, I., '76 Hills, J. D ., '78 • Hoadly, C. J., ' 51 Holbrooke, G. 0 ., '69 • Holcombe. D. E ., '56 Holcombe, G. H., '96 Holden, S. M., '82 Holway, 0., '80 Hooker, S.D., '77 Hopson, G. B., '57 Hornor, H. A., '00 Hotchldn, S. F., '56 Hovey, H. E., '66 • Howard. H., '91 Hubbard, G. M., '75 Hubbard, W. S ., '88 • Hugg, G. W ., '62 Hughes, I. W ., '91 Hull, A. S., '66 Humphries, R. F .. '92 • Hunt, E - K., (h '51) Huntington, G. S., '81 (h '9v) Huntington. J . T., '!)U • Huntington, J. W., '83 • Hurd, J. D., '74 Huske, J ., '77 Hutchins, R. H .• '90 • J ackson, A., '60 • J acobs, E. C ., '55 J ennings, A . B., '61 J ohnson, C. A ., '92 * John son. E . E., '59 Johnson, E. P ., '65 Johnson, F. E., '84 Johnson, F. F., '94 Johnson, G. D., '54 Johnson, W . MeA., '98 Jones, C. W ., '81 • Jones, L. H., '52 Judd, C., '93 • Kelley. J ., '44 Ker, G., '43 • Kerfoot, J. B. (h '65) Kissam, E. V. B., '69 • Kittridge, A. S., '57
Peabody, F . B., '48 Pedersen, V. C., '91 Perry, J. B., '72 • Pettit, W. F., '46 Phair, P. D., '94 • Pierce, H . H., '58 Plumb, J. F., '91 Potts, F. H., '68 Pratt, A., '98 Pressey, W., '90 • Preston, T. S., '43 Prince, F . W., '00 Prout. J ., '77 Purdy, C . E., '88 • Purdy, J. S., '49 Pynchon, T. R., '41 Pynchon, W. H. C ., '90 Raftery, 0. H., '73 * Randall, E. D., '92 Reineman, R. T., '82 Remington, C . H., '89 R ichardson, F. W., '84 Richardson, L. W., '73 • Rogers, R. C., '45 * Rudder, W., '48 Russell, F. F., '85 Russell, G. W., '34 (h '51) * Sands, 0. A. ,'87 * Sanford, D. P., '44 • Sanford, H. S., '36 (h '61) Scarborough. J ., '54 Schulte, H. von W., '97 Schutz, W. S., '94 • Scudder, C. D., '75 Scudder, E. M., '77 Scudder, H., '91 • Scudder, H. J., '46 (h '50) Scudder, W., '89 Selden, F. C. (h '59) Sennett, L. F., '89 Seyms, G. H., '72 Shepard, C. N., '91 •. Shipman, W. D., (h '71) * Short, D. H., '33 (h '56) Short. W., '69 Simonds, E. L .. '00 Small, E. F., '74 Smith, C. B., '54 Smith, G. W., (h '85) * Smith, H. M., '93 * Smith, H., '62 • Smith, J . S .• '63 Smith, S. E., '75
• Knickerbacker, D. B., '53 Lanpher, L. A., '80 Lawton, E. F., '91 Lecour, J . H., '98 Lilienthal, H., '86 Lindsley, C. A., '49 (h '96) Linsley, A. B., '82 Lockwood, L. A., '55 Lockwood, L. V., '93 Loomis, H. V., '85 Loveridge, D. E., '50 Luther, F. S., '70 Mackay, J. (h ' ~4) • Mackay, W. R., '67 • Mallory, G. S., '58 . • Marble, N. E. (h '61) Mayo, M. C ., '93 • McCook, G. S., '97 McCook, J . I., '63 McCook, P. J., '95 McCrnckan, J. H., '82 McElwrun, F. A., '99 Metcalf, H. A., '66 • Miller, P. S., '64 Miller, W. J., '92 Mitchell, S. S ., '85 Moffett, G. H., '78 Moore, C . E., '76 Morehouse, F. S .• '01 Morgan, W. F., '88 • Mulcahey, J ., '42 (h '82) Murray, J . B., '62 N eely, H. R., '84 Newton, E. P., '81 Nichols, W. F., '70 Nichols, J. W .. '99 Niles, E. C., '87 Niles, W. P., '93 Niles, W. W., '57 • Norton, F. L., '68 Olmstead, C. T., '65 • Paddock, B. H .• '48 • Paddock, J . A., '45 Paddock, L. H .. '88 Paddock, L. S., '50 (h '96) • Page, D. C . (h '51) Parker, T. H., '98 Parsons, A. T., '71 Parsons, H., '83 Parsons, J. R., '81 Pattison, A. E., '80 Pattison. G. B., '81 • Payne, W., '34 (h '54)
93
Smyth, J . D., '74 • Somers, J. B . Y. (h '57) Spencer, U. H .. '90 • Spencer, W. G., '53 • Stevens, S., '65 Sto cking, C. H. W .. ' 60 Stone, M., '80 Stotsenburg, J . H., '50 Street, C. H., '96 • Studley, W. H., '50 Sturtevant, A. M., '98 Sturtevant, F . R., '01 Tate, W. J., '86 Taylor, E. B., '73 • Taylor, J . B ., '49 • Taylor, W . F., '44 (h '51) • Terry, C. E., '51 ( h '56) Thorne, R., '85 Tibbits, C. H., '87 T ibbits, W. B .. '61 Tomlinson, S . L., '00 • Toucey, I. (h '46) Tracy, E. M., '00 • Tremaine, C. H. B., '66 Valentine, W. A., '72 Van Meter, A. R., '99 • Van Nostrand, C . A .• '77 Verder, D. H., '99 Vibbert, A . D., '99 Vibbert, H . C., '68 Vibbert, W. H ., '58 • Vinton, F. (h '54) Wales, J. A., '01 Walker, D. B.. '61 ·warner, D. T., '72 (h ' 96) Warner, M. C., '88 * vVarren, S. B., '59
*
*
•
•
• •
Washburn, L. C., '81 Waterman , L., '71 Watson, S. N., '82 W ebster, L ., '80 Weed , C . F. , '94 W e lles, H. T ., '43 Wheeler, C. H ., '01 Whitcombe, F. B., '87 vVhite, R. A., '81 White, W. C ., '97 'Whiting, S. M. , '46 Whitlock, H. R., '70 Whitney, H. E., '74 Williams, A. J., '96 Williams, C. C., '71 Williams, E. W., '53 Williams, F. G., '89 Williams, J. , '90 Williams, J. H., '54 Williams. J. W., '78 Winkle y, R. L. , '79 With erspoon, 0., '56 Woffenden, R. H., '93 Wood, H. S., '71 Wood , P. M ., '97 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, C. G., '97 Ziegler, P., '72
• Deceased. h Honorary.
9~
TRINITY COLU:tGE AND THE LITTLE ("OW PARK) RIVER From an old Lithograph in the possession of Rev. Frederick WitHam Harriman 1\f. A.
JARVIS HALL
SEABURY HALL
'l'RINITY COLLEGE ABOUT
t
50
BRO\VNELL HALL
THF, HALL OF
ATURAL HISTORY
th
\\'
T st
J
le
The Year
n
tl a ELL, we are about through another college year. In many ways the year has been exactly like the others that we have spent here, and yet things have sec::med a little different, too. Those that came here as Freshmen are now almost Sophomores, and life begins to center more in a class pipe than in a strong lock on the door. The Sophomores are nearly Juniors, and are calculating how their dignity had best be displayed. The Juniors will be Seniors soon, and will proceed to put on the corrugated brow that betokens the wisdom of four years. As for the Seniors, well , they will have to begin to work, in the real sense of the word. But this is not a condensed class history, so we must pas on. The year began with the usual unclerclass deq1on trations, in which the two classes came off with honors about even. Then the football team began to attract attention. The team last year was not what it was the year before, for some of our best men were gone, but in spite of that we did pretty well , and in the most important game of the year we held our opponents clown to a reasonable score. In other games the team played well, and if it did not win, at least it did much toward getting the material into shape that will make a winning team in the coming season.
II
W
la
111
th th \\'
â&#x20AC;˘
As soon as the winter set in the basketball team began its work, the first game we played showed, in the language of the press, "the weak points in the team." But these weak points were soon remedied, and the team gut clown to business. In the league games, we did not show up so well as in some of the others, but this was clue to the fact that the league games came in the first part of the season. Towards the end of the winter we played Wesleyan, and added another victory to the string. "Trinity Week," with its teas, receptions, and dances, was a sea on of great enjoyment, and during that time the college was able to extend its hospitality to a large number of friends. The festivities of the week lumni closed with the Junior "Prom," which was highly successful. Hall was beautifully decorated on the evening which marked the debut of 1903 as upperclass-men. In order to make the change from society to athletics seem less abrupt, perhaps it would be well to make some mention of an event which partook of the nature of both-the St. Patrick's Day celebration. The campus was wet and muddy, and the rain fell at intervals. but the struggle was unhindered by the elements, and was only ended when the Juniors had to leave the field of carnage in order to be present at the lecture in Ethics on "Our Duty to Our Fellow Men." The In-door Meet was as interesting as usual this year, and although no record s were broken, the work done in many of the events was of the "star" variety. During the evening the announcement was made of the gift of a silver athletic trophy by Professor J. J. McCook, to be awarded yearly to the Trinity athlete making the best record at any intercollegiate meet. The results of the in-door Meet. like those of last year, were in favor of 1902. This i the second year that the gymnasium cup has been won by the clas of 1902. The Parallel Bars Cup was won by E. S. Merriam, 1902, and the McCracken Cup went to C. H. Hill, 1902. At the present writing, the baseball team has begun a most promising season. Wâ&#x201A;Ź are about even so far on victories and defeats, but that will be changed later when the team gets into regular form. And so another year is over. It seems hard to realize that we are that much nearer the end of our college life. But the new faces on the walk and the regular recurrence of the gas bills remind us of the flight of time. For some there ¡are only a few weeks left. For others the time is longer. It won't be long now before we will all have gone, and "others will fill our places." Some are anxious for that time to come-perhaps all are,-but when it does come, and we are numbered among the Alumni, there will often be times when we will wish we were back again in that room in I ortham or Jarvis or Seabury, and could begin it all over again from the night when we first heard, "All out, Freshmen !" 99
THE TRINITY TRUE tt
ll Words by J os.
Music by BUFFINGTON
VICTOR HRRBRRT
~ Trinity, '75
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home, blue fath up; gold
true to the teachings we learn at thy knee; him who bears sonship, leal mother, to thee; wilt shield them the closer because they are ours: verse, if in honor, is vic- to-ry won; guidance for youth, mould our manhood for strife,
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D. S. al Fine.
The Horn of Wisdom The Sultan was young and proud and fair But his h eart was heavy with despair, For the whole earth seemed to him to be CurLed by man's inhumanity. "There is no rig~t. there is no wrong; The fierce, the cowards, the weak, the strong. Make up the tribes of men," he said; " The circle which binds the royal head, " My father won by craft and force, His throne was built on his brothe r's corse. " The lightning falls on the bad and the good, But the just man bears the heaviest load. " Pity and kindness, simple truth, Love and mercy, and gentle ruth, " These are trampled in the dust Everywhere by greej and lust. ''The beast of prey is the noblest brute And strength is the noblest attribute; "Man is merely the cunningest beast, And the lia'r sits highest at the feast. "Our pleasures all are rooted in death, And temperance is but saving breath "Which spent more quickly were ow路 gain, Since the shorter our days the less our pain. "This earth was framed by an evil god With a heart of hate in a careless mood; "And what can Allah's heaven give When on Allah's earth 'tis hell to live?"
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Thus was the young man's spirit wrought Beneath the chilling load of thought: 103
In his haunted eye and haggard stare Men read the story of despair. All the pride of life and the lust of the eye And the charm that springs from minstrelsy, All beauty and music and woman's kiss And the breath of Spring were powerless To fill his heart with the wholesome thought And the shallow joys that come unbought To those, who, blest with thoughtlessness, Escape the thinker's soul-distress.
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To the Sultan thus in sombre mood '拢here came from the desert's solitude, An old man, grey, and thin, and worn, In his hand he bore a brazen horn. With eye serene and unbent head "Listen and learn, 0, King," he said, "The guardians of the sacred roll Have known the sickness of thy soul. The sadness which the wise man feels Only a higher wisdom heals, And, therefore, I have come to thee, To heal thee of thy malady. For thee, 0 King, by us was wrought The magic horn which I have brought; We wrought it with fasting and with prayer In the holy p路l ace with pious care, And we sang as we wrought in unison The mystic words that are known to none, But the three who read the sacred book On which no other men may look. The dancing atoms knew the word, Anew their rhythmic pulse was stirred, And when God's true name thrice was said, It entered the walls of the thing we made. 104
Thus whoso listens through this horn, To his sense the soul of things is born, He hears the deeper harmony Which closes in all things that be. The mighty stream he comes to know Of the river of )jfe, upon whose flow The false, the true, the bad, the good Are foam-borne bubbles of the flood." The Sultan put the horn to his ear. And bent his head as If to hear. Then the inner music of life he heard, The mystic murmur his being stirred. Both the song of joy and the sigh of distress Held the note of cosmic hopelessness. For love and hope and joy all merge Their music in creation's dirge. The note of death was over all '.rhe other notes that rise and fall, And sounds unchanging, triumphing, The dominant voice of Nature's King. The Sultan said, " take back this thing, For bitter comfort does it bring; The face of the world is scarred with a curse But the hideous heart of the world is worse. Best is the careless fleeting glance, F'or Paradise was ignorance, And wisdom teaches that central law Is changeless, soU'lless; that all things draw To cold oblivion where no bow Of promise bends o'er a world of snow: Only the cold auroral light Beneath whose rosy rays grows bright, A waste unvisited by the sun, When the farcical dance of life is done." And from that day his soul in gloom Sank deeper neath the sense of doom. C. F. J.
When You Are Here When you are here, Though dark clouds rise I know the sky will clear When you are h ere. Upon my face there is no care or pain, That at your kiss won't turn to joy again, When you a re h ere. When you're away, Though skies are clear I fear a somber day, Wh en you're away. Though joys are many a nd misfortunes few. Yet all is tinged with loneliness for you, When you're away.
T.
In November. Blow high, blow low, ye winds that go, And kiss my fair Ruth's cheek, For now we're offOur game is golf With putter, brassey, and cleek. On bende d knee, I build her tee, And when she drives I gaze. Lost is the ball, My heart, my all. Wh en â&#x20AC;˘Ruth, my fair Ruth plays. Still on we go- the sun is low, I've lost holes le ft and right. I''ll count these few, Since Ruth's mine, too, Our hazards are cleared to-night. P.
I06
The Two Blind Pools
ACK ASHLEY was one of those unfortunate young men, who have never been called on to exert themselves except at football. He went through college with credit because it was easy for him to learn, and it was about as easy to be regular in attendance as to be irregular. He had few wishes ungratified; in fact, he hardly took the trouble to formulate wishes about anything. He was good looking, good natured, and in good health, and seemed to possess all qualities in happy balance and none in excess. He knew a little about music, a little about art, a little about science, and was equally interested, or uninterested, in everything. His guardian-all his near relatives were dead-allowed him a generous income, and when he came of age handed over to him $soo,ooo, in gilt-edged bonds and stocks, and, the trust having been closed, thought no more about him. Ashley went to Europe for a year, and when he came back he found all his classmates and friends actively engaged in business. There seemed to be nothing for him to do. From dissipation he shrank with the instinct of a healthy young fellow. He liked all women in a general way, and, though several young ones had intimated pretty plainly that he might like them in a particular way if he wished to, he kept up quite easily a brotherly relation to all of them. lt did not seem worth while to specialize in a subject, all parts of which were about equally interesting. Having nothing to do, and living in ew York with a sufficient income and no expensive tastes or hobbies, he naturally took to speculating. •A s long as he knew nothing about business he lost little, for whether he bought or sold blindly his chance was even. He did not venture much, and his losses and gains were about balanced, and the broker's commissions, attached impartially to both, amounted only to a few thousand dollars. This did not seem very interesting, and soon after New Year he went into a "blind pool" with old Lamb, of Lamb, Skinner & Co., to buy all the stock of the "Tin Plate and Spanish Castle R. R. Co." In a "blind pool" a number of men contribute money, and one does the "operating." In the end, when the realizing or "sugaring off" takes place, this operator divides the profits-or losses-in proportion to the amounts originally contributed. Ashley would have told you that old Lamb was one of the shrewdest and most successful specu-· lators in the world. Everybody knew that. But he would not have told you that T. P. and S. C. shares were absolutely valueless, for he did not know that; nor that old Lamb already owned nearly all of them, for only two people knew that; nor that old Lamb O\ ned in addition the greater part of the bonded indebtedness of the road, for only one per-
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son knew that; nor that thi astute person was preparing to foreclose, for only old Lamb and his confidential lawyer knew that. If he had known all these facts it might have seemed odd to him that old Lamb should form a partnership with him to buy a railroad of which he already owned nearly ninety-five per cent., but perhaps he might have understood, had he known that it was Lamb's custom to operate through two brokers, one to buy and the other to sell, and that he never let his right hand broker knew what his left hand broker was doing. So it happened that in the spring months Lamb sold all the stock oÂą the road to himself and Ashley. Instead of owning all of it, Lamb now owned half and Ashley the other half. Then he made the discovery that nothmg could prevent foreclosure, and Ashley found himself in possession of a lot of handsomely engraved certificates, and little else. Life began to seem rather interesting. In these circumstances, Ashley showed some of the pluck and determination to make the best of it which had distinguished him when his side was overmatched at football. When he had sold the solid incomebearing stocks his grandfather had left him and given his check for the expenses of the blind pool he found that he would have about $ro,ooo left. He determined to go to Oregon, where one of his classmates was engaged in mining and lumbering. Other acquaintances had expressed sorrow for his bad luck, but no one made the slightest advance to lend him a helping hand. The rough Westerner had written him repeatedly to come out to the Pacific coast, and Jack felt that he ,could trust him. "I will go to see Orton,'' he said to himself, " and I will take off my coat and go to work, farming or lumbering or drving a team. I know I can drive as well as any man in New York. o more buying something I catmot see. To-morrow I will run up and bid Mary good-bye and tell her just how I stand, and leave. She will understand. She has sense." He felt an odd pain as he said this, half aloud; something he had never felt before, but he only shut his mouth the more firmly. His old life and his old character seemed to fall from him, and his demeanor compelled even the admiration of the foxy old Lamb. "I'm pretty hard hit," said Jack to him, " but I don't propose to give up. I've got a good deal left and I mean to get as far from ew York as I can." "Have you? have you, Mr. Ashley?" said the old man eagerly. "How much?" "I have youth and health, and my two hands," said Jack. "Oh !" grunted the old man, rather disappointed to find that the rest of Jack's fortune was not available assets, though the thought flitted through his mind that if he could get what he " had left" it would be worth more than all the rest. " We have been a little unfortunate, Mr. Ashley. I lose twice as much as you." "Yes," replied Jack. "You can stand it. It's the old story of the brass pot and the ea,rthen pot. That was one of the first fables I read in Latin. I wish that I had learned it better, but Latin never did a fellow much good." I08
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Something like compassion stirred the old man's dry heart. "If ::t loan would do you any good I will let you have five hundred on your note, or five thousand," he added, hastily, seeing the look of contempt on the young man's face. No, thank you," said Ashley, "I've got through borrowing and putting up margins. I'm going to work. Good-bye.'' He left the office, his head erect and his face set. Old Lamb was more feared than respected. He was feared because he owned a powerful god, money, which most men worship. He had sacrificed to this god all his life. But he also owned a goddess, whom he worshipped even more devoutly. His daughter Mary was nearly twenty, and, as Lamb's wife had been dead for many years, this daughter came to represent an object of affection hardly less powerful than his absorption in money-getting. He 路rarely spoke to her, and she was absent from him most of the time, but her good looks and her girlish whims were a great delight to him, unconsciously, and in adding to his fortune his main thought was that it would all be hers some day. She had inherited some money from her mother, and it was the passion of Lamb's life to add to this. Since she was eighteen he had made some permanent investments in her name, and had encouraged her, with but indifferent success it must be admitted, to keep accounts and to look after her business affairs. Many a weary hour he had explained to her the immense difference between bonds, preferred stock, and common stock, and all the algebraical puzzles of the stock market. She was a very capable young- woman and readily comprehended the points her father elucidated. though she was repelled by the profound selfishness which seemed to lie at the bottom of the entire system . She was, at the time of the last interview between Ashley and her father, visiting a married friend on the Hudson. and, as the young man was in the habit of visiting a friend of his in the same place, a friendship had sprung up between them. If Ashley had been asked he would probably have said that she was the daughter of old Lamb. of Lamb. Skinner & Co .. but picnicking and tennis and driving were so entirely different from the turmoil of Wall Street that he never associated the father and daug-hter. The very morning that he resolved to bid her g-ood-bye and found that his feeling for her was different from mere friendship she received a letter from her father, which read:
"Mv DEAR DAUGHTER: I have sold a part of the T. P. and S. C. stock which really belong-ed to you, for I bought it ten years ag-o with some money that your mother left me. It cost very little and I have put the proceeds to vour credit. You can buy a yacht or a hou e or anything you want. I won't put any restraint on my little g-irl. In fact it is all her own . I have put the money to your credit in the Geological Bank and enclose a statement showing a balance in six figures. Does it. not look nice? Exercise independent judgment in investing. Yr. aff. father, CoRNELius LAMB." 109
The Jetter did not produce an impression on the girl commensurate he had money enough already, and "six with its weighty import. figures," even if the first was a five, did not appeal to her very forcibly. Perhaps it was by chance that she drove alone in her village cart in the direction of the station about the time for the arrival of the afternoon train in which Ashley came from the city. At all events, as he was walking to his friend's house, carrying his bag, in a spasm of economy, he heard the sound of a horse's hoofs behind him , and Mary Lamb overtook him. "Why, Mr. Ashley," she cried. "you here on a week clay! Let me drive you to 1r. Tainter's gate. I am going right past it." "Thank you, ever so much," said Jack, stepping into the cart. "Why, what is the matter?" said she. "You look awfully determined. I thought even your back looked as if you had made up you mind. Have you had some bad news?" There was a sympathetic note in her voice. but Ashley answered doggedly, "Well, yes, rather. Fact is, I have determined to go to O regon, and it's really something of a wrench to leave all one's friends . Luckily I have no relatives who would care if I went there or to the bottom of the sea. I've determined to 'go West, young man,'" he added, gaily. "Why, must you go?" said the girl, looking straight in front of her, as if the pony's harness needed close scrutin y. "Why, you know. I had some money and I was such a fool as to specu late. and now I haven't any, and so--" "But surely you can find someth ing to do here. We shall all miss you so much." "Perhaps I might,'' said Jack, bitterly. "Perhaps I might get ten dollars a week. What would that amount to? I should have all my old a sociations holding me back. When a man has to step down in the social world he must go to a new place where strength counts and start even.'' "I think that is cowardly," said she. "Perhaps it is. I could not bear to live here and hear of you every clay. You and the others," he added hastily. "I am coward ly." "No you are not. But. Jack. I have some money of my own. Papa lets me be entirely independent. Now you must borrow some of me and--" "That I could not possibly do." "\i\Thy not?" "I could not be under obligations to you, because J think more of you than any other person in the world." "I should think that would be a reason," said the girl. "What are , friends good for if they don 't help one another?" "Don't you ' see," said the young man with decision. "that when a fellow loves a gi rl as I do you, he cannot possibly be under money obli路 gations to her. You don't think I want to go away. I must.'' IIO
"Oh, I cannot bear it," said the girl, impulsively. "You are the only man that has ever spoken the truth to me. All the rest are lying and making believe. Oh, you mustn't go." "I will come back," said he, taking her disengaged hand. "I will come back as soon as I have shown myself a man." "But when will that be? And you may change. No, you will never change, nor shall I. I know thaf," said she, as the young man kissed her tenderly. "I know it, too," said Jack. "You and I are not of the changing kind." Before Ashley left her that evening he had mentioned that he meant to try to sell what he could of his Tin Plate and Spanish Castle shares, though it must be owned that business formed but a small part of the staple of their conversation. He said that the minute he offered any of them, clown went the price. He was rather inclined to regard the matter from the humorous standpoint, but when Mary Lamb heard the name of the road she became very serious. As soon as he was out of the house she flew up stairs and opened her father's letter. The moment she saw the tell-tale initials she sai,l half aloud: "Why, that i 路 1 Jack's money I have, and there is no way to get it back to him. I will not keep it, if I have to throw it in the river." She remained some time in thought, and early next morning she went to ew York and reached the house of one of the brothers Straightgoocl, banker_s and brokers. What she said was never known, but John Straightgoocl, as he put an oblong slip of paper in his pocketbook, was overheard to say: "It shall be clone at once, my dear, and it does you great credit. Not a word shall get out.'' At all events. when Jack's broker, on the opening of the board, said, rather perfunctorily, "I will sell one hundred Tin Plate at 35." a broker who sometimes bought for the Straightgoods said promptly, "Taken." "Want any more, same figure?" "How much?" "Sell you any part of fifteen thousand." "Taken." The memoranda were made and the stock actually delivered before Ashley got clown town. and going into his broker's office, said: "Could you sell any of the stuff?" "It is all sold," replied his agent. and you can have your check before the bank closes. And now, Mr. Ashley, let me buy you some safe stocks.'' Before the day closed Ashley was back nearly where he started, minus some thousand dollars. broker's commissions. plus a good deal of valuable experience. and the Lamb family were again sole owners of the Tin Plate Railroad Co. Jack even had to buy a few shares from old Lamb's broker, to make good his delivery. as his broker in his haste had sold more than he owned. "Papa," said Mary Lamb, next day, "T have taken your advice and bought some nice railroad stock. Tin Plate. they call it." The old man was dumbfounded. "Tin Plate! Whv. it isn't worth a nickel. What you goin' to do with it? Paper a路 room?" "Why. papa, I thought you said you wanted me to exercise independent judgment. T'm holding it for a rise," said the girl. III
"Your money's gone. Next time you ask me before you buy cats and dogs," replied old Lamb, savagely. "I will, papa, dear, and, by the way, papa, Jack Ashley and I are going into a blind pool.'' "Blind pool! Whose blind?" "He is, papa dear. He wants to marry me." "Seems to me," said her father, "that you are exeretsmg a good deal of independent judgment. But I have nothing to say." "Not even to congratulate me, papa?" "Ashley is the one to be congratulated." "Well, here he comes. Tell him you are glad." "Mr. Ashley," said the old man, as Jack came into the room and he noticed his daughter's radiant face, "you have won more than I have lost. If this young lady is happy, I am content.'' "So am I," said Jack. "More than content." "But let me advise you to go into no more blind pools," said the old man with a grin, as the humor of the situation struck him. "I certainly shall not," said the young man, fervently. As the old man turned away, he said to himself: "It's all in the family." Mary did not tell Jack that she had saved him from ruin till two years afterward, when their hearts had so grown together that it was impossible one should have a secret from the other. And then Jack did not mind, for it seemed quite a natural thing to do. Had she told him before they were married he would have been an unhappy man. Her woman's instinct told her when to keep silent and when to speak.
