Wrintty C!!olltgr ~library
SAMUEL HART FUND Established in I8gg b'J'
THE ALUMNI Ig_ .
e/lccesaion :J\(o . ...... .
mr~tratr~ tn
ID17r Alumni nf IDriuity Qlnlbgr by IDI7r 1904 JJby T!lnatil
Jrrfarr ,tP LL IvrEs are, and in the nature of things must be, more or less alike. The field is not wide enough to aclmit of variety of treatment, and even the material in many cases is prescribed. A transcendent genius, under such circumstances, might find it difficult to be original,- and none of us answers that description. Therefore, for these and other reasons, it is not probable, we think, that this Ivv should be much different from the general run. All that we can claim for it is that it has received our best service and care, and that it is quite as good, allowances being made for accidents, as we can make it. For all errors or omissions, if there be any, we ask your pardon; for all innovations, your forbearance at least; and for all that pleases you, your commendation. Finally, to those who have aided us in our work, fellow-students, friends, and especially alumni, we extend our hearty thanks.
,:.:.; __
-
Managing Editors EDGAR J QHNSON D IBBLE, .6 KE BAYARD QuiNCY M oRGAN , A X P
Literary Editor
VV ALTER
BEST ALLEN , S 'l'
Associute Editors M oRGAN H YDE BuFF J NGTo ' , '짜Y PH ILIP L LEWELLYN L I G H TBO U RN , A .6<l> EDWARD JAME S MANN,
lK A
FREDERi C K B E TH u NE BARTLETT, <I>r.6
6
MANN BUFFINGTON
LIGHTUOURN MORGAN
BARTLETT DIBBLE
7
A LLEN
IDrtntty Olnllrgr i~artfnr!l, Qlom1.
J-liS College was chartered by the State of Connecticut in 1823. Its fi rst class was g raduated in 1827. lt was founded by Episcopalians under the leadership of the Right Rev. Thomas Church Brownell, and has been fostered especially by members of that communion, but it is governed by a self-perpetuating Board of Trustees not under ecclesiast ical control. \Vhile attached to the interests of its church, it is not sectarian. It has included among its students men of every faith. It is a generously equipped secular institution, religious in spirit and motives, but not ecclesiastical. It gives its advantages to all properly qualified candidates. irrespective of religious affiliations. The corps of instruction路 consists of twelve professors, five lecturers, eight instructors. and a librarian.
Qlnursrs of J.lmdrufltnn The College offers four courses of instruction, VIZ . : I. A Cou1路se In Arts. II. A Course Ill Letters and Science. III. A Course In Science. IV. A Course in Letter . The courses extend over four years. Students completing the course in Arts receive the degree of Bachelor of Arts. Students completing the cour e in Letters and cience or the Course in Science receive the degree of Bachelor of Science, and those completing the Course in Letters receive the deg1路ee of Bachelor of Letters. Students who do not propose to pursue all the stud ies of any of the regular courses may be permitted, under the name of special students, to attend any class in such studies as, upon examination. they are found qualified to pursue. Upon ho norable dismissal, they are entitled to a certificate from the President, sta ting the studies which they have pursued. fn certain departments the College offers also instructions for g raduate students. The departments of instruct ion in the Co ll ege number twenty-fom. including eighty-two elective and vo lun tary courses.
The number of the teaching force, large relatively to the number of those taught, admits of a close relation between instructors and st udents. Each student is held accountable for his work e\路ery day, and receives personal encouragement and guidance in a degree impossible where the number of the taught is greateL Practical research and laboratory methods arc applied wherever poss1blc.
The College Library, numbering 43.000 volumes. is under the superintendence of a professional libra ri an, who guides the students in the use of books. T hey have a lso at their command the vVatkinson Reference Library of so.ooo vo lu mes, the Library of th e Connecticut Jl istorical Society, and the Hartford Public Library, with its well-stocked reading rooms. 8
tGaboratorir.a anll ®b.arruatory The Jarvis Physical Laboratory contains, in addition 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 ad1•anced work of a special character. The laboratory has a very complete equipment for work in all the branches of Physics. Special attention has been given to making the facilities for work in electricity as complete a possible. The department is provided with standard apparatus for electrical measurements, and has a workshop, steam engine and direct current and polyphase alternating current generators for its special use. The Jarvis Chem ical Laboratory is well equipped for work in general experimental and organic chemistry, in qualitative and quantitative analysis, and in assaying and gas analysis. The main laboratory has desk space for thirty students working at one time. This room is devoted to work in general experimental chemistry and qualitative analysis. For work in quantitative analysis and organic chemistry sep:nate laboratories are provided and properly equipped. A room set apart for assaying is fitted up with suitable furnaces and other necessary material. The new Hall of atural History contains biological, botanical, geological, and mineralogical laboratories provided with every modern equipment. The Observatory contains a six and a half inch refractor, a two and a half inch transit, a standard clock, a chronograph, a smaller refractor, a portable transit, a sextant, and conveniences for the simpler work in astronomical photography.
<&ymna.aium anll .i\tlrlrtir JJHrlll A Gymnas ium is supplied with the best apparatus, in the usc of which the students are trained by a special instructor. An Athletic Field on the College grounds is to be extended and perfected at an expen e of $ro,ooo, contributed by friends and alumni of the College.
The Russell Fellowship, yielding about $-lOO, is awarded biennially to a member of the graduating class, of uperior ability, who engages to pursue an approved course of graduate study at Trinity College or at some foreign university. The Holland Scholarships, each having an annual value of $6oo, are awarded to the students attaining the highest rank in the Junior, Sophomore, and Freshman classes respectively. Prizes of the aggregate value of $.:t90 are awarded in the several depa1·tments.
The amount of the Treasurer's bill each year varies from $177.50 to $242.50. Board can be obtained at $3.50 a week and upwards, 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 holders of beneficiary scholarships, of which then: are more than fifty.
~ituation The buildings of the College are situated on a site commanding beautiful vie11·s 111 the southern part of Hartford, itself one of the most beautiful cities of New England. The largest of the buildings, more than 6oo feet in length, intended to form the west side of a great quadrangle, i of stone in the English secular gothic style, and is one of the most notable collegiate buildings of the country. The Jarvis Laboratories, the Hall of Natural History, and the Gymnasium, are tasteful and commodious structures of brick. All of the college fraternities have special chapter houses. For catalogues apply to the President or to the Secretary of the Faculty. 9
~rnatun i\ra~rmtrun
lllinitnrn The Rt. Rev. THOMAS MARCH CLARK, D.D., LL.D. The Rt. Rev. WILLIAM WooDRUFF NILES, D. D., LL.D., D.C. L. The Rt. Rev. HENRY CoDMAN PoTTER, D. D., LL.D., D.C.L.
illnrpnratintt i*The Rev. TI-m PRESIDENT OF TI-lE COLLEGE, ex officio P1路esidmt The Rev. GEORGE H. CLARK, D.D.
Hartford
*CHARLES E. GRAVES, M .A., Treaszwer The Rt. Rev. WILLIAM W. NILES, D.D., LL.D., D.C.L. * t The Hon. WILLIAM HAMERSLEY, LL.D.
t LuKE
New York
J . PIERPONT MORGAN, Esq.
ew York
QUICK, M.A.
Chicago
*JACOB L . GREENE, M.A., Suretary
Hartford
The Rev. WILLIAM H. VIBBERT, D. D .
t SYDNEY
G. FISHER, L.H.D.
Hartford Washington
HENRY WooDwARD, M.A.
Hartford
WILLIAM S. CoGSWELL, M.A.
t The Rt.
New York Philadelphia
*JAMES J. GooDwiN, Esq. WILLIAM J. BOARDMAN, LL.B .
* P.
Concord, N . H. Hartford Hartford
WILLIAM E. CURTIS, LL.D.
s.
New Haven
Riverside, Conn.
A. LocKwooD, LL.D.
*iThe Rev. FRANCIS GooDwiN, D.D.
JOHN H.
Hartford
Jamaica, N.Y.
Rev. CHAUNCEY B. BREWSTER, D.D.
Hartford
*WILLIAM C. SKINNER, M.A.
Hartford
fThe Hon. JosEPH BuFFINGTON, LL.D.
Pittsburg, Pa.
AMBROSE SPENCER MURRAY, Jr., M.A.
t RoBERT
THORNE, LL.B.
New York New York
*These members of the Corporation form the Executive Committee. t Elected by the Alumni. ~These members of the Corporation constitute the Committee on Honorary Degrees.
II
111arulty ~
IDI1r il\rb.
~rorgr
11tlfillirumtott
§mit~.
iJll .. iGiG.m.
115 Vernon St.
President, and Hobart Professor of Metaphysics; B.A., Hobart, '57. D. D., 'So; D. D., Columbia; LL.D., Trinity, '87; Chaplain, U.S.N., 1864; acting Pro· fessor of Mathematics, U. S. Naval Academy, Newport, 1864-5; Chaplain at Annapolis, •86s-8; Rector in various places till 1883; President of Trinity, t88J-. 1 5 Seabury Hall
Brownell Professor of Moral Philosophy Emeritus; B.A., Trinity, '41; A.)I., '44; D.D., St. Stephens, '6s; LL .D., Columbia, '77; Classical Tutor and Lecturer on Chemistry, Trinity, '43-'47; ::>covill Professor of Chemistry and Natural Science, Trinity, '54-'77; President of Trinity, '74-'83; Professor of i\loral Philosophy since 1877; Associate Fellow of the American Academy of the Arts and Sciences, Boston; Vice-President of the American Meteorological Society; Fellow of the A.A.A.S .; member of the Geological Society of France; Trustee of the General Theological Seminary; author of ''Treatise on Chemical Physics," "Life of Bishop Butler."
1 Columbia St. Seabury Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, and ::>ecretary; B.A., Trinity, '7o; Ph.D ., '¢; Professor at Trinity since r883; member of the Amer ican Society of Mechanical Engineers. 123
Vernon St.
Northam Professor of History and Political Science; B.A., Trinity, '68; M.A., '75; LL.D., 1900; Professor at Trinity, 1883-; member of the American Historical Association; author of "Four Periods in the Life of the Church," ''Essays on American History." 69 Vernon St. Professor of English Literature; B.A ., Yale, 'ss; M.A., '83 ; L.H.D., '95; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, U. S. Naval Academy, t86s-7o; Professor at Trinity, 1883-; author of" English ·words," "Three Englishmen and Th ree Americans,"" Elements of Literary Criticism," '' \Vhat Can I Do for Brady? and Other Verse,"" Outline History of English and American Literature."
ID~r
i!\rb. 1Jo~tt 1Jamrn iirQloolt, it.A.
396 Main St.
Professor of Modern Languages; B.A., Trinity, '63; studied at Jefferson College, New York College of Physicians and Surgeons, and Berkeley Divinity School ; Second Lieutenant First Virginia Volunteer Infantry; Professor at Trinity since 1883; Rector of St. John's Church, East Hartford, since r~; author of reports on poor-law administration and prison reform ; a lso of numerous magazine articles on vagabondage, venality, pauperism , d rink, etc. 12
35 Forest St. Scovill Professor of Chemistry and Natural Science; B.A., Beloit College , Wisconsin, '76; Ph.D ., Gottingen; Chemist for the U. S. Geological Survey, t88-l-7; Professor of Chemistry, National College of Pharmacy, 1885-7.
llfinfn~
il{obrrt .tttlartjtt, 1ÂŁ1ÂŁ.1B., JqJil.
21 J arvis Hall
Professor of Oriental and Modern Languages; B.A., Princeton, '72; Ph. D ., Tiibingen, '87; studied in Berlin and Leipzig as Classical Fellow from Princeton; P rofessor at Trinity since 1888.
llirault (!Iolr ilabbitt, J lTJil. .
65 Verno n St.
Professor of the Greek Language and Literature; B.A. , Harvard, 'go; M.A ., '92; Ph .D., '95; Fellow of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 18g5-<>; Instructor in Greek at Harvard, 18g6-8; Professor at Trinity, 18gg-; member of the American Archreological Institute; member of the American Philological Association; author of "Greek Grammar," also papers in A m erican Journal of Archreology and in Harvard Studies in Classical Philology.
27 Wet hersfie ld Ave. J . Pierpont Ill organ Professor of Natural History; B.S., Lombard, '8-l; B.S., Indiana, ' 6; i\f.A., Indiana, '87; Ph. D., Leipzig, 'go; Fellow in Clark University, 18<)0-2; Assistant Professor of Biology, University of Texas, 1&)2-J; Adjunct Professor of Biology, same, 1893-4; Professor of Biology, University of Cincinnati, 18g-l-'900i member of the American Society of Naturalists; member of the American Morphological Society; President of the American Folk-Lore Society; Socio Corresponsal de la Socieda d de Geografia y Estadistica, IIIexil;o; Socio Honorario de la Sociedad Mexicana de Historia atural ; Socio Honora rio de la Soctedad Antonio Alzate; author of numerous articles in scientific journals.
109 Elm St. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature; B.A., Columbia, '93; M.A., Harvard, 'g6; Ph.D., Harvard, '98; Instructor in Latin in University of Cali fornia, t 8g8-1go1 ; author philological articles, occasional poems in The Bookman, "The Fighting Bishop."
llfilhur
~aral1all
1\trbatt, J l7.1il.
74 Ve rn on St.
Professor of Philosophy; B.A., Princeton; Ph.D., Leipzig, '97; studied at Jena and Leipzig; Reader in Philosophy, Princeton; Professor of Philosophy, Ursin us College; member of American Psychological Association and of the American Philosophical Association.
i~rnry
.1\uguatua Jrrkiua, .fltlt.l\., I .I.
22 J ar vis Hall
Professor of Physics; B.A. , Yale, 'g6; :!.I.A., Columbia, '99; E.E., '99.
13
20 Buckingham St. Instructor_in Natural History; studied dt a famous" gymnasium" in Leipzig; then went to the University, where he obtained his degree, taking the highest rank in ·ooth places. He has assisted Professor Edwards since 1901.
54 Woodland St. Lecturer on Hygiene; Ph.B., Yale; 1\l.D., Columbia; studied also in St. Luke's Hospital, New York City, and in Germany; member of the American Medical Association and of the Connecticut Medical Association.
Wtlliam 1!lrnhmn .ttanrgan, .tta.A .. .tta.1!1.
108 Farmington Ave.
Lecturer on Anatomy and Physiology; B.A., Trinity, '72; M.A., '76; 1\l. D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, '76; Lecturer at Trinity since t &)J. Philadelphia Lecturer on Law; B.A., 'l'rinity, '79; L .II.D., Western Univer;ity of Pennsylvania; Harvard Law School; Trustee of Trinity, 1895· Author: "Making of Pennsylvania;" "Pennsylvania, Colony and Commonwealth;" "The Evolution of the Constitution;" "Men, vVomen, and Manner~ in Colonial Times; " "The True Benjamin Franklin;" '• The True ·william Peun;" also many magazine articles of very wide influence.
111 r.rllrrtr i.l\nbrrtantt 16;nnry. llfli. m.
ew Haven
Instructor in Drawing and Descriptive Geometry; Ph.B., Yale, '85; i\larine Engineer's Certificate from the London Board of Trade, '71; Instructor in Trinity, Smith College, Sheffield Scientific School, and in the Yale School of Fine Arts. Author: "Linear Perspective;" also numerous artkles in scientific periodicals.
Wallin
~rlllrn
Jratt. m.A., .mus.1!1.
86 Gillett St.
Instructor in Elocution; B.A., Williams, '78; i\l.A. , '81; Johns Hopkins, '78-'So; Fellow in h:sthetics and History of Art in the same, '79-'So; Assistant Director of the Metropolitan i\Iuseum of Art, New York, 188o-2; Registrar of Hartford Theological Seminary, 1888-<;)5; now Professor. of 1\Iusic and Hymnology, same; Instructor at Trinity smce t &)•; Lecturer on l\lusical History and Science, Smith College, 1&)5-; same, Mt. Holyoke College, 18<)6-9; Conductor of Hartford Choral Union, 1882-91; member of 1\Iusic Teachers' National Association ; Honorary Vice-President of the American Guild of Organists; member of the lnternational Society of l\lusicians; Editor of various publications.