II2
The Progress of Years
At evening as I stand alone, On Trinity Hill a nd gaze away, A cross the vall ey to th e w est, And watch th e slow departing day; And as I think how many d ays, Have that same sun slowly si nk, Behind those everla s ting hill s, And p a int the sky a glorious pink, Deep, solemn t hough ts com e c rowding up, Nor does the quiet of the night Bring p eace to my unqui et mind , With thoughts of what is wrong, w h a t right. "The World grows worse," some p eople say, "There is no progress under H eaven ; The lump is as it was before, We've even lost the little leaven." 113
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My . thoughts fly back two hundred years, Two centurie ago I s.tand Alone on this same rocky bill, Th e same prospect at my command. Alone, yet nol alone, for, see, Not far away, a ghostly sight, There stands a gloomy gallows tree, And catches rays of fading 'light. And from its long and silent arm, There h angs a human shape, A man? No! Heaven h ave mercy on their souls; A woman's form: look, ye who can. The fiery sun directly west, The body of old Goody Brown, As lon e it hangs upon the tree, Casts a lon g shadow on the town. Across the village roofs it falls, As slowly now the day expires, Across the stately Meeting-House, And lingers on the tall Church spires. A few days since as Goody Brown, Toiled slowly on her lonely way, She stopped to say a cheery word To children laughing in their play. Three days had passed, when, strange to tell, A sickness fell on •l ittle May, On whom old Goody's kindly smile Had chan ced to fall, that fatal day. Then up arise the honest folk Of Hartford town, and with one voice, They cry: " She is a witch, must die." And in that thought they a ll rejoice. To-day they h anged her on the On Gallows Hill, and then To pray beneath that gloomy For the lost soul of Goody
tree, went down shade. Brown.
Oh, Witchcraft, fatal blot of sin, That looks so black upo'n the page Of old New England's history, And blacker grows from age to age.
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But what a change the years have wrought, As slowly onward they have rolled. What wealth of knowledge they have brought, As superstitions knell they've tolled. Where stood that hideous gallows tree, A liber:;.J Christian college stands. Instead of Witchcraft's tyranny, The Witch of Science now commands. The storied halls and noble towers Of Trinity have taught us well, To trust the Great Creator's plan, Some day to ring Sin's final knell. E. C. THOMAS.
IIS
A Soliloquy I often lie beneath a tree, And smoke my pipe reflectively, My latest meal digesting. And there I watch the busy bee, Thinking h ow great a fool is he To buzz about so busily When h e, too, might be resting. W. S. T.
Nocturne To-night the stars are clouded deep, And veil the luster of their light, And darkness' shadows slowly sweep O'er hill and forest hushed in sleep, All silent till the morning bright: But Jet not on your spirit creep The sorrow and the dread affright, Forgetful of the journey steep, To-night. To-night old memories throng, to-night, The quiet house and at us pee p From darkened corners, sad and white, Yet do not mourn their ghostly plight, But close your eyes and never weep To-night. HERVEY BOARDMAN V ANDERBOGART.
Dan Cupid Dan Cupid went a hunting, w ith frolicsome intent. He saw two people 'neath a tree, And at them, most mischievously, His pointed arrows sent. Alas, Dan Cupid's hunting left me in sorry plight, For while at me his shafts went true, And pierced my poor heart through and through, He missed my lady, quite. W.S.T
n6
Night
When the black night has drugged the world with sleep, And the round orb of th e red moon doth c r eep Above the distant hills , a nd :;.til th e stars Sca tte r through out th e sky, like w a ndering sheep, Th e n, through th e stillness, fan cies comes to m e, The shadows of th e days that used to b e, All those p as t hours of joy and pain are now But phantom ships, afloat on m e mory' s sea: I feel a longing and a vague unrest, As if my soul to break th e fast e nings pressed, Whic h bind it to th e petty things of life, And in the vastness seek some nobl e r quest. I seem to see a gate befo r e m e the r e, Beyond which beckon figur es wondrous fair, I stretch my h a nds to push away th e gate, And, lo, my finge rs close on e mpty air. So, in my wearied mind such fanci es play, Forbidding r es t and driving sleep away, Until th e light above the eas te rn hills, Sca tte rs the night and tells of corning day. W . S. T.
II7
The Silent Thoughts The best and noblest in us, From our birth till the time we're dead, Are the thoughts that we can not utter, The words that we've never said. The tender eyes of a mother, The grace of a sweetheart's smile, A glance, a touch, or a token, Are the things that make life worth while. So w h e n we hav e .crossed the waters, And our life is a tale that's told, And the great 路 recording angel, Is sorting the dross and gold, When we've passed from this old world's darkness, To the li g ht of t h e perfect day, I think that the things we fee l will co unt Far more than the things we say.
T
Memory In the sweet quiet of the after days, When sinks the s un of life adow n the west And nature's voice calm m adrigals of rest At eve ning's close will tranquilly upra ise, Then once more through fond memory's shadowed maze We shall be wandering, not sad, opprest With bitter thoughts, but truly doubly blest By what was fairest in our present ways. Then let us nobly strive, though hard the du'ty, The master sculptor's perfect dream of beauty Is hewn with pain from cold r esisting stone: So thus the toil to-day doth shape to-morrow; L et not our work be for our future sorrow, But strive for right s in ce that is peace alo ne. HERVEY BOARDMAN VANDERBOGART.
II8
READING AND REFERENCE ROOM.
ll9
rrj-
~~~~i' \ ~.rf
Board of Editors 1901- 1902
(l
r
;» ~
PHILIP SAFFORD CLARKE, 1903, Managittg Editor. EDWARD JAMES MAN
;.; tr1
, 1904, Business Manager .
HERVEY BOARDMAN VADERBOGART, 1903 , Literary Editor. EDMUND CRAWFORD Tf!OJ\IAS , I 903. REEVE H UNTINGTON H TCHINSON, 1903. WILLIAM LARCHAR , ]R. , 1903. GEORGE HERBERT HOLD.E:N , 1902. THEOPHIL S MINTON SYPHAX , 1903.
"'..< p:
> ::< <
> z C) !'!!
"
1::1
0 0
>
..,~
:z:
0
•
b ltl z
120
I
I>
The Trinity Ivy FOtJ-NDED BY THH CLASS OF 1874
Editors '74 '75 '76 '77 '7 '79
P. H . Whaley, G. M. Dubois, S. H. Hewlett, H. E. Whitn e y W. D. Sartwelle, H. M. Hooper, C. D. Scudder, G. W. Lin c oln , E. W. Worthington I. Hiester, E. N. Burke, H. V. Ruthe rford, W. W. Gill e tte, W. C. Skinne r A. M. Clarke, R. H. Cole man, W. E. Roge rs, J . E. Kurtz, G. H. Norton W. C. Blackmer, R. M . Campbell , G. H. Moffe tt, J. C. Du ell, H . B . S cott W . N. E lbert, Managing Editor; Orr Buffington, A. Harding, J. S. Ca rpenter, S. G. Fisher '80 G. Kneeland, W. R. Leaken, W. L. C rosby, C. G. Willi a ms, J. C. Banows '81 G. B. Pattison, Managing Editot路; L. C. Washburne, A. W. R e ine man, W. T . E lmer, G. S. Huntington '82 C. Carpenter, Managing Editor; C. H. Carter, C. E. Hotchkiss, D .' M. Bohlem, R. T. Reineman 122
'83 F. Roosevelt, Managing Editor; H. L. Golden, H. W. Thompson, A. H. Wright, J. R. Carter '84 E. •L . Purdy, Managing Editor; W. R. Sedgwick, W. S. Barrows, F. D. Bulkley, E. S. Van Zile, E. S. Hills '85 S. T. Miller, Managing Editor; H. Nelson, Jr., H. B. Loomis, A. Codman, J. R. Cunningham '86 H. R. Heydecker, Managing Editor; G. E. Beers, E. C. Niles, E. B. Hatch, A. H. Anderson, '87, W. J. '!'ate '87 A. H. Anderson, Managi ng Editor; G. C. Carter, G. S. Waters, C. W. Bowman, F. B. Whitcombe, 0 . A. Sands '88
M. C. Warner, Managing Editor; J.P. Elton, L. W. Downes, A. McConihe, R. C. •Eastman, H. M. Belden
'89 C. H. Remington, Managing Editor; R . H . Schutz, S. F. Jarvis, Jr ., A. E. Wright, A. Millard, R. C. Tuttle '90
G. P. Coleman and G. W. Miner, Managing Editors; G. T. Macauley, Literary Editor; G . T. Warner, C. S. Griswold, R. McC. Brady, R. H. Hutchins
'91
E. B. Finch, Managing Editor; J. B. Burnham, Literary Editor; A. C. Graves, I. W. Hughes, J. F. Plumb, E. F. Pressey
'92
H. S. Graves and W. 0. Orton, Managing Editors; T. H . Yardley, Literary Editor; R. F. Humphries, C. A . Johnson, Ernest Randall
'93
Reg inald Pearce, Managing Editor; R. P. Bates, Literary Editor; W. F. Collins, W. •E. Conklin, James Cullen, Jr., J. W . Lewis, W . P. Niles
'94 W . W. Vibbert and C . F. Weed, Managing Editors; P. R. Wesley, Literary Editor; G . W. Ellis, H. T. Greenley, N. T. Pratt '95 R. H. MacCauley· and F. S. Burrage, Managing Editors; David Willard, Lit erary Editor; E. P. Hamlin, W. W. Reese, S. K. Evans, A. F. Miller, E. M . Yeomans '96 L . Potter and E. Parsons, Managing Editors; P. T. Custer, Literary Editor; M. H. Coggeshall, W. F . Dyett, W. T. Olcott, C. H. Street, S. K. Zook '97 H. W. A ll en and G. S. McCook, Managing Editors; W . S. \Danker, Literary Editor; G. •E. Cogswell , G. T. Hendrie, H. W. Hayward, P. M. Wood, H. T . S h eriff, M. F. Chase '9
M. R. Cartwright and Philip Cook, Managing Editors; H. R. Remsen, Literary Editor; W. M. Austin, H. J. Blakeslee, D. C. Graves, 'l'. H. Parker, Alexander Pratt, Jr., P. S. Smithe
'99
C. B. Hedrick and J. W. Nichols, Managing Editors; R. A. Benson, Literary Editor; Aubrey Vibbert, F. A. McElwain, J. B. Bunn, F. S. Bacon, C. A. Smith
1900 W. C. Hill and F. W. P1·ince, Managing Editors; H. A. Hornor, Literary Editor; '1'. G. Case, E . P. Taylor, A. S. Titus, E. M. Tracy 1901 F. E. Waterman and J . M. Hudson, Managing .Editors; A. T. Wynkoop, Literary Editor; J. A. Wales, Art Editor; A. H. W. Anderson, J . D Evans, A. P . Kelley, W. A. Mitchell, R. E. Peck 1902 W. H. Wheeler and Jewett Cole, Managing Editors; H. R. Wh;te, Literary Eaitor; A. B. Quaile, Art Editor; J. A. Laubenstein, C. E. Tuke, W. P . Bentley 1903
E. C. Thomas and H. L. G. Meyer, Managing Editors; W. S. Trumbull, Literary Editor; A. C. Short, P. S. Clarke, K. H. Fenning, R. A. Edwards 124
SOUTH END OF THE LIBRARY
125
The Library Library Committee THE PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE SIDNEY G. FISHER, L.H.D. PROFESSOR FERGUSON PROFESSOR MARTIN THE LIBRARIAN
Librarian WILLIAM
EWNHA~1 CARLTON
Assistz..nt EDGAR MARTIN RoDGERS
Since the date of the last annual report, have been added to the Library I.9I2 volumes, and 755 pamphlet . The most notable gift of the year was the famous copy of Audubon's great work on the birds of America, presented by Dr. Gurdon W. Russell of the cla of 1834. our oldest living alumnus. The possession of this book alone would confer distinction upon a library. The total strength of the Library, at the present date, is 42,648 volumes, and 27,090 pamphlets. The total number of volumes taken out during the year has been I,222, an increase over last year of 478 vols. The following table give the circulation by month and shows the character of the books drawn: 126
TABLE OF CIRCULATION. 1900-1901.
Class.
Philosophy, Religion , Economics and Sociology, English Language and Literature, . Greek and Latin Languages and Literatures, Modern Lan g uages: French, German , Itali an and Spanish. Science, Useful Arts, Fine Arts, History and Geography •. Biography,
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -8 4 4 12 7 7 . . 12 5 II
70 6o
81 7 12
10
121
17
21
245
191
9
II
120
16 19 4 5
9 12 2 3
7 5 4
4 4
79 130 30 !8
28 7
48
28
II
II
2
14
3
6
4
5
19
4
17
21
7
IS
9
12
8
32
24
17
41
32
4I
0
7
12
9
14
22
18
2 9
6 17 4
Il
I4 3 2
8 12 7 3
12 27 5 5
34
2J 14
37 12
0
4 II 0.
0
0
22 8
0.
4 0
0
•
0
I7 6
94
II
----
7
II
-- -Totals,
Totals.
j'ne. S'pl. Oct. Nov . Dec. Jan. F eb . Mar. Apr. May.
•
0
0
0
I 0
-
24 6
263 86
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- - - - -
36 137 140 II4 191 147 172 100
92
1,222
The followin g t able shows the reference-use of the Library by months : TABLE OF ATTENDANCE. 1900-190I.
1899-1900· M ont b .
June, Se ptember, October, November, December, J an uary, February, March, April, May,
No. of Readers.
No. of Readers.
Evening Attendance.
121 8o 268 269
26 165 261 225 148 276 367 181 195
IIS
1,844
•Tbi s total includes evening attendance.
127
271 447 873 393 476
48 93 47 51
3,313*
239
THE GYMNASIUM
The New Engl~nd Inter-Collegiate Athletic Associ~tion Officers 1902-1903 ]. B. A. B. A. T. H. T.
President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer
ELY, Williams M rTCHELL, Dartmouth FosTER, Amherst . \iVI NCHESTER, M. I. T.
Executive Committee Chairman, ELY, Williams w ,\LTIIO UR, Bowdoin S 1\ll TII, \i\T esleyan POPE, Brown CLEELAKD, Amherst
to ta
The Association Amherst College Trinity College Bowdoin College Tufts College Brown University Wesley:m niversity Dartmouth College 路w illiams College Ma sachusetts Institute of Technology 路worcester I olytechnic Institute University of Maine
Trinity College Athletic Association 1901-1902
President Vice-President S eCJ路eta I"}' Treasura
E. GooDRICH, 'o2 CARLOS CURTIS PECK, '02 ARTHUH CnADWfLL SnoRT, 'o3 . HENRY L. G. 11EYER, '03
Executive Committee E. GoonRICH, 'o2 w. H. WHEELER, '02 R. N. WEIBEL, '02 G. D. RANKIN, '03
. C. SnoRT, 'o3
}. HENDERSON, '02 E. GooDRIDGE, Jn., 'o2 ST. J. MORGA ' '03 J. B . CRANE, '02
s
Trophy Room Committee
G. D. RANKIN, '03
w. LARCHAR, '03 IJO
R.
T.
vVEmEL, 'o2
T
Graduate Athletic Committee Chairman PROF. F. S. LUTHER
Members PROF. F. S. L UTIIER, '70 PERCY S. BRYA T, '70 EDWIN s. ALLEN, '94
T
HE chief duties of the Committee are to act as advisers to the undergraduates on all important athletic matters, to endorse such appeals to the alumni f01路 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.
Undergr~duate
Athletic Committee Chairman
PRES IDE NT OF T.
c.
A. A.
Members E. E. S. T. E. G.
Goomucn, "o2, President of the Athletic Association C. TnoMAS, 'o3, Manager of Football Team T. J. 1oRG.\N, '03, Manaaer of Baseball Team l\I. YPJIAX, '03, Captain of Football Team GooDRIDGE, Jn. , 'o2, Captain of Baseball Team D. RA KLN , '03. Captain of Track Team J. B. CR.\NE, "o2, Captain of Basket] all Team R. T. WEIBEL, '02, Manager of Track Team THE 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 important 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.
T
131
The College Athletic Cups
THE LEFFINGWELL CuP.-Presented by E. DeK. Leffingwell, '95路 competed for at each field meeting.
To be
Trm McCRACKA r CuP.-Presented by W. D. l\IcCrackan, '85. competed for at each indoor meet. Held by Merriam, 'oz.
To be
THE GYMNASIUM CuP.-To be competed for at each indoor meet. Held by class of 1902 in 1901. TnE UNDERWOOD CuP.-Presented by J. C. Underwood, '96. To be competed for at each fall underclass meet. Held by 1903 in 1900. THE RECORD CuP.-Presented by E. Brainerd Bulkeley, '90. TnE RELAY TEAM Cur.-Won by the First Regiment C. N. G. games, April 18th, 1895, by Sparks, '97, Bancroft, '97, Lecour, '98, Coggeshall, '96. THE WESLEYAN-TRINITY CuP. -Won at Second Division, Naval Battalion, C. N. G., Feb. 21st, 1902, by defeating Wesleyan in indoor meet.
132
Trinity Athletic Records
Indoor Records EVENT
NAME
RECORD
Rope Climbing
7 s.
Applegate, ' 87 McCook, 'go Davis, '94 B riu ley, 'oi
Standing High Jump
4ft. BY, iu.
Baxter, '99
Running High jump
II~
5 fl.
!-ugh Kick
in .
9 ft.
Fence Vault
6ft.
II
in.
DATE
March , 18g6
Baxter, '99
March, rfl97
Baxter, '99
March, 1897
Hill,
'02
l\1:arch, 1901
Pulling r6-pound Shot
37ft.6in.
Ingalls, '99
March , 1899
Pole Vault
9ft. 8 in.
Sturtevant, 'or
March, r899
Outdoor Records EVENT
RECORD
NAME
DATE
roo-yard dash
10~
s.
A. W. Strong, '94
May, 1fl92
220-yard dash
22X s.
li. S. Graves, '92
May, rfl92
W. A. Sparks, '97
May, I fl97
44o-yard dash ~-mile
run
51 s. 2 min.
8~
s.
1-miJe run
4 rnin. 34 2-5 s.
2-mile run
10
min. 39
1-5
R. H. Hutchins, 'go
May, rfl9o
F. E. Waterman, 'oi
May, 1901
w. C.
s.
White, '97
May, r897
12o-yard hurdle
17 4-5 s.
I. K. Baxter, '99
May, rS¢
22o-yard hurdle
27 1-5 s.
H. de K. Leffingwell, '95
May, 1895
Running High Jump
6 ft. r in.
I. K. Baxter, '99
October .' 895
Running Broad Jump
21 ft. 6 in .
G. Brinley, 'or
May, 1900 May, 18¢
Pole Vault
9 ft.
7~
in.
I. K. Baxter, '99
Putting r6-pound shot
39ft.
7~
in.
S. Carter, '94
May, 1893
126ft.~
in.
F. C. Ingalls, '99
May, r899
Throwing r6-pound hammer 2-mlle Bicycle Race
4 min. 57ji sec.
J. A. Wales , 'or
June, 1900
Throwing the Discus
98ft.
G. Brinley, 'or
May, 1900
133
Track Team Squad
Captain G.
D. RANKIN, '03
Squa..d E. H. C. E .
J.
1
LORENZ, 02
H.
TuKE, 'o2
J.
1
02
E.
S. MERRIAM, 'o2
c.
H. HILL, '02
}AMES HENDERSO ' ,
J. B. CRANE, '02 w. s. THUhlBULL,
1
02
H.
c.
w. F. c. w.
'03
R. H. HuTCHINSON, E. c. TIIOMAS, '03 A. C. SnoRT, '03 0 . W. CRAIG, '03
VANWEELDEK, '03 }OIIN ON, '03
T. 1. SYPIIAX, '03 1I. II. BUFFiNGTON, R. B. VANTINE, 'o4 E. L. DuFFEE, 'os c. F . Cu:MENT, 'os
W. WALKER, 'o2
H . R . WHITE,
c.
1Ic .
'o3
'04 l:l:l
.. d
z'" " "i 0
BovnE, 'os
z
BuLKLEY, 'os
()
"'
>
REMSEN, 'os
W.
B.
RoBERTs, 'os
H.
L.
WATsoN, 'os
:::...
...
5
134
•
SHORT
VAN WEELDEN RANKIN
T 'UKE
LORENZ WALKER
THOMAS
COC II RANE
(Mgr.) TRUMBULL STURTEVANT (Capt.) WAI,ES
:~;; vANS
BUFFINGTON
Ruon H I LL M .lTCBELL
CRAIG
"
Annual Indoor Meet of the Trinity College Athletic Association
March 21 , 1902 20- Yard Dash,
{ rst, Boyde, 'os, . . 2d, Van 'Yee,lden, 'o3, 3d, Rankm, 03.