Oyster Bay, L. I. Lecturer in Geology; B.A., Trinity, '90, i\I.A ., Harvard, '93·
14
'. llilliam
Nrwtt~am
OLarltott .
Library
Librarian and Assistant in English.
69 Allen Place As istant in the Departm ent of History and P olitical Science; B.A., Haverford , '97; Ph.D., University of P ennsylvania; studied a lso at Columbia; Fellow in Political Economy and Finance at Cornell, I8gr1900 ; m ember of the American Economics Association and of the American Academy of Political an d Social cience.
55 Garden St. Instructor in the Gymnasium.
1ol7tt 1Butlrr
~rOLook,
1B ..搂.,
~-~-
396 Main St.
l\Iedical Director; B.S., Trinity, '90; M.D. , College of Physicians a nd Surgeons, '94路
rs
~oar~
of 1Jfrllotu!1 President
THE PRESIDENT Ol' THE COLLEGE
ex o.f!ict'o
Sem'or Fellows FRANKLIN HAMILTON FowLER, l\1.A. The Rev. LuciUs WATERMAN, D.D. FREDERICK EVEREST HAIGHT, PH.D. \VALTER STANLEY SCHUTZ, M.A., LL.B . ALEXANDER TAYLOR MASON, M.A . , LL.B. CHARLES SH!RAS MORRIS, B.S.
Jttm'or Fellows The Rev. JoliN TAYLOR HuNTINGTON , M.A. The Rev. JoHN J AMES McCooK, M.A. GEORGE EMERSON BEERS, M.A., LL.B. 'J'he Rev. FREDERICK WILLIAM HARRIMA N, D. D. PERCY SHELLEY BRYANT, M.A . FRANK ELISHA JOHNSON, M.A.
l\ssoriatiou of tqr l\lumui ~ FREDERICK EVEREST HAIGIIT, PH D. FRANK LAN GDON WILCOX, B.A. DAVID VAN SCHAACK, B.A.
.
FRANK ELISHA J OHNSON , M.A.
~tauiliug
President Vzi:e-Preszdent Secretary Treasurer
Qtnmmittrr
THE PRESIDENT
The Rev. JAMES GooDwiN, S.T.B .
TilE TREASURER
GEORGE THURSTON M ACAULEY , B.A.
The Rev. SA~IUEL HART, D.D., J.D .C .
r6
A.~mnriatinn
Nrht 1Englau1k
nf Alumni
® ffiter5 1902 Presidmt LUKE A. L OCKWOOD, '55
Viu-Pruidmt
w.
C. SKINNER, '76
Secretary
vv.
F.
Treasurer
H ARRIMAN, •7 2
P.
s.
BRYANT, '70
Executive Committee
Dr. W. D. MoRGAN, '72
Rev. S. HART, D. D., '66
Nrht lnrk An.snriatinn nf Alumui ® ffiter5 1902 Presidmt ALEX ANDER
T.
MASON, ' I
Vice-Pruidmts D. MAITLAND ARMSTRONG,
'sS
EDGAR CHARLES BEECROFT , '97
J.
WILLIAM ROBERT MOWE, '70
CLEVELAND CADY, '6o
Secretary
Treasurer
FREDERICK EVEREST HAH;HT, '87
WILLIAM STIMPSON H UBBARD, M.D .
Executive Committee L UKE VINCE NT LOCKWOOD, '93, Chairman MURRAY H ART COGGESHALL, '96
G EORGE NEWELL HAMLIN, '91
ARC H IBALD MoRRISON LANGFORD, '97
GEORGE EDwARD CoGSWELL, '97
tlfqila1krlpl1ia Annnriatinn nf Alumni ® ffitcr5 1901 P•·esident
J.
EWING MEARS , M.D., '58
Vice-President WILLIAM DRAYTON, '71
Secretary SYDNEY G. FISHER , '79, 328 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia
E xecutive Committee
H. 2
GoRDON McCouGH, '75
SYDNEY G. FISHER , ' 79
Jittaburg .A.a.an.rtatinu nf .Ahututi ~fficrru
1901
Presidmt Hon. JoSEPH BUFFINGTON, '75
Secret,u-y
Vice-President
M. K. KosTER, '87
GEoRGE C. BuRGWIN, '72
Executive Committee
A. P. BuRGWIN, '82
.Ahunui
W. R. BLAIR, '75
Hon. J osEPH BUFFINGTON, '75
.A.a.antiat~u
fnr t~t ili.atrifl nf <1rnlumbia au?l ]firiuity ®fficrru 1901
Pruidwt
E. M. GALLAUDET, '59
nt Viu-P1·esidmt
2d Vice-Pruident
GEo. A. WoouwARD, '55
WM. FELL JoHNSON, '66
See~·etary
T•·easttrer
Rev. J. W. CLARK, '63
S. HERBERT Gmsv, '85
<!talifnruia .A.a.anriatinu nf .Alumni ®ffiw:u 1901 P•·esidmt
Secretm-y and Treasurer
Rt. Rev. 'V . F. NICHOLS, D.D., '70
Rev. F. H. CHURCH (now of Tacoma, Wash.
1Bn.atnu .A.a.anriatinu nf .Alumni ®fficers 1901 President
Rev. E. T. SuLLIVAN, '89 Vice-Presidents W. C. BROCKLESBY, '69
J. H. GOODSPEED, '66
Sec1·etary C.
c.
Rev. WILLIAM PRESSEY, '90 Treasurer
BARTON, '93
HORTON G. IDE, '94
mttrnit .A.a.anriatintt nf .Alumni ®fficcrn 1901 P•·esident SIDI'\EY T. MILLER, '87
Secretary
Vice-Presidmt
A. K. GAGE, 'g6
N. C. LOVERIDGE, '86
r8
QTollrgr QTolnr.a DARK BLUE AND OLD GOLD
QTollrgr frll Rah-1路ah-ralt .I
Trinity .I
Boom I Rah, Boom I Rah, Tri11ity I Trinity I
Tri11ity I
'9
Trinity!
~ra~uatr ~tu~rnts
Residence
Name
EDMUND SAWYER MERRIAM, B.A., 1902
.
H. E. Russell Fellow
} Hartford
Room
314 Collins St.
Hartford
360 Farmington Ave.
HowARD CuRTIS MEsERVE, B.A., Bucknell} University, 1900 . . Hartford
Hartford Theological Seminary
Rev. HARRY KEPPELE BuNTING OGLE, B.A.,} . Hartford Princeton, 1899
232 Sargeant St.
LEWIS A. STORRS, B.A., Yale 1889 .
ABBREVIATIONS
J. H.-jarvis Hall
S. H.-Seabury Hall
20
N. '1'. -Northam 'l'owers
~ruinr
QUnnn
1903 CLASS CoLORS CLASS MoTTO
OLIVE GREEN AND WHITE
N oN INSTRENUI LABORAMUS
Bim-boom-brama-kootra, Hip-hz'-dra, Hullabaloo-hullabaloo, Rah-ralz-rah, Rii:kety-axe-coax-coax, Rzi:kety-a.xe-coa.x-coax, Rah-ralz-ree, rah-ralz-ree, Trinity I90J I
速tlirrr.s Christmas Term W. LARCHAR
R. W. TR ENBATH H . D. BRIGHAM H . D. BRIGHAM P. s. CLARKE
Preszdent Vzi:e-President Secretary Treasurer Chronicler
21
Trinity Term
A.
c.
C. SHORT
E. BRUCE P. H. BRADIN P . H . BRADIN P. S. CLARKE
~tstnry ~ • 0 judge from many of the class histories which have appeared in the '·Ivy," the chief thing which the historian must do is to start off by mentioning the "ivy-clad walls of alma mater," and wind up with a few lofty sentiments and the class motto. ow this is undoubtedly a good plan, btl! at the same time a little variation from the usual order might not be amiss. Of comse, we of the Senior Class know that we are going to graduate, and lea,·e college, and get out in the world, and hustle around, and remember Trinity, and grasp each other by the hand before we part, and do a number of other things prescribed by the laws of nature and the statutes of the college. But what's the use of making a class history read like an epitaph? \Ve started in at Trinity with a good deal of hope, and plenty of self-confidence. We have never lost the hope, but it has taken a couple of years to get back the confidence after the Sophomores got through with it. In our Sophomore year we made the usual changes, and tried to be important. Then came the Junior year, in which there really was a change. We refer to the l\Ioral Philosophy department. vVe question if any class e\·er had its faith in humanity so shaken as did 1903 when the class assembled in the Ethic's room. Then, when the year was over, and we were waiting to see the next victims go up and be slaughtered, the faculty decided that Ethics would be an elective. "This was the most unkinclest cut of all"- and, by the way, it wa about the only voluntary cut we ever did gel from the faculty. Now, 1903 are Seniors. \Vhen we were Freshmen that word used to call up pictures of grave personages walking around with the cares of life hanging all over them. How different is the realization! It doesn't mean "grave personages" at all. A Senior i a real human being, j usl like any one else, and perhaps even a little more so. The .. care of life" are really the struggle \\·hich comes between June rst and the time when we respond to a request in Latin to come up and receive a document to take home and hang up beside our high school diploma. Senior year has been about the same as preceding senior years. We gave a class banquet this yea1·, as a new departure, and it seemed to be a good idea. We also had a new depart me tried on us- the new absence system. It has also seemed to be a good idea. (These two sentences may seem a trifle incongruous at first, but when you think it o\·er you will find that the banquet and the absence are pretty closely connected.) So we have come to the end of our college course. As a class we think we have done as well as the average. If anyone thinks we have done better than that, we will leave it to them to say so. \Ve have won some victories, sustained some defeats, made plenty of mistakes, and are now about to go away. If we have been a credit to Trinity, we have clone something. As a class, we are not anxious to go. If we could stay another four years here, we'd jump at the chance. But there are other things for us to do. vVe shall always, we hope, be Joyal to Trinity, but, like the small boys ready for the first swim of the season, it is our tum to jump in. It's hard to start, but after you get in, fellows, keep right on, and, no matte1· how unpleasant it may seem, remember the small boy, and "holler" back to the other classes: "Come on, fellers, 't ain't cold!" P. S. C. 22
~rninrn ~ Name
Residence
Room
Boston, Mass.
ARTHUR MUIRSON BELLAMY, 'l''l'
43
J.
H.
44
J.
H.
First Mackay-Smith Prize (•); First Chemical Prize (3). PERCIVAL HA UTREY BRADIN, A~<!> .
Hartford
Football Team (•); Baseball Team (2, 3, 4); Sophomore Dining Club; IQ03]unior Promenade Committee; Manager Basketball Team (4). HENRY DAY BRI G HAM, ~'l' .
East
Orang~.
N.
J.
II
J.
H.
Baseball Team (r, • , 3· 4); Sophomore Dining Club; President of Class (•) 2d term; German Club (3, 4); Representative N. E. I. Tennis Association (r, 3); Secretary and Treasurer Junior Promenade Committee; College Tennis Champion (2, 3); Captain Baseball Team (4); Football Team (4); Basketball Team (4 ) ; Senior Honorary Society; Pres. Tennis Association (4). CHARLES ERASTUS BRUCE, Jr., ~'lr.
Elmira , N. Y.
II
J.
H.
Sophomore Dining Club; Junior Promenade Committee; Football Team (3, 4); Glee Club (3, 4); :Manager Musical Organizations (4). HENRY BERNARD CARPENTER, 'l''l'
14 N. T.
Brooklyn, N. V.
.
Mandolin Club (•, 3, 4); Banjo Club (3, 4); Glee Club (4). PHILIP SAFFORD CLARKE, <l?r~
Point Pleasmzt, N.
J.
17 N. T.
Tablet Board (2, 3, 4); Managing Editor Trinity Tablet (3, 4); Mandolin Club (2); Glee Club (3. 4); '903 IVY Board. ORA WILFRED CRAIG, AXP .
As!tland, N . H.
RI CHARD ARTHUR EDWA RDS, ~KE
P ortland
IN.
39
T.
J. H .
'903 IvY Board. CLARK THOMPSON FALKNOR, <I>r~
Hartford
502 Hfd . Fire Bid.
Second Mackay-Smith Prize (•); Football Team (4). KARL HERBERT FENNING, <l?r~
U7 ashington, D.C.
17 N.
T.
IQ03 I VY Board; Second History Prize (J); Second Mackay-Smith Prize (3). }AMES PHILIP GARVIN,
Sanbornville, N. H.
I4 N. T.
Kittanning, Pa.
43
'¥T .
Football Team (3 , 4); Glee Club (4). HARRY CLIFFORD GoLDEN,
'¥T, <I>BK
J.
H.
Holland Prize Scholarship (r, 2); Second Goodwin Greek Pri?.e (I) ; Alumni English Prize (3, 4); Douglass Prize (3); Valedictorian; Debating Team (4). HuBERT DANA GooDALE, <I>r~
Sujfidd
Suffield
Highland Park, ill.
7
Second Chemical Prize (3). REE YE HuNTIN GToN HuTCHINSON, ~-¥
J. H.
Track Team (•); Tablet Board (3, 4); German Club (3); Sophomore Dining Club; Managing Editor Trinity Tablet (4).
23
Name
R esidence
JARVIS M c AL PI NE JoHNSO N ,
Room
68
Hartford
'¥T
Vernon
St.
Football Team (r, 2, 3, 4); Track Team (2, 3, 4); Sophomore Dining Club; German Cl ub (3, 4); Second Chemical Prize (3) . WILLIAM L ARCHAR, Jr.,
Providma, R. I. .
'¥T
IS N . T .
Sophomore Dining Club; ~Iandolin Club (1); Banjo Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Leader Banjo Club (3, 4); Assistant Manager ~fusical Clubs (2, 3}; Assistant Manager Track Team (3}; Tablet Board (3, 4) ; Manager Track T eam (4) ; Class President (4) rst term ; Glee Club (4).
St. Louis, llfo.
HENRY LoUIS GODLOVE MEYER, <l"i'
JO
J.
H.
Football Team (t, 2, 3, 4); Class President (r) 2d term; Sophomore Dining Club; ?!lanaging Editor '9"3 IVY; Senior Honorary Society; President T. C. A. A .; Holland Prize Scholarship (3}; Salutatorian; Debating Team (4).
16 N. T.
Hm·tford
'¥T
SAMUEL ST. J oHN MoRGAN,
Assistant Manager Baseball Team (2); Manager Baseball Team (3); Class President (2) rst term; Second Mackay-Smith Prize {2); Sophomore Dining Club; Hartford Admittitur Prize {r); Representative N. E. I. Tennis Association (2, 3); Junior Promenade Committee; Honor Oration ; Senior Honorary Society.
7 N. T.
St. Louis, lllo.
ARTHUR CHADWELL SHORT, IKA
Sophomore Dining Club; '9"3 IVY Board; Junior Promenade Committee; Class President (4) 2d term.
J.
Tamaqua, Pa. 27 H. Tablet Board (3, 4}; Glee Club (3, 4); Assistant ::\!anager Football Team (3); l\[anager Football Team (4); Track Team (2, 3); Class President (3} zd term; Alumni English Prize (3, 4); :\Ian aging Editor r903 IVY; Whitlock Prize (3); Senior Honorary Society; Basketball Team ( 4); Debating Team (4}.
EDMUND CRAWFORD THOMAS, A<l<l>
Philadelpllia, Pa. .
THEOPHILUS MI-NTON SYPHAX, <lKE
3 N. T .
Football Team (r, 2, 3, 4); Captain Football Team (4); Tablet BoarU. (2, 3, 4); Business Manager Trinity Tablet (•); Track Team (r, 2 , 3); Senior Honorary Society; Baseball Team {3, 4); Glee Club (4); Basketball Team (3, 4).
Somerville, N.
ROBERT WI GHT TRENBATH, <lKE
J. .
39
J.
H.
Glee Club (2, "3, 4); ::\[andolin Club (2, 3, 4); Leader Glee Club (4); President Musical Clubs (4). HERVEY BOARDMAN VANDERBOG AR'f , <l>r<l
Troy, N. Y.