Pole Vault,
{ rst, Merriam, 'o2, . 2d, Van Weelden, '03, 3d, Syphax, '03.
· Rope Climbing,
{ rst, Walker, 'o2, 2d, Short, '03, 3d, Tuke, '02.
3 sec.
9ft.
4~
in.
7 % sec.
4ft.
4~
in.
33ft.
2~
in.
Standing High jump,
{1st, Van Weelden, 'OJ,· 2d, Hill, 'o2, 3d, Blakesley, 'os.
Putting 16-pound Shot,
{ rst, Syphax, '03, :zd, Johnson, '03, 3d, Hill, 'o2 .
Pa,.allel Bars,
{ rst, Merriam, 'o2, :zd, Hill, 'o2, 3d, Van Weelden, 'o3. { rst, Van Weelden, '03, 2d, Walker, '02, 3d, Bushnell, 'os.
5 ft. IO in.
Running High ':Jump,
{ rst, Hill, 'o2, . . 2d, Walker, '02, 3d, Van Weelden, '03.
6ft. 9J4 in.
Fence Vault,
Horizontal Bat',
{ rst, Merriam, '02, 2d, Hill, 'o2, 3d, Van Weelden, '03.
Hot'se,
{ rst, Merriam, 'o2, 2d, Hill, 'o:z. { rst, Hill, 'o2, . 2d, Henderson, 'o2, 3d, Merriam, '02.
8ft. 4 in.
High Kick,
{ rst, Walker, 'o2, 2d, Lorenz, 'o2, 3d, Bulkley, 'os.
29% sec.
Potato Race,• .
136
A
c.
Referee Prof. F. S. Luther.
Prof. F. C. Babbitt.
Judges P. S. Bryant, '70.
L. A. Ellis,
'9B路
Judges o f Parallel 821o.rs Mr. A. C. Melby, Mr. W. Winkleman, of the Hartford Y. M. C. A.
Timers
Prof.
J. J .
li. H. Rudd, 'oi.
McCook.
Committee on Arr&.ngements
\Veibel, '02.
Rankin, '03.
Larchar, '03.
S corers Announcer
Evans, 'or.
Goodrich, 'o2.
C. H. Wheeler, 'or McCrackan Cup won by Hill, 'o2 . Points won by '02, " '03,
"
" "
St&.rter Mr. G. B. Velte.
66 33 0
8
Wesley~n-
Trinity
Tr~ck
Meet
Middletown, May II , 1901
roo-Yard Dash.-,Von by Rankin, Trinity; second, Brinley, Trinity; third, Tuke, Trinity. Time, 10 % seconds. Mile Run.-VJ'on by Lorenz, Trinity; second, 'Vaterman, Trinity ; third, Hutchinson, Trinity. Time, 4 minutes, 58 seconds. 440-Yard Dash.-Won by Rankin, Trinity; second, Becker, Wesleyan; third, Nixon, Wesleyan . Time, 53 % seconds. 120-Yard Hurdles.-Won by C. R . Dodds, Wesleyan; second, Brinley, Trinity; third, Walker, Trinity. Time, r6% seconds. Half-Mile Rnn.-Won by Guernsey, Wesleyan; second, Nixon, Wesleyan ; third, Rudel, Trinity. Time, 2 minutes, 13 seconds. 220-Yard Dash.-Won by Lacy, Wesleyan; second, Cline, 'Vesleyan; third, Bagg, Wesleyan. Time, 24 % seconds. Two-Mile Run.-Won by Lorenz, Trinity; second, Meeker, Wesleyan; third, Palmer, Wesleyan. Time, I I minutes, 19 seconds. 220-Yard Hurdles.-Won by Brinley, Trinity; second. C. R. Dodds, Wesleyan; third, Parker, Wesleyan. Time 28 1,6 seeonds. Running High Jump.-First place, tie between Sturtevant, Trinity, and Brinley, Trinity; third place, tie between Van W eelden, Trinity, S. A. Dodds, Wesleyan, and Cline, Wesleyan. Height, 5 feet, 3Yz inches. 16-Pound Shot.-路won by Brinley, Trinity; second, Gould, Wesleyan ; third, C. R. Dodds, Wesleyan. Distance, 38 feet, 6Yz inches. Pole Vault.-First place; tie between Cline, Wesley an , ann C. R. Dodds, Wesleyan ; third, Sturtevant, Trinity. Height, 9 feet, 6 inches. Running Broad Jump.-Won by Cline, vVesleyan; second, S. A. Dodds, W esleyan ; third, Cochrane, Trinity. Distance, 21 feet, 3 inches. 16-Pound Hammer.-Won by S , A. Dodds, 'Vesleyan; second, Silliman, Wesleyan ; third, Hill, Trinity. Distance, 95 feet. Discus.-Won by S. A . Dodds, Wesleyan ; second, Henderson , Trinity; third, Clarke, Wesleyan. Distance, 105 feet, I I inches. Two-Mile Bicycle Race.- Won by Schmidt, Wesleyan; second, Merriam, Trinity; third, Guy, Wesleyan . Time, 6"minutes, 3 seconds. Score by Points.-Wesleyan, 74 %' ; Trinity, 6o}j .
Wesleyan-Trinity Indoor Meet Febru~ry
21, 1902
Invitation meet held by the Second Divis ion Naval Battalion, C. N. G.
40 Yard Da.rh FIRST HEAT- Rankin, first , Trinity Trumbull , second '' TIME, 4 4-5 seconds SECOND HEAT-G uernsey , first Wesleyan Syphax, second , Trinity TIME, 5 seconds FINAL H EAT-R a nkin , first , Trinity Trumbull , second, '' Guernsey, third , Wesleyan TIME, 4 4-5 seconds
One Mile Run Guernsey, first , Wesleyan Lorenz , second , Trinity Henderson , third, " T il\'lE, 5 min . 3 sec. ScoRE-Trinity,
12 ;
Wesleyan , 6.
Trinity winnin~ the Silver Troph y offered b y the Second Division Naval Battalion, C. N. G .
139
,
Football
C~ptains
'83, S H.
GrESY
'92,
G. D.
'84, S. T.
MILLER
"93,
J. W. EDGERTON J. STR.\ \VDRTDGE w. S. L\NGFO IW,
'85, W. W . '86,
w w.
'94,
BARBER
'95路
BARBER
'87, W . W.
'96, A. l\1.
BARBER
HARTLEY
LANGFORD
'88, E . McP. McCooK
'97, A. S.
'89, E. McP.
'98, W. D.
SuTTON
'99, W. P.
BROWN
'oo, vV. P.
DROWN
'90, T. P. '91,
W. C.
'91,
H. S.
1cCooK
THURSTON HILL
GRAVES
'or, 'o2,
T. M.
SYPHAX
J.
JR.
WooDLE
HENDERSON
Q
P. L
Clen
ASSOCIATION Directors E . C. Thomas, Assistant Manager
W . H . Wh eeler, Manager
Trainer George B. Velte
Ca..ptain J . Henderson
Medical Attendant Dr . J . B. McCook
The Team L路 E .
L . T.
L . G.
c.
R . G.
R. T.
Allen Curry
VanTine Crane
Hill
M . Johnson M eyer
W. Johnson
Henderson
R. E.
Garvin Meredith
Q. B.
Tyke C. Wheeler L. H.
F. B .
R.H.
Van \Veelden Crane Trumbull
Townsend Maddox
Syphax Wynkoop Bruce
Ca..ptain for 1902 T. M. Syphax, 'o3
The Consolidated
Captain P. L. Barton
Manager E . C. T homas
The Line L路 T.
Wheny, '04
L. G.
c.
R . G.
R. T .
Mcilvaine, '04
Jones, 'os
Short, '03
Watson, 'os
L. E.
Duffy, 'os
L.H.
Barton ,
'02
F . B.
Clapp, '04 Substitutes Buffington, '04 Hill, 'os
R . E.
Bushnell, 'os
Q. B.
Clement, 'os
R.H.
Bulkley, 'os
Townseud
M~redilh
Van Weelden
Bruce Wheeler
VanTine
Allen Trumbull
Wheeler, (Mgr.) W . Johnson Hill Meyer J. johnson Henderson , (Cap.) Syphax Crane
Garvin
-
'l'uke
Wynkoop
Curry
•
Trinity's Football Record
Following is a record of Trin ity in Football from 1878 to 190 1: GA~li~S
Amh e rst Amherst Aggies Boston T echn ology Brown Columbia Co rnell Dartmouth Hamilton H ave rford Hol y Cross L afayette L a m·eates M. I.
T.
Nava l Academy N ew J ersey A. C. N ew York Un ivers ity
WON
LOST
5
6 0 5 1 0 1 3 3 0 1 1 0 2 1 0 0
9 2 2 3 0 0 3 1 0 0
1 0
6
GAMES WON
Stevens St. John 's St. Steven's Tufts U niv e rsity of Pennsylvania University of Roc h es t e r University of Syracu se Un iYersity of V er mont W esleyan W est Point Willi a ms vVorcester T echnology Y a le
143
3 1 1 0
0 1
0
LOST 0
0 0 1 1 0 0 0 11 6
0 4 0
5 3 14
50
65
Football Schedule for
Satu!"day, September 27 October
" ,,
"
" "
Monday,
4 II
1902
Yale at New Haven Y. M. C. A. Training School of . Springfield, at Hartford West Point, at West Point
18
I
"
25
Wesleyan, at Hartford
November
I
Seventh Regt. of New York, at New York
8
Tufts College, at Hartford
ew York
niversity, at Hartford
"
IS
Hamilton College, at Clinton,
"
I7
Syracuse University, at Syracuse, N.Y.
. Y.
â&#x20AC;˘
Trinity College Footb~ll
~
Interschol~stic Le~gue
Founded 1900
â&#x20AC;˘
"" Schools in the League Hartford Public High School Boardman Manual Training School, New Haven, _Conn. l\Iericlen High School Torrington High School New Britain High School Holders of Cup. t900, 1-Iartford High School Holders of Cup, School
1901,
Hartford High
A Banner is presented to the Champion Team of each xear, and the School obtaining three Banners in three successive years, retains the Cup permanently.
145
Trinity's Baseball Captains
'67' E . R. BREVOOST
'86, J. W . SHANNON
R. BREVOOST
'87, }. W. SHANNON
BROCKLESBY
'88, G . w. BRINLEY
BRoCKLESBY
'89, T . L. CHERITREE
'68, E. '69, A . '7o, A. '7I, E.
B. WATTS
'90, R. McC. BRADY
'72, E B. wATTS
'9I, H.
'73, E. B. wATTS
'92, H.
'74,
c.
E. CRAIK
'75, F. T. LINCOLN '76, G.
s. HEWITT
s. s.
GRAVES GRAVES
'93, G. D. HARTLEY '94, J. J. PENROSE '95, H . R. DINGWALL
'77, W. E . RoGERS
J. }. PENROSE
'78, F. w. WHITE
C. D u B. BRouGHTON
'79, w. N . ELBERT
S. ST
'96. A. J. WILLIAMS M . H. CoGGESHALL
'8o, W. J. RoDGERS '8I, G. D. HowELL
'97, D.
'82, A. H. WRIGHT
'98, D.
'83, C. M. KuRTZ
'99,
J.
c. c.
GRAVES GRAVES
H. K. DAVIS
'84, F. E. JoHNSON
'oo, H. McK. GLAZEBROOK
'85, J. W. SHANNON
'oi , R. FISKE 'o2, E. GooDRIDGE, JR.
PECK,
Directors S. ST.
J.
• C. C. PECK, Manager MoRGAN, Acting Manager R. B. VAN TINE, Assistant Manager 1901
Team
R. FISKE, Captain HENRY, '03, c. BRIGHAM, '03, Ib. FISKE, 'or, 3b. MANN, '04, r.f., p.
GooDRIDGE, '02, p., r.f. TOWNSEND, '04, 2b. HENDERSON, '02, S.S. VAN DEWATER, 'or, c. f. BRowN, 'or, !.f.
Substitutes
PEcK, 'or
BRADIN, 'o3 ·
Baseb~ll Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday,
" Wednesday, Saturday, Wednesday, Saturday,
" " Wednesday, Saturday, Friday, Monday,
April
8 9 !2 " 19 " 23 " 26 " 30 May 3 " IO " I7 "rt 21 24 " 30 June 2
" "
Schedule for
1902
Harvard, at Cambridge Brown, at Providence Manhattan, at Jew York Williams, at Williamstown West Point, at West Point Jew York University, at Hartford Holy Cross, at Worcester Tufts, at Hartford Amherst "Aggies," at Hartford Yale Law School, at Hartford Fordham, at Fordham Ct escent Athletic Club, at Bay Ridge Amherst, at Amherst Columbia, at Hartford 147
R. Peck
Allen
rrJ
':-'
Brigham Henry
r;
Van DeWaler Fiske, (cap. )
~
:-:;路~
C. Peck, (mgr.) Townsend
Henderson Goodridge
Brown
Bradin
Se~son 1901-1902
]. B.
Captain
CluNE. 'o2
11f. anagcr
E. GooDincn, 'o2 ltc G. B. \'ELTE,
Coach
The Teb..m Right F01路ward
E. L. D
FFY,
Left Forward
'os
H. L. HowE, 'o2 Center
J.
B.
CRANE, '02
Right Guard
J. H
H.
ENDERSON, '02
Substitutes
E. H.
MADDOX, '04
T. M.
SYPHAX.
'49
'03
c.
Left Guard VAN WEELDEN,
'03
c.
路os
F.
CLEMENT,
Van Weelden,
Goodrich , (Mgr.) Maddox .
Duffee Crane, (Cap.)
Henderson .
Clement. Howe.
New England Intercollegiate Ba.l'ketball Association. FOUNDED AT TRINITY,
1901.
President, E. B. GooDRICH, Trinity Vice-President, JosEPH W. GILLIES, Harvard Secretary and T1'easurer, RoBERT W. MAYNARD, Amherst
Association Amherst
Holy Cross
Williams
Dartmouth
Trinity Amherst, champion for I901-1902
1903 Football Team TRUMBULL, MEYER,
center guard BRIGHAM, guard BROWN, tackle MEYER, tackle THOMAS, tackle CuNNINGHAM, end
Captain, '99-'00
Captain,
'oo-'or BRADt
HENRY,
full back half back CozzENS, half back TR 1\IBULL, half back GARVIN, quarter back SnoRT, quarter back YA
,
end
JoHNSON,
WEELDEN,
BRuCE,
c
1903 Baseball Team Captain c. HENRY, s.s. BRIGHAM, rb. GARVIN, l.f. RANKIN,
MEYER,
BRADIN,
TRUMBULL, 2b.
AIanager
}OIINSON, BRUCE, SHORT,
Jb.
c.f. r.f.
Sub.rtitutes CARPENTER
CuN
INGHAM I
53
FAULKNER
1903
Tr~ck
Team Capta路in Captain
THOMAS, '99-'oo, SHORT, 'oo-'oi,
Tuo CRAIG
RANKIN
CozzENS
TRUMBULL
CuNNINGHAM
MEYER
HUTCHINSON
JoHNSON
VAN WEELDEN
THOMAS
154
1903
THOMAS,
Basketb~ll
Team
g uard, Captai11 forwa rd forwa rd g uard center
center , AJ anager
BRIGHAM,
V i\N W EELDEN } OHNSON
SnoRT MEYER
ISS
T.
1903 Tennis
Te~m
c.
MoRGAN,
Captain
JoHNSON
BRIGIIAl\1
RANKIN
SHORT
Other Class Teams
1902 T. M.
SYl'IIAX, Captain H. BRADFIELD,
c. T. c.
E.
l
R.
s.
Football
c.
H. HILL, I. g. M. SYPHAX, f. b. E. T KE, q. b. . MERRIAM, I. t. B. CRANE, r. g. N. EIBEL, r. t.
Te~m E. J. CLEVELAND, Jf anager P. L. B.\RTON, 1. e . E. D. GooDRICH, r. e. A. H. \ VEED, r. h. F. R. CLAPP, I. h. J. A. L\L' BENSTEI , r . e. H. S. B.\CKUS, I. e.
w
Substitute .r
S.
l~.
CoLE
1902 JAMES HENDERSON, Captain E. GooDRIDGE, Jn . , p. H . BACKUS, c. PECK, c. HE r nERSON, Ib. F . R. CLAPP, Ib. F. A. HTr.GINBOTHi\111,
A.
HIGGlNBOTIIAl\I
Ba.re ball Team W. H. WnEELER, Jfanager H. L. HowE , 2b. P. L. B.\RTO " , ss. T. f-I. SYPH .\X, 3b. R. N. WEIBEL, I. f. S. W. CooKE, c. f. H. R. WunE, r. f.
s.
c. . J.
2b. S ub.rtitute.r
c.
E.
J.
TUKE
1902
B.
E. H.
CRANE
Track
Te~m
Captain
A. H. WEED, '98-'99 C. E. TuKE, '99-'or
c. c.
H. HtLL
c.
A.
E. TUKE A. H. WEED E. GooDRIDGE,
J.
'vV.
W .\LKER
E. S. 1\1 ERRIAM F. R. CLAPP J. A. LA UBENSTElN
JR.
E.
LANE
J. HENDERSON
157
H. LORENZ
LORENZ
1902 Basketball Team J.
c.
].
E.
J.
E. S.
MERRIAM,
Captain
HENDERSON I-I. HILL B. CRANE S. MERRIAM
Center Guard Forward Forward Guard Guard
W. WALKER
]. CoLE
1904
Footb~ll
Team
Rar.kin, M. I., Manager Mann, r. h. Maddox, f. b. Captain. Allen, q. b. Clapp, I. h. Wherry, I. g. Mcilvaine, r. g.
MacKeon, r. e. Van Tine, I. t. Townsend, f. b. Bartlett, c. Buffington, I. e. Ensign, r. t.
1904 Baseball Team Townsend, 2d, Captain.
Mann, p. Allen, c. Van Tine, lb. Glenny, 3b.
Humuhries, ss. Maddox, e. f. Bartlett, rf Ensign, If.
1904 Track Team Mcilvaine, Captain.
Townsend Packard R . Moore n. Moore. Brinton Glenny
M. I. Rankin Buffington Mann Morgan Maddox
1904 Basketball
Te~m
Buffington, Manager.
Maddox Allen
Bartlett Wherry
1905 Football Team Meredith, Captain. Randle, I. e. Bushnell, I. t. Everett, I. g. Buckley, c. Watson, r. g. Remsen, r. t.
Roberts, Manager. Curry, r. e. Clement, q. b. Meredith, r. h. b. Duffee, I. h. b. Wynlwop, f. b.
rs8
1905
Cl~ss
Track Team Wynkoop, Manager. Boyd Buckley Harriman Roberts Goodale
Remsen, Captain. Duffee Clement Watsan, Welles Blaksley Bushnell
1905 Basketball
Te~m Flynn, Manager. Right Forward Flynn Eaton
Duffee, Capta;n. Left Forward Boyd Meredith Center Clement
Right Guard Duffee
Left Guard Buckley F. Hill
159
New England Intercollegiate Lawn Tennis Association TECE:~OLOGY
AMHERST BOWDOIN BATES BROWN
VERMONT DARTMOUTH TUFTS W •ESLEYAN TRINITY
D. M. Belcher, Technology President F. A. Mille r. Ve1·mont Vice-P•·esident ('. A . R. Ray, Brown Secretary and '.r•·easure r
Trinity
College Tennis Association
C . C. Peck President H. D. Brigham Vice-President. S. St. J. Morgan Secretary a nd Treasurer
>Dr. Robb Dr. Babbitt Dr. Luth e r M cCoo k Crane Barton Holden John so n Brigham llforgan Rankin Buffington Mcilvaine R emsen Rhodes Burrows Gostenhoffer
100
Member.r Prof. Haye5 H . H . Rudd, '01 1902 Ste wart C. C. Peck T ay lor
1903 Trenbath H e nry Hutc hinson 1904 Denslow B. Morgan 1905 Watson Euwing Walker Short
College Tennis Tournament May 1901
Evans Foss Waterman Crane Denslow Trenbath McCook Holden Van Tine Buffington Derby Rudd Short Brigham Humphries Bruce
Foss
} } } } } } }
I
default
I
} Fo"
Waterman
6-2, 6-4
6-4, 6-4
Trenbath default
6-o,6-o
I
I McCook
I
McCook 6-2, 6-3
J
Van Tine
I
6-4, 6-o
~
Rudd 6-3. 6-2
I
J
I
I f Brigham 6-r, 6-2
Brigham
.
"I
J
1r
Brigham
8-6, 7-5
Humphnes, 6-2, 6-2
I
6-3,
7·5
6-r, 6-r } Hudson
Wheeler
II-<),
Morehouse Trumbull Morgan
I
J
Brigham 6-r,
I
7-sl
I
I I
Ir "'s~~ ' '
..!:l "'""'"'" ,.~-o ... ' .;..0 ' ~00~
J
Hudson
Wilson
I
I J
Van Weelden} Fiske Fiske
I
l
6-3· 6-3
I J
I
I
~
I Rudd
6-r, 6-2
I f Fo"
3-6, 6-3
} Wilson
1Fiske
I
6 -1, 6-2
J I
6-2, 6-2 } Morgan 6-o,6-o r6r
J
Morgan
I ·~. ·-·
I I I I Morgan r I 6-2, 6-2 J I I J
I
I
~~
1-
~
F
' 162
• Officers of Musical
CHARLES
Org~nizations
. President . Manager Assistant Manager
Evw ARD Turm
WILLIAM HARDIN WHEELER WILLIAM LARCHAR, }R.
Season 1901-1902 CONCERTS AT
I
•
Foot Guard Hall, Hartford-l\Iandolin Club Alumni Hall-Glee, Mandolin, and Banjo Clubs Foot Guard Hall, Hartfor !-Quintet from Mandolin Club Winsted-Octet from Glee Club, and Mandolin Club Broad Brook-Quartet Alumni Hall-Mandolin Club
Le21..der
Marshall BowYER STEWART FirJt Tenors
F.
R. B. GOODEN, '02
s.
BROWN, '04
F. B. BAR'l'LETT, '04 Second TenorJ
G. H . HOLDE ) '02 G. H. HEYN, '04
M. B. STEWART, '02
P.
s.
CLARKE, '03
R.
. GRAHAM, 'os FirJt Basses
C.
E . TUKE,
E.
c.
R.
w.
B.
Q. MoRGAN , 'o4
C. B.
E. BRUCE, '03 D. FLYNN, 'os
H. F.
c. BoYD , 'os c . MEREDITH,
F.
s.
'02 TRENBATH, '03 Second Basses
THOMAS, '03
+ 'os
Quartet
BROWN, '04
R. B. GooDEN, 'o2
C. E. F. c.
TuKE, 'o2 MEREDITH. 'os
.. ~
Trinity College Mandolin Club .,...,
""
c:r
~
c:r (fJ
Leader
;;
MARSHALL BowYER STEW ART
".,
~
;;
First
"0. "
Mandolin.r
.:::!
C. H.
F. W . PRINCE, 'oo W .
H.
H.
WHEELER, 'o2
WHEELER, 'or
B. CARPENTER,
'OJ
(fJ
r;
0.
;;"
Fir.rt Violin
M.
"
B. STEW ART, '02 ()
R.
w.
.,"...
Second Violin.r TRENBATH, '03
B.
D.
+
Cello
A. T.
c.
McCooK,
~
!l
FLYNN, 'os
'o2
Guitar.r
H . HILL,
H. C.
'02
w.
BoYD, 'os
P. STEDMAN, 'os
r66
•
..,0.0
';{
" 0
~
;
1ft
;; ~
~ ;;
"0.
~
Y2
"'g~
(')
.,"
'0
~
;; .,
.
...,0"'
c.