29
J.
H.
Toucey Scholar; Tablet Board (2, 3, 4); Literary Editor Trinity Tablet; Alumni English Prize (4); First Whitlock Prize (4). · HAROLD CLIFTON V AN W EELDE:-1,
AXP
Baby/01z, N. Y.
33
J.
H.
Football Team (3, 4); Basketball Team (2, 3, 4); Track Team ( 2, 3• 4); Captain Basketball Team (4); Holder of Intercollegiate Record for Broad Jump (3).
~.p.rria l GEoRGE DouGLAS RANKIN,
'¥T
Saybrook Point
17 S. H.
Track Team (•, 3, 4}; Baseball Team (r); Captain Track Team (3, 4); Class President ( J) rst term; Sophomore Dining Club; Junior Promenade Committee; Senior Honorary Society; Winner Fall Tennis Tournament (3). WALTER SLATER TR UMBULL,
'¥T
Chicago, Ill.
17
s. H.
Track Team (2, 3); Sophomore Dining Club; German Club (2, 3, 4}; Literary Editor '9"3 Ivv; Chairman Junior Promenade Committee; Football Team (r, 4).
24
111nrmrr .flrmbrrs D.KE
DuNCAN HoDGE BRowN,
New York, N. Y. Pittsfield, Mass. Chicago, Ill. Watertown Bethel Hartford West Hartford Cambridge, Md. Hartford Minneapolis, Minn. Washington, D. C. Brooklyn, N. Y. Norwich Elizabeth, N .Y. Buffalo, N.Y. South Manchester Detroit, Mich.
STUART HAROLD CLAPP, D.'짜 HARRY GREY COZZENS,
IKA
NoEL GILBERT CuNNINGIIAM, D.'짜 EDGAR J oHNSON DIBBLE,
D.KE
EDWARD WILLIAM FoTHERG ILL Ro BERT AsHLEY GAINES ADKINS HENRY,
AD.cf>
SAMUEL D. LINDSAY MALCOLM"'APPLETON MACLEAN, RonERT CAREY McKEAN,
D.KE
D.KE
Ro BERT LI NCOLN McKEO N,
AD.cf>
CIIR!STOPI-IER CARSON THURBER, AXP CHARLES TowNSENI>, Jr.,
IKA
WILLIAM WINTON TUCKER , JAMES Ro GERS VEITCH,
AD.<!>
cf>l'D.
HowARD BELL ZIEGLER, AXP
25
1Juninr Qtln.s.s 1904 CLAss CoLORS
CLAss MoTTO
DARK BLUE AND WHIT E
Qlla.s.s ltll Trinity I
Trinity I rah-rah-rah,
Trinity I
Trinity I wah-1vho-wah,
Boom-a-lacka, boom-a-lacka, Roar, roar, roar,
Sumus populi, 'o4 I
Christmas Term
w.
G.
速ffirtr.s
Trinity Term
G.
H. HEYN
Viu-Presidmt
G. E.
B.
Suretary
M. H. BUFFINGTON
B.
Q. Q.
P.
L. LIGHTBOURN
WHERRY
MoR GAN MoRGAN
Presidmt
Tr~asurer
.
Chronicler .
H. HEYN
J.
DIBBLE
M. H. BuFFINGTON
P. L.
LIGHTHOURN
ifintnry ~ , â&#x20AC;˘...,..._,.-.:c,T is not always the great things in life which prove the most -valuable. It is not always the large classes in college which form the best men. Some of the most successfnl and most highly esteemed of our alumni have been members of three of the smallest classes which Trinity rver graduated. And there is a reaso n for this: a small class develops individuality, for every man feels that he must do his share to uphold the good name of his class; in thi s way more than in any other hi s character is brought out. The clas. of rgo~ is one which displays marked individuality. The sma llness of its numbers impresses upon its members the necessity of every man doing something, be it in athletic or scholastic work. Thus the strong point of each man's character become clearly defined and more intensified. He learns to think for himself, to manage his own affairs, in sho rt, to be, in the full sense of the word, a '111011. And has not the class a record of which we may well be proud? In every branch of athletics, with the exception of the track, we have excelled. In the three years of our cou rse we have proved more than a match for 1903. When Freshmen we overwhelmingly defeated them in baseball; when Fre hmen also we conquered them in football, and for three consecutive years we have had the same success in basketball. On the 'Varsity teams our class has always been most creditably represented. In scholarship we are not behind any class in college. The year which i drawing to a close has been, on the whole, a very successful one for 'o~, despite the fact that we have lost several of our old classmates. Three men on the football team, and three on the baseball nine, is a fair showing in athletics. The Jnnior Promenade this year \\'as an immense success, and won us the hearty cong1¡atulations of the whole college and the visitors. Those of our number who have filled posi tions as managers of various college organizations have done their work in an efficient manner. To our younger brothers, the Freshm en, who have so well acquitted themselves in all branches of college life, we say, pointing to I90~ as an example, " Go and do likewise." ''A good character is the most precious possessio n" is the translation of our motto, and with that before us we shall not rest content with \\'hat we have already clone, bnt shall press on to greater deeds next year and in the years that are to follow. "A little one shall become a thon sa nd and a small one a great nation." P. L. L.
27
1Juuinrn Room
R eside nce
Name WALTER BEST ALLEN, D.~
Bayonne, LV.
.
I
8
J.
H.
Football Team (r, 2 , 3, 4); Captain Football Team (4); Literary Edito r rqo4 IvY; Junior Prom e nade Committee; German Club; Sophomore Dining Club; Baseball Team (r, 2, 3) ; President T. C. I. F. L . FREDERICK BETHUNE BARTLETT,
9 N. T.
Sout!L Mancluster
<J?rD.
Junior Promenade Committee ; Glee Club (r, (r), 2d term .
2,
3) ; '904 I VY Board; Class President
IS N. T.
Kitamziug, Pa.
MORGAN HYDE BUFFINGTON , ~'X'
Chairman Junior Promenade Comn1ittee; Track Team (t, Club; '904 IvY Board ; Assistant Manager Track Team (3). EDGAR J OHNSON DIBBLE,
2,
3);
:>ophomo re Dining
13
J.
Sparkill, N. Y.
3S
J. H.
St. George's, Bermuda
14
J. H.
14
J.
Bethel
D.KE
H.
Managing Editor '904 Ivv; Banjo Club (r, 2, 3) ; Sophomore Dining Club. GEORGE H ENRY HEYN,
AXP
Glee Club (r, 2, 3). PHILIP LLEWELLYN LIGHTBOURN,
AD.<l>
'904 IvY Board; Sophomore Dining Club; Alumni English Prize (3). EDW A RD HUGH MADDOX,
Brooklyn, N . Y.
D.KE
H.
Class President (2) 2d term; Football Team (r, 2, 3) ; Sophomore Dining Club; Baseball Team (o). EDWARD J AMES MANN,
Oneonta, N . Y.
IKA
II
N. T.
Baseball Team (r, 2); Football Team (r); T ablet Board(>, 3); Business Manager Trinity Tablet (•, 3); 1904 I VY Board; Class Presid e nt(r) rst term; Sec y.-Treas. Junior Promenade Committee.
Hartford
BAYARD QuiN CY MoRGAN, AXP
227
Sigourney St.
H a rtford Admittitur Prize (r); Goodwin Greek Prize (r) ; Mathematics Prize (r); H olla nd Scho larship (r , 2); Glee Club (r, 2); First Mackay-Smith Prize (2) ; Managing Editor '904 IvY; Junior Promenade Committee; Alumni English Prize (3); Second Whitlock Prize (3). WILLIA M GEORGE WHERRY,
U1li01t Hill, N.
D.KE
I
IS
J. H.
Class President (3) rst term; Junior Promenade Committee; Manager F ootball Team (4) ; Manager T. C . I. F. L.; Track Team (•).
~prrial HERMAN EDwARD T owNSEND, ~'X'
•
Waslzington, D. C.
Class President (•) rst term; Football Team (r, Dining Club.
2,
IS
J.
H.
3) ; Baseball T eam (r, 3) ; Sophomor e
1J1nrmrr :!lrmhrrn' PAUL HE NRY MALLET PREVOST BRINTON, FRANK SEIDERS BROWN, <I>rll. STEWART HAROLD CLAPP, Ll.'l' THEODORE NORTH DENSLOW, All.<l> FRANK HoWARD ENSIGN,
AXP
WINTER HAMILTON EVEREST ROBERT GLENNEY, <I>rll. ARTHUR GEORGE H UMPHRIES, Ll.KE HERBERT ROBINSON MciLVAINE, 'l'T ROBERT LINCOLN McKEON, All.<l> GEOR GE FRANKLIN SEYMOUR MOORE,
AXP
RALPH CHARLES BELCHER MOORE ABNER pACKARD MATHER IN GRAHAM RANKIN, 'l'T RAYMOND BRI!'iCKERHOFF VAN TINE, All.<P
29
'f'Y
Philadelphia, Pa. Salmon Falls, N.H. Pittsfield, Mass. New York City Silverlane, Conn. West Haven, Conn. South Manchester, Conn. New York City Philadelphia, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Quincy, Ill. Chatham, N.J. Quincy, Mass. Saybrook Point, Conn. Bayonne, N.J.
~npijnmnr.r
Olla1lS
1905 CLASS MOTTO
CLAss C o LoRs
AD OMNIA PARATUS
ORANGE A ND BLACK
O!la.a.a lrll Bricki go·ax, go-ax, go-ax , Bricki go-ax, go-ax, go-ax, Hollabola, all alive, Trit~ity
Christmas Term
c. P. C. C.
W. T. E. E.
REM SEN •
I
Tri1zity I 'o5
®ffirrr.a President .
Trinity Term
E. L .
KENNEDY
Vice-P1·uidmt
H.
JoNES
Secrtlary
.
C.
T reastt1'er .
C.
Chronicler .
M.
JoNEs
C . J. HARRIMAN
30
c.
DUFFEE BOYD
E. G osTEN H OFER E . G osTENHOFER F . OwENS
' i!;hdnry ~ ~~~AHlS is the time of year when the Chronicler steps into the lime-light, make hi s bow, and endeavo rs to perform the functions of the office which he did all in his power to avoid when it was thrust upon him, his modesty telling him that to do the Class of 1905 justice would require a historian greater than he ever hope to beco me. As every college man knows, the Sophomore year is the hardest of the college course, because combined with the worry of endeavoring to brin,.g the Freshman Class into some semblance of discipline by carry ing out the suggestions of the upper classmen, and at the same time avoiding the possibility of a communicati on from the Faculty givi ng the recipient six weeks vacation, the standard of the class in st udi es must also be upheld. 'vVe were warned that it was no path of roses, and th at all Sophomore classes were expected to appear before the Faculty to answer for some fancied misdemeanor; but, whi le we have not sought trouble, we have not in any way t ri ed to avoid it, and so far we have always managed to be. true to ou r motto, "Ad Omnia Paratus." The Class of r905 even as Freshmen had become imbued with the true Trinity spirit, and as Sophomores it ha developed until we have become models for the Freshmen, who we tnt t h:lVe been impressed to such an extent that they will endea\"Or to live up to our sta ndard. ln athletics, a nd, in fact, all college work, the Class of 1905 has always clone its share and entered into it with all the spiri t of true Trinity men. After college spirit, class spirit is perhaps the most desirable feature in a college man, and thi s th e Class of 1905 has abundantly displayed in all its dealings with the stud ent body. To enumerate all of the class eve nts would require more space than is at my disposal. but just mention "Springfield " to any of the Class of 1905 and it will bring a story which will " 路ell repay yo u for the inquiry and awaken in him memories of the time when as frightened a lot of Freshm en as one could well imagine were gathered together in the Hotel Massasoit, protected by the Juniors and the police force of Springfield. The St. Patrick" Day celebration was carried out this year with more enthusiasm than has been sho\\路n by the College for some time past, and the men of the Sophomore Class feel j u tly proud of their part in its success. For the two years we have been in the College, I think we can look back with satisfaction upon the record made, and whi le hoping in the future to do even more, yet if we can but keep up the same sta nda rd, we will have made a mark in Trinity history that can not well be overlooked. l\1. F. 0.
31
Name
Residence
Room
ROGER HEATON BLAKESLEE
Hartford .
HARRY CLAYTON BOYD WILLIAM FRANCIS BULKLEY
U11ion City, Pa. A lpma, Miclt.
F RANC IS GEORGE BURROWS
Sunbury, Pa.
EDMUND SAMUEL CARR
St. Johnsbury, Vt.
791 Park St.
3 N. T. 6 N. T.
6
CHARLES FRANCIS CLEMENT
Sunbury, Pa.
EDWARD LLEWELLYN DUFFEE
Fall Riv~r, l J.lass.
ROBERT LE Roy EATON
Northford .
J.
H.
19 N. T. 9
J. H.
IS N. T. r8 N. T.
ROBERT MOSLEY EWING
P~oria,
MALCOLM COLLINS FARROW, JR .
Shamokin, Pa.
6
ALLEN R EED GooDALE
Suffield
Suffield
CHARLES EDWARD GosTENHOFER
West N~w Brighton, N. Y. Windsor
CHARLES JARVIS HARRIMAN
Ill.
CARLos EuGENE JoN Es
bzd~p~nd~1Zce,
PHILIP THOMAS KENNEDY
Hartford .
MICHAEL FRANCIS OWENS
Ha1路tford .
CHARLES HAMLIN PELTON
llfiddlttown
CHARLES MILTON RHODES
Steubm vill~,
WILLIAM BLAIR RoBERTS
Hartford .
WALTER BEACH SHERWOOD
Hartford .
WILLIAM PERRY STEDMAN
Waterbury
9 N. T.
Iowa
J.
H.
7 J. H. Windsor 31 ]. H. 83 Edwards St. 85 Hawthorn St. 31
0.
44
J. J.
H. H.
31 Townley St. 182
Bellevue St. 13 J. H. 19 N. T. 16 N. T.
CHARLES BURTON WALSH
Brooklyn, N. Y.
HENRY LEE WATSON
New York, N. Y.
PHILIP T URNER WELLES
Norwich
9 N. T.
J.
RICHARD NILES GRAHAM
Austin, Tex.
16
JoHN WILLIAM O'CoNNOR
1\ 'ew Yo1路k city
CoRNELIUS WAGSTAFF REMSEN
Babylon, L. I.
CHARLES BARTON WYNKOOP
Utica, N. Y.
8 J. H. 4 N. T. 9 N. T .
32
H.
1J1nrmrr fllltrmhrr.!i Name
Reside nce
Pittsburg, Pa. Hartford Pittsburg, Pa. Hartford Hartford Hiawatha, Kan. Bridgeport Boston , Mass. Thompsonville Chester, Pa. New York city Hartford
EDWIN LATHRO P BAKER HowARD EMORY BusHNELL CHARLES HENRY CURRY BENEDICT DEVINE FLYNN JAMES THOMAS GRADY
•
FREDERICK THOMAS HILL GEORGE BARTOW LEWIS FREDERICK CHARLES MEREDITH HENRY }AMES NOLAN CLEMENT GRISCOM RANDLE WILLIAM SEWARD WYMAN WALLACE CARLILE PATTERSON WINSLOW •
3
33
Htnli CLASS COLORS CLAss 1\foTTO BLUE AND GRAY
One I 1ti1te I 1taugltt I six I Rah I rah I 1zoughty-six I Rah I 1路alz I 1taug!zty-six I Tri11ity I
庐fttrrrli
Trinity Term
Christmas Term OwEN MoRGAN .
T.
H .
ScHWARTZ
w.
G . GRANGE
W.
G. GRANGE
J.
S. GALLAGHER
P1路esident
HARRY HUET
Vice- Prtsidenl
D. W.
Sec1路dary
F. C. F. C.
Treasurer C!zro11icler
3+
J.
GATESON HINKEL HI NKEL
S. GALLAGHER
i;istnry ~ HREE years from now the present Freshman Class will be the Senior Class. The character of its members will determine the character of the College: if they are lazy and lacking in college spirit, the whole College will be the same; if they are industrious and zealous for the welfare of Trinity, the undergraduates will catch the spirit and become like them. So the Freshman Class is not the most unimportant of the classes. In the history of the Class of r9o6, then, we find the answer to the question, "What will Trinity be three years from now?" We started the year propitiously by defeating the Sophomores in the bulletin and push rushes. In the beer rush which followed, however, the Sophomores clearly outcla sed us. Vl/e simply followed the funeral custom, and " passed round the bier." On November 15th, at Springfield, :tllass., we gave the annual banquet to the Juni ors. Five of our men were captured by Sophomores, and after being dressed in fastastic costumes were sent in to the banquet. All testified to their gentlemanly treatment at the hands of the Class of 1905. In athletics we have been well represented: six Freshmen played on the 'Varsity football team, and ten on the scrub. Several very fine players were discovered among the number. On the basketball we had three men who did exceptionally fine work. Our class basketball team defeated the Juniors, who but a short time before had gained a victory over the Seniors. There is but one fault to find with the team, and that is that during the year several games were played with outside teams, and that for these game the 190(5 team never practiced regularly. Several times we were defeated by overwhelming scores. Things like these a re going to ruin the reputation of the Class and the College also. The Freshman team ought not to be allowed to play without the permission of the Athletic Association. In the indoor meet this year, 19o6 won twelve of the thirty-six points and took seco nd place. We form a large percentage of the track team, having excell ent long eli lance runn ers, sp rinters, hurdlers, pole-vaulters, etc: Four Freshmen are on the 'Varsity basebali team and all of them are first-rate players. The game that r9o6 won from 190.5 last fall must not be forgotten. In fact, everywhere about the College, the Freshman Clas is making itself felt. On St. Patrick's Day everything went smoothly. Nineteen Hundred and Six did not fail to how her metal. For several nights before the eventful day, members of the Class kept the Sophomores fully occupied. Then," on St. Patrick's Day in the morning," by a clevedy worked ruse we succeeded in getting our banner firmly fa tened to one of the electric light poles on the Campus, and stoorl ready to defend it. But the time was ill chosen, for all of us ought to have been in recitations, and so, like so many naughty children. we were sent to ou r classes, but not before we had had a little scrimmage with the Sophomores. The class has en tered into everything with life and vim, and earnestly hopes to continue to do the same in the future. Thinking first of our College, then of our Class, we hope to still press on and help to raise Trinity higher among the colleges than she has yet been. ]. S. G. _ 35
Name
Residence
Room
J. H . J. H.
HENRY G RAY BARBOUR
Hrwtford .
27
JoHN JO RDAN BoLLER
New York, N. Y.
27
GARRETT DENISE BowNE, JR.
Hartford .
6 Columbia St.
CLIFTON CULVERHOUSE BRAINERD •
Hartford .
48 Huntington St.
HILL BURGWi N, }R. •
Pittsburg, Pa.
WILLIAM CLINTON BURWELL
Wi1uted
RALPH EVELYN CAMERON
Fish/.i!l-on-Hudson
.
J. H. 5 J. H. s8 Imlay St. 32
GEORGE DI CK INSON CHAMBERS
.Hartford .
FREDERICK AUGUSTUS GRANT COWPER
Ifuntingdon, Pa.
JonN FRANK CRONAN
Taunton, llfass. Harlf01·d .
PHILIP EvERETT CuRTISS
16 S. H.
2
N. T.
29 J. H. 809 Asylum Av. 36
J. H. J. H.
Saginaw, Mich.
s
N. T.
Brooklyn, N . Y.
14
Newtown .
40
J. H. J. H. J. H.
DAVID MORRIS FACKLER
New York, N. Y.
WILLIAM SYDNEY WALKER FISKE
P1·ovidma, R. I.
JoHN SILL GALLAGHER DANIEL W!UI OT GATESON }AbiES HARDIN GEORGE, JR.
S
DWIGHT WORDEN GRAHAME
Woodbury .
17
WALTER GATES GRANGE
Pittsbm·g, Pa.
IS N . T.
AusTIN DuNHAM HAIGHT
B1·ooklyn, N. Y .
IO
JAMES SAYERS HINE
12
FREDERICK CHARLES HINKEL
O•·attge, N.J. New York, N. Y.
HARRY H UET
G•·attd Forks, N. D.
38
Winsted
40
ELMER
fUNS ON HUNT
RICHARD PR.ESCOTT KELLAM DoNALD ELY LAUDERBURN HAROLD BROWER LINGLE
.
BURDETTE CRANE MAERCKLEIN
J. J.
H.
H.
8 N . T.
J. J.
H. H.
South Glastonbury Wellesley, llfass.
37
J.
H.
Bellefonte, Pa.
IS
J.
H.
Hartford .
THOMAS SMITH MARLOR
Brooklyn
OwEN MoRGAN
213
THOMAS BERNARD MYERS CARL FRANCIS MOULTON
Hartford
HoRACE NoRTH
Hartford
J. J.
H. H. Collinsville
.
Dallas, Tex. Collimvil/e
Laurel St. 17 12
245 Collins St. Sherman St.
23
R eside nce
Name
R oom
Wat~rbu ry
WILFRED SPRAG UE PERRY
33
J. H.
P ittsbu rg, P a.
16 S. H.
GEORGE PREBLE PIERCE
R ed W ing , Jlfimt.
38
CHARLES MURRAY RE E D
N~ w
MORRIS SHALLCROSS PHILLIPS
Y ork, N. Y .
8
J. H . J. H. J. H .
VICTOR EUGENE REHR
Oil City , P a .
HOMER STUART SAYRES
D et?·oit, Mir!t .
HERMAN LIVINGSTON S CHWART Z
Lak~ wood,
THOMAS THEODORE WEEK S
L ak~po rt,
STANLEY WIMBI SH
A tlanta, Ga.
4 J. H.
Bristol
I N . T .
ERNEST
F.
WIN STON
32
s
N .I N. II.
N.
T.
37
J.
H .
2
N.
T.
:§prrial *JoHN HART CHA~1BERLI N
H artford
t EDWARU
So. Mancheste1·
SIMPSO N E v ERETT
* 'V!LL!AM BARNWELL EWI NG
P eoria , I ll.
·*FREDERI CK WILLIAM LY CETT
H artford .
*HERMAN EDWARD T O W NS END WILLIAM HEWI"lT GR EENOUG H
2 7 Hudson St. So. Ma nchester
48
24 J. H . Hopkins St .
Wasltiug ton , D . C.
14
N . T.
Philadelphia, Pa .
36
J.
H.
:§ununary Cou rse Course in in Le tte rs a nd Scie nce Arts
Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen Special Students
17
3
7
2
Undergraduates Graduate Students
so
Course in Sc ie nce 4
S pecia l Student s
Tot a l
2
26
4
28
3
46
2
2
12
113
II
II
4
7
IS
8
20
17
Course in L e tters
31
2
3
4
Total
1! 7
*Nut regularly matric ulated .
t Of the Connectic ut Leag ue of A r t S t ude n ts, v. p . 57·
37
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ARTHUR CHADWELL SHORT EDWARD J AMES MANN CARLos EuGENE J oNES CHARLES HAMLIN PELTON FRANCIS GEORGE BURROWS HENRY GRAY BARBOUR \ VILLI AM
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WILLIAM D. 110RGAN, '72 ROBERT G. ERWI N , '74 WILLIAM GEORGE
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DuRNIIAM, GRAY,
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'99
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O!orporation ~ President J oHN HENRY STEVENS QurcK
Secretary and Treasurer CHARLES LUTHER BURNHAM CHARLES EMMET GRAVES WILLTAM CLAIBORNE BROCKLESllY WILLIAM DENISON l\l:ORGAN,
M.D.
ROBERT G .\LLAUDET ERWIN WILLIAJ\1 STERLING COGSWELL v\iiLLIAM CONVERSE SKINNER EDWARD l\L~NSFJELD ScuDDER
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ERNEST DEFEMERY l\frEL
ARTHUR COLLIN ' GRAVES GEoRGE vVATsoN BEAcH THOMAS l\fcKEAN HOBART WARREN THOMPSON ALEXANDER TAYLOR 11ASON
43
3.1. if(. i\. ~nwuatt flllltmhtr!i Abbot, C. W., '49 *Abbott, ]. P., '49 *Adams, G. Z., '39 *Adams, ]. R., '49 * Allen, E. T., '41 A nd erson, A. I-I. W., 'or Andrews, C. i\L, '84 * A ni staki, }., '37 Arvedson, A. E., 'or * Ashe, ]. B., '30 * Backus, C. A., '52 Bacon, F. S., '99 Bacon, ]. W., '46 Bakewell, }., '59 * Barbo ur, ]. H., '73 Barclay, R., 'So Bartlett, H. P., '72 * Bayard, 'vV. H., '4r * Bayley, ]. R., '35 Beach, E. S., '83 Beach, G. \V., 'So *Belden, . i\J., '48 * Benton, i\I. F., '58 Bento n, ]. R., '97 *Bond , ]., '40 * Bondurant, 'vV. E., '63 Bowman, C. W ., '87 * Brainard, N. L., '43 * Brander, II. 1., '45 * Brandt, L., '49 * Brewer, \ V . L., '38 * Brinley, E. I-I., '49 Brinley, G., 'or Bri nl ey, P., '47 Brockles by, A. K., '70 Brocklesby, ] . H., '65 B rockl esby, vV. C., '69 *B rownell , T. S., '38
* Buchanan, ]., '53 * Bull, W. i\I., '39 Burnham. C. L., 'g8 * Butler, i\L ., '44 *Ca ldwell, C. E., '82 *Campbell, C. I., '30 Cand ee, H. S., '93 Ca rpenter, ] . S ., '79 Carpenter, ]. T., '88 Carpenter, R. H., '8 r Chapin, D . D., ' 56 Chapin, W . i\ I., '7-+ * Chapman, C. R., '47 Clapp, F., '55 Clark, A. i\I., '77 Clark, E. S., '65 * Clarke, R. i\I., '~5 Clemont, P. \V., '68 Coggeshall, G. A., '65 Cog well, G. E., '97 Cogswell, 'vV. S., '61 Cole, }., 'o2 Cole, S., 'oz Collins, W. F., '93 * Comstock, ]. C., '38 *Conyngham, C. i\I., '59 * Cossit, P. S., '~5 *Co wling. R. 0., '6r Cozzens, H. G., '03 *Curti s, W. E., '43 * Daves, G., '57 Davies, 'vV. G., '6o * DeForre t, G. A., '55 * Delancy, T. ]., '40 *DeLano, F. R., '6;; Deming, 'vV. C., '8~ Dewell, F. W., 'or * DeZeng, E., '40
â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
44
Hill, C. H ., 'o2 Hill, F. T., '05 * Hoadly, C. ]., 'sr Hollister, ]. B., '8-1Holly, ]. A ., '91 * Hopson, E . C., '6+ Hopson, G. B., '57 Horton, P. A., '68 Hotchkiss, C. E., '82 Hovey, H. E., '66 Hubbard, G. A., '9+ Hyde, T. McE., '90 * Ingalls, T., '52 J ackson, R. E., '-15 * Jarvis, ]. S., ' 57 * John on, E. P., '65 Johnso n, W. F ., '66 * Jones, C. H., '35 * Kellogg, H. L., '36 * Ker, ]., '43 "' King, H. W ., '36 * Lambert, D., '36 *Lansing, C. A ., '66 Leaken, W. R., '8o * LeRoy, A . N., '-1-2 LeRoy, ]., '69 * LeRoy, T. 0., '-1-2 Lilienthal, H., '86 Lynch, R. Leb., '90 l\Jack, J . E., '7r * :-Iallo ry, G. S., '58 Mallory, R. H ., '92 * 11allory, W. H., '6o lllarble, F. P., '82 *Marshall, ]., '-1-2 Mason, A. T., 'S r * Matthewson, ]., '-t6 lllcConihe, A., '89 lllcConihe, M. S., '92 lllcConihe, W ., '90 * l\Iclntosh, ]. H., '53 lllcKean, T., '92 McKennan, ]. D., '76 McLemore, M . C., '89 * :i\Ieech, H. ]., '42 lie!, E. DeF., '88 *Millard, A. B., '36
*Dick, ]. M., '54 * Dirickson, L. L., '41 *Dorsey, W. H . I., '39 Downes, L. T., '48 *Driggs, T. I., '48 * Dyer, A., '70 Ellis, G. W ., '9-1Erwin, ]. B., '76 Erwin, R. G., '74 Evans, S. K .. '95 *Faxon, E., '47 *Ferrill, W. C., '78 *Foote, I., '42 *Franklin, E . C., '5+ *Gadsden, C. E., 'so *Gadsden, ]. A., 'so Gallaudet, B. B., 'So * Gallaudet, T., '42 * Gardner, H. G., '65 Gowen, F. C., '82 * Goddard, F . M., '96 * Gordon, 0. K., 's8 Graves, A . C., '91 Graves, C. E., 'so Graves, D. C., '98 Graves, G., '49 Graves, H. S., '92 Graves, R. S., '94 *G ray, ]. W ., '72 Gray, R. W., '98 *Ha le, C. F., '47 Hale, C. S., '62 *Halsey, A., '37 *Hamilton, H . C., 'sr Hamilton, I. K ., Jr., '9 1 Hardee, C. H., '8r *Harri s, T. L., '41 * Hasell, B. D., '49 * Hasell, L. C., 'so Hawley, F. M., '6r *Hazlehurst, G. H., '42 Hazlehurst, ]. W., '5 r *Hazlehurst, R., '.p * Henry, ]. F ., '34 * lTewlctt, S. H., '74 Heydecker, H. R., '86 * Heyward, J. F., '48 â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
45
* Thiiller, ., '47 Moffett, G. H., '78 Thfoore, C. E., '76 *Moore, D. S., '6-+ Morgan, G. B., '70 M01·gan, \V. D., '72 *Morga n, W. F., '37 Th forrill, C. A., '67 *Mowry, D. S ., '67 Nel on, H., Jr., '86 Nelson, W. B., '8 r *Nicholl s, G. H., '39 * Nichol s, R. W., '33 oyes, A. H., '8g Olmsted, J. F., '8-+ Olmsted, W. B ., '87 *Overfield, J . L., '55 Paine, J., '92 Paine, 0. T ., '96 * Paine, R. T., '32 * Pardee, D. W., '40 Parks, S. H., '82 * Payne, J. \V., '6r * Peake, C. F., '-t2 Peck, C. C., 'o2 Peck, R. E ., 'or Peck, T. M., 'So *Peck, \V. E., '7r * Perkins, L. H ., '3-+ Peters, G. E., 'so Peugnet, L. D., '93 * Phelps, J. S., '32 Porter, A. T., Jr., '02 Potter, Louis, '96 * Powcl, E. F., 'or * Proctor, C. II., '73 Quick, G. A., '9-+ Quick, J. H., '98 Quick, J. H. S., '58 Quick, IV. F ., '92 Richardso n, L. W., '73 Rich a rd son, R. D ., '71 * Ripley, P., '47 * Robert so n, J. A., '5-+ Rodgers, G. W., '87 Rodgers, R . E. L., '87 * Roge rs, R. C., '45 • Deceased