Trinity College Banjo Club
Leader 0
W I LLI A M LAR CHAR, JR ., ' 03
r'i 0
c
~
c -路 -
0
~
Banjeaurine.r
C. II . vV n EELER, 'or H.. 13. \ '.\ N TI NE, '04
W I LLI .\lll LAR CII .\R,
J. W . O 'CoN
'o3
oR, 'os
Sec ond Banjo.r
T. l\ I cB.
STEELE,
E. J. DIB BL E, 'o.:J.
'oz
Guit"'rs
C. H . H1 LL , 'oz
H . C. BoYD, 'os \ V. P. STEDMAN, 'os
Mandolin.r \ V.
TT.
\ V n EE LE R,
rJl
;;
H . B.
'oz
CA RPEN T ER, '03
0.
a "
"
!68
-
Royal Egyptian String Octette ORGANIZED A. D. , 1879
Honorary Members Hoffma n Mi ll e r H . R. Thompson G . P. Inge rsoll A . P. Burgwin J . R. Bac on T . H . Yard le y J. W . L e w is E. F . Burke D e F . Hi c ks G. S. M cC ook J. S . Carte r w . H . E a ton S . P. B. Trowbridge H . S. M a rtind a le
W . D . M cCrack a n R. E. Burton H . P a n ·ish C . C. Trowbridge W. C . D. Willso n E. D e K . L e ffingw e ll 0 . T. P a ine G . E . Cogs w e ll M . R. Cartwrigh t J . H. K . D av is W. H. Boa rdm a n C . A . Appl e t o n C. W. Bowm a n G . H . Hill s
C. H . T a lc ott F . P . J o hn s on F . M . V e rmilye R. H . M acaule y M . M . Sibl ey E. C . B eecr oft L . G . R e yn olds W . B. Sutto n R. H . N e lso n E . B . B ulk e ley R. S . Sa ltu s H . T . Gree nl ey C . A. L e wis W . W. Vibbe rt
P . J . M cCook E. P a r sons H: G. B arbo ur J . H. P a g e, Jr H . D . Plimp t on J. W . Ni c h o ls J . K. <C le m ent R. H . F o x Thea Cas e A. R . Va n D e W a t e r M. W . C lem e n t R. Fiske G. B rinl ey A . T . W y nkoo p
B~>o.njos
E. G oodri c h , '02 P . L. Barto n , '02
R. N . W eibe l. '02 C . C. P eck , '02
Dulcimer C. H . Hill. '02
Sack but G. D . •Rankin, ' 03
P.raltery
P.rhawms
H . D. B ri g h a m , '03
E. C. Th o m as, '03
Lute
H~>o.rp
J. M eA John s on , ' 03
W . H . Wh ee l<!r , '03
Bugle A. C. Sho rt, ' 03
Fre shm en m ay com e a nd S e nio r s m ay go But y e t th e r e r e m a in s th e R. E . S . 0 . !70
I]I
The Medusa Jl1i Senior
Honor~ry
Society
Active Members R. N. WIEBEL, Pres ident P. L. BARTON, Sec r eta ry and Tt·easurer. E . GOODRIDGE, JR. C . H. HILL J. HENDERSON C. C. PE 'K. W. H . WHEELER
Gr&..duate MemberJ' Allen, Edwin Stanton, '94 Austin , William Morris, '98 Bacon, Fre deri ck Stanle y , '99 Barbour, Henr·y Grosvenour, · ~o Barton, Charles Clarence, '93 Bates, Robert Pec k, '93 Beec roft, ·Edgar Charles, '97 B e ll amy, Robert .Bayard, ' 01 Brines, Moses James, '00 Broughton, C h arles Du Bois, '95 Brown, William Parne ll , '01 Erinley, Godfre y, '01 Bulkeley, John Charles, '93 Ca rte r , Julian Stuart, '98 Carte r , Lawson Ave r e ll, ' 93. Ca rte r , Shirley , '94 C hurchman, C larke, '93 Coggeshall, Murray Hart, · ~b Cogswell, George Edward , '97 collins, William Fren c h, '93 Cullen, James, Jr. , '93 Danke r , Walton Stoute nburgh , '97 Davis, John H e nry Kelso, '99 Davis, !Cameron Josiah , '94 Dingwall, Harrie R e nz, '95 ~dgerton, Fran c is C ruger, '94 :E:dgerton, John Warre n, '94 Ellis, George William, '94 Fisk e , Reginald, '01. Gl azebrook, Hasl e tt M cK im , '00 Graves, Dudl e y Chase, '98 Green ley, Howard Trescott, '94 Hamlin , Edward Percy, '95 H a rtl e y. George Derwent, '93 Hornor, Harry Archer, ' 00 Hubbard, Louis IDeKoven, '93 Hudson , Jam es Mosgrove, '01
L a ngford , Arc hiba ld M o rrison , ·~, Langford, Willi a m Spaight, Jr., '96 Lewis, John William , ' 93 Litte ll , Elton Gardine1·, '99 Lord, Jam es Watson, '98 Loc kwood , Luke Vincent, '93 Macauley, Ri c h a rd H e nry, '95 McCook, George Sh e ldon , '97 M c ilvain e, John Gilbe rt, '00 Morse, Bryan Killike lly, '99 Nichols, John William s, '99 Nil s, William Po1·ter, '9:3 O lc ott, Willi a m T y le 1·, '96 Paine, Ogle T ay loe, '96 Page, John H e nry , '97 Parsons , Edgerton, ' 6 P ea r ce , R e ginald , ' 93 Pelton, H e nry Hubba rd. ' 93 P e nrose , John J esse, Jr., ' 95 Prince, Frederi c k vVe ll es , '00 H e mson. H e nry Rutge r s, '98 Reynolds, Lloyd Gilson, '98 Ri c h , Earnest Albert, '99 Schutz, Walte r Stanley, '94 Schwartz, D av id L o uis, '00 f;parks. Willi a m Alb£>rt, '79 , tra wbridge , John , '95 Taylor, Ch a rl es Edward, '94 Vibbert, Aubrey Danell, '99 Vibbert. Willi a m W e ls h , '94 Wainwright, J on a than Mayh e w, '95 W eed , C harl es F1·e d pri ck, '94 "\Vheele r , Charl es Hathorn, '01 Willson, Willi a m rosswell Doane. '93 Wil!lon , George Hewson. ' 93 "\Voffenden, Richard Hem·y, '93 Woqdle, Allan Sheldon, '99 172
I ./
~·
_,.,
....
·,
,I
• --r
(
' /
1 73
• • • • • •••
Presenter, W . H. Benjamin, '57
'57 Receiver, G. R . H a llam, '59
'59 Inveniam vi&.m aut faciam Presenter , G. R. Hallam, '59 R ece·iver, W. S. Cogswell, '61
'61 Per a.l'pera &d a.rtra Prese nter, ·w. H. W ebs ter, 61 Receiv e r , N. B. Dayton, ' 63
'63 Presenter, R . F. Goodwin, ' 63
Ne tente.l' aut perfice Receiver, C. W. Munro, '65
'65 Presenter, H . G. Gardner, '65.
Facta non verba Receive r, Robert Shaw, '68
174
'68 Semper cre.rcens R ece iv e r, E. V . B. Kissa m , '69
Presente r , F . L . Norton , '68
'69 Nunquam non par&.tu.r R ece ive r , D. P . Cotton , '71
Prese nte r , J acob L e Roy, '69
'71 Nulla vestigia retror.rum Preile nte r, William Drayton, ' 71
R eceiver , F . 0. Grannis, '73
'73 Prese nte r , C. E. Woodman , '73
A~€v 'Aary€r; R eceive r C. E. C raik, ' 74
'74
Ov 7rapa uxo'TrOV Presente r, 'R. M. Edwards, ' 74
H eceiv e r, H. V. Ruth e rford , '76
'76 Inservit honori R ece ive r , W . C. Blackm e r , '78
Pres e nte r , C. •E. l'iloore, '76
'78 Av()p {~€u0€ R eceiver , D. L. Fl a ming, '80
Pres ente r , J . D . Hill s, ' 78
'80 Ou A.oryr:! £1.A.A. €pryq R eceive r , A. P . Burgwin, '82
Pres e nte r , W . R. L ea k e n, '80
'82 Respi ce finem R ece ive !', S. H . Giesy, '85
Presente r , A . P. Burgwin , '82
'85 Duris non Frangi R eceive r , G. S. Wate r s , ' 87
Prese nte r, A. D . N ee ley, '85
'87 Multa in die.r addi.rcente.r Prese nte r, A . H. Anderson, '87
R eceiver, E. C . Johnson, 2d, '88
175
'88 Per angusta ad Fresenter, E. C. Johnson , 2d, '88
H
august~>.
Receiver, E. McP. McCook, '90
'90 Semper agen.r aliquid Receiver, I. D. Russell, '92
Presenter, T. A. Conover, '90
v '92 To "aA.ov cp { A.ov Presenter, G. H a ll, '92
Sa Honor
Receiver, F. F. John son, '94
1
'94 Presenter, J . W. Edgerton, '94
Agere pro viribu.r Receiver, J. Strawbridge, '95
'95 En z..vant! Presenter, E. P. Hamlin, '95
Receiver, G. E. Cogswell, '97
*TnE
'96 Presenter,
Receiver, - - - - - - - - - -
'99 Presenter,
Fortiter, fideliter, feliciter Receiver,
'01 Presenter,
Novu.r ordo .raeclorum Receiver,---------
'04 T'V7TO\' Ot"aw\' Iâ&#x201A;ŹTTJ}./,a
TÂŁ}./,~WTaTov Keepers of the Lemon Squeezer
P RIZES
Honor Men for the Year 1900-1901
HONORS IN THE CLASS OF 1901.
Valedictory . Salutatory Honor Oration
FRANCIS RAYJ\10ND STURTEVANT FRANK HALSEY Foss FRANK STEPHEN MoREHo SE
0TIIER SPEAKERS AT CoMMENCEMENT
James Albert Wales
*TnE CHEMICAL PRIZE EssAY
WiJiiam Perry Bentley Edmund Sawyer Merriam Aubrey Henry Derby Bayard Quincy :M organ
Prizes div ided between TuTTLE PRIZE EssAY MATHEMATICAL PRIZE GooDWIN GREEK PRIZES
First Prize Secoud Prize
Bayard Quincy Morgan [Not a warded]
PRIZES IN HrsTORY AND PoLITICAL SciENCE
Fi1'st Prize Second Prize
William Perry Bentley James .'\!bert Wales
HOLLAND PRIZE ScHOLARSHIPS
In the Class of In the Class of In the Class of
WiJJiam Perry Bentley Harry lifford Golden Bayard Quincy Morgan Walter Beach Sherwood
I902 I903 r904
HARTFORD ADMITTITUR PRIZE
ALUMNI PRIZES IN ENGLISH COMPOSITION
In the Class of
I90I
In the Class of
I902
Frank Halsey Foss Francis Raymond Sturtevant Augustus Talcott Wynkoop \iViJiiam Perry Bentley Marshall Bowyer Stewart
•The prizes are arranged in the order of their foundation.
177
-
-
----
- -
William Lispenard Robb, Ph. D.
P
ROFESSOR Robb i 路 to leave Trinity College. The e few words carry a load of regret to Trinity men all over the country. During the seventeen years, which Dr. Robb has given us out of his life, no one has done more than he in developing the courses of instruction, in promoting interest in college affairs or in making our college prominent before the public. When he came the facilities of his department were small and the apparatus was limited to a few antiquated instruments. Under his guidance the progress has been so continuous that its rapidity has not surprised us, as it might well have done , and it has even seemed a matter of course that the department of Physics should be one of the most prominent in our college. His activity in the outside field of electrical engineering has been no less remarkable, and yet , with all the pressure of work he has found time to devote to development of our athletics and to the beautifying of the college grounds. He has laid the foundation of his department deep and the spirit of energy and progress which he has infused must ever remain a lasting benefit to us and our college. In his new work he will find greater opportunities than we can afford, for training and equipping men for service in the world , and we cannot but congratulate the Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute with all our hearts, in being able to number him on her rolls. To wish him success merely were superfluous, as that is assured, but we do wish him all the happiness that a long life can afford.
THE JARVIS CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL LABORATORIJ<:s
E rected by the late George A.
179
jan~s.
Esq.
I8o
Germ~n
Trinity College
RICHARD NtcKs WEIBEL,
WALTER SLATER TRUMBULL,
Club
President
Secretary and Treasurer
Members P. L. BARTON, 'o2 E. B. GooDRICH, '02 E. GooDRIDGE, ]R., 'o2 C. H. HILL, 'o2 A.
T.
J.
McCooK, 'o2
]. P. W. TAYLOR, 'o2 E. A. SHELDON, '02 R.
D.
H .
BRIGHAM, '03
R. H . HuTCHINSON , '03
A.
S. TRUMB ULL, '03
w.
B.
S. H. H. R. R. B.
. WEIBEL, '02
JoHNSON, 'o3
'vV.
ALLEN, '04 CL.\PP , '04 IciLV.\INE, ·o-t VA
TINE, '04
W. H. WHEELER, ' o2
Leaders First German Second German Third German Fourth German Fifth German Si:rth German
•
B. R.
S. H. CLAPP H.
D.
]. A.
R. E. A.
R.
BRIGHAM
v..r. S.
JoHNSON
H. H
TCin
B. GoooHr
u
T. McCooK
soN
vv. E. ].
MciLVAI NE
B. VAN TINE TR Ul\IBULL
B. ALLE A . SHELDON
R.
W . TAYLOR
--
-~
Third Trinity German T uESD.\Y, FEBRUARY 4TH
Le;a..ders
w.
S.
]. l\IcA.
TR UM B ULL
J o n NSO r
College Tea.. VVEDNESD.\Y, FEBRUARY 5TII
in AIL!mni Hall, from 4 to 6 P. M.
Glee, Banjo and Ma..ndolin Clubs, followed by Da..ncing TH URSDA Y, FEBRUARY 6TII
Junior Promenade FRiDAY, FEBRUARY 7TH !82
•
44
TJl~Vl\IIO~~JWj
Junior Promenade GIVE
BY THE CLASS OF
1903
~
Committee WALTER SLATER
Tu ' .\IBULL, Chairlllan Secretary al!d T1'easnrer
HENRY DAY BRIGHAM, CHARLEs ERAST
s BtwcE
PERCIVAL HAUTREY BRAD!
GEoRGE Do
GLAS RA NKIN
ARTHUR CI-IAU\\'ELL SHORT
SAMUEL ST. JoHN MoRGAN
Patronesses Mrs. F. H. Adriance l\1 rs. F. B. A llen l\'l rs. L. B. Barbour l\drs. ]. L. Barbour 1\f rs. C. . ~ac h Mrs. G. VI/. Beach l\[rs. T. B. Beach Mrs. H. D. Bean Mrs. M. T. Bennett Mrs. ]. vV. Braclin Mrs. R. H. Buell l\lrs. George Bulkley l\1 rs. John Bulkeley l\lrs. W. H. Bulkeley Mrs. F. Bushnell l\lrs. R. H. Chapman i\f rs. T. B. Chapman Miss l\lary Clark l\'f rs. Samuel Colt Mrs. R. W. Cutler Mrs. F. W. Davis l\J rs. P. Davis Mrs. G. H. Day l\frs. C. L. Edwards !\Irs. G. W. E llis Mrs. Henry Ferguson Mrs. ]. W. Gilson l\ f rs. C. C. Good rich Mrs. T. W. Good ridge Mrs. Francis Goodw in 'f rs. L. E. Gordon Mrs. ]. II. Greene l\1 rs. J. L. Greene l\f rs. J. H. Hall Mrs. E. B. Hatch Irs. E. C. Hilliard Mrs. J. l\ L Holcomb :\Irs. E. B. Hooker Mrs. I-I. l\1. Hopkins
1rs. F. L. Howard l\1 rs. W. W. Hyde l\lrs. C. B. Ingraham
Mrs. E. J. Lake l\ [rs. . H. Lawrence Mrs. H. Lilienthal l\lrs. T. l\J. Lin coln l\Lr. F . S:Luther Mrs. L. P. W. Marvin 1rs. vV. R. l\ latson Mrs. J. J. l\lcCook Mrs. A. R. lVIerriam Mrs. vV. D. Morgan Mrs. W. G. Morgan Mrs. Burton Parker Mr . L. D. Parker Mrs. J. D. Parker Mrs. Robert Parker Miss P helps Mrs. W. H. Post Mrs. H. S. R ed field l\ lrs. R. B. Riggs Mrs. W. L. Robb Mrs. George Rye Roberts l\lrs. Robi on Mrs. J. H. Root l\11 rs. J. H. Rose Mrs. F. Sampson Mr . R. N. Seyms l\1 rs. vV. C. Skinner l\11 rs. G. W. Smith Mrs. S. P. StJohn Mrs. B. Stillman l\1 rs. E. Strong l\1rs. E. P. Taylor l\ 1rs. l\1. H. Wha pies Mrs. F. Winzlow M rs. P. H. Woodward l\[rs. E. . Van Zile r84
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搂:
Trinity College Missionary Society FouNDED 1832
"P1'o Clwisto et ecclesia."
Christmas Term 1901
E. B. GooDRICH, 'oz . R. w. THENB.\TH, '03 0. W. C RArGE, '03 ]. P. GA RVIN , '03 REv .
T. R.
REv.
C.
Preside11t Vice-President Secretm-y T1'easurer Chaplain Asst. Chaplain
Pv ' CHON, ' 4I
H. HAYES
Trinity Term 1902
E . B. GooDRICH, 'oz . R. W. TRENBATH, 'o3 C. E. JO NES, 'o5 ]. P. GARVIN, '03 R Ev . T. R. PYNCHON, R EV.
c.
Pr~side11t V ice-P1'esident Secretary Treasurer Chaplain Asst. C hajJ! a i ll
'41
H. HAYES
r86
Select Preachers at Trinity College Chapel 1901 -! 902
1901
Dec. 15.
The REv. EDWIN S. LINES , D. D. . Rector of St. Pau ls Church , New Ha\路en, Conn.
1902
Jan.
12.
The BISHOP OF CONNECTICUT
Jan. rg .
The REV. ERNEST M . STIRES. D. D. Rector of St. Thomas Church , New York City.
Feb . g.
The REv. jOHNS. LINDSAY, D. D. Rector of St. Pauls Church, Boston, Mass.
Feb. 23.
The REv. CHARLES MARTIN NILES, D. D. Rector of St . Pauls Ch urch , Ossining. N. Y .
March g. April 13.
May
II.
June 8.
The BISHOP OF NEw HAMPSHIRE The REv. FRA K WooDs BAKER , D. D . Rector of Trinity Church , New Haven, Conn . The Bishop of Delaware The REv. SPENCERS. RocHE, D. D. Rector of St. Marks Church, Brooklyn, N . Y.
Trinity College Chapel i!J PRESIDENT SMITH,
C!wp/ain
RH:V. CHARLES HARRIS HAVES,
Assistant Chaplain
Order of Service.r OBLIGATORY
VOLUNTARY
Daily
Sunday
Morning P r ayer, 8 .30 A. l\f . Ash Wednesday: 9路 15 A. l\f. Sunday: 9路15 A.M. Ascemion Day: 8.30 A. M.
Holy Communion, 8 A. M. Evening Prayer, 5 P.M. Lent-Daily II.55 A. M. (Litany) T!ta nksg izJing Day: 10.30 A . M.
Chapel Choir R.
B. GOODEN, '02
Precentor
Cantoris
Dec ani
'o2
GOODEN,
STEWART, '02
TUKE, '02
HENDERSON, '02
WHEELER, '02 THOMAS, BROWN,
'03 '04
CLARKE,
BUFFINGTON,
'04
A. B.
E. M.
'03 '03 LARCHAR, '03 PENNING, '03 BARTLETT, '04 'o2, Organist TRF;NBATH,
QUAILE,
Cha..pel Monitors ROGERS, '02
R. N. WEIB EL, '02
188
st~ff Man~ger
Stage
WALTER SLATER TRUMBULL
Assistant Stage Manager ALFRED BURNETT QUAILE
M~nager
Business RICHARD
ICKS WEIBEL
Assistant Business
ManZ~.ger
SAMUEL ST. JoHN MoRGAN
Executive Committee R.N. A.
B.
WEIBEL
W. S. TRUMBULL
QuAILE
S. ST.
190
J. MoRGAN
The Alphabet
A
stands for 路Arthur, ca lled Shorty for Short, H e' ll out talk a ll the lawyers contained in a co urt.
B
stands for Brown, to be Ft路ank, who is be tte r, To give dignity, beauty and weight to this le tter ?
C
' s the condition whi c h, like a bull pup, Will hang to you grimly from Freshman year up.
D
stands for Douglas, who runs with such vim That only his woni es ca n keep pace with him.
E
stands for Edmund, with muscl es so strong, That we f ea r h e' ll pull up Gym and all before long.
F
stands for Freshman, the oll eg e for them Is a pl ace whi c h will c hange th e m from c hildre n to nll' l! .
G
is th e Glee C lub who howl with such gl ee, That it's worth tra ve ling far their contortions to see .
H
stands for "High" h e is quite a big boy, Y e t an old silve r mug is his ch i e~ pri ce a nd joy.
J
J
is the "Ivy,', a bool' you can't bea t , Without it no lib1路ary's e ve r complete. (If you don't be li eve this ask any of th e Editors, or Andrew Carnegie.) 's Captain Jimmie, it's easily guessed, That " After the (Foot) Ball's" the son g h e likes b st.
K
is the Ki c k e r , that know-it-a ll man, Who' d remode l th e Earth on his own special plan.
L
stands for Larch ar, a pool shark 'tis true , But th ey say that quite often h e misses his c u e.
M
stands for '' Monk " whi c h is used by his fri e nds, As a term of endearment for Edward Lorenz.
N
is the Nine - let's g e t out, every man, And ch eer the m to vi ctory whe n ev er we ca n .
0
is the Owl - a bird of s u ch knowledge, H e must b e an alumnus of 'l'rinity Colleg e .
p
stands for pies th a t a re lu scious and big. Who eats th e m , you a sk ? Quit your foolin' ther e Brig.
Q
stands for Qua ile . You 'll agr ee h e's a bird, If e v er his notes on th e orga n you've h ea~路d.
R
' s R a bbit Bruce, with hi s lon g s ilky h a ir, Whi ch h e brush es each morning with w on derful care.
S
is St. P a tri ck. From a ll I can h ear, Th e Freshmen re m e mb e r ed hi s birthday, thi s y ear .
T
stand s for T aylor , th e hunte r ,- I h ear That hi s hunting' s m o re d a n gerous to d ear s th a n t o d eer .
U
is th e umpire a t a Class Gam e, His fun e r a l's imp r es siv e, a nd great i s hi s f a m e.
V
s t a nds for Velte , th e b est y ou can find , W e wi sh th a t the r e w e r e a f ew m ore of h is k ind .
W
is W e ibel, wh o' s so e n er getic, Th a t it's sa id th a t hi s en r gy' s wh olly Kinetic.
X
Pl ease X c u se m e, I thi nk you h ad bett er E ndeav o r to find your ow n rh y m e for this letter .
y
s ta nd s for you , gentl e reader - Be kind , And s eek , in thi s n o nsen se, a mu sem e nt t o find.
Z
s t a nd s for Ze r o, a n d w h en you ' r e in c la ss, If you say tha t m ean s " Nothin g " I d on't think you ' ll pass.
The 20 Club
President
c.
H. HILL
Vice- PreJiden t
c.
E.
BRUCE
MemberJ C. H. HILL E. BRUCE H. L. G. MEYER
R.
H. HuTCHINSON
c.
w.
S.
LARCHAR }R.
} EWETT CoLE
W. H.
R. N.
WEIBEL
193
TRUMB
LL
B . CA RPENTER
The
Honor~ry
Fraternity of Kappa Beta Phi
FouNDED IN:
rn6
AT MARY AND WILLIAMS CoLLEGE
Roll of United Chapters Trinity College, Cambridge Trinity College, Dublin Ecole de Beaux Arts, Paris Emynxt University Smith College Wellesley College Harvard Annex Trinity Wesleyan University .W ells College Vassar Sage College, Cornell University Xymtba College Blypqksm University Dnjlucix Institute Qvltjmin Lytnqbmp Atljo Combinojint Bryn Mawr Nowhereatal Heidelberg University of Mskovitchjski University of Shanghai University of Tokio
ALPHA OF GREAT BRITAIN ALPHA OF IRELAND ALPHA OF FRANCE BETA OF FRANCE ALPHA OF
.
11ASSACHUSETTS
BET.\ OF MASSACHUSETTS GA~HIA OF MASSACHUSETTS
ALPHA OF CoNNECTICUT BETA OF CONNECTICUT ALPHA oF
Ew YoRK
"BETA oF NEw YoRK GAMMA oF NEw YoRK DELTA OF NEW YORK EPSILON OF NEw YoRK Z~TA oF
TEw YoRK
ETA OF
EW YORK
THETA oF
Ew YoRK
IoTA OF NEw YoRK ALPH .\ OF PENNSYLVANIA BETA OF PE r NSYLVANIA BETA OF GERMANY ALPHA OF RussiA ETA OF CHINA OMEGA OF JAPAN
194
C. H .
E. B. P. L.
R.
Alpha of Connecticut CHARTERED
r889
c. H. HILL
President
E . B.
Vice-President
P. L.
GooDRICH
Secretary and Treasure!'
BARTON
Class of 1901 R.N.
WEIBEL
SAxoN CoLE
195
A. B.
QuAILE
Nee le poeniteat calamo tn"visse /abelitt m
Keeper J of the Pipe of Peace whose names are cut on the Box H. M. Gregory, '56
H. E. Whitney, '74
T. L . Elwyn, '92
S. McConihe, '56
W. R. Blair, '75
'!' . H. Yardley, '92
H. W . Kloppenburg, '58 W. J. Roberts, '75 E. N. Burke, '76
L. D . Hubbard, '93
B. E. Warner, '76
G. ID. Hartley, '93 F . C. Edgerton, '94
W. >E . Rogers, '77
H . T. G-reenley, '94
N. B. Dayton, '63
B. F. H. Shreve, '78 0. Buffington, '79
F . â&#x20AC;˘S . Burrage, '95 C. DuB. Broughton, '95
J. E. Mears, '58 '1' . B. Sexton, '60
W. H . Tibbits, '61 L. K. Storrs, '63 G . M. Stanl ey, '68
0. Holway, '80
DeF. Hicks, '96
H. S . Carter, '69
C. Carpenter, '82
E. W . Robinson, '96
H. Van B. Kissam, '69
J. R. Cunningham, '85
E. F . Waterman, '98
B . E. Ba<:kus, '70
H. R. Remsen, '98
J . K. Stout, '70
C. G. >Child, '86 C. H. Tibbits, '87
W. Drayton, '71
F. B. Whitcomb, '87
J. H . K. Davis, '99
D. P . Cotton, '71
J. W. R. Crawford, '88
:!. G. Mcilvaine, '00
J. W. Nichols, '99
G. C . Burgwin, '72
L. H. Paddock, '88
E. P. Taylor, J r., '00
J . T . Bowditch , '73
E. N. Scott, '89
H. Fiske, '01
C. E. Craik, '74
E. B. Bulkeley, '90
H. H. Rudd, '01
T. L . Stedman, '74
G. W. Sar gent, '90
Present Keepers H. H. Rudd, '01
S. St. J. Morgan, '03
[As every member voted for him self no officers were elected. ]
Member .I' C. H.
WHEELER,
c.
BRUCE, '03
E.
'oi
P. L. BARTON, '02 H. CLAPP, '04
s.
Honorary Member 0MAR KHAYYAM
Jiil
The A. F. L. or the Order of the Stave and Hoop Germani btllacissimi d ftrrisimi srmt Patron Saint: CARRIE NATION
St21..ve MemberJ Hereditary keeper of the Staves, Past Grand Master of the Hoop, "Old Ironsides" Custodian of the Sacred Bull, Dispenser of the Bromo, Guardian of the Silver Mug, Taster, Delegate toW. C. T. U.,
E. D EVELYN N . S CHULTE H. H. R UDD "BISH" WHITE "B UNNY" BRUCE "BILL'' L ARCHAR HIGH M EYER "SAM" MORGAN "DUG" RANKIN
Hoop Members Chief Chaser, Queen of the May Pole,
197
BRICK BRADEN PAT GARVIN
Sophomore Dining Club FOUNDED BY THE CLASS OF
D. J. C. G.
S. Corson , '99 H. K . Davis, '99 B. Hedrick, '99 T. Kendal, '99 E. G . Litte ll, ' 99 B. K. Morse, '99 A. D. Vibbert, '99 H. D. Green, '99 W. C. Hill , '00 H . A. Hornor, '00 D. B. J ewett, '00 J . G. Mcilvaine, '00 F. W. Prince, '00 P. H. Bradin, '03 H . D. Brigham, '03 D . H . Browne, '03 C. E. Bruce, Jr. , '03
'99
ON FEBRUARY
W. H. Eaton, '99 J. W . Nichols, '99 A. H. Onderdonk, '99 H . C. Owen, '99 E.. A. Rich , '99 E . K. Sterli n g', '9& W. B . Sutton, '99 J. W. Bradin , '01) T. P. Brow n e, Jr. , '00 R. H. Fox, '00 S. R. Fuller, J r., '00 H. McK. Glazebrook, M. G . Haight, '00 A. Henry, '03 J. MeA. Johnson, '03 W. Larchar, Jr., '03 H. L. G . Meyer, '03
IS, 1897 D. L. Schwartz, '1.10
W. P . Brown, '01 M. W. Cle m ent, '01 J . D. Evans, '01 R. Fiske, '01 J. M. Hudson, '01 W. J. M c N e il, '01 R. E. P eck, '01 H. H . Rudd, '01 A . R. Van de Water, J . M. Walker, '01 C. H. Wheeler, '01 H. D. Wilson, Jr., '01 £. St. J . Morgan, '03 G. D. Rankin, '03 A. •C. Short, '03 W. S. Trumbull , '03
Active Member.r W. B. A llen M. H. Buffington S. H. C lapp T . N. Denslow
E. P. E. H.
J. Dibble L. Lightbourn H . Maddox R. Mcilvaine
I<)S
P. L. McKeon H. E. Townsend R. B. Van Tin e
Sophomore Dining Club 1903 Graduate Members
Rankin
Henry Cunningham Meyer Morgan Short Brigham Trumbull Larchar
199
Bradin Bruce
Johnson
Junior
Fre-rhm~n B~nquet 1903 from 1905 DECEMBER 6TH, I90I.
Banquet at the Elm Tree Inn Fz..rmington, Conn.
Toa.st.r R.
Toastmaster I90J Ottr Country The Ladies 路The College Athletics The Sophs The Faculty I905
ILES GRAHAM
BENEDICT D. FLYNN SAMUEL ST. JoHN MoRGAN HENRY D. BRIGHAM PERCIVAL H. BRADIN GEORGE D. RANKIN ARTHUR
c. SHORT
JARVIS MeA. JoHNSON HENRY
L.
G. MEYER
Committee CHARLES F. CLEMENT,
R.
c.
Chairman
c.
NILES GRAHAM
BARTON WYNKOOP
w.
JARVIS HARRIMAN
BENEDICT D. FLYNN
200
BLAIR ROBERTS
College MarshalJ
1836. 1837. l 838. 1839. 1840. 1841. 1842. 1843. 1844. 1845. 1846. 1847. 1848. 1849. 1850. 1851. 1852. 1853. 1854. 1855. 1856. 1857. 1858. 1859. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. 1868.
1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1 82. 1883. 1884. 1885. 1886. 1887. 1888. 1889. J890. 1891.
Pliny A. J ewett Albert Dodd George W. Beers Thomas T. Guion C. B. Varley George R. Hall Francis J. Clerc John G. Sterling Samuel Flower James B. Wakefield David F. Lumsden William C. Peters Edward H. Brinley Samuel Sherman Charles E. Terry J ames rw. Smyth A. Hamilton Polk J. Gardiner White W. Butler Krumbhaar Jared Starr Sidney Hall John H. S. Quick Samuel B. Warren Wm. G. Davies Wm. B . Tibbits G. W. Hugg John J. McCook Thomas R. Ash C. T. Olmsted Charles Wanzer Henry K. Huntington Howard C. Vibbert Joseph B. Cheshire
1892. 1893. 1894. 1895. 1896. 1897. 1898. 1899. 1901. 1902.
201
George E. Elwell D. Page Cotton John W. Gray Russell Murray L. M. Plumer Charles D. Scudder Henry H. Brigham J. Ellis Kurtz 'R . B. Brundage Wm. N. Elbert Henry C. Lovebridge Wm. B. elson Charies H. Carter J. Eldred Brown E. S. Van Zile S. S. Mitchell E. B. Hatch W. B . Olmsted 'W. F. Morgan, Jr. E. N. Scott E. McP. McCook T. P. Thurston Wm. Joseph Miller Wm. French Collins Robert Prescott Parker John Moore McGann Wm. Speaight Langford, Jr. James Watson Lord James Watson Lord Elton Gardiner Littell Harry Archer Hornor Godf1路ey Brinley Richard Nicks Weibel
ORli\N~~AHD~
LU.Tf\TOR~l\1'1~, 1827. V. Isaac E. Crary S. Samue l C. Goldsborough
1837 V. Abn e r J ackson S. John T . Cu s hing
1828. V. H e nry G. Sm ith S. William H . W a lte r
1838 V. C h ar les G ill e tte S. Cyru s Munson
1829 V. Joshua G. Wright S. Sa mue l S. L ewis
1839 V . I saac G. Hubbard S . N a thani e l 0. Co rnwall
1830 V. Augustus F. Lyde S. Isaac W . H a llam
1840 V. Robert B. Fairbairn 'S. Vandervoort Bruce
1831 V. Nath a nie l E. Cornwa ll S . Joseph R . Ecc leston
1841 V. William H. Fris bie V. H e nry D. Nobl e S. Thomas R. Pyn c hon
1832 V. E . Edwards Beardsley S. John W. French
v.
s. v.
s. v.
s.
1842 V. G eorge Rossite r S. H e nry C. Prel' ton
1833 Hugh "L. Morrison Edward Hard year
1843 V. Thomas S . Preston S. George K e r
1834 Willia m P ayne Solomon G. Hitch cock
1844 V. :David P. Sanford S. Tilton E. Doolittle
1835 Rober t Tomes Edward Van D eusen
1845 V . Robert C. Rogers S. John A. Paddock
1836 V . J ames H. Elliott ::. . Isaac H. Tuttle
1846 V. John W. Bacon S. Sa mu el M. Whiting 202
1847 V. Samuel Benedict S. George S. Gilman
1862 Y. J ames B. Murray S. George W. Hugg
1848 V. Benj. H. Paddock ..-- S. Nath. N . Belden
1863 V. John R Smith s. 路w . N. Ackley
1849 V. John M. Atwood S. George W. Giddings
1864 V. Robert A. Benton S. Joseph F. Ely
1850 V. John T. Huntington S. Daniel E. Loveridge
V. C h arles '1'. Olmstl'd
S. Edward S. J ohnson
1851 V. Charles J. Hoadly S. Alex G . Cummings
1866 V. Samuel Hart S. Henry A. Metcalf
1852 V. Lucius H. Jones f:! . Francis C hase
1867 V. William 路R. Mackay S. George G . Ni~hols
1853 IT. Alfred L. Brewer S. William G. Spencer
1868 V. Frank L. Norton S. Frank H. Potts
1854 V. George D. Johnson K James H. Williams
1869 Y. George 0. Holbrooke S. Arthur McConkey
1865
'
1855 V. Luke A. Lockwood S. Edwin C. Bolles
1870 V. George McC. Fiske S. Harlow R. Whitlock 路
1856 V. Daniel E. Holcomb S. Samuel F. Hotchkin
1871 V. George W. l.Jouglass S. Ch a un cey C. Williams
1857 V. :Samuel Herm'ln S. George B. Hopson
1872 Y. Paul Ziegler S. J ames H. George
1858 V. George S. Mallory S. William H. Vibbert
1873 V. Leonard W. Richardson S. Oliver H. Raftery
1859 V. Samuel B. Warren S. Edwin E. Johnson
1874 V. Edward N. Dickerson S. James D. Smyth
1860 Y . Ch arles H. W . Stocking ..,, Augustus Johnson
1875 V . George M. Hubbard S. Edward W. Worthington
1861 V. Arthur W. Allen S A. B. Jennings
1876 V. Isaac Heister S. Charl es E. Moore 203
1877
V. Charles C. Edmunds, Jr. S. John Prout 1878
V. John D. Hills S. John G. Williams 1879
V. Alfred Harding S. James S. Carpenter 1880
V. T. M. N. George S. S. Lorin Webster 1881
V. J. Russell Parsons S. Charles W. Jon es 1882
V. Seaver M. Holden S. John H. M<iCrackan 1883
V. R. T. Reineman S. J. 路E. Brown 1884
V. Henry R. Neely S. William S. Barrows 1885
V. H. B. Loomis S. Robert Thorn 1886
V. Herman Lilienthal S. William J. Tate 1887
V. Orrin A. Sands S. William A. Beardsley 1888
V. Lewis H. Paddock S. Charles E. Purdy 1889
V. Willard Scudder S. Joseph W. Fell
1890
V. Clifford S. Griswold S. William H. C. Pynchon 1891
V. Harry Howard S. Charles Herbert Young 1892
V. Albert CrabtrPP. S. Romily F. Humphries 1893
V. March Chase Mayo S. Robert Peck Bates 1894
V. Nathan 'l'olles Pratt S. Cameron Josiah Davis 189fi
V. Edward Myron Yeo:nans S. Sydney Key Evans 1896
V. George Nahum Holcombe S. George Blodgett Gilbert 1897
V. Hermann von W. Schulte S. John !Robert Benton 1898
V. Woolsey MeA. Johnson !;:. Albert Morey Sturt('vant 1899
V. Harold Loomis Cleasby S. Charles William Henry 1900 V. Simon Lewis Tomlinson
S. Harry Archer Hornor 1901
V. Francis R. Sturtevant S. Frank Halsey Foss 1902 V. Anson T. McCook
S. Karl Philip Morba
R.INJTY • CHUR.CH ~...._..CHOOL·CL\JB
w. B. w. G.
c.
President Vice-President Secretary { Treasurer
ALLEN, '04 '04
WHERRY,
H. HEYN, '04
Che.rhire Academy Alumni Association of Trinity College OfficerJ'
J.
W. P. H.
W.\LKER,
BR.\DIN,
President Vice-President Secretary { Treasurer
'oz 'o3
R. L. McKEoN, '04
MemberJ'
P. H.
J.
BRADI ' '03
R. L. McKEoN, '04 205
W. WALKER, '02
Hartford High School Club OfficerJ E. S. MERRIAM S ST. ]. MoRGA r E . J. CLEVELAND
President Vice-President Secretary a11d Treasnrer
Members E. ]. CLEVELAND, '02 E . H. LoRENz, 'o2 B. Q. MORGAN' '04
J. MeA. } oHNSo , '03 H. E. BusHNELL, 'os P. H . BLAKESLEE, 'os P. T. KENNEov, 'os w . B. RoBERTs, 'os w. B. SHERwooD, 'os
A. T. McCooK, 'o2
E . S. MERRIAM, 'o2 K. P. MoRBA, 'o2 S. ST. ]. MoRGAN, 'o3
St. Alban's School Club OfficerJ H. H. RuDD, 'or .
President Vice-President Secretary and Treasttrer
JEWETT CoLE, 'o2 SAxoN CoLE, 'o2
200
J
JAMES HENDERSON, NoEL
G.
P1'esident Vice-President Secretary and
'02
CuNNINGHAM, '03
EDWARD J. MANN, '04
Treas~trer
Shattuck School Club President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer
HowARD RussELL WHITE HENRY CARLON
L. G. E.
MEYER
JoNEs
.
207
TRINITYST. PAULS (LVB. " Garden City"
Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! R ah ! Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! St. Paul's - - R.
ILES GHAHJ\M
President CHARLES H .
c
RRY
S ecrctary and Trcasnrer
Member .I' R NILES GRAHAM
Kr
CHARLES H . CuRRY
BARTON WYNCOOP
EYRE ISE
J ACK O'CoNNOR
The
W~shington,
D. C. High School Club
EnGAR ~IARTIN RoGERS, 'o2 MARSHALL BowYER STEWART, 'o2 KARL HERBERT FENNI JG,
'03
WrLLIAM SEwARD WYMAN WALLAcE, 'os
2o8
~-
The Yale Bi-centennial Representatives from Trinity
1902 GOODRICH, }R.
PECK
HE TDERSON
WEIBEL
GOODRIDGE
HOLDEN
HIGGINBOTHAM
WHITE
HowE
CRANE
MERRIAM
1903 BRIGHAM TRUMBULL MEYER
HENRY
MORGAN
THOMAS
1904 ALLEN
McKEoN
BROWN
VAN TINE
BUFFING1'0N
1905 FLYNN WATSON
ROBERTS
Gun Club OfficerJ' JEwETT CoLE
President HENRY B. CARPENTER
S ecrctary and T1'easnre1' J. P.
w.
TAYLOR
Captain
MemberJ' EDWARD
H.
l\IADDOX
JEWETT COLE l\IATHER I. RA
H. D. CARPÂŁ ' TER
J.
P.
w
T ;\ YLOR
KI
Ping-Pong Captain, R.
Te~m
. WEIBEL H cad Coach, Mrss PING Assistant Coach, Mrss PoNG
MemberJ' Brigham Morgan teele I eyer Hutchinson Rankin Trumbull
All Members of the Faculty. Trenbath Barton, Champion, Thomas Allen Goodrich Goodridge
1902
Sub.rtitutes
The rest of the College, also Adams and Duffy 210
VICTOR HERBERT. 1lie Composer of " TRINITY TRUE." : Was born in Dublin, Ireland, in I85g, and is a g r andson of Samuel Lover the famous Iri s h noveli s t. At the age of seven h e was se nt to Germany to begin hi s musical education , and from that time be bas conti nu o usly and assid uously devoted his life to the acq uire ment of a thorough knowled ge of hi s chosen a rt. His first position of prominence was that of principal vio lonce llo player in the court orcb~ str a at Stuttgart, and he was h eard in many hnportant conc erts throughout H urope before acce pting in t886 a n e n gagement as solo violoncellist in th e Metropolitan O r chestr a in New York. During the twel ve years of his reside n ce in th e U nited . la t es, 1\lr. Herbert bas been prominently connected with the best o r c h estr a l organi za tions , and as s olois t and conductor has become favorably known in the princi pa l cilies. For a num ber of years he was principal violoncello player in lhe Theodor e Thomas Orchestra, and more recently h e ld a similar pos ition in Anton Seidl 's Orc hestra , whe r e he was also Associate Conductor; and at the Worcester, Mass., Festival and e lsewhere, before being call ed to Pittsb urgh. Mr. Herbert demcnstrated hi s a bility as conductor. Mr. Herbert appeared as conductor of the Pittsburgh Orchestra fo r the first time on the e ve ning of N ov ember 3, 1898, and the s uccess then achieved and repeated at following con c erts , was without para llel in mus ical Pittsburgh. Mr. Herbert bas w on distinction as a composer, the Hst of .his later orc h estral works inc lude the "Suite Romantique," Op. 31, brought out in New Yor k at the Pi tts burgh Orches tra concert of jan . 23. I9QO, a nd Symphonic Poem, " Hero a n d Lean der," Op. 33, played in New York on Jan. 22, I9QI . Suite " W ood land Fancies," Op. 34, Dec. Igo r. In the department of o)era comi'que, Mr. Herbert, Uke the late Sir Arthu r Sullivnn bas added to the p leasure of nations . 'fhe yea r s of unremitting service Mr . 1-ferbert bas given in lhe rehearsal a nd conce rt room of the P ittsb urgh Orchestra bas demonstrated his pos session of pre-emin ent qualifications for the pos ition of Conduc tor.
2II
Class Day President Historian Poet Presenter Statistic ian
} AMES HENDERSO HARRIE LESLIE HowE ALFRED B ROETT QUAILE JEWETT CoLE EDMU D SAWYER MERRIAM
Committees Cl~ss D~y
HENDERSON,
s.
Chainnan
WHITE M CooK BENTLEY
COLE BARTON
Reception WElBEL,
Chainnan
SHELDON TAYLOR
GoooRI H STEWART lnvit~tion
TEELE,
Chairman
CLEVELAND
HowE
Finz..nce STEWART, Chairman LAUBENSTEIN
MERRIAM
Photograph WALKER,
Chairman
HIGGINBOTHAM
HILL
Drz..matic.r QUAILE, WEIBEL
Chainnan
ROGERS 212
'ss
GEoRGE CYPRIAN JARvrs, M.D .,
Died May 7th, 1901.
'78
THE REv. WILLIAM HuosoN BuRR,
Died April 24th, 1901. SAM
EL FARMER JARVIS, JR.,
'89
Died June 14, 1901. TIIE REV. w LLLIAM TAYLOR wALKER,
'97
Died July 5th, r9or. TriE REv.BRADY ELECTUS BAcKus,D.D.,
Died August 2d, 1901. SAMUEL SHERMAN,
·so
Died October 26th, 1901. '70 Died September 29th, 1901
TnE REV. HENRY l'vlARTIN TORBTT,
'74
TuE REv. EuwJN FR ,\NCLS SMALL,
Died October 24th, 1901. FREDERICK WILLIAM
Died
E\VSCIIAFER, '07
ovember 12th, 1901:
THE REv. URIEL HEBER
PENCER,
'90
Died January 9th, 1902. Trm REv. ALBIN BARLOW JENNINGS,
Died March r rth, 1902.
214
'61
'70
•
!n
m~motTiam
SIMON LEWIS TOMLINSON CLASS
DIED
OF
1 900
DECEMBER 6, 1901
215
Marriages Married, In St. George's Church, Newburg, N. Y .. April lOth, 1901, H enry Hubbard Pelton, M.D., '93, and Miss Natalie Smith. Married, in the Presbyterian hurch, Englewood, 'N. J. , May 31st, 1900, Jon a than Mayhew Wainwright, M.D., '95, and Miss J ssie Bell Hart. Married, in St. Paul's Church, Wickford, R. I., June 19th, 1901, Edward Wanton Robinson, '96, and Miss Helena Porter Thomas. Married, in New York, June 27th, 1901, W. A. Eardeley, '96, and Miss Florence M. Kass. Married, in St. Jame ' Church, Winsted, 1Conn .. June 20th, 1901, the Rev. Karl Reiland, '97, and Miss Elizabeth Louise Burwell. Married. in Hartford, Conn., June 19th, 1901, the Rev. Cranston Brenton, '99, a nd Miss Elizabeth Alden Curtis. Married, in Colorado Springs. Col., July 17th, 1901, William Hanmer Eaton, '99, and Miss Isabel Westcott N1cholson. Married, in Grace Chapel, Hartford, Conn., June 27th, 1901, the Rev. William Albert Sparks, '97, and Miss Eva Adela Harding. Married, in St. John's Church, Hartford, Conn., October 2, 1901, Frank Elisha Johnson, '84, and Miss Gertrude Anna Schulze. Married, in Mammoth ,spring, Ark., Sept. lOth, 1901, The Rev. Henry R. Neely, '84, and Miss Bush. Manied, in !Detroit, Mich., Sept. 3, 1901, Carl Gottlieb Ziegler, '97, and Miss Louise Langley Neff. Man:ied, in Claremont. N. H., Se t. 10, 1901, Charles Frederick Weed, '94, and Miss Mary Duncan Walker. Married, in Christ's Church, !Cambridge. Mass., July 30, 1901, the Rev. James B. Goodrich, '66, and Miss Caroline T. W. Rice. Married, in All Saints' Church, Great Parsons, and Miss Mary H. hilds.