Rowland , E., '57 * Sargoot, G. D., ' sr * Sawyer, J. L., 'so Scott, E. G., '57 * Scudder, C. D ., '75 Scudder, E. Thl., '77 * Scudder, H. J., '46 Scudder, H., '9r * Scudder, T., '54 Scudder, 'N., '8g Sedgwick, W . R., '8-+ Shannon, J. W ., '87 Sheldon, E. A ., 'o2 * Sherman, H. B., '38 Sherman, H. i\I., '77 * Sher\vood, W. B., '36 * Shipma n, P. \V., '82 Short, William, '6g * Singletary, G. E. B., '46 Skinner, W. C., '76 *Small, E. F., '7-+ * Smith, C. H., '36 Smith, J. H., '7-+ * Smyth, J. \V., '52 Starr, J ., '56 * Starr, S., '29 Sted man, R. S., '63 *Stirling, W. H., '-+-+ * Stone, J. A ., '+4 Stone, L. H ., '87 * Stoughton, N. C., '38 Story, 0. J., 'or * Sumner, A. E., '6r Sutton, E. B., '76 Taylor, C. E., '92 *Taylor, F. L., '43 Taylor, H. E., 'g6 *Taylor, Vv. F., '-+-+ *Terry, C. E., 'sr * Thomas, G. I-I., '41 T hompson, H. \V., '83 Ti tus, A. S., 'oo *Todd, c. J., 'ss Tolles, W. A ., '46 Townsend, C., Jr., '03 *Tracey, W. D., '42 *Tracey, J. R., '39
*Tudor, H. B., 'so *Turner. ]. H., '38 *Van Zandl, C. C., '5! *Van Zandl, \ V., '29 *Varley, C. D., '-F vVainwright, F. C., '88 vVainwright, J. l\I., '95 *Wainwri ght, W . A. l\1., *Wail, ]. T ., '35 \i\Tarner, L. F., '85 *Warren, E. I., 'So WaHen, G. T ., '90 * \ iVarren, ]. l\I., '32 * \ iVarren, vV. H., '3~ vVarren, v..r. H., '90 *Waring, C. M., '36 \\Tashburn, L. C., '81
* \ iVay, ]. A., '37 * Webb, E. C., '75 * \ iVebb, W. E., ·~o \i\Tebb, W. W., '82 vVelch, L . E., '86 White, ]. G., '54 White, R. A ., '81 Wiggin, A. H., '68 Willa t·d, D., '95 *Wolcott, F. H., '86 * Vlolcott, S. G., · ~7 *Wood, H. S., '71 vVoodbu ry, T. C., '7r Woodward, G. A., 'ss Vl'oodworth, F . A ., 'So Wright, A. E., '89 Wright, l\I. R., '91
'6~
• Deceased
47
ID'~r
1J1ratrrnity nf irlta Jnt
FOUNDED IN I8-17 AT COLUMBIA COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
iRnll nf A LPHA DELTA EPSILON LAM BDA
Pm UPSILON SIGM A TAU
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Columbia College University of Pennsylvania Tr\nity College Williams College University of Mississippi University of Virginia Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University Massachusetts Institute of Technology
ID~r
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CHARLES EDwARD CosTEN HOFER RICHARD NILES GR.\HAM AusTIN DuNHAM HAIGHT REEVE HuNTINGTON
HuTCHINSON
GEORGE PREBLE PIERCE THOMAS SMITH l\lARLOR HENRY Lo urs GoDLOVE ]\[EYER OWEN l\IORGAN JoHN WILLIA:\I O'CoNNOR CHARLES ~lURRAY REED HENRY LEE \VATSON
so
~rabuatr
.flrmbrrs .of tqr 1Epsil.ott Qtl]aptrr ~
Allen, E. S., '94 Allyn, A. W., '6r Appleton, C. A., '82 Appleton, E. D., 'So Appleton, H. C., '85 Arundel, W . B. Von H., 'oo Atkinson, J. G., '64 Austin, W. M., '98 Bacon, J. R., '92 Baldwin, F. T., 'oo Barnwell, R. W., '72 *Barnwell, S. E., '72 Barton, C. C., '69 Barton, C. C., Jr., '93 Barton, P. L., '02 *Beckwith, C. JH., '88 Beer , G. E., '86 Benedict, L. LeG., '88 Bibb, W . A., '75 Blackwell, J., Jr., '66 Bliss, G. H., '64 Bohlen, D. JH., '82 Bowen, A., '63 Braine1·d, J. B., '82 Brandcgee, J. E., '74 * Brandegee, L . C., '77 Breckenridge, A. E., '70 * Bree e, H. L., '57 Brenton, C., '99 Brigham, H. H. '76 *Brown, T. I., '64 * Buckingham, W. B., '69 Bulkeley, J. C., '93 Bulkeley, W. E . A., '90 Burke, E. F., '95 Burr, Vv. H., '78 Bushnel l, H. E., 'os *Butler, W., '58 Cady, }. C., 'So
Camman, E. C., '96 *Ca rter, C. L., '54 * Cenas, B. C., '56 Chapin, F . W., '79 Chapin, W. V., '78 Chapman, T. B., 'So Cheever, J . D., Jr., 'Sr Clark, J. W., '63 Clement, J. K., 'oo Clement, l\1. W., 'or *Clem on, T. G., '56 Clifford, S. W., '68 Clyde, W. P., '65 Coleman, R. H., '77 Comfort, B. F., '89 Cookson, F. 1\I., '6r Coons, S. 'IN., 'oo Cunningham, N . G., '03 * Coxe, J. N., '55 Crane, R. N., '55 * Curtis, F. R., 'So Cnrtis, G. i\I., 'So Curtis, R. H., '68 Curtis, W. E., '75 *Dan-ell, A. S., '59 * Dayton, W . B., '56 Deal, J. A., '72 DeForest, J. G., '82 DeRossett, A. L., '62 * DeRossett, E . S ., '6-1 * Devendorf, G. S., '55 Dobbin, E. S., '99 DuBois, G. :.\1., '7-1 DuRois, H. 0., '76 Eaton, W. H., '99 Edson, S., '55 Edwards, A. N., '76 Elbert, W. ., '79 Ellis, A. L., '98
• Deceased
51
*Jarvis, S. F., Jr., '8g Jennings, A . B., '61 Kane, G., '75 *Kerr, E. L., '55 *Kirby, ]. W., '65 Knoblock, A. F., '55 *Lamson, vV., '56 Lawrence, C. V., '56 *Leacock, ]. H., '5S Lewis, C. A., '93 *Lewis, E. B., '65 Lewis, E. G., '92 Lewis, G. B., 'os * Lewis, ]. I., '62 Lewis, ]. W., '93 Lewis, S. S., '61 *Lewis, T. C., '7r Lewis, \V. H., '65 *Lincoln, F. T., '76 Lincoln, G. W., '75 Macauley, G. T., 'go Macauley, R. I-I., '95 * l\Iackay, W. R., '67 l\Iaginnis, ]. H., 'o2 l\Iartindale, H. S., '79 1IcClory, H., '51 McCullough, D. H., '73 ~1cCook, E. McP., 'go McCough, H. G., '75 l\IcLean, T., '75 Miller, H., 'So * Mille r, P . S., '6..( . Miller, S. T ., 'S5 *Mines, F. S., '6..( * l\Iines, ]. F ., '54 l\Iorgan, B. T., '6r Morse, ]. F., '66 l\Iurray, A. S., Jr., '7! ?-Iurray, F. W., Yale, '77 Murray, R., '73 lelson, R. H., 'So Nichols, G. G., '67 *Norris, E. C., '6r No rris, I-I., '63 *Norton, F . L., '68 Nott, R. H., '71 Orton, W. 0., '92
Elton, ]. P., '88 Elwell, G. E., '70 Finch, E. B., '9r * Fisher, T. R., '62 FitzGerald, F., '8g Ford ney, T. P., '62 Fuller, J. R., '70 *Fuller, S. G., 'sS Fuller, S. R., '70 Gardner, C. H., '70 Gibson, B. S., '6g * Glazier, T. C., '6o Goldthwaite, A. C., '99 Goodspeed, ]. H., '66 *Goodwin, G. H ., '62 Graham, C. 1., 'so Grannis, F. 0., '73 Greene, ]. H., '9r Haight, F. E., 'S7 Haight, M. G., 'oo Hall, A. C., '88 Hall, C. L., '92 Hall, F. DeP., '7S Hallett, W. T., '62 Harding, N., '73 Harraden, F . S., '67 Harris, \V. R., 'sS *Hartshorne, E. M., '56 Hayden, R. C., '93 Hazelhurst, G. A., '79 Henderson, E. F., 'S2 Hendrie, G. T., '97 Hendrie, S., 'S7 Hill, G. H., '9r *Hill, W. C., '93 Hill, W. C., 'oo Hills, J. S., 'or Hitchings, H. B., '5-l * Hoffman, C. F., 'sr Hoisington, F. R., '91 Holbrooke, G. 0., '6g Holbrooke, S., '67 Hotchins, S. F., '56 Hudson, J . l\I., 'or Hull, A. S., '66 Ingersoll, G. P., 'S3 *Jard ine, H. D ., '68 â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
52
Owen, F. W., '84 Padgett, P ., '76 * Palmer, C. C., '5r Parker, B., '93 Parker, R. P., '94 Parso ns, H., '83 Parsons, ]. R., Jr., '8r Parsons, W . W., 'g6 Parsons, E ., 'g6 Pattison, G. B., '8r Paxon, H. C., '5r Pearce, ]. S., '62 Pearce, R., '93 Peck, B. D., 'g6 *Peck, D. L., '62 Perkins, G. E ., '8r *Pierce, H. H ., '58 * Pinckney, F. S., '62 Platt, Chas., Jr., '75 Platt, Clayton, '74 * Platt, W. A., '75 Potter, A. H ., '92 Quaik, A. B., 'o2 Reed, H. P., '84 * Roosevelt, F., '83 * Russell, F. G., '8o Russell, I. D., '92 Russell, H., '84 Rutherford, H. V., '76 Schulte, E. D. ., '97 Schulte, H. von W., '97 Scott, H. B., '78 Scudder, ]. A., '97 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., '6~ Smith, I. T ., '91 Smith, R. H., '6g 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, ]., '95 Strong, C. i\I., '64 Strong, ]. R., '82 * Sumner, C. A., '56 Swenson, E. P., '75 Swenson, S. A., '8r Talcott, A. B., 'go Talcott, C. H., 'gr Thompson, H. R., '87 Thompson, S. C., '72 Thorne, N. D., '71 Thorne, R., '85 Totten, C. A . L., '6g Trowbridge, C. C.. '92 Trowbridge, S. P. B., '83 * Underhill, G. B., '73 VanZile, E. S., '8~ Vibbert, A. D., '99 Vibbert, H. C., '68 Vibbert, W. H., '58 * Vibbert, W. W., '94 Wanzer, C., '66 Waterman, L., '71 \Vaters, G. S., '87 *Watson, W . C., '63 \Vatts, E. B., '73 *Weeks, R. D., '93 Welsh, R. F., '95 Wheeler, C. H ., 'or *Whistler, W. G. MeN., '57 *White, F. W., '78 Wilcox, F. L., '8o \IVilcox, E. P., '8o *Wildman, T. G., '57 Williams, C. C., '71 Williams, C. G., '8o Wilson, W. C. D., '93 Wilmerding, H., '8r Winkley, R. L., '79 Woodin, W. R., '58 Woodruff, E. H., '82 Wright, G. E., '74 Young, A . M., '82
*Deceased
53
W~r
1J1ratrrnity of
i\lp~a
irlta
J~i
FouNDED IN 1832 AT H AMILTO N CoLLEGE
1Roll of <nqaptrrs HAMILTON COLUMBIA YALE AMHERST BRUNONI AN HARVARD HUDSON BowDOIN DARTMOUTH PENINSULAR ROCHESTER WILLIAMS MANHATTAN. MIDDLETOWN KENYON UN! ON CORNELL PH! KAPPA JOHNS HOPKl s M!Nl'iESOTA TORONTO CHICAGO M c GILL
Hamilton College Columbia College Yale University . Amherst 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 New York Wesleyan University Kenyon College . Union College Cornell University Trinity College . Johns Hopkins University University of Minnesota Toronto University University of Chicago McGill University
54
1832
1836 1837 1837 1837 1837 1841 1841 1845 1846 1850 1851 1855
I8S6 r8s S 1859 1869 1877
1889 1892 1893 1896 1897
ID4r J4t il(appa Qt4aptrr ft . 1\rlih.r 4rmh.rr.s PERCJV.IL II AUTREY BRADIN DAVJD MORRIS FACKLER MALCOLM CoLLINS FARROW, }R. HARRY IluET ELli!ER l\IUNSON HUNT PHILIP
LLEWELLYN
LIGHTBOURN
BURDETTE CRANE l\fAERCKLEIN CHARLES l\1-ILTON RHODES J-fERMAN LIVINGSTON
SCHWARTZ
EDMUND CRA WFOIW THOMAS CHARLES BARTON V.,Ty ' KOOP
1J1ratrrn in lllrhr Samuel M. Alvord, Yale, '96 l-Ion. Edward B. Bennett, Yale, '66 Percy S. Bryant, Phi Kappa, '70 Charles H. Bunce, Yale, '6o George F. Cady, Wesleyan, '6g 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, '58 Rev. Arthur L. Gillett, Amherst, '8o Charles A. Goodwin, Yale, '98 Rev. James Goodwin, Yale, '86 Walter L. Goodwin, Yale, '97 Charles E. Gross, Yale, '6g Frederick H. L. Hammond, 'Wesleyan,
Thomas F. Lawrence, Yale, '99 E. R. Lampso n, Jr., Phi Kappa, '91 Rev. William DeLoss Love, Hamilton, '43 L. P. Waldo Marvin, Yale, '92 Leonard Morse, Amherst, '7r R ev. Kings ley F. Morris, Amherst, '73 Edward C. Perkins, Yale, '98 Henry A. 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 Hon . Nathaniel Shipman, Yale, '48 Hon. George G. Sill, Yale, '52
R obert S. Starr, M.D., Phi Kappa, '97 Rev. Charles C. Stearns, Yale, '72 '88 C. M. Stearns, Johns Hopkins, '98 Rev. Samuel M. Stiles, Wesleyan, '6o Panett l\1. Hastings, M.D., Hamilton, '39 Samuel B. St. J ohn, M.D., Yale, '66 Edward B. Hatch, Phi Kappa, '86 Melancthon Storrs, M.D., Yale, '52 Frederick Van H . Hudson, Dartmouth, Henry E. Taintor, Yale, '65 '6o Arthur R. Thompson, Yale, '96 Harwood Huntington, Phi Kappa, '89 David C. Twitchell, Yale, '98 Rev. J ohn T. Huntington, Phi Kappa, David Van Schaack, Phi Kappa, '9r
'so
William C. J ohnson, Middletown, '94 Solon C. Kell ey, Brunonian, '86
Philip C. Washburn, Phi Kappa, Arthur C. Williams, Yale, '98
57
'96
~rnbuatr
ilrmhrr!l nf tqr Jqi Kappa C!tqaptrr ~
Allen, H. W ., '97 Almy, S., '92 Andrews, R., '53 Applegate, 0., Jr., '87 Armstrong, D. 11., '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. ] :, '85 Boardman, W. ] ., '54 Booth, T. R., '52 Bowie, C. L., '93 Bowman, ]. P., '53 Bradfield, H. S., 'o2 Bradin, ]. W ., 'oo *Brainard, E. W., '42 Brainard, ] ., '51 Brainard, ]. M., '84 Briscoe, ]., ] r., '95 Brown, W. P., 'or Brownell, H. B., '88 Bryan, W ., '75 B ryant, P. S., '70 * Bulkeley, C. E., '56 * Buxton, ]. B., '72 Buxton, ]. C., '73 Cameron, ]. I. H., '79 Cameron, L., '86 *Capron, A ., '45 Cary, H. A., '93 Carter, B. M., '82 Carter, C. H., '82 Carter, G. C., '87 Carter, ] . R., '83 Carter, ]. S., 'g8 â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
Carter, L. A., '93 Carter, S., '94 Chase, F., '52 Cheritree, T . L., 'go Cheshire, ]. B., Jr., '6g Chipman, G. C., '45 * Chipman, G. S., '78 Chrystie, T. M. L., '63 Church, S. P., '41 *Churchman, C., '93 Churchman, E. G., '95 Clapp, F. R., 'o2 Clark, A. F ., '75 Codman, A., '85 Coe, G. ]., '74 Coit, C. W., '82 Coleman, G. P., 'go Coley, ]., '62 *Conklin, H. H., '38 Cook, P., 'g8 Cooke, G. L., '70 Cooke, 0. D., '44 Cowl, M. L., '83 Crane, T., '45 Crocker, H. D., '84 *Crosby, D. G., '51 Cullen, ] ., ] r., '93 Curtiss, H. C., '8r Davenport, ]. S., 'g8 Denslow, T. N., '04 * Dickinson, E. L., '93 Dingwall, E. A., '92 Dingwall, H. R., '95 Drane, H. M., '52 Dyett, W. F., 'g6 Elliott, ]. H., '72 F isher, R., '56 F lagg, E . 0., '48 *Flagg, ] . B., '46
ss
*Flower, S., '45 Foot, E. H., 'g8 Foote, C. E., '76 Fox, R. H., 'oo Freeland, C. \V., '81 * Fuller, F . B., '92 Fuller, S. R., 'oo * Geer, G. }., '42 Gilmore, A. P., '74 Glazebrook, F. H., '99 Glazebrook, H. McK., 'oo Goodwin, ]., '86 * Goodwyn, W. S., '38 Gordon, T. H., '71 Grady, J T., '05 Graham, H . C., '6 r * Gr<tham, J ., '72 Grinnell, I-I., '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 ~-IcC., '86 Hays, W. W., '58 Hazelhurst, G. B., '77 *Heath, J F ., '38 Hedrick, C. B., '99 Henshaw, C. H., '53 I-I eister, I., '76 *Hills, G. M., '47 Hills, J. D., '78 Hills, G. H., '84 Hills, R., '8-t Holcomb, B. T ., '59 Holley, W. W ., '6r *Hoof, J L., '46 Hooker, S. D., '77 Hooper, G. G., '66 Horner, H. A., 'oo Howell, G. D., '82 Hubbell, J H., '56 *Humphrey, G. F., '85 *Hunter, C., '78
Huntington, G. S., '81 *Huntington, H. K., '67 Huntington, J T., 'so Huntington, J W., '83 Huntington, R. W., '6-t Huntington, H., '8-t Huske, J., '77 Hutchins, R. H., 'go Ide, H. G., '94 Ingersoll, C. M ., '39 * Ives, A. l\1., '56 * Jacobs, E. C., '55 * J ames, C., '61 * Jewett, P. A., '37 * Kennedy, F., '68 Kerner, H. S., '99 Kidder, H., '92 *Kirtland, J., '70 *Kneeland, G., '8o Kurtz, C. M., '83 Kurtz, J E ., '77 Lampson, E . R., Jr., '91 Langford, A . M., '97 Langford, W . S., Jr., 'g6 Leaver, H. K., '59 Littell, J S., 'go Littell, S. H., '95 Littell, E . G., '99 Lockwood, L. V., '93 Lyman, A. J, '78 McGann, J. M., '95 McKeon, R. L., '04 Maddox, W. T ., '59 *Mallett, W. P., '40 Meredith, F . C., 'os Middlebrook, L. N., '48 Moore, J A., '97 Mock, L. C., '78 ~[organ, W. F., '88 Morrison, P. B., '94 Morse, B. K., '99 *Morss, J R., '47 Newton, E. P., '8r orton, G. H., '75 * Olmstead, H ., '42 Onderdonk, A. H ., '99 Page, J H., Jr., '97
â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
59
Steele, T. McB., 'o2 Stewart, G. T., '78 Stewart, W. ]. S., '88 * Stimson, L. B., '48 Stone, l\1., 'So * Stone, S., '8o * Storm, C., '39 Sullivan, F. R., '66 Thurman, A. W., '67 Tracy, E., 'ss * V ande rpoel, A. M., '8g Van Schaack, D., '91 Van Tine, R. B., '04 Wadsworth, L. F., '44 ·walker, ]. M., 'or Warner, A. ]., '42 Warner, D. T., '72 Warner, M. C., '88 Washburn, P. C., 'g6 Watson, S. N., '82 Weibel, R. N., '02 Wesley, P . R., '94 Whaley, P . H., '74 Wheaton, C., '49 Whitlock, H. R., '70 * Williams, E. W., '53 * Williams,]. H., '54 * Wilson, G. H., '93 Woodruff, F. D., '83 White, H. R., 'o2 Wynkoop, A. T., 'or *Yale, H. A., '46
Palmer, N., '45 Peabody, F. B., '45 Perry, ]. B., '72 * Perryman, E. G., '55 *Peters, W. C., '48 * Pitts, c. H ., '65 Plumb, ]. F., '91 Plumer, L. M., '74 Plumer, S., Jr., '97 Porter, T. A., '76 Potts, F. H ., '68 Prescott, 0. S., '44 Preston, ]. A., '55 Putnam, W. T., '88 Pynchon, T. R., '41 Pynchon, W. H. C., 'go * Randall, E. D., '92 Reynolds, L. G., '98 Rich, E. A., '99 Richardson, F. W., '84 Robbins, ]. P., '69 * Sartwelle, W. D., '75 Schiitz, R. H., '89 Schutz, W. S., '94 Schwartz, D. L., 'oo Sennett, L. F., '8g Sherwood, G. H ., 'oo Si tare, C. G., '47 * Smith, P ., 'go Smyth, ]. D., '74 Snow, A. H., '79 Snyder, E., '72 Starr, R. S., '97 ·• D eceased
6o
IDqr 1J1ratrrnity nf irlta il(appa iEpailnn FouNDED IN
18-1-1
AT YALE UNIVERSITY
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CoL. J ACOR L. GREENE, l\Iichigan, '6r, President. CHARLES P. CooLEY, Yale, '91, Secretary and T reas urer.
ftllrttthrrs The four hundred and seventy-five A lumni of the F raternity in the State of Connecticut.
1J1ratrrs in lltrhr .-\lien, H. B., Yale, 'or Altemus, H . B., Trinity, '04 Alden, H. W., l\I. I. T., '93 Ayres, vV. A., Yale, '64 Bacon, Dr. W . T., Yale, '68 Baldwin, H . S., l\I. I. T., 'g6 Beardsley, E. R., Yale, '79 Bennett, l\1. F., Yale, 'g8 Camp, ]. S., Wesleyan, '78 Case, T. G., Trinity, 'oo Cla rk, C. H ., Yale, '7r Coll ins, A., Yale, '73 Conant, G. A., Amherst, '78 Cone, J. B., Yale, '57 Cooley, C. P., Yale, '9 r Cooley, F. R., Yale, '86 Day, A. P ., Yale, 'go Davi , F. W ., Yale, '77 Forrest, C. R., Yale, '65 Freeman, H. B, Yale, '62 Freeman, H . B., Jr., Yale, '92 Gates, A. F., Yale, '87 Goddard, G. S., Wesleya n, '91 Greene, ]. L., 1ichigan, '6r Harbison, Gen. ]. P. (H)
Hicks, L. H., Yale, '70 Hine, C. D., Yale, '7 r Howe, D . R., Yale, '74 Hyde, W . W ., Yale, '76 I ngalls, Dr. P. H., Bowdoin, '77 Knight, F. H., Amherst, '83 IIIatson, \V. L., Yale, '62 Pa rker, Rev. E. P., Bowdoin, '56 Pattiso n, Rev. Harcld, Rochester, '92 Plimpton, H . D., Tr!n ity, '97 Pratt, W. W., Adelbert, '85 Prentice, l-Ion. S. 0., Yale, '73 Robbin , E. D ., Yale, '74 Rowley, A. IlL, Amherst, '95 Ryce, L. C., Yale, S., '86 Smiley, E. H., Colby, '75 Smith, E. H., Yale, 'or Starr, Dr. P. S., Yale, '6o St. J ohn, W. H ., Yale, '91 Taylor, ]. M., Williams, '67 T ucker, ]. D., Yale, '6r Way, C. L., Yale, '85 Welch, A . A., Yale, '82 vVilliams, Rev. H. D., A mh erst, '9 r Woodman, Charles, Colby, 'g8 6s
~nwuatr
.flrmbrr.a of tqr Alpqa (!1.11i (!l.qaptrr ~ Honorary Member, Gen. J o uN P. H ARBISON Davis, C. J., '9-+ Deuel, C. E., '87 Eastman, R. C., '88 Fleming, D. L., '8o Forrester, I-I. T., 'or Foss, F. H., 'or French, G. IT., '92 * Goodrich, 'vV. S., '82 Graff, H. A., '86 Grint, A. P., '8r Griswold, C. S., 'go Hal l, G., '92 Hamilton, C. A .. '82 Hammond, 0. G., '92 Jlolden, S. 1\I., '82 Hopkins, L. A., '97 Horne, C. A., '93 Hubbard, W. S., '88 Humphries, II. R., '9-+ Humphries, A. G., 'o.+ Jewett, D. B., 'oo Johnson, C. A., '92 Johnson, E. C.. 2d, '88 John on, F. F., '9-+ Leaf, E. B., '85 Lecour, J. IT., '98 Leonard, L. L., 'g6 Linsley, A. B., '82 Loomis, II. B., '85 Lord, J. W., '98 Loveridge, li. C., '8o Lund, F . A., '99 l\Iead, R. C., '99 Mitchell, S. S., '85 i\ [cCulloch, W. H., '91 McKean, R. C., '03 l\IcLean, l\I. A., '03 * 1\lcNeil, W. ]., 'or
Altemus, H. B., 'o.+ Anderson, A. H., '87 Barrows, J. C., '8o Barrows, 'vV. S., '8-t Bartholomew, D. \ V., '97 Baxter, I. K., '99 Bates, R. P., '93 Benson, R. A., '99 Bentley, W. P., '02 Benton, W. L. H., '8g *Bid well, L. B., '8o *B id well, W. D ., '8r Birdsall, P., '86 *Bishop, N . H., '92 Black, I-I. C., '8o Bowie, \ V., '93 Brewer, S. D., '82 Brooks, R. H., 'oo Brown, G. I., '88 Brown, T. P., 'oo Brown, D. H., '03 Burchard, J. D., 'oo Burnham, J. B., '91 Bu rt, L. H., 'oo Bu rton, R . E., '83 Cable, J. N., '02 Ca rt\night, l\1. R., '98 Case, T. G., 'oo Chapman, T. B., '83 Cole, l\1. W., '97 *Cook, C. S., '8r Coster, l\I. K 87 Coster, 'vV . l J., '91 Coster, C. C., '97 Cowles, A. W., '8r Crabtree, A., '92 Danker, W. S., '97 * Dauchey, F., '85 â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
66
Olcott, W. T., 'g6 Pedersen, V. C., '9r Penrose, ]. J, Jr., '95 Plimpton, H. D., '97 Purdy, C. E., '88 Ramsdell, ]. E ., '92 Reese, W. W., '95 Reiland, C. G., '97 * Reineman, A. W., '8r Reineman, R. T., '83 Remington, C. H., '89 Rogers, W. ]., 'So Smart, ]. H., '95 Smith, ]. S., Jr., '9-* * Smith, 0 . A., '94 Stockton, E. B., '9r Stoddard, S., '94 Strong, A. W., '94 Strong, C. H., 'or Stuart, A. R., Jr., '88 • Deceased
Stuart, 'vV. C., '88 Thurston, T. P., '9I *Tomlinson, S. L, 'oo Walker, W. D., '82 Warner, W. A., '99 * ¥,Taters, C. T ., '87 Weed, A. H., 'o2 Weed, C. F., '94 Wharton, W. P., 'or Wheeler, F. M., '83 Wildman, W. B., 'g8 Willcox, R. N., '99 Williams, F. G., 'Sg Wilson, H. D., 'or Wright, A. H., '83 Wright, B., '8g Wright, G. H ., '9r Wright, W. G., '9r Wright, F. A., '94
FouNDED IN 1833 AT UNION CoLLEGE
1Rnll of
(!!~aptrr!l Union College New York University Yale University Brown University Amherst College Dartmouth College Columbia College Bowdoin College Hamilton College Wesleyan University University of Rochester Kenyon College University of Michigan Syracuse University Cornell University Trinity College Lehigh University University of Pennsylvania University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin University of Chicago University of California
THETA DELTA BETA SIGMA GAMMA ZETA. LAMBDA KAPPA
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i\flihr flllbmbrr.s ARTHUR l\1UTRSON
BELLAMY
GARRETT DENISE BowNE MORGAN HYDE BUFFINGTON HILL
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HENRY BERNARD CARPENTER PHILIP EvERETT CuRTISS ROBERT Mosu::y EwiNG WILLIAM
BARNWELL EWING
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l\IcALPINE ]OHNSON
'?lfrLLIAM LARCHAR, ]R. EDMUND SAWYER MERRIAM SAMUEL ST. ]OliN MORGAN MORRIS
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GEoRGE DouGLAS
PHILLIPS
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CORNELIUS WAGSTAFF REMSEN WILLIAllf PERMAN
BLAIR
ROBERTS
EDWARD TOWNSEND
WALTER SLATER TRUMBULL PHILIP
TURNER WELLES
70
1J1ratrrs itt 11lrbr J ames P. Andrews, Beta, '77 Rt. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster, Beta. '68 Hon. John H . Buck, Beta, '91 Ron. John R. Buck, Xi, '.62 Clarendon C. Bulkely, Beta Beta, '75 Philip D . Bunce, i\l.D., Beta, '88 Charles W . Burpee, Beta, '83 E. W. Capen, Gamma, '94 Will iam S. Case, Beta, '85 Albert St. Clair Cook, Beta, '89 William H. Corbin, Beta, '89 G. Pierrepont Davis, M.D., Beta, '60 J. H. Kelso Davis, Beta Beta, '99 J ohn C. Day, Beta, '57 Louis N. Denniston, Xi, '02 Leona rd A. Ellis, Beta Beta, '98 Charles E. Fellows, Beta, '56 Rev. Prof. Henry Ferguson, Beta Beta, '68 Samuel Ferguson, Beta Beta, '96 George H. Gilman, Beta, '90 T. Welles Goodridge, Beta Beta, '92 L. E. Gordon, Xi, '90 W ilbur F. Gordy, Xi, '70 lion. 'vVm. Hamersley, LL.D., Beta Beta, '58 lion. Joseph R. Hawley, LL.D., Psi, '47 R. Vv. H un tington, Beta, '89
Prof. Charles F. Johnson, Beta, '55 W. MeA . Johnson, Beta Beta, '98 Frank E. Johnson, Bela Beta, '8-1 Anson T. i\lcCook, Beta Beta, '02 Prof. A. R. i\Ierriam, Beta, '77 Charles Shiras i\Iorris, Beta Beta, '96 John J. Nairn, Beta, '8o Francis Parsons, Beta, '93 Arthur Perkins, Beta, '87 Edward L. Pollock, Bela, '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, Gamma, '96 George H. Seyms, Beta Beta, '72 Henry P. Schauffier, Gamma, '93 Forrest Shepherd, Beta, '92 Arthur L. Shipman, Beta, '86 Lewis E . Stanton, Beta, '55 J ames U. Taintor, Beta, '66 Franklin H. Taylor, Xi, '84 James R. Turnbull, Beta, '92 Rev. Joseph H. Twichell, Beta, '59 Edgar F. Vvaterman, Beta Beta, '98 Lewis S. 'vVelch, Beta, '89 Charles G. Woodward, Beta Beta, '98 P. Henry Woodward, Beta, '55.