Necl~.
L. I., June 5, 1901, Walter Wood
Married, in Trinity Church, Boston, Mass., Sept. 24, 1901, the Rev. John Moore McGann, '94, and Miss Susan Duncan. Married, i:t;J. Hartford, Conn., Nov. 27, 1901, Robert Prescott Parker, '95, and Miss Ruth Whitmore. Married, in Clinton, Conn., Jan. 1, 1902, Brainerd Duffield Peck, ex, '96, and Miss Laura Boynton Chalker Married, in University Congregational Church, Chicago, April 19th, 1902, Edgerton Parsons, '96, and Miss Alice Tullis Lord. Married, in New London, Conn., April 15th, 1902, Robert Thorne, and Miss Ruth Huntington Bond.
216
Optimi
SAMUEL HART,
'66
GEORGE OTIS HOLBROOKE,
'69
Lucrus WATERMAN, '7I LEONARD WooDs RicHARDSON, '73 HIRAM ' BENJAMIN LOOMIS, HERMANN LILIENTHAL, WILhARD路 ScuDDER,
'85
'86
'89
HAROLD LOOMIS CLEASBY,
'99
FRANCIS RAYMOND STURTEVANT, 'or
217
ERRATA. The following men are no longer connected with the fraternity of Alpna Chi Rho : Fred Augustus Higginbotham. Philip Safford Clarke. Theophilus Minton Syphax. Robert Wight Trenbath. Hervey Boardman Vanderbogart. - Frank Seiders Brown. William George Wherry. Edward James Mann. Edwin Lathrop Baker. William Francis Bulkley. Edmund Samuel Carr. Edward Llewellyn Duffee. Philip Thomas Kennedy.
Be • Bil Bi Bil Bo Bo
Br Br • B
• Br Br Br Br Brc Brc Brc Bn • Bn
Brl Bu: Bu.
,
Tiffany & Co. D ia mond
and
Gem
.Awards and Appointments I
Makers of the
Appoint~d
Jewelers and Stlversrntths to H. M. KING EDWARD Vll H . M. QUEEN ALEXANDRA
90 I
PAN-AMERICAN EXPOSITIO 8 Gold Medals P A R I S EXPOSITIO~ 3 Grands Prix IO Gold Medals Grand Prizes and other Awards from all the International Expositions
23 ROYAL APPOINTMENTS from the principal Courts of Europe and 3 Decorations upon members of the firm
U NION S<z_UARE
NEW Form II24. Oct. 30,)901.
Merchants
YORK ii
Yale Bicentennial Medal Fraternity Pins Class Rings Class Cups Trophies for Sports Invitations to Commencement Exercises, etc. Heraldic Engravings Book Plates Etc.
Correspondence l nvz"ted
50fl\ETHING NEW COLLEGE BOWS
These bows are made of best imported silk ribbon. Just the thing for German Favors. We can furnish these bows in ALL COLLEGE COLORS AND LETTERS
DECORATIONS We have added to our business a Decorating Department with all new stock and competent help. Are now pr~pared to furnish decorations for all occasiOns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
FLAGS Being the only manufacturers of Flag s in the city, we can furnish Flags, Burgees Signals, Jacks and Yacht Ensigns of every description , of very best Bunting or Silk, at Lowest Possible Prices for First Class Work. Golf Flags a Specialty .路. .路. . 路. .路.
Si ll\O f\5 &
Fox iii
240 ASYLVfv\ ST.
AGRAND GRAPHOPHONE The possessor of one of these new machines may have small records to u se with the small mandrel and is a 1 so able to a v a i 1 himself o f the g reat v olum e and superior q ual ity of the Grand r ecords at no additional cost other than that of the record s themselves.
ALSO USING SMALL CYLINDERS FOR
$25.00 Crapkoj>lwne arrangrd 'Or large cylinder
GRAND RECORDS, SI .OO each. SMALL RECORDS , 50 cents each: Ss per dozea. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE.
YOU CAN MAKE YOUR OWN R E CORDS ON THE GRAPHOPHONE. OTHER TALKING MACHINES LACK THIS - TH E GREATEST CHARM.
GRAPHOPHONES
COLUMBIA
DISC
Using FLAT RECORDS.
No other disc machine compares with ours.
The GRAPHOPHONE won the GRAND PRIZE at the PARIS EXPOSITION. Send $5 with your order to nearest office and goods will be shipped C. 0 . D. for the balance.
COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH COMPANY New York : Wholesale and Retail , 93 Cham hers Minneapolis: r~ Fourth Street. South . St. Louis : 709 Pine St. Baltimore: no E. Baltimore St. Pittsburg: 615 Penn. Ave. San Francisco: 125 Geary St. Chicago: 88 Wabash Ave. Buffalo: 645 Main St.
iv
St. Retail only. 573 Fifth Ave. Detroit: 23S.240 Woodward Ave. P hilad e lphia: r6oq Chestnut St. Washington: 919 Pennsylvania Ave . Boston : 164 Tremont St. London: 122 Oxford St., W. Paris : 34 Boulevard des Ita liens . Berlin : 65-A Friedrichs trasse.
THE JoHNs-PRATT Co.. HARTFORD. CONN.
VuLcABESTON MouLDED MrcA S AcHs " N OARK" FusEs
v
THREE PICTURES.
AYNOR shut his silver cigarette case with a meditative snap, and looked at it absently. " I wonder," he said finall y, " what I should do without you. You don't know what a comfort it is to me to have you-someone who und erstands me so, some one to whom I can tell everything that troubles me and be sure of being understood and sympath ized with-you know so well-" H e paused to note the effect of his word s and to watch with inward amusement the color rise through her clear skin ( just as he knew it would). She opened her lips to speak, but closed them again, say ing nothing, and he noted with no trace of compun ction, but rather w:th satisfaction that lig ht which was in her eyes. 路'Why, do you know,'' he went on, throwinrr minor inA ections into hi s voice, makin g it very low and appealing, '"do you know that I have seen all of the world for twenty-five year s, Margaret. A nd I am so tired-so tired-often I have wished I were lying dead under the g round . There I should have rest, qu iet, nothingness, no misunderstanding. no mistakes. And now, tfargaret, what have you done to me. I want to live for you. I would rath er see the understanding in your eyes-rather hear your voice speak my name than-Margaret, what sha II I do?" S he had not moved. Little streaks of sunli ght fitfully crossed and recrossed her bronze hair as the breeze waved the branches above her head, and in her eyes was the quiet blue of the sky and the light of the sunkissed waters lapping the lake shore at her feet. Something very like affection touched him momentarily, she was so little and so sweet an I so pathetic. B ut she said nothing, and an impul se of irration sprang up within him. He must make her exh ibit some feeling. He had amused him self with drawing her on for weeks now, and to-day when he craved a climax she sat silent and gave him no satisfaction. He had tried the effect of hi s voice and hi s eyes, and he could see by the look in hers that she was affected, but he desired more. "One can almost always reach a woman with the pitiful," he soliloquized, and he drew himself nearer her on the pine-needle covered g round . He bent his head low and twisted the end of her scarf be路 tween hi s finger s, havi ng the satisfaction of knowing she turned toward him.
G
vi
THE fETNA NATIONAL BAN K OF HARTFORD, CONN. Surplus and Profits,
Capital,
$soo ,ooo .oo
$525,ooo.oo Deposits,
$3,000 , 000.00 Banking House, 644-648 M ain Street, ..ETNA LIFE BUILD IN G .
OFFICERS. A. SPitNCRR, JR ., President. A . R. HILLYER, Vice-President. W. D. MORGAN, Cashier. DIRECTORS. H o u . MORGAN G. BULKELEY,
Hon . L EVERETT BRAIN ARD, Pres't Case. Lockwood & Braiuard Co. Ex-Mayor City of Hartford.
Pres't Mtna Life Insurance Co. :Ex-Go,路ernor State of Connecticut.
APPLETON R. HILLYER,
JA:VIES B. CONE,
Vice-President.
Hartford.
ALFRED SPENCER, JR . President. Thi s Bank offers to Depositors eve ry faci lity which their balances, business a nd responsibility warrant.
THE
_IETNA INDEMNITY COMPANY.
BO NDS AND
UNDERTAKINGS.
HOME OFFICE : 650 MAIN ST., HARTFORD , CONN.
CORRESPONDENCE INVITED. vii
ELEC'rRIC AUTOMOBILES Excel all others in efficiency, durability, and radius of action.
ÂŁlEtT RI C YEH.ICI,.t: t.O -
COLU MBIA R U NABOU T , l\1ARK XXXl.
One of the most stylish and serviceable of our lates t models. Adapted to all fo rms of city and s uburban u se . Will run 40 miles on one cha rge of b attery.
Our latest styles for pleasure, service and general use, also include our CoLUMBL-\ SuRREY, MARK XIX; CoLUMBIA VrcroRIA, MARK XXXI; CoLUMBIA TONNEAU, MARK XIX; and CoLUMBIA CABRIOLET, MARK XIX. Each typifies the highest standard of construction, equipment and finish. WRIT E FOR CATALOG UE AND PRICB LIST.
Electric Vehicle Company CO RNER PARK AN D LAUREL STS, HARTFORD, CO NN . viii
" I have been very unhappy, dear," he whispered. " You do not know,-my nature is a very unhappy one, and living in this world is very hard for such a man as I. You are the only one who comes anywhere near understanding me, and, :Margaret, to care as I care-to care as I care for you--" She cried his name with a half sob, and he bent his head still lower. She noted with sudden pain all the fine silver lines in the beautiful hair. " It is true, it is true," he said, forcing a hopeless tone into his voice, "I care so for you that I do not care for another thing on earth. I see you in everything. There's not a beautiful flower which I see without thinking of your lips,-your lip , -if I should tear my love for you out of my life, then there would be nothing left. Good God, if I should take the love for you out of everything what would be left of tl e world." He turned his face toward her, his eyes clark with pain, and hopeless. He was a marvelousl y convincing actor, and she, womanlike, searched his face with so tender a gaze, with all her love for him in her eyes, that he thought swiftly. " I wonder what she would do if I should take her hand. It is strange that in all these weeks I have been really, reall y afraid to try to take her hand. She is so young, too. Where can she have learned such self-repression? By heaven, she shall show me some feeling. " .. Why will you not say soJnething," he pleaded. " Is it that you think there are others ? I never can care for another as I have for you. Yes, I know I have spent most of my time with other girls here thi s summer, but it is because I wouldn't make you conspicuous by paying you too much attention. 'To see them makes me love you better." He clasped her hand firml y in his and drew it against his breast. "My dear, my clear, my dear,'' he whispered, " Love me, do love me. I love you so I cannot live without your love. I want it so--" He drew her to him sw iftly and ki ssed her lips again and again. "Harry, Harry," she sa id, breathless with the realization of the g reatne s of hi s love, "I love you, too, I love you, I--路路 H e sprang to his feet with a sudden loud laugh. Now his object was accomplished, now her feeling was expressed, he wanted no more , except, perhaps, deeper feeling expressed. "You little, foolish girl," he said, " did you really think I cared? You sweet, clear child,-but-I am going to ask Miss Wetherington to be my wife-this very afternoon. I think I need her millions in my business." ix
Cb~
]. C.
Ripl~y
Jlrt Co.
Paintings, Wattr路colors, Etcbings, Engra"ings. manufactur~rs 752
of Jlrtistit Pictur垄
fram~s.
main Stn垄t, Hartford, eonn.
THOMAS j. SINNOTT,
Steam and Hot Water Heating.
sanitary
Plumber and Gas Fitter.
Estimates Furnished on Application.
248 PARK STREET.
THE
LI G HT
used by our ancestors was a pine knot or a tallow dip. The science of optics was in its infancy . Only tl!e most ordinary eye defects wen路 understood. Possibly that is the reason some of us are compelled to wear glasses. YOUR EYES MAY TROUBLE YOU
or your present glasses may not be correct. \Ve make a scientific examination without charge. Should we be able to demonstrate to you that we cau imp rove your vision, we will fit you with the guarantee of perfect satisfaction or your money back.
GEO. S. RICHARDS, Eye Specialist With G . E. WOERZ ,
226 Asylum Street, X
Jeweler and Optician,
Hartford, Conn.
HaJIHoJid ~ lllew Yor~ Tnn~p oJitation Go. " HARTFORD LINE" NEW YORK OF'FI CE Pier 24, Ea t River
HARTFORn Ol'FI CE :Foot of State Street
TWO NEW TWIN -SCREW STEEL STEAMERS
LEAVES HARTFORD
''MIDDLETOWN"
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday At 5 P . M., UNTIL OCTOBE R 15th Steward, A LONZO H . CORWIN
Captain, R . H . HILLS
LEAVES HARTFORD
,,
Monday, Wednesday and Friday Captain, F RED H. BEEBE
Steward, ] . P. MURPHY
nART F0RD"
yJ
J_,eave New York each Alternate Day, from Pier 24, East River, at 5 P. M . From October 15th to close of navigation, leave Hartford at 4 P. 111.; New York at 5
P. M.
P asse:n.ger F a r e s
One way, . Roun d Trip, good for season, Round Trip, good for six days,
Deck Fare, fir. r5 State Room , one way, . . r.oo Children , 6 to 12 y rs. of age, Half Price
f,r.5o 2 . 50 2.25
E. :;. GOODR ICH, President. EDGAR L. SMITII, Secretary and Assi stant Treasurer. C. C. GOODRICH , General Manager. E. B. WILLIAMS, Supe rinteudent. GEO. C. HII,I,S, Ge n era l F rei ght and Passenger Agent, Pier 24. East Ri ver, N.Y. W. B. SMITH, New York Agent, Pier 24, East River, N.Y. IJlnstrated Folder on application in person or by mail.
R. F. GOODRICH, Local Agent,
No. 285 State Street, Hartford, Conn. xi
There was a Princess of Timbuctoo, And she loved, as only a m a id can do, A rolli cking Irish sailor lad, But her P a , the King, was bold and bad And swore a swear, when her love he saw, That he'd have no Irish son-in-law. And preparations at once began For the d emise of that Irishman. Orders were g iven, with kingly guile To serve the sailor boy up in style. And so the cook, when the fire was hot, Popped the poor Irishman in th e pot. And when the Princess came in that night, And ate with a splendid appetite, She shed a tear with a loud " boo-hoo," Wh en she partook of the Irish stew. And this is the story, sad, but true, Of th e beautiful Princess of Timbu ctoo. W. S. T.
AM ERICAN and EUROP EAN PLANS
Loc~ted in the business cen t re, corner Asyl u m and Tru mbull Streets .
Electric
cars pass the door every two minutes. Hotel Electric Bus meets all trains.
American Plan, $3.50 to $s.oo per Day European Plan, $r.so to $3.00 per Day
ARE SIMPLE, SERVICEABLE AND DURABLE â&#x20AC;˘ .MADE WITH EITHER SINGLE OR DOUBLE KEYBOARD
PRICE,$60.
CATALOGUES
ON APPUCATION.
THE. HARTFORD TYPEWRITER
Co.,
450 CAPITOL AVENUE, HARTFORD, CONN.
xii
CHARTERED 1866
HARTFORD THE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY HARTFORD , CONN .
35 Years Successful Business
D
SSUES every desirable form of Policy Contract, Ordinary and Industrial. Endowments at age 8o, at Ordinary Life rates ; Endowments at age 8o, at Limited Payment rates j Participating and Nâ&#x20AC;˘ nParticipating, Return Premium and partial Return Premium, Installment Policies, Ordinary and Special Endowments, together with Term and other forms having special and unique features. Industrial Contracts issued at ages z to 6o, in amounts from $ ro to $soo. All Policy Contracts in full immediate benefit in case of death by accident.
Twenty-two Million Dollars Paid in Benefits Ratio of Assets to Lib.bilities, $139 to $100 GEO. E . KEENEY, President CHAS. H. BACALL, Secretary
xiii
All the savage in him watched her as he made the speech, watched to see the spirit break. It was a terrible crisis for her, but beyond her own proud spirit stood that of many generation . For a moment her face became a white mask, with the brilliant thread of red purple where her lips crossed it, and on the left cheek were the marks of the spruce tree trunk against which it had been pressed. Then rang out her laugh, natu ral, and clear, and scornful. "Oh, you little, little man," she said; "light heart goes with light heels. Do you know who I am? I am La Sulli ! Now-ah, I see you know me now . Well, then, I need hardly remind you that my vocation is dancing."
II. The rain had not yet come, but each crash of thunder and streak of lightning seemed to tear the black clouds in twain and show the lurid yellow sky behind. At the foot of the precipice the heavy black waves broke into angry white with hushed dread expectancy. But f argaret, looking clown, saw only the oblivion in their darkness, and the white tips like little spirits raising them~elves in soft invitation to her. An unearthly light showed. in her face, born of high courage and of hopeless grief. She had passed through a pas ion of madness of pain, and now it had gone and left her calm. "If I fall over in the storm they will never know I meant it, it is merciful and will carry me over gently. See ! The waters call me and reach for me-l couldn't live on. and on, and on, and he will never know. La Sulli's bnsiness is breaking hearts. and he believed that I was she-let him know? Thank God in his goodness that he gave me strength to hide myself'-and he will n ver know I loved him. I fooled him well-the fooler fooled." and he laughed a little wildly. "0 God. that there are men in the world like him-to kill a spirit for amusement. But oh-I love him. That God should make a man so beautiful and o wicked. I love him- I love him-! love him-and 1 shall die because 1 love him so. Dut he \\路ill never know. Harry. Harry Gaynor, God guard you and keep you, and turn your heart. Oh clear God! my life has been short. and l have not troubled you much, and all I ask of you is this: Keep and guard dear Harry, and forgive him and turn his heart. Amen. Goodbye, world, be very good to my Harry." Once more the thunder clashed and the lightning flashed, and the rain fell. And down, down, down across the black rocks fell the little xiv
Superior Cutlery.
s
Safety Razors, Manicure Sets, Pocket Knives, etc.
HARDVZARE in endless variety. L A W N MOWERS, SCREENS, etc.
TraC)l, Robinson & 78 and 80 Asylum
Vlilliams,
Street.
TOOTHAKER 'BROS.,
Tailors, NeW Sage=A lien 'Building, Hartford, Conn.
902 Main Street. Rooms 32, 33, 34, 35.
Two Articles of Genuine Utility!
Billings' Combined CIGAR CUITER and WHISTLE will enable you to hail a street car, call a dog or trim a cigar easily. The best Key Ring in the World. Cuts full size. Man ufactnred and for sale by
The Billings & Spencer Co., Hartford, Conn., U. S. A.
Price, so cents each .
路~~WJ~~~ :~~-~~-~~ BICLINGS' IMPROVED -
KEY- RING PAT. APPL D
Price, XV
FOR
HAR T FORD路 CONN 路
$1.20
per dozen.
"Improvement the Order of the Age." HIGHEST TYPEWRITING
POSSIBILITIES
availablt! only to users of the
Smith Premier Typewriter Recently adopted. after official competiti,路e test, for t h e 1200 courts of the Austrian Empire.
The Smith Pretnier Typewriter Co., No. 82 Pearl St., Hartford, Conn. F. HOWARD TUTTLE, Manager. xvi
OF HARTFORD.
Cash Capital, Total Assets,
$1,000,000.00 4,318,611.52
SU 1l\1ARY Cash Capital, Reserve for R e insurance, All Outstanding Claims, Net Surplus,
$r ,ooo,ooo.oo 2,03I,I44 路70 279,043-62 r,oo8,423.20 Total Assets,
$4.318,611.52
]. D. BROWNE, President. CHARLES R. BURT, Secretary. L . W. CLARKE, Ass't Secretary.
W. E. l3AKER & SON, Local Agents, 700 Main St., Hartford, Conn, J!:Vi.i
Miss Bluebell saw a horrid worm. And trembled, much afraid, But up came gallant Mr. Grass, And stabbed it with his blade.
W. S. T.
HARTFORD ENGRAVING CO. ~boto C!fngrabtr~ Manufacturus of
Fine Half Tone and Line Printing Plates and Embossing Dies. FRED' K \V ESSEL.
1. B. STANDISH.
~oolt
anti
~atalogue ~llu~tration~.
88 STATE STREET, HARTFORD, CONN. We guarantee high grade work. xviii
PIKE 'S .e; 269 Park Street
Drugs ano Medicines
KIBBE'S CHOCOLATES In packages "'nd by the pound.
JOHN F. }lORAN, Toggery Man for Trinity Men,s Furnishings. Trinity 'Banners, Trinity Caps, .Athletic Goods.
869 Main Street, Hartford, Conn.
DREKA Fine Stationery and Engraving House, 1121 Chestn ut Street, Philadelphia S T ATIONERY with the new monogram V I SITING CARDS correct styles and shapes I NVI TATIONS for Weddings, Teas and Receptions DAI NTY MENUS for Luncheons and Banquets H ERALDRY and GENEALOGY
!l~ubf~in lla~b~r
$l1op
34 MULBERRY STREET, ]. Goulet, Proprietor.
Hartford, Conn. xix
white"Shape and was caught in the mist blanket and mercifully caressed by the spirits of the foam.
III. "I think, l\Iiss Wetherington," and Harry held the oars stationary for a moment, and let the boat drift, "that you have the most exqui itc taste in dress. Now nothing could bring out the gold in your hair like that blue gown, and your complexion is very white in contrast to that yellow ribbon." " Really, Mr. Gaynor, you shouldn't say such things. You say them to everyone, I am sure." But her face showed the pretty satis faction his words gave her. '' No," he answered, "only those of whom they can be true." Something in the direct gaze of his eyes, his open and evident admiration made he1路 fidget with her parasol, and the conscious look in her bee increased. Into his mine\ at the same moment came with curious insistence and an unexplainable pang of tenderness the memory of bronze lights in the rich hair above a pair of sea gray eyes. And at the thought he shook his shoulders with an impatient shrurr. "Who " 路oulcl have thought that that innocent looking child could be La Belle Sulli-the sweetness of her face, the hair, the eyes-bah ! La Sulli, the dancer. Well, I was well fooled." l\Iiss Wetherington was a bit impatient at his preoccupation. She \\'as far from clever, though rather pretty in an artificial sort of a way, and petted and spoiled by family, friends, and society. Hers was a little nature, and intensely selfish and superficial. Gaynor was reminded of her presence by the impatient action of one little foot beneath her silken skirts, which noting, he made the remark of admiration, which it invited, and followed his words swiftly with these: "You are very beautiful, Alice, and with all your discernment you will hardly be surpri eel at what I am going to say. You must have ~en it, that I love you; that I always have loved you, and that your beauty has always been before my eyes and blinded me to any other woman. You are one of the rare ones of the earth who can love. I-I know I am not a 'good catch' from a worldly point of view, but you are above all that. Alice, I cannot imagine any greater happiness than being with you always. My darling, what would I not do for you? To feel you beside me on the box; to get you yachts, hor es, houses; to enter with you in the ballrooms and hear the low mur-
Established 1818
BROOKS 路 BROTHERS BRO ADWAY, CORNER 22nd STREET,
NEW YORK
All varieties of plain and fancy sui tin gs ready made or to measure. Separate N or f o I k and Chester Jackets. Riding suits and breeches in woolen and cotton fabrics. Rain-proof long coats made from specially prepared tweeds and coverts. All clothing and furnishings for Golfing, Tennis, Ridin g, Coaching, Shooting, Yachting, Polo or the Hunt. Automobile G a rme nts, Liveri es a nd Sundries, Dressing Gowns a nd Room Suits, s imple a nd practi cal or most lu x uri ous in style, t raveling rugs , sh a wls a nd ma uds.
Fine English leather and wicker goods, Luncheon and Tea Baskets, Kit Bags, Portmanteaux, Fitted Suit Cases, Flasks of silver and cut glass, Combination Knives, Jewel Cases, Writing Folios, etc. Catalogue containing over JSO illustrations with prices, mailed on request. xx i
1\dmi~al
eare
M. B. SMITH, Proprietor.
SCHLITZ,
MILWAUKEE,
BASS
E.
C. QUIG GLE,
Pres•t.
FROM
THE
BURTON WOOD.
A. rt:::"' WILSON, Vice-Pres't a nd Treas.
Ch~
AND
R. D.
BALDWIN,
Sec'y
E. S. Ribb~ £o. Wboltsalt 6roctrs.
"ljtlmtt Brand tt CZannt4 Qoods. 149 = 1ss
Statt Strttt. Hartford. £onn.
STEINHAUS & SON, VIENNA
Ladies' and Gent's Tailors. Ladies' Suits and Jackets Made to Order. Also Bicycle Suits and Riding Habits. Fur Garments remended. Gent's Suits Made to Order. Also Dress Suits, Overcoats and Bicycle Suits. I I 62
Main St., Hartford, Conn. xxii
COLLEGE SONGS
THREE路 GREAT路 SUCCESSES Compiled by college men En do r sed by college presidents Programed by college glee clubs R a h- r a h 'd by college students Favored by college alumni Cherished by college alumme A w e 1 c o m e gift in any home WORDS AND MUSIC THROUGHOUT
SONGS OF ALL THE COLLEGES Attractive and durable cloth binding, $1.50 postpaid
New edit. with
104 songs added for 67 other colleges. Over seventy college presidents have actually purchased this volume to have at their own homes, so they tell us, for the students on social occasions. Ten editions have gone into many thousands of homes
SONGS OF THE EASTERN COLLEGES Novel and durable cloth binding, $1.25 postpaid Ideally complete portrayal of the musical side of the student life in our Eastern colleges. Plenty of the old favorites of all colleges, while crowded with the new songs which are sung-many never before in print
NEW SONGS FOR COLLEGE GLEE CLUBS Paper, SO Cents, postpaid Not less than twenty humorous hits, besides numerous others, sentimental and serious. Not a single selection in this book but has bo::en sung by some glee club locally to the delight of an "encoring audience." Never before published, they are really new Glee club leaders will appreciate a collection every piece in which, by the severe test of both rehearsal and concert, is right- the musical notation, the harmony of the voice parts, the syllabification, the rhy thm, the rhyme, the instrumentation, and last, but not least with audiences, the cafchonaftbeness
HINDS & NOBLE, Publishers 31-33-35 West Fifteenth Street.
New York City
Schoolboo1(.s of all publi.sher.s at one .store xxiii
THOROUGH INSPECTION
Organized 1866
Insurance
Again~t
Loss or Damage to Property and Loss of Life
and Injury to Person Caused by
Steam Boiler Explosions ]. M. ALLEN, President
WM. B. FRANKLIN, Vice-President F. B. ALLEN, Second Vice-President
]. B. PIERCE, Secretary
L. B. BRAINERD, Treasurer
L. F. MIDDLEBROOK, Asst. Secretary xxiv
COL LEG
Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases, Travelers Supplies. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY.
J62 Asylum Street, (Allyn House Block), Hartford, Conn. TELEPHONE.
COLLEGE WORK A SPECIALTY
1039 Main Street, Leading 'Photographer.
WE EXC E L IN GROUP WORK XXV
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, MEDICAL DEPARTMENT.
The University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College Session of I 902- I 903. The Session begins on Wednesday, October I, 1902, a nd continues for eight months. For the annual circular, givi ng requirements for matriculation , adm ission to advanced standing, graduation, and full detai ls of the course, address Dr. Egbert LeFevre, 26th St. and First Ave., New York. EDWARD G. JANEWAY, M.D., LL.D., Dean.
ELECTRIC NOVELTIES.
EVER READY ELECTRIC FLASH LIGHT.
HIGH GRADE RECORDS AND ALL SUPPLIES.
BRAPHOPHONES
PHONOGRAPHS
ALL REPAIRING PROZ.IPTLY DONE.
N. A. SPERRY, 85 Pratt St., Hartford, Conn.
)
""-J 85-93 PRATT ST.
'
.
~~ QifF@~~. (!~IIi .
Compare work and prices and you will know where to have your Photographs taken. xxvi
BOSTON & ALBANY RAILROAD. N.Y. C. & H . R. R . R. Co. , Lessee.
FOR NEW YORK via SPRINGFIELD LINE. Lv. g.oo a. 111. e xce pt. Sunday . : : 1 2 .00 noon ex~e pt Sund ay. " 4.00 p. tn. d a~ly . II .OO p, In . d ru ly. Drawing R oom Cars o n day tra ins . S 1 e e pin g Ca rs o n night trains. Dining Car on 4 p. tu. train.
The Only Double-T rack Route from Boston to Albany, Buffalo and the West, through the famous Berkshire Hills. Through Trains and Pullman Palace Cars to New York City; also to Albany and the West. For .!llbct:ny ct:ncl tlte "West. I; . 8.30 a. m. except Sunday for Worcester, Springfield, Pittsfield, Albany, Saratoga, and points in New York State. Lv. 10-45 a. m. daily, Chicago Special for Albany,Syracu se, Buffalo, Cleveland, Toledo, Chicago, Cin . cinnati, Indianapolis and St. Louis. Lv. 2.00 p. m. daily, "The No rth Shore Limited," for Albany , Buffalo, Detroit and Chicago. Lv. 4.15 p. m. except Sunday, Chicago Express for Albany, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Detroit and Chicago. L v . 6.oo p. m. daily, Western Exp. for Rochester, Buffalo, Cleveland, Cincinnati and St. Louis. Lv. 8.00 p. m. daily, Pacific Exp. for Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit , Toledo and Chicago. L v. 11. 00 p . m . exce pt Satunlay, for Alban y, and points in New York State .
Reservation of Berths, etc., M ade at Company's Office,366 Washington St• •'1.. S.
lld~·soJt·,
Geue1·al P a••e , ge•· d gent, Bos ton.
THE BONNER-PRESTON CO. 843 MAIN STREET , HARTFORD, CONN.
I:lJeeorators
I
AND DEALERS IN
Metal Ceilingst Wall Paperst Paintst Artists' Materials, Photographic Goods. DRAWING AND PAINTING OUTFITS. SPECIAL RATES FOR STUDENTS. xxvii
H . R . WARNER
~be
F. C. DAVIS
<Sttltp C!lotbing C!ompanp R E T AILER S OF
FASHIONABLE CLOTHES FOR MEN EVENING FULL DRESS AND TUXEDO SUITS OUR GREAT SPECIALTY
27 Asylum St., Hartford, Conn.
-
~~v~~~~~~~~~~wwQg~~~~~~
~ANYTHING
YOU WANT1
~ THAT A DRUG STORE SHOULD HAVE You will find at the ~
IMAR!"!~~A~ ~~~~ :T~~ORES i ASYLUM AND FORD STREETS.
1
QUALITY THE BEST
~MeM
PRICES THE WWESj
~~~eM
J. ~tinity
~M~
G. MARCH,
QL.ollege
9 ASYLUM
~
~air
ST. ,
QLuttiug r£atl.ots 1
HARTFORD,
CONN.
J'T01J1JAR1J & CA ULKI.NJ',
(ltontractor~
anb
Jiuilbtr~,
Cabinet Work, Interior Finish, and General Jobbing. Jun ction Charter Oak and Vredendale Avenues, HARTFOR~, CONN.
Telephone 401-5 . xxviii
'lire
Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company 1846-1902
COMPLETE FINANCIAL HISTORY. RECEIVED :
Fer premiums, $2I6,7SI,123.41 For interest, 89,762,76o.29 For rents, 8,892,648.73 Balance profit and Joss, r,238,ss6.go Total receipts,
$316,645,o89.33 $rog,759.365.91 Endowments and annuities for, 15,449,303.79 for surrendered Policies, 26,691,442.17 for dividends, . 62,379,7o8.56
It has paid Death claims for,
A total returne d to policy-holders or their beneficia ries, being 98.86 per cent. of the e ntire prennums re-_, ceiv ed, . ,.214,279> 8 20.43 It has paid for E xpe nses, g. 13 per cent. of its income 28,9n,657 .70
Taxes, ro,8o4,o28.28 Total expenditures, 253,995,5o6.41 Balance net assets, January r, 1902, $62,649.582.92 It has additional assets (see Statement), 2,627,596.29 Total assets, $65,277,179-21 JACOB L. GREENE, President. JOHN M . TAYLOR, Vice-Pres't.
HERBERT H. WHITE, Sec'y. DANIEL H. WELLS , Actuary .
A. T. RICHARDS, General Age nt, Room t6, Company's Building.
xxix
mur, 'That is Harry Gaynor 's wife. Lucky devil.' A lice, I know I am not half worthy of a look from your dear eyes, not worthy by com路路 parison to the many who have loved you, but if only you would give me this happiness, I care not what happens. I only know, I want you to marry me. vVill you ? " "But you have paid attention to lots of girls here." " I wouldn't mark you by my admiration." " I do not choose to be one of many." " You a re one out of many.'' " Will you really be proud of me, only me, when we are together, and g ive me yachts, and houses, anJ take me everywhere I want to go ?' " Yes," answered Gaynor. "And never flirt with other women and break my heart ? " " Jo," he answered, smiling at the conceit that all women think they have hearts to be broken. "Then I will marry you." "And let me put this on your finger now." And he slipped on a beautiful solitaire, kissing the hand and holding it off to admire with the ring glittering on it. A moment later he was rowing home at his best speed, urged on by the threatening sky. Black and blacker it grew, and black and blacker grew the rock precipice which overshadowed them. A low cry sounded in he intense silence, following a crash of thunder, and by a sudden glare of lightning he saw the white face and bronze hair on a foam-framed rock. Something seemed to drop out of hi very life. Something seemed to break through the artificial part of his natu re, and for the first time in his life, perhaps, he was dominated by instinct alone. "Margaret," he whispered, hoarsely. He turned the boat toward the rock "What are you doing, Harry ? Mercy, we will be killed. See the waves break again st that rock. Stop, stop ! " Dut with lips set in determination, never hearino- Alice's cries, he pulled on, guid in g the boat in and out among the treacherous rocks. It seemed a miracle that it at last reached the rock on which Margaret lay without disaster. Very tenderly he lifted the unconscious form, faint and stricken at the sight of its mangled cond ition. With it in his arms he stepped into the boat. "Row, for God's sake, Alice, quick; the child is dying; quick--'' "But I--" XXX
T
G
K
The
~ocktails
~lob
MANHATTAN, MARTINI, WHISKEY, HOLLAND GIN, TOM GIN, VERMOUTH and YORK We guarantee these Cocktails to be made of absolutely pure and well-matured liquors and the mixing equal to the best Cocktalls served over any bar in the world ; being compounded in accurate proportions, they will always be found of uniform quality, and, blending thoroughly, are superior to those mixed as wanted. Connoisseurs agree that of two Cocktails made of the same material and proportions, the one which is aged must be tlle better.
q. F. HEUBLEIN xt
BRO.
Sole Proprietors 29 Broadway, New York ; Hartford, Conn., and 20 Piccadilly, W., London , England.
•
Horsfall & Rothschild OUTFITTERS
A
PPAREL FOR
'' rOUNG
HARTFORD
MEN."
w
E paJ' special attmtion to tlzis pa1·timlar class of dressers. Clotltes and Outjitti11f:S designed especially for tlzeir exacting demands. We are distribtt!ors of tlze celebrated Stein-Bloclt Tailor Made Clothes. GOLF GOODS, LADIES' SHIRT WAISTS AND FURNISHINGS, KNOX HATS, SUIT CASES. Tlu kind tltat it pays to buy.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY.
LAWRENCE SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL. HE Lawrence Scientific School, which is under the same Faculty as Harvard College and the Graduate School, offers professional cou rses leading to the degree of S. B. in Civil, Mechanical, and E lectrical Engineering; Mining and Metallurgy; Architecture; Landscape Architecture ; Chemistry ; Geology; Biology; Anatomy, Physiology, and H ygiene (as a preparation for medical schools); Science for Teach er s; and a course in General Scie nce. Graduates of colleges may be admitted to advanced standing without examination. For information concerning courses of stud y, expenses, and plans of admission, address J. L. LOVE, Secretary, r6 University Hall , Cambridge, Mass.
T
N. S- SHALER, Dean-
JOHN McGEE.
air Dr~ssing Saloon
No. 3 Asylum St., One Door from Main Street.
HARTFORD, CONN .
. ED"WdBD H.
MOL.ri.NS,
llol tuul Cold BttUu.
99 Slttle Sll路eet,
Ope,. S11ndtty S to 12 JJI.
II~:u 路 tro,.,,,
( ) on,,.
JOHN H. GRISWOLD, 347 Main Street,
m~n's
furnishings
(Between Buckingham and Capitol Avenue.)
riAOAZINES and PERIODICALS. xxxii
Max Later, WILL CALL AT TRJ ilTY
EVERY WEEK.
Dealer in
New and Second Hand
eL0THING.
PAYS HIGHEST CASH PRICES for Cast-off Clothing.
80 T emple Street.
Wait for " M AX."
JV\aker s of W. J. C ole!T\af\ . Gee. H. Stevef\S .
JV\el\ 's Clotf\es .
920 Broa dw ay , New Yo rk.
JOHN L. PURCELL,
~anitarp ~lumbing, ~a~ Ventilating, Hot Water and Steam
jfittfng,
Heating. ~
391 MAIN STREET, CORNER CAPITOL AVENUE, HARTFORD Estimates Furnished and Jobbing Promptly Attended to. Telephone lio9-2. xxxiii
=
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'-" Enjoy Good Sports?
:!"
---
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We 're prepared to serve you with the proper equipment to help you enjoy such sports as
=~
~ ~~
~ =----=
:::
= ~=
-; Baseball, Football, Golf, Tennis and Cycling.
=
-=
~
GOODS OF STANDARD MAKE IN ALL THE ABOVE LINES.
-
~
~
Our Bicycle Stock.
How's this fo r a quartette of h i g h qualit y , r e liabl e whee l s?
Warwicks, Columbias,
Crescents, Hartfords.
-= :::: Many other makes as well , an d a complete line of Bicycle :_ Sundries. Prices please as well as the goods. ~
::::::: =-
--
......
= --::-:= ~
~~
__
~
-=:
~
=
G
ILLETTE BROS. , I c . Pearl Street, corner Haynes.
---
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~
ji;IIIJJ II IIIUIIIIU!II III:I'Illl l '~lill lli lil1. 11 m~lll ll! llllll lll l llll.ll l ~11111111'11111,111 UlilUlll'lrl:llllil.rl IHI Ulillri.I'U:IIIII:UII'IHrlif i
" Row ! " he commanded savagely. " My little one-my own darling," he whispered. And then he looked at her with such dumb suffering in his eyes that even Alice understood and dared do nothing but whimper weakl y as she pulled the oars. The beautiful head was unmarred and peaceful , but the poor little body was lreadfully crushed. O blivious to all else, Gaynor held her in his a rm s, uttering disjointed sentences and moaning from time to time like a dumb animal in pain. "Margaret, Margaret, I love you-I love you-it's no one but youI hurt you so-to-day-I , who would never hurt you- 0 God, 0 God, I am a beast -but I love you, I love you, I love you. If you will onl y live I will care fo r you a ll the days of my life.-They shall be atonement, all- all-you shall wish for nothin g-and I will serve you all my life- Margaret- - " T he g ray eyes were open, conscious, with perfect peace in their depth s. " Harry--" He bent low to catch the faint whisper. " I am not La S ulli-I-am cly ing-I-think- 1 -- " T he eyes closed " Margaret,"" he cried in ang uish, " you shall not die-you shall not. O pen you eyes again . For now I love you, and you shall stay with me-you believe-oh, if you will believe-! think I should die of happin ess. Margaret,-forg ive me-forg ive me." The eyes opened, a smile of infinite peace came into the face. " I- believe-1 have nothing-to-forgive-1- love-Harry------" A nd then the tired eyes cl osed forever, and reverently Gaynor buried hi s face in her hai r-alone with his new li fe and hi s little grief. M . F. T.
X XXV
COflflecticut T r ust afld 5a fe Deposit Cornpaf\y CORNER OF fv'\AIN AND PEARL STREETS
Surplus, $300 ,000
Capital, $300,000
. B 路 B a f\ k If\ g ll 5 If\ 8 S5 路 s ubj ect to check at sight.
Conducts a general banking business. 路 Accounts opened and deposits received Accounts solicited. ALSO,
路 y j S a f 8 0 ep051t au ts. for rent at from $ro to
The most capacious and impregnable inthecity. Onethousandsafeboxes roo per annum, according to size.
Is authorized by its charter to act as trustee for individuals and corporations, executor or administrator of estates, g uardian of minors, etc.
T rust 0 epa rtrrt 8[\ t.
MEIGS H. WHAPLES, President JOH N P . WHEELER, Treasurer HOSMER P. REDFIELD, Assi tant Treasurer HE RY S. ROBI
SO
, Secretary and Manager of Trust Department xxx:vi
OUR GOODS
THE BARBER INK CO.
TALK FOR US ~ IF YOU ARE NOT USING THEM A TRIAL WILL CONVJNCE YOU OF THEIR SUPERIORITY OVER OTHERS. QUALITY AND PRICE
FRANK
E.
JOHNSON,
Pres .
NATHANIEL
G.
VALENTINE, Vice~Pres.
WIL LIAM P. BARBER , Sec'y and Treas.
Manufacturers of 44 STANDARD" INKS AND MUCILAGE tw INK EXTRACTS tw WHITE PASTE tw AMMONIA AND BLUEING MANUFACTORY and OFFICE : !66 PEARL STREET HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT '.I' '.I' Telephone Connection
CONSIDERED~~~~
PLIMPTON MFG.
co.
! HIGH GRADE PRINTING. EMBOSSING AND HALF-TONE WORK A SPECIALTY PLATE
PRINTING
AND
ENGRAVING
BLANK BOOKS ENVELOPES AND DESCRIPTION EVERY
OF
HARTFORD li1 li1 /illil
CONNECTICUT
THE EDWIN TAYLOR LUMBER CO. ~ '.I'~ '.I''.I'~ DEALERSIN ~'.I''.I'~'.I'~
YELLOW PINE TIMBER IN CONNECTION WITH A '.!' '.!'GENERAL STOCK OF ~'.!'
ROUGH and DRESSED LUMBER CHARTER OAK A VENUE and TAYLOR STREET
HARTFORD, CONN. xxxvii
The Edward Balf Co. ~rutking, . ~rabing anb
<!J;ta\1ating ~nnb
anb
~tone
HARTFORD, CONN.
No. 2 Chapel Street
" AMERICAN " DIARY PUBLICATIONS
1836-1901
''PEERLESS'' DAILY CALENDARS
The Case. Lockwood & Brainard Co Printing, Electrotyping Bookbinding, Papermaking BLANK BOOKS , PAPER RULING Historical, Gen alogical, Biographical and Poetical Works. Commercial, La\v, and Miscellaneous Business Printing. Illustrated Catalogues for Ma nufacturers
THE CASE, LOCKWOOD & BRAINARD CO. HARTFORD, CONN.
Corner Pearl and Trumbull Streets, xxxviii
TWENTY: ONE LARGE GREENHOUSES IN CULTIVATION OF FLOWERS 1t1t
Hartford, £onn.
THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE FLOWER STORE IN NEW ENGLAND L EVE R E TT BELKNAP
GEORGE F. WARFIELD
BELKNAP & WARFIELD • • BookSdl~rs and Stationtrs • • • Publisb~rs,
77 and 79 ASYLUM STREET
HARTFORD, CONN.
T[te Parsorts' T [teatre Ca fe J . B. RYA N, Proprietor PRIVATE DI ING ROOMS
CAFE A D GRILL ROOM
HEf\DQUf\RTER S FOR TRINITY f\ LUf\ NI f\ND UNDERGRf\DUf\TES xx:xix
SCHMIDT & FOX .
Watchmakers and Jewelers DEALERS IN
FINE WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY AND STERLING SILVERWARE J9 PEARL STREET, NEAR MAIN
CLARK
HARTFORD, CONN.
6
SMITH.
rint~rs, 49 Pearl St.. Hartford, Conn.
ROBERT GARVIE (Successor to William A . Garvie)
Practical Plumber and Gas Fitter GAS FIXTURES A SPECIALTY No. f2 Mulberry Street
Hartford, Conn. xl
. THE JURY OF, AWARDS
.
AT THE
PAN - AMERICAN EXPOSITION,
appointed to pass upon the merits of the articles exhibited, pronounced
The
Underwood THE FASTEST, THE STRONGEST, THE SIMPLEST, THE MOST COMPLETE AND THE MOST PRACTICAL TYPEWRITER EVER MADE.
SPORTY SHOES AT
AVERY'S ALLYN HOUSE SHOE STORE J60 Asylum Street
What ' s the use of worrying ? It doesn't pay to fret,
Rain will never stop because You stand out in the wet. If the day is gloomy, With shadows all about The sun is all the brighter When, at last, it does come out. So never fret or worry, Just laugh and trust to time, Night is blackest just before The star s begin to shine. G . D. RANKIN .
HABENSTEIN Hf\BENSTEIN, THE
Cf\TERER OF Hf\RTFORD
is known from one end of Connecticut to the other, and in fact his reputation has extended even into the neighboring states. He is to that section of the country what Sherry is to New York, the caterer par excellence. .JI. .JI. .JI. .JI.
No. 8o5' Main Street
The Phoenix Bank Building, xlii
Our Spring Suitings ~~ 路 " COMPRISING ALL THE NEWEST THINGS IN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WOOLENS ARE READY FOR YOUR INSPECTION.
Suits to Order $20.00
18 ASYLUM STREET,
HARTFORD, CONN.
HAVE YOUR FREIGHT SHIPPED
IN
CARE OF
BILL BROTHERS CARMEN AND GENERAL FORWARDERS Furniture Packers and Movers Office and :torage Warehouse
R.
46 Ann Street
SPIECEL~ CLOTHES CLEANED AND PRESSED SUITS rlADE TO ORDER
... 20 CHURCH STREET x liii
PHOENIX INSURANCE CO.
95th Semi-Annual Financial Statement JANUARY J st.
J 'J02 .
oltbe
OP IIAR.TPOR.D, CONN.
Cash Capital,
Assets Available for Fire Losses,
$2,000,000.00
$5,953,444.45 AS FOLLOWS:
Cash on Hand, in Bank, and with Agents, State Stocks and Bonds, Hartford Bank Stocks, . Miscellaneous Bank Stocks, . Corporation Stocks and Bonds, Railroad " " " Co unty, City, and Water Bonds, Real Estate, . Loans on Collateral, Real Estate Loans, Accumulated Interest and R ents, Total Cash Assets, Cash Capital, Reserve for Outstanding Losses, Reser ve for Re-Insurance, NET SURPLUS, Total Assets,
$862,442-48 rr,65o.Oo 559,890.0o 465.930-0o 78o,3o5.oo 2,341,305-0o 3Q9,II0.00 46o,195.82 29,000-0o 89,074路93 44-54!.22
$5,953,444.45
LIABILITIES. $2,000,000.00 454.788路57 2,382,405-32 r,rr6,25o.56
$5,953,444.45
Su rpl us to P o li cy-h olde r s,
33, 116,250.5 6
Total Losses Paid since Organization of Company, $48,343.033.79 D. W . C. SKILTON, President. J. H. MITCHEI,L, Vice-President. EDW. MILLIGAN , Secretary. JOHN B. KNOX, Ass't Secretary. LOVEJOY & SPEAR , General Agents Western Department, Cincinnati , Ohio. GEORGE H. TYSON. Manager Pacific Department, San Francisco, Cal. J . W. TATLEY, Manager Canadian Department, Montreal, Canada.