71
~ra(luatt
.iltmbtrli nf tqt iltta iltta Q!qapttr ~
*A lexander, H. W., '57 B. E., '70 Bailey, M. K., '79 Baldwin, L. B., '6o Barbour, H. M., '70 * Barbour, H. G., 'g6 Beard ley, W . A., '87 * Beaupillier, A. L., '56 * Beckwith, J. W., '52 Bellamy, R. B., 'or * Benedict, S., '47 Benjamin, W. H., '57 * Betts, J. I-I., '44 Birckhead, J. B., '94 * Birckhead, W. H., '6r * Bi hop, H., '6r Blair, W. R., '75 Bolles, E. C., '55 * Bostwick, H. P., '46 * Bostwick, W. L., 'sr Bowd ish, ]. T., '73 *Bowles, J. H., '6o Boylston, C. W ., '78 Brady, R. McC., '90 Bredin, W. S., 'So Brevoort, E. R., '68 *B rewer, A. L., '53 *Bridge, J., '47 Brinley, G. M., '88 Brinton, P. H . M. P., 'o-1 * Bronson, l\1., '52 Broughton, C. DuB., '95 *B row n, T. l\1., 'so Brown, } . E., '83 Brundage, R. B., '78 Buffington, }., '75 Buffington, 0., '79 Bulkley, C. C., '75 Bulkley, W . H., '73
Bull, F. S., 'gr Bull, W. A ., '9r * Bull, A. B., '59 Burgwin, C. C., '72 Burgwin, J. H. K., '77 Burgwin, A. P ., '82 Burke, E. N., '76 Burrage, F. S., '95 *Cady, D. K., 'ss Cammann, D. M., '72 Campbell, R. M., '78 Carpenter, C., '82 Carpenter, S. B., '73 Carter, I-I. S ., '6g Chase, H. R., '72 Child, C. G., '86 Child, E. N., Jr., '85 * Clark, G., '70 * Clerc, C. M., '45 Clerc, J. F., '43 Coggeshall, M. H., 'g6 Coleman, C. S., '82 * Collins, J. B. ] ., '74 *Colt, W. U., '44 . Cook, S. W ., '02 Corson, D. S., '99 *Cotton, D. P., '7r Cotton, H . E., '74 Craik, C. E., '74 Crawford, J. W. R., '88 * Crosby, W. L., 'So Cummins, A. G., 'sr * Cunningham, J. R., '85 * Das hiell, E. F., '46 Davis, J. H. K., '99 * Dayto n, M. B., '63 * Dewey, D. P., '64 Dickerson, E. N ., Jr., '74 D ockray, E. L., '83
* Backus,
â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
72
Douglas, G. W., '71 Douglas, A. E., '89 * Douglas, M., '46 Dow nes, L. W., '88 Drayton, W., '71 D rumm, T. ]., '74 *DuBois, ]. C., '53 *Easton, G. C., '51 Edgerton, F. C., '94 Edgerton, J. W., '94 Edmunds, C. C., J r., '77 Ellis, L. A., '98 Elmer, W. T., '8r Elwyn, T. L., '92 * Ely, ]. F., '64 Emery, R., '54 Emery, W. S., '8r Everest, C. S., '71 Ferguson, E. M., '59 Ferguson, H., '68 *Ferguson, ]. D., '51 * Fet·guson, S., '57 Ferguson, W., '63 Fet·guson, W., Jr., '93 Fergu on, S., '96 Fiske, W. D., 'oo Fiske, G. McC., '70 Fi ke, R., 'or *Flower, Samuel, '45 *Fogg, T. B., '52 Fowler, F. H., '6r F rench, 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, ]. F., '77 George, ]. H., '72 George, T. M. N., 'So Giesy, S. H., '85 *Gilman, G. S., '47 Golden, H. L., '83 *Goodrich, A. B., '52 Goodrich, E. B., 'o2 Goodrich, ]. B., '66
Goodridge, E ., '6o Goodridge, E., Jr., 'oz *Goodridge, F., '57 Goodridge, T. W., '92 Gould, C. Z., '82 * Greene, F. H ., '82 Greene, G., '83 Green, H. D., '99 * Green, V., '6o Greenley, H. T., '94 *Gregory, H. M., '56 Gwinn, F. Vv., '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 Hickox, G. A., '51 Hicks, G. C., '56 Hicks, ]. M., '54 *Hicks, W. C., '48 Hicks, W. C., Jr., '91 Hicks, DeF., '96 *Hitchcock, W. A., '54 Hitchcock, W. H., '8.+ * Hoff, H ., '82 Holway, 0., 'So Hubbard, E. K., J r., '92 Hubbard, L. DeK., '93 Hudson, R., '71 * Hugg, G. Vv., '62 Hurd, A. D., '77 *Hurd, ]. D., '74 Husband, C. H., '89 Hyde, E. M., '73 Hyde, F. B., '98 Ingalls, F . C., '99 *Isbell, C. M., '63 * J ackson, A., '6o * J ackson, W. A ., '83 *Johnson, E . E., '59 J ohnson, F. E., '84
• Deceased
73
Johnson, G. D., '54 * J ohnson, S. W ., '8r Johnson, F. F., '94 Johnson, vV. MeA., 'g8 Jones, C. W., '8r Jones, E. P., Jr., '77 Jones, W. ., '88 * Kelley, J., '44 Kempe, E. A., '8r Kendal, G. T., '99 Kennett, L. 1\I., '70 Ki ssam, E. V. B., '69 * Kittredge, A. S., '57 Kloppenburg, H. W., '58 * Knickerbacker, D. B., '53 Kramer, F. F., 'Sg * Krumbhaar, W. B., '55 Lanpher, L. A., 'So * Leffingwell, C. S., '54 Leffingwell, E. DeK., '95 Lewi s, G. F., '77 Lindsley, -::. A., '49 Lobdell, F. D ., '85 * Long, W ., '43 Loveridge, D. E., 'so * Luther, R. I., 'go Mackay-Smith, A., '72 . *Macklin, R. B., ' 58 Magill, G. E., '84 Marshall, M. M., '63 Mather, W. G., '77 * McConi he, S., ' 56 1cCook, A. T., '02 McCook, P. J., '95 * McCook, G. S., '97 McCrackan, J. H ., '82 McCrackan, W . D., '85 Mcilvaine, H . R., '04 Mcilvaine, J . G., 'oo Mcivor, . W., '82 Mears, J. E., '58 Morris, B. vV., Jr., '93 Morri s, C. S., 'g6 Morris, F., '64 * Mo rri , J. H., '45 Mowe, W. R., '70 * Neely, A. D., '85
Neely, H. R., '84 Nichols, W. F., '70 Nichols, J. W ., '99 Nichols, vV. 1., 'or Niles, W. W., '57 Niles, E. C., '87 Niles, W. P., '93 Oberly, H. H., '65 Olmstead, C. T., '65 * Olmstead, H. K., '46 Owen, H. C., '99 * Paddock, B. H., '48 * Paddock, J A., '45 Paddock, L. S., 'so Paddock, L. H., '88 Paddock, R. L., '94 Paris, I., Jr., '76 Parker, C. P., '73 Parrish, H., '9r Patison, A. E ., 'So Pelton, H. IT., '93 Penfield, W . D., '62 * P ettitt, W. F., '46 Phillips, C. W., '7r * P olk, A. H ., '53 * Pond, C. 1\I., '58 Potwine, W . E., '79 Pressey, E. A., '92 Pressy, W ., 'go * Pres ton, T. S., '43 Purdy, E . L., '84 * Purdy, J. S., '49 Raftery, 0. H., '73 Randle, C. G., 'os Rankin, 1. I., '04 Remsen, H. R., 'g8 Rhinehart, E . J., '76 Robert , B. C., '95 * Roberts, W. J., '75 Robinso n, E. W., 'g6 Rogers, L. W., '9r Rogers, W . E., '77 Rudd, H. H., 'or * Rudder, W ., '48 Saltus, R. S., '92 Saltus, L., '87 Sargeant, G. W., 'go
â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
74
Scarborough, J., '54 Scott, E. N ., '89 * Scott, J. T., '91 Scott, W. G., '88 Sexton, T. B., '6o * Seymour, C. H., '52 Seyms, G. H., '72 *Shaw, J. P. C., '71 Sherman, S., 'so Short, W. S., '83 Shreve, B. F. H., '78 Smith, C. B., '54 * Spencer, W. G., '53 Stanley, G. M., '68 Stanley, J. D., '77 Stedman, T. L., '7-l * Steele, 0. R., '53 *Sterling, J. C., '44 Stocking, C. H. W ., '6o Stoddard, E. V., '6o Stoddard, ]., '71 Storrs, L. K., '63 Stot enberg, J H., 'so Stout, J K., '70 * Studley, W . H., 'so Sullivan, E. T., '89 Sutton, 1cW. B. E., '99 * Syle, H. W., '67 Syle, L. D., '79 Taylor, E. B., '73 Taylor, E. P., 'oo Taylor, J P., '43 Taylor, J P. W., '02 Tibbits, W. B., '6t Tibbits, C. H., '87 Tingley, G. C., '52
Travers, E. S., 'g8 *Tremaine, C. H. B., '66 *Truby, J. 11., '79 Tullidge, E. K., '76 Tuttle, R. C., '89 *Tuttle, R. H., '46 Upson, A. I., '88 Valentine, vV. A., '72 Van DeWater, A. R., 'or *Van Nostrand, C. A., '77 * Vincent, S., '58 Wakefield, J. B., '46 Warner, B. E., '76 * Warren, S. B., '59 Waterman, E. F., '98 Waterman, F. E., 'or Webb, W. R., '78 Webster, L., 'So *Webster, W. H., '6r * Welles, H. T., '43 Welles, L. H., '64 vVheeler, W. H., 'o2 Whitcome, F. B., '87 vVhitney, H. E., '74 Williams, J., '90 Willson, C. T., '77 * Willson, D. B., '79 * vVinchester, 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
â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
75
FOUNDED IN I848 AT VVASHINGTON AND }EFFERSON COLLEGE
1!toll of O!qapter.n Mu Mu
OMEGA IoTA
PI IoTA ALPHA
CHI
CHI TAU ALPHA
Nu
DEUTERON
THETA
Psr
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Nu Nu
SIGMA OMEGA
UPSILON
Nu
EPSILON.
BETA
.
SIGMA
DEUTERON
BETA CHI
XI DELTA PI ALPHA GAMMA PHI.
Mu
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OMICRON ZETA DEUTERON DELTA DEUTERON BETA DEUTERON RHO
CHI
THETA 0MJCRON DEUTERON RHO DEUTERON THETA DEUTERON SIGMA LAMBDA DEUTERON
Mu
University of Maine Mas achusetls lnstitute of Technology Worcester Polytechnic Institute Amherst College Union College Trinity College Yale University Colgate University Cornell University Syracuse University Columbia College College of the City of New York New York University University of Pennsylvania Lafayette College Lehigh University Pennsylvania College Bucknell University Allegheny College Washington and Jefferson College Pennsylvania State College Johns Hopkins University University of Virginia Washington and Lee University Hampden-Sidney College Roanoke College Richmond College University of Alabama Ohio Stale University Woo ter University Ohio Wesleyan University Wittenberg College Denison University University of Wisconsin
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Mu ZETA
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LAMBDA
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Nu PI DEUTERON ZETA PHI TA U
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University of Minnesota Indiana University De Pauw University Wabash College Hanover College Illinois Wesleyan University Knox College University of Tennessee Bethel College Kansas University William Jewell College University of Texas University of California University of Illinois University of Nebraska University of Missouri University of Washington
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77
wau i\tplla QJqaptrr ~
J\rttbr !1\bmbrr.n FREDERICK BETHUNE BARTLETT WILLIAM FRANClS BuLKLEY EDMTJ ND SAMUEL CARR PnrLil' SAFFORD CLARKE EDWARD LLEWELLYN DuFFEE RoBERT LEROY E.\TON CLARK THOMPSON FALKNOI< KARL HERBERT FENNI J .\J\!ES J1AtUJIN ALLEN
REED
G
GEORGE, Ji<.
GoODALE
HuBERT DANA GooDALE PHILIP THOMAS KENNEllY l\1ICHAEL FRANCIS OwENS HERVEY BoARDMAN VANDERBOGART CHARLES BuRTON
79
VvAt.Sn
~nwuatr ~rmhrr.a Charles Judd, '93 \IVilliam Eugene Conklin, '93 Iadison Brown Bordley, '95 Frank Raymond Young, '95 Arthur Fletcher l\Iiller, '95 George Francis Langdon, '96 Joseph Henry Buell, '96 William Curtis White, '97 Joseph Devine Flynn, '97 Herman E. Tull, '97 Percival Sargent Smithe, '98 Norman Milo Loomis, '98 Charles Andrew Monaghan, '93 Louis Isaac Belden, '9-l Samuel Wilkinson Maguire, '95 Alfred Hallet Wedge, '95 Charles Hubbell Street, '96
of wau
.Alp~a (!I~aptrr
James Walter Gunning, '96 Leroy Kilbourn Hagenow, '96 Percival Watson Wood, '97 Sanford Irving Benton, '97 Albert Dumond Merwin, '98 Clarence Alexander Smith, '99 Raymond Sanford Yeomans, '99 Clifford Knox Wood, 'oo Arthur Paul Kelley, '01 Edward Jarvis King Mason, '01 Harold Simeon Backus, '02 Harry Leslie Howe, '02 William Stewart Hyde, '02 Jacob Alexander Laubenstein, '02 Jame Rogers Veitch, '03 Robert Glenney, '04
111ratrr.a in lllrhr Frederick T. Jarman, Nu Deuteron, '02 R. J. Clapp, Pi Iota, '93 Dr. Arthur B. Kellogg, Mu Epsilon, '90 James N.H. Campbell, Nu Deuteron, '03 Carl W. Davis, Nu Deuteron, '02 Kenneth E. Kellogg, Omega, '93 Edgar C. Lynn, Pi, '86 James W. Gunning, Tau Alpha, '96 G. C. Soderstrom, Omicron Mu, '04 Joseph D. Flynn, Tau Alpha, '97
So
FouNDED IN
6
1895
AT TRINITY CoLLEGE
PHI Psi
Trinity College
PHI CHI
Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn
PHI PHI
University of Pennsylvania
PHI OMEGA
Columbia University
81
i\rtihr
~rmhrr.s
lJAROLD CLJFTON VAN WEELDEN ORA vVILFnw CRAIG B.\YARD QUJNCY 1JORG. N .EOKGE HENRY HEYN \ VALTER BEACH SHERWOOD ROGER I-IE.\TON BLAKESLEE \VJLFRED SPRAGUE PERRY liOMER STUART SAYRES ERNEST
F.
\ VINSTON
CLIFTON CULVE RHOUSE BRAINERu
/
JJ1ratrr5 itt 11trbr F. H. Hasti ngs, Phi P si, '9(5 Carroll C. Beach, 1\l.D., Phi Psi, '9(5 A. M. Sturtevant, Phi P si, '98 H. J. Blakeslee, P hi Ps i, '98 V . F. Morgan, Phi Psi, '99 A . C. H ~ ll, Phi P si, Ex 'oo E. L. Simonds, Phi P si, 'oo E. H. L orenz, Phi P si, '02
'
Addis, Emmett, '99 forgan, Victor For rest, '99 Arnott, Alexander, 'oo l\1oreho use, Frank Stephen, 'or Rice, Harry La ndon, '99 Beach , Carroll Charles, '1)6 Benson, Lloyd Raebu rn , '99 Ri chmond, Deniso n, Ex 'oo Blakeslee, Henry J ones, '98 Rogers, Edgar ~fartin, '02 Brines, l\Ioses J ames, 'oo Rouse, William Herman, 'g6 Buck, Frederick Earle, '98 Sherriff, Herbert Thomas, '97 Buckley, Frederick Dashi els ( h '84), R ev. Simonds, E rn est Leon, 'oo Burbanck, George Graham, 'o r Smart, Charles Thomas, oo Carson, Edwin Schively, Ex '02 Stacey, Everett Eugene, Ex 'or Cleasby, Harold Loomi s, '99 Stewart, l\farshall Bowyer, '02 Colloque, Orrok Paul, '99 Sturtevant, Albert l\Iorey, '98 Crane, J oseph Baird, '02 Sturtevant, F ra ncis Raymond, 'or Derby, Aubrey Henry, 'or Thurber, C hri stop l~er Carson, Ex '03 Eardley, William App lebie, '9(5 Tracy, E ll sworth Morton, 'oo Ensign, F rank Howard, Jr., Ex '04 Tuke, Charles Edward, '02 Gooden, Robert Burton, '02 Van l\1eter, A llen Reshell, '99 Hall, A ma sa Clark, Ex 'oo Wales, J ames Albert, 'or Hastin:;:-s, F rancis Homer, '1)6 Walker, J ohn White, '02 Henderson, J ames, 'o:a vValker, l\lill idge Penderdl ( h) H enry, Charles William, '99 vV alker, Robe1路t, ( h '9r) Holden, George Herbert, 'o2 *vValker, Willi a m Taylor, '97 Kurth, Karl F ra nz F rederi ck, Ex 'oo Wallace, \ Villiam Sewa rd Wyman, Ex 'os Lorenz, Edward Henry, 'o2 Ziegler, Carl Gottlob, '97 ~IcElwain, Frank Arthur, '99 Ziegler, Howard Bell, Ex '03 l\foo re, George Seymo ur, E x '04 Ziegler, Paul (h '72) ~Iorba, Karl Philip, '02 *Deceased
h Honorary
-
FouNDED TN 1776
AT WiLLI AM
AND l\IARY COLLEGE
iRoH of lltttitr!l (!!~aptrrs A lpha of l\Iaine Beta of Maine Alpha of New Hampshire A lpha o f -Vermont Beta of Vermont . Alpha of Massachusetis. Beta of Massachusetts Gamma of 1\lassachusetts Della of l\Iassach usetts E psilon of 1\lassachusett s Alpha of Rh ode Island A lpha of Connecticut Bela of Co nnect icut Gamma of Connecticut Alpha of ew York Beta of 'ew York . Gamma of New York Delta of ew York Epsilon of New York Zeta of New York . E ta o f New York . Theta of New York Iota of ew Yo rk . Kappa o f New York Lambda of New York [u of New York . Alpha of New Jersey Beta of New J ersey Alpha of Pennsylvania Beta of Pennsylvania Gamma of Pennsylvania Delta of Pennsylva ni a Epsilon of Pennsylvania Zeta of Pennsylvania
Bowdoin Colby Dartmouth University of Vermont ;\Iiddlebu ry Harvard Amherst Will ia ms Tufts Boston U niversity Brown Y'lle Trinity Wesleyan Union New York U nive1路 ity College of City of New Y)rk Columbia Hamilton Hobart Colgate Cornell Rochester Syrac use Sai nt Lawre nce Vassar Rutgers Princeton Dickinson Lehigh La fayette University of Pennsylvania Swarthmore Haverford 8-J
'
'
Eta of Pennsyh路ania Alpha of Maryland Alpha of Virginia Alph:t of Ohio Beta of Ohio Gamma of Ohio Delta of Ohio Alpha of Indi ana Beta of Indiana Alpha of Kansas Alpha of Illinoi s Beta of Illinois Alpha of Uinnesota Alpha of Nebraska Alpha of Io wa Alpha of California Alpha of \Visconsi~ Alpha of Tennessee Alpha of Missouri .
Allegheny J ohns Hopkins William and r-1ary Adelbert Kenyon Iari etta U niversity of Cincinnati DePauw Wabash Un iversity o f Ka nsas Northwestern U niversity of Chicago U niversity of Minnesota University of Nebraska U ni versity of Iowa U ni ve rsity of California University of \ Viscons in Vanderbilt University of :-1isso uri
~ria
of Qtouurfftrut CHARTERED 1845
速tftrtfli REV.
T.
REV. J.
Pruidml
R. PYNCHON, D.D., LL .D.
T.
HUNTINGTON,
M.A.
Vice-Pruidmt Sur1lary
REV. SAMUEL HART, D.D. GEORGE LEWIS CooKE,
M.A.
Treasurer
5 Assistant
HARRY CLIFFORD GOLDEN
l
Secretary A ssistant Treasurer
illlltmbtr.s .A!lmittt!l. 1!102 EDMUND JANES CLEVELAND, '02 HARRY CLIFFORD GOLDEN, '03
86
~ralluatr
aw
~ounrary ~tbmbrr.s ~
Ackley, vV. N., '63 Alcorn, E. C., '74 1\lling, S. IT., 'g2 Andrews, C. ?1拢., '84 (h 'g6) Andrews, S. J. (h '67) Applegate, 0 .. '87 * Ash, T. R., '64 Atwood, ]. M .. '4g Bacon, ]. vV., '46 Bailey, :.\f. K., '7g Bakewell, ]., '59 Barber, F. 1\f., 'g r * Barbour, J. H .. '73 Barrows, vV. S., '84 Barton, C. C., '6g Bates, J. f., '72 B路ates, R. P., 'g3 Bates, W . H., '72 * Beardsley, E. E., '32 ( h '.J6) Beardsley, W. A .. '87 Beers, G. E ., '86 Belden, N. L, '88 * Belden , . 1\ f., '48 Benedict, L e LeG., '88 * Benedict, S., '47 Bentl ey, W. P., 'o2 Bent on, ]. R., 'g7 Benton. R . A ., '64 * Bidwell, L. B., 'So Birckhead, ]. B., 'g4 Black, If. C., 'So Bolles, E. C., 'ss Bowie, W., 'g3 Brai nard, ]., 'sr (h '56) Brainard, J. 1\I., '84 * Brewer, A. L., '53 *B rid ge, ]., '47 Bri gham, 1-1. H., '76 Brocklesby, A. K ., '70
* Decca3ed
II H onorary
B rocklesby, ]. H ., '65 Brocklesby, \V. C., '6g Bronson, I., '52 Broughton, C. D .. 'g5 Brown, ]. E., '83 * Brown, T. 1\1., 'so Bryan, W., '75 Buffi ngton, ]., '75 Bulkeley, vV. H., '73 Burgwin, J. H. K., '77 Bt11-rage, F . S., 'g5 Bu rton, R. E., '83 ( h 'g6) * Butler, C. l\1., '33 ( h ' sz) *Capron, A. '45 Ca rp enter, J. S., '7g Carter, G. C., '87 Chapin, W. V ., '78 *Chapman. C. R., ' -17 Chase, F., '52 Chase, :.\I. F, 'g7 Cheshire, ]. B., '6g (h 'g6) *Chipma n, G. S., '78 * Clark, G. H ., (h '63) Clat路k, ]. W., '63 Cleasby, H. L., 'gg Clerc, F. ]., '43 Cleveland, E. ]., '02 Coit, C. W., '82 Coleman, C. S., '82 Coleman, G. P ., 'go Collins, W. F ., '93 *Colt, W . U., '44 *Colton, C. ( h '54) Co nkl in, W. E., 'g3 Conove r, T. A ., 'go Cooke. G. L., '70 Coste r, i\1. K.. '87 *Cowling, R. 0., '61 Crabt ree, A., 'gz
Crawford, J. W . R.. '88 *Crosby, D . G .. 's r Cummins, A. G., '5 1 * Curtis, F. R., 'So Curtis, R. W ., '96 *Curti s, T. W . T ., ( II '58) *Curti s, VI/ . E., '-l3 *Cushing. J. T., '37 ( lr '47) Davies, W. G., '6o Davis, C. ] ., '9-l D ea n, E. B., '93 * Derby, A. H .. 'or Dickerso n, E. 1., '7-l Dockray, E. L., '83 Douglas, G. W ., '71 Douglass, A. E., '89 *D ri ggs, T. I., '48 DuBois, G. l\1cl., '7-l DuBois, H. 0., '76 * Dyer, A., ' 70 Edmu nd s, C. C., '77 Emery, R ., '54 Evans, S. K., '95 *Everest, C. W., '38 ( II '48) *Fai rbairn, R. B.. '-lO ( h '45) *Faxon, E., '47 Fell, J. W ., '89 Ferguson, H., '68 *Ferg uson, ]. D., 'sr Ferguson, S., '96 Fischer, C. L., '6o Fiske, G. McC., '70 * Flower, S., '45 Flynn, ]. D., '97 Foss, F . H ., 'or F rye, P. Il., '89 *Gallagher, J. D., '95 Gallaudct, B. B .. 'So * Gallaudet, T., '45 ( lr '5 r) George, ]. H., '72 George, T. l\1. N., 'So * Giddings, G. W., '49 Gilbert, G. B ., '96 *G ilman, G. S .. '-l7 * Godda rd, F. lVI., '96 Go lden, H. L., '83 Gooden, R. B., '02
* Deceased
Gordon, T. H ., '71 Gowen, F . C., '82 Gower, H . B., '49 Graham, ]., '72 Green, H . D., '99 * Gregg, D., '54 Gregory, H . T., ' 54 Gre nn ell, ] . S., (lr '58) Griswo ld, C. S., '90 Gunnin g, ]. W ., '96 * Hale, C. F., '47 Hall , G., '92 * Hall, S ., '54 Ha llam, G. R., '59 Hamersley, W., '58 ( II '96) Hamilton, C. A., '82 Hamilton, G. E .. '95 Harding, A., '79 Harraden, F. S., '67 * Harriman, F. D ., '45 (lr '96) Harriman, F. W ., '72 Hart, S., '66 *Ha rwood, E., ( II '61) *Hawkes, W . W .. (lr '6 r) Hayden, C. C., '66 * Haydn, T. L., '56 Hedfick, C. B., '99 Henderso n, E. F., '82 Henry, C. W., '99 H erm an n, S., '57 Hickox, G. A., 's r Hicks, G. C., '56 Hicks, ]. M., ' 54 Hiester, I., '76 H ills, ]. D., '78 * Hoad ly, C. ]., '51 Holbrooke, G. 0 ., '69 * Holcombe, D. E., ' 56 H olcombe, G. H .. '96 Holden, S. 1\I., '82 Holway, 0 ., 'So H ooker, S. D ., '77 Hopso n, G. B., '57 I-T or nor, H. A., 'oo Hotchkin, S. F., '56 Hovey, H . E., '66 * Howa rd, H., '91
It Honorary
88
H ubba rd , G. M., '75 H ubba rd, W. S., '88 * H ugg, G. W ., '6z H ughes, I. \V., 'g r Hull , A. S ., '66 H umphri es, R. F ., '92 *Hun t, E. K. ( h 's r) H untin gton, G. S., 'S r ( h 'g8) Huntington, J. T., ' so * Huntington, J . W ., '83 * Hurd, J . D .. '7-+ l-T uske, J., '77 I-T utchins, R. H ., 'go * J ackson, A., '6o * J acol s, E. C., '55 * J ennin gs, A. B .. '6r Johnson, C. A., '92 * J ohnso n, E. E., '59 Johnson, E. P., '65 J ohnson, F. E ., 'S4 J ohn son, F. F., '9-+ J ohnson, G. D., '5-+ J ohnso n, W . MeA ., 'gS J ones, C. 'vV ., 'S r * J ones, L. H., '52 Judd, C., '93 * Kelley, J., '-l4 * Ke r, G., '43 * K erfoot, J. B. ( h '65) Ki ssam, E. V. B., '6g * K ittridge, A. S., ' 57 * Knickerbacker, D. B., ' 53 Lanph er, L. A., 'So L aw ton, E. F., 'g r L ecour, J. H., 'g8 Lilienthal, H., '86 Lindsley, C. A., '49 ( II 'g6) Linsley, A. B., 'S2 L ockwood, L . A., ' 55 L ock wood, L . V ., '93 L oomi s, H. V ., 'Ss L orenz, E. H., 'oz L overidge, D . E., ' so Lu ther, F. S., '70 Mackay, J . ( II ' 54) * Mackay, W . R., '67 *Mallor y, G. S., 'sS â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
II H onor ar y
*i\[a rble. N. E. ( II '6r) i\ [a yo, i\I. C., '93 }IIcCook, A. T., 'o2 * i\IcCook, G. S ., '97 i\l cCook, J . J., '63 McCook, P . J ., '95 tll cC rackan, J. H., 'S2 McElwain, F. A., '99 tlf etcalf, H. A., '66 *M ill er, P. S., '6.+ M iller, W. J ., '92 11itche11. S. S .. 'S5 Moffett, G. H., '7S 1 l oo re, C. E .. '76 Morba, K. P., 'oz 'I orehouse, F. S .. 'o r Mo rga n, vV. F ., '88 * I ulcahey. J., '.+2 (h 'Sz) * i\1 urray, J . B., '62 eely, H. R., 'S.+ Newton, E. P . 'Sr N ichols. W . F .. ' 70 N ichols, J . W., '99 N il es, E. C., 'S7 N il es, W . P., '93 il es, Vl . \ V., '57 * To rto n, F. L., '68 Olmsted , C. T., '65 *Paddock, B. H., '4S * P addock, J . A., '45 Paddock, L. H., '88 Paddock, L. S., 'so ( h 'g6) * P age, D. C. (h ' s r) P a rker, T . H ., 'g8 P a rsons, A. T., '71 P arsons, H., 'S3 P a rso ns, J . R ., 'Sr Pa tti son, A. E., 'So P attison, G. B., 'Sr * P ayne, W., '34 ( h '54) Peabody, F. B., '48 P edersen, V . C., '91 Perry, J. B. '72 * P ettit, W . F., '46 Phair, P . D ., '94 * Pierce, H. H., 'sS Plumb, J . F ., '91
* Somers, J. B. Y. (h '57) *Spencer, U . H., 'go * Spencer, \V. G., '53 * Stevens, S., '65 Stewa rt, 11. B., '02 Stocking, C. II. W., '6o Stone, 11., 'So Stolsenbmg, }. H .. 'so Street, C. ]I ., 'g6 *Studley, W. 11., 'so Sturtevant, A. l\l., '98
Potts, F. H., '68 Pratt, A., '98 Pressey, \ V., '90 *Preston, T. S., '-B Prince, F . VI/ ., 'oo Prout, }., '77 Purdy, C. E ., '88 *Purdy, J. S., '49 Pynchon, T. R., '41 P ynchon, W. 11 . C., 'go Raftery , 0 . II., '73 * Randall, E. D., '92 Reineman, R. T ., '82 Remington, C. 11.. 'Sg Richardson, F . W .. 'S..t Richardson, L. \V ., ' 73 *Rogers, R. C., ·~5 *Rudder, W., '48 Russell, F. F., '85 Russel l, G. W., '3 ~ (II ·sl) * Sands, 0 . A., '87 *Sanfo rd , D. P., '44 *Sanford , H . S .. '36 (II '6r) Scarborough. J., '5~ Schulle, H. von VI/., '97 Schutz, W. S., '9~ * Scudder, C. D., '75 Scudder, E. 1L, '77 Scudder, H., '91 * Scudder, H. J., '~6 (II 'so) Scudder, W., 'Sg Selden, F. C. (h '59) Sennett, L . F., 'Sg Seyms, G. H., '72 Shepard, C. N., '91 *Shipm an, W. D. (h '71) * Short, D. H., '33 (II '56) Short, VI., '6g Simonds, E . L., 'oo * Small, E. F., '7~ Smith, C. B., 's~ Smith, G. W. (II '85) * Smith, H. 1I., '93 *Sm ith , H ., '62 *Smith, J. S., '63 Smith, S. E., ' 75 Smyth, J. D., '7~ • Deceased
Sturtevant, F. R .. 'o1
Tale, W. J., '86 Taylor, E. R, '73 *Taylor, J. B., '49 *Taylor, \V. F., '-1-1 (II 'sr) *Terry, C. E., 's r (h ·s6) Thorne, R ., '85 Tibbits, C. ll., '87 Tibibls, W. B., '6r * Toml'nson, S. L., 'oo * Toucey, l. (h. '46) T racy, E. 11., 'oo *Tremaine, C. H. B., '66 Valentine, W. A., '72 Van feler, A. R., '99 * Van Nost rand, C. A .. '77 Verdcr, D. l-1., '99 Vibbert, A. D., '99 V ibbert, H. C., '68 Vibbert, W. IT. , ' 58 *Vinton, F . (h '5~) \Vales, }. A., 'or vValkcr, D. B., '61 \Varner, D. T., '72 (II 'g6) Warner, 1\L C., '88 * \Van·cn, S. B., '59 \Vashburn, L. C., 'Sr \Vatcrman, L., '71 \Valson, S. N., '82 \ \' cbsle r, L., 'So Weed, C. F., '9~ Welles, 11 . T., '43 \Vheeler, C. H., 'o r Whitcombc, F. B., '87 Whit~. R. A., 'Sr White, W. C., '97
ll H onorary
90
* Whiting, S. M., '46 * Whitlock, H. R., '70 Whitney, H. E., '