THE BEST QUALITY
(2t)1\L and
weeD
MAY BE HAD AT
746 Main Street
W. C. MASON
(::J
CO.
(Succes sor to J . J. Poole & Co.)
GEO. G. McOLUNIE ... FLORIST ... 2!;1- 30 HIGH STREET,
HARTFORD, O ONN. TELEP H O NE 2156-14
xliv
Playing all of t he first-class attractions and a few of the best popular priced ones.
Spalding's Championship RUNNING SHOES.
Championship Running Sh oe. 'l'his running shoe is made of the finest kangaroo
leather; extremely light and glove fitting; best English steel spikes firmly riveted on. Worn by nearly all of A1nerica's fastest sp rinters and distance runners. No. 2...0. Per pair, 5.00 Jumping and Hurdling S h oe. Jumping and Hurdling Shoe; fine kangaroo leather, hand-made; two spikes on heel. No. 14H. Per pair, $s.oo
No
Ill .
Indoor Running S hoes . .Made with or without spikes. Fi11e leathe r, rubber-tipped sole, with spikes. Per pair, J.so
Cross Country S hoes. No. n2. Leather shoe,rubber-tipped sole, with spikes. Per pair, $3.00 Finest kangaroo leather; low broad heel, flexible shank, hand-sewed; sbc spikes on sole; No. II4- Leather shoe, rubber-tipped sole, no spik es. with or without spikes on heel. Per pair, 2.50 No. 14C. Per pair, $s .oo Running Shoes. No. II. Calfskin Running Shoe, machine made. Per pair, 3.00 No. to. Finest Calfskin Running Shoe; light weight, hand made; sb: spikes. Per pair, $4.00 ARTHUR DUFFEY-Holder of the world' s record , CIIAS. J. KILPATRICK-America's greates t haltmile runner and holdt::r of the world's record, 9 4-ss., for too yards, wears Spalding's Shoes in wore Spalding's Shoes in all his races. all his races. JOHN F. CREGAN-The American half-mile and M. W. LONG-The world's greatest runner. holder Intercollegiate champion, and thou sands of of the world's 440 yards record , the A1uerican, others attribute their success on t h e path to the English and International champion, wears fad that they had a well-fitting, ligh t, serviceSpalding's shoes in all his races. able shoe to wear. B. J. WEFERS-The holder of the \vorld's record Nearly every American, Intercollegiate and I nter for roo yards and 220 yards, made his records scholastic record has been made w h en t he with a pair of Spalding's Record Shoes. contestant wore Spalding Shoes. Catalogueof aiiSportsll1ailedFree. NEW YORK. CHICAGIO.
A. G. SPALDING c::l BROS. DENVER.
xlv
Incorporated.
Colt's Patent Firearms -----Manufacturing C o m p a n y - - - - -
HARTFORD,
-
-
-
-
CONNECTfCUT
COLT'S COLT'S NEW ARMY 38&.41 CALIBRES,
NEW ARMY AND NEW
NAVY
REVOLVERS THE
U .
S.
GOVERNMENT
STANDARD
COLT'S
c
Automatic Machine Guns and Pistols ( Brouning'.r
Patent )
ALL STYLES
OF REVOLVERS
Service., Pocket, Target xlvi
THE
STORE
CIGAR
BIG OP
HARTFORD.
WHERE YOU CAN GET THE LARGEST VARIETY OF TOBACCOS AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES TO BE FOUND IN THE STATE.
"C ROwN JEwEL"
THE
Is the Standard ro cent Cigar.
FRANK BEST IN
I
TURNING OUT TO PRODUCE .
YOUR
LINEN
WORK
CALLED
SEND
YOUR
AS
ALWAYS FOR
CALL
STREET
BEST IN WORK.
LAUNDRY.
""BEST"
TRIAL WILL CONVINCE IS THE BEST .
AM
CRYGIER
H.
NAME AND
TRY THE ONE
On the market for 47 years.
ASYLV~
245
LOOKS
AND ON
A
YOU
FINE
ciGAR
THAT
LAUNDRY
NEW
WHEN
THE
''BEST"
WORK
AS
IS
LAUNDERED
LAUNDRY
POSSIBLE
BY
ME.
DELIVERED. POSTAL,
OR
TELEPHONE
104-12.
GEO. L. BEST. CUSTOM LAUNDRY 42 ELM STREET, HIGH
GRADE
HARTFORD, CONN.
WORK.
xlvii
J
~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~ ~~~~~~ ~ ~~ ~ ~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
a
u
u u u u
I I
illhl~ IErrrmยงll ยง~IhlCIDllll ~((])0
~
S I LVERSMITHS A
~ ~
JJ~\W~ll~IFยงo
~ ~
a a a
D DIAMOND MERCHANTS,
Fine Watches, Bric-a-Brac, Optical Goods,
Iu
HARTFORD,
CO
a u ~ ~
Ill Ill Ill
i I ~ ~
D D ~ ~
~
~
~ ~ ~
c
Dempsey & Carroll' . Fine Engraving, Society Stationery, W eddi ng Invitations, Reception and Visiting Cards, N. Y. City.
~ ~
~ ~
~
~ Ill ~ Ill ~ ~~lll~~~~~ lllllllllllllll lllllllll~rnrnrnrn~rn~~~~rn~~~~~~~ lll~~llllll~~~~~~ ~ a llllllllllll ~~~~
Ill
EXCELLENCE IN STYLE AND WORKMANSHIP P REDOMINATES THROUGHOUT OUR
WE INVITE YOUR I NSPECTION.
~J<YSH OES
LARNED & HATCH, 945 MAIN STREET, HARTFORJJ, CONN.
FINE FOOCIWEAR. xlviii
C.P Sole
EIMER &
~MEND . N EW YORK.
205 - 2 11 T HIRD AVENUE ,
C. P. Chemicals and Acids, Chemical Apparatus, Scientific Instruments. Sole agents Ior J ENA N ORMAL GLASS , BEST LABO R AT OR Y GLASS EVE R MA DE .
}0t. ~· 011c~wn® ood ~~' )0e~~' 6 f~Lati ~fltu1,
Jlfa'L~o!td., ~tn.
• • • THE STUDENTS' RESORT ••.
The Capitol Pool and Billiard Parlors 141 to 145 ASYLUrl STREET EVE~YTHINO
FIRST- CLASS AND UP- TO-DATE
ST~ICTL Y TEMPE~ATE
TEN TABLES
POPULAR. PR.ICES
FO UNDED 1826
FIRST
CL~SS
FURNITURE ONLY
MODERN f\ND f\NTIQUE
ROBBINS BROS • t x lix
633 MAIN STREET HARTFORD, CONN.
POPULAR PRICES
LEADING STYLES
T
P. H. BILLINGS HIGH CLASS TAILORING II ASYLUM STREET
HA HARTFORD, CONN.
Lives there a man with soul so dead He loveth not a luscious pie? If such there can be, pass him bye. This shall be written o'er his head, When he is gone and turned to dust, "Here lies a man who had a crust." H. D . BRIGHAM.
Publisher of Genre Photographs and Reproductions of the Paintings in the Yale School of Fine Arts. Medal at Chicago, Photographers' Ass'n of A1nerica, r887 rst Prize, Buffalo, Photograph"ers ' As s'n of America, 1891
1st Prize , Edward L . Wilson, New York City, r892
Eastman Co., R oc hester, New York, 1893
Art Magazine Competition, rst Prize, r!J9>rrgoo Michigan State Association , r897-r898-r&J9 World's Fair, 1893
Paris, 1895
Munich , r89s
London, r89s
Pictures Hung Permanently in Art Galleries of Munich , Paris and London, r895
HERBERT RANDALL, PORTRAITURE STUDIOS:
New Haven , Conn. 1o62-1o64 Chapel Street. Hartford, Conn. Cor. Main and Pratt Streets. Ann Arbor, Mich. Washington Jllock.
!
1
THE HEUBLEIN FACING
BUSHNELL
EUROPEAN
PLAN
PARK
Junction of Lewis, Wells and Trumbull Sts.
HARTFORD
AUSTIN C.
DUNHAM ,
·CONNECTICUT
Pres' t.
D. NE,VTON BARNEY ,
Treas.
II========
:::.~'~t,€::~;:;.. The partford Electric Light Do. DR. W. L. Ronn, Consulting Engineer.
Executive
z66
Pearl
Stre e t,
HARDWARE
Office ,
Hartford ,
Conn.
SPORTING GOODS
BICYCLES AND BICYCLE SUNDRIES BICYCLE REPAIR SHOP
RALPH E. PAGE
419 Main St., Hartford, Conn.
Telephone 147
THE LINDEN li
CLASS
AND
FRATERNITY
PINS
DIAMONDS WATCHES RICH JEWELRY LEADING JEWELERS OF CONNECTICUT
HENRY KOHN & SONS 890 MAIN STREET
Allyn House Barber
Cbt
Shop Jl. 6. Ptrklns Proprietor
lii
THE NEA REST
FIRST-CLASS DRUG STORE TO TRI N ITY COLLEGE. ·. .·.
]. ]. SEINSOTH SOUTH END""' N OS.
II
PHARMACY TO
OPP OSI TE
IS
MAIN S TREET
BARNARD
PARK
P. 0. S UB-ST A TION, NO.5 MONEY ORDERS ISSUED LETTERS REGISTERED
ADVERTISERS in this book have a ri g ht to expect the patronage of all Trinity men. PLEASE KEEP THIS IN MIND
Cbt Hartford Woutn Wirt mattrtss £ompany MANUFACTURERS OF
BRASS AND WHITE ENAMELED IRON BEDSTEADS A D CRIBS
-w-oven -w-h·e natt••esses Folding Cots, Railroad Car Seats, Wire Door Mats, Iron and Brass Grille Work for Offices, Banks, Etc. For sale by Furniture stores only.
618 CAPITOL AVE.
HARTFORD, CONN., U. S . A. I iii
PE RFUMES
DRUGS
CHARLES L. HUBBARD 'S
Prescription Pharmacy 407 MAIN STREET, COR. CA PITO L AV EN UE
Our Stock is Selected with C are and Prices Right CI GARS
CONFE CTIONERY
STUDENTS DRUG SUPP LIE S
AT
GEO. L. RAPPORT ' S
DRUGGIST PURE
M APL E AVE. AN D CONGRESS ST.
SPARKLING SODA
SOUTH
PARK
PHARMACY CORNER OF MAIN AND PARK ST .
The Wm. H. Post Carpet Co. CARPETINGS,
RUGS
WALL PAPERS AND UPHOLSTERY 219
Hartford, Conn.
Asylum Street, liv
Chas. !tf. Gaines
Printing and Embossing Courant 'Building Hartford, Conn.
66 .State .Street Telephone 245
I dreamt I went to Heaven, one night And stood at t he open door, And I t hought it looked familiar As if often seen before Then all of a sudden it beamed with l ight, A blaze of electric glory, And I recognized with a fond delight 'Twas the Physics laboratory. J. MeA. JOH NSON.
G. S. BULL
N.B.BULL
N. B. BULL l::J SON 345 ASYLUM STREET Dealen in
HOT AIR AND HOT WATER HEATERS WINTHROP RANGES Tin Ware aad House Furnishiag Goods
Plumbing and Ventilating a Specialty
Establiâ&#x20AC;˘ hed 1854
Telep hone 831-5
lv
NATIONAL FIRE INSURANCE
COM'PAN路Y
OF HARTFORD, CONN. DIRECTORS. HOMER BLANCHARD, WILLIAM B. FRANKLIN FRANK W. CHENEY, JAMES NICHOLS, J AMES NICHOLS, President.
JOHN R. BUCK, HENRY C. JUDD, FRANCIS T. MAXWELL, BYRON A. SIMMONS, B. R . STILLMAN, Secretary.
CHAS. H. BRISCOE, RALPH B . ENSIGN , J . M . ALLEN, J AS. P. TAYLOR , H . A . SMITH, A as't . S ecretary.
Statement, January J, 1902
CAPITAL STOCK, Re-Insurance Reserve, Legal Standard, - 路 Unsettled Losses and other Claims, Net Surplus over Capital and Liabilities, Total Assets, January 1, J~02, WESTERN DEPARTMENT: Office, 171 La Salle St., Chicago. FRED. S. JAMES Gen' l Agent. GEO. W. BLOSSOM. Ass ' t Gen'l Agent. CHAS. RICHARDSON , 2 d Ass't Gen'l Agent.
$1,000,000.00 2,555,486.15 387,677.55 J,48J ,273.30 $5,424,437.00
PACIFIC DEP AR TM.E;NT:
Office, 32-34 San some St ., San Francisco. GEO. D. DO R.NIN, Manager.
GEO. W . DORNIN, Ass't Manager.
GULF DEPARTMENT: SOUTH WESTERN DEPARTMENT: R. L. Emery, Gen'l Agent, T rezevunt & Cochran Co., Gen'l Agents, New Orleans, La. Dallas T aas.
HIGH GRADE PAPERS FOR
Society Correspondence. QUALITY- GUARANTEED STYLE-CORRECT FINISH - PERFECT.
The Variety of Tints, Finishes and Styles are carefully selected and Attractively Displayed. New York Salesroom ,
Eaton-Hurlbut Paper Comp~ny.
339 Bro!!.dway .
Pittsfield, Massachusetts. lvi
r
I1 '-路
•
•
r-
r
--
- -~
I McCLUNIE I I I I DECORATOR I - -- ___....__
~
I FLAGS, BUNTING, Etc. I \.
-
II I
I I II
II
-
-
-
PROMENADES
II
DECORATIONS FOR COLLEGE
I
DECORATIONS FOR COLLEGE
GERMANS DECORATIONS FOR FAIRS DECORATIONS FOR BALLS DECORATIONS FOR LAWN PARTIES DECORATIONS FOR ALL PUBLIC CELEBRATIONS
I
I I
I I
1177 ASYLUM STREET I
I
II
HARTFORD . CONN.
'---------.1 lvii
.J
.,.
•
T. SISSON & CO.
DRUGGISTS CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL APPARATUS, SP08'{GES, CHA§I,!QIS FE:ACJHER DUSTERS, ECJC.
150° SECURITY OIL Headquarters for GRISWOLD'S FAMILY SALVE
729 Main Street HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT.
GEMMILL, BURNHAM & CO. m~rcfl ant
<ij0ailotts
1Jllnnufnc1ur!C'rs nu6: lltctnilcrs of
~in~ !t~a~y Illltab~ FULL DRESS SUITS FOR RENT
Qr;lotfling 64, 66 and 68 Asylum Street HARTFORD, CONN,
A. E. H0B8E, LIVERY STABLES. FI EST SERVICE TRINITY PATRO AGE SOLICITED JO PARK STREET,
HARTFORD, CONN. lviii
LIBBY ano BLINN 164 STATE .ST.,
HARTFORD. CONN. CONTRACTORS FOR
Steam, Hot Water Heating and Ventilating Apparatus
FAN SYSTEM for Heating and Ventilating a Specialty
MERCER- COTTAGE - GOLD - MILLS BOILERS Send for Catalogues.
A. D. BERMAN,
1 ti ~
Dealer in
~~@~e
New and Second-Hand Clothing. Boots and Shoes-Also
Knee Caps and Anklets, For the support of Varicose Veins, Swelled Limbs, Weak Joints, Sprains, &c.
Bought and Sold.
l60 Front Street,
HARTFORD, CONN.
Made of i'>rout Silk, Medium Silk, I.inen and Cotton.
PAYING HIGHES T CASH PRICES FOR WHATEVER CAST-OFF CLOTHING
TRUSSES C. P. GLADDING
YOU MAY HAVE TO DISPOSE OF .
Successor to S. GOODRICH & CO Druggists,
1203-5 Main St.
.o:;r-Drop me a Postal giving your address and I will call on you.
lix
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~a
a a
~ ~
: REGAL $3.50 SHOES AND OXFORDS. Ia ~ ~ ~
a a
~ L~~K T~ ~
~ F~R ~ ~
5 5 ~
~
D
~
I ID I 6a
THE best in Hats-the best in Shirts- the best in all sorts of outfittings and the b e s t in Shoes. We control ''Dunlap'' hats in HartÂŁ or d and many other leading specialties. $ $ ~ ~ ~ .:1- Jl.
~~
~
~ ~
~ ~
:
~ ~
~ ~
US THE BEST
aIll
: a
CHAMBERLIN & SHAUGHNESSY.
If it's new and
worthy- it's here.
~
a a
~
~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Organized. J865.
CONNECTICUT GENERAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF HARTFORD.
Robert W. Huntington, Jr., President. Life Insurance means a sure provision for old age and in event of death an equally sure protection for the family. The
CONNECTICUT GENERAL issues an up-to-date policy that contains special advantages at most favorable rates. This is one reason why our gain in insurance in force for year 1901 in Connecticut was not equalled by any Hartford Company.
Horne Office Agents. H. A.
FARNSWORTH
P.
G. GORTON
lx
J. C.
GORTON
1
I
ISS I 1902
Cb~ Pb~nix Tnsuranc~
mutual [if~ fompany
OF
CONNEC TI CUT
HARTFORD,
FTER a successful business experience of fifty years is stronger, safer and more progressive than ever. All of its policies are I ncontestable after two years, and have extended Insurance, Loan, Cash and Paid-up Values endorsed thereon . We invite inspection of ou r new Life Rate Endowment Policies, also our Life, Endo路wment and Annuity Contracts, under which the Company g uarantees to either men or women, when the I nsured is Fifty, Sixty or Seventy years old, it will pay $r,soo I CASH FOR EVERY $r,ooo OF INSURA CE IN FORCE. : : : : : : : : : : We also issue all forms of Term, Limited Premi um Policies, and Annuities, by which a person can secure a stated income for life. : : : : : : : : : If you are contemplating insurance or the p urchase of an annuity, we suggest a comparison of our contracts with those offered by any other company. For sample policies, terms, et cetera, address the Home Office, 路 Hartford, Conn., or any of its Agents in the principal towns of the United States.
li
I~
:Jonathan B. Buntt, Pm. ebarlts 1). J:awrmt, Stt'Y
lxi
]ohn m. l)olcombt, Ultt路Pm. William Jl. moort, Jlsst. Stc'y
NEW YORK LAW SCHOOL. ~w
Ym·k City.
" Dwight !Uetbo<l " of lnotrncllon . Day S ch o ol, 35 NASSAU STREET. Eveninjl' School , 9 WEST ISTJ-1 STREET. "'ummer School, (Eigh t weeks, J u ne-August), 35 :NASSAU STREET .
Degree of LL.B. after two years' course; of LL.M. after t h ree years ' course . P r epares for bar of all States. Numbe r of s tude n ts for t h e J' re sent year ( HJO 1-H102) , 831, of whom 2 119 are coll ege g raduates. The method of stu dy pursue aims to gi ve the s t udent a thorough kn ow ledge of l llgal princ ipal s and of the reas ono upon whic h they res t , and to render him w e ll equipped fo r the practice of his profession . T h e location o f the School in the mids t 'lf th e courts and lawyers' offices a ffo rds also an i n va luab le oppo rtunity to gain a k n owledge of co u rt procedure and th e practical conduct of affa irs . Send fo r catalogue explaining Dwight Method, cou r ses of study, etc. , to G e or~r e Cha s e, D EAN, 35 NASSAU STREET.
~ ,
PASHIONABLI: I:NGRAYING and STATfONI:RY. 100 Weddin g Invitations, Engraved and Printed on Perfec tly Whit e Paper, wit h envelope complet e, • fl. 50 Additional 1OOs. 2.25 LEADING HOUSE FOR NIENU$1 DANCE PROGRAMS AND
INVITATIONS OF ALL KINOS
We have our own Photograph Gallery Jor Half Tone Engraving
STULTZ
&
1108 Chestnut Street, Philadelpia COMPAR E SAMPLES AND PRICES
BAUER Pianos Talk
for us- and while we sing their praises it's simply to gain an audience-the pianos do the rest. Our greatest advertisement is the fact that Stultz & Bauer Pianos always give perfect satisfaction, as is attested by the large number of letters voluntarily sent us by delighted purchasers. There are plenty of pi~nos not so good as the Stultz & Bauer-there are none better. Our terms to purchasers are the most accommodatiog in Hartford, and our pianos are guaranteed for JO years.
WOODS PIANO HOUSE,
227 ASYLUM STREET.
JERRY DEVTIO, COLLEGE SHOE MAKER, Fine Custom Work and any kind of Shoes promptly attended to. 954 BROAD STREET,
HARTFORD, CONN. lxii
THEODORE B. STARR' Di~mond
Jeweler
Merch~nt
an~
Silversmith
Madison Square, NEW YORK.
Pearl Necklacest Pearl Ropes and Strands, Diamonds, Rubies and Sapphires. Sterling Silverware of all kinds. Hand-wrought Silver, Artistic Gold Jewelry-exclusive designs. Society Stationery for all functions.
Visitors are A lbJays Welcome. lxiii
ATHLETIC SUPPLIES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION WE KNOW
WHAT THE STUDENT ATHLETE PREFERS , AND Wf!. KEEP
WHAT
HE
WANTS
TRACK SHOES, SHIRTS, PANTS, &c .. &c . TENNIS RACKETS, BALLS , NETS, &c., &c. BASE BALL SUITS, BATS , BALLS , GLOVES . MITTS , &c . , &c. FOOT
BALL .JAckETS.
UNI FORMS AND
FOR
PANTS , NosE GuARDS, SHIN
EVERY CLASS OF ATHLETICS .
FIELD .
GUARDS , HELMETS, &c .
SUPPLIES FOR TRACK
THE RIGHT THINGS AT THE R IG HT
PRICES .
ARTHUR JOHNSON & COMPANY ATHLETIC OUTFITTERS 55 WEST 42D STREET,
NEW YORK.
NEAR 6TH AVE.
Water Colors Carbon Prints Photogravures Facsimiles Artistic Picture Framing Over 1,000 Patterns always in STOCK.
When Your Check Is Overdue WE WOULD RESPECTFULLY SUGGEST TO YOU THAT WE 'VE PATRONIZED YOUR "IVY" WE BELIEVE. SINCE t8go. THEREFORE WE THINK WE SHOULD HAVE THE PREFERENCE
COLLATERAL LOAN COMPANY 7t ASYLUM STREET - ROOM 10 MONEY ADVANCED LIBERALLY
lxiv
RELY E)N US in matters pertaining to Stoves. Furnaces. Tinning. Repairing. Plumbing. Gas Fitting ~nd ~11 sorts of Sheet Met~l Work. ~ ~ Third of
ill.
Century's experience.
Get our estimates.
J. C. McMANUS 344路348
(:J
SONS.
MAIN ST REET, HARTFORD.
Trinity
Men
PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS, AND CONFER A FAVOR UPON THE MANAGEMENT ~ ~
SIMMONS & CO'S $3.50 " SPECIAL" SHOE FOR MEN. h as no equals at the price for STYLE, FINE FITTI G AND WEARING QUALITIES. All the Latest Shapes, Leathers and Finishings.
W. G. SIMMONS lxv
J
(:J
CO. Corner Pratt.
901 Main S treet,
~he
Students
who wear HaFt, SchaffneP &. ~aPx C:::: Jothing always graduate with high honors ; besides they are always well dressed. " H. S. & M." Clothing is sold in Hartford only by Hart · s,·haffner & Marx
ra1JoY.
~illis
&
~ilson,
~·a
de Cl ofhes
115 to 119 Asylum S t.
25-29 TEMPLE STREET. HEADQUARTERS FOR
CHOPS, STEAKS, WELCH RAREBITTS AND IMPORTED DELICATESSEN A SPECIALTY.
•
25-29 TEMPLE STREET. lxvi
J L
Trinity T
Q
,__
_ rini
ty fv;y
!96 (1903)
cop . z
•
Z7
Date Due
·= NOT TO 1•aE TAKEN - FROM LIBRARY -
IAN 3
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I
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-
I
-I
FIUna iOU"" ' NT au•••• Cat. No 1090A:J ,~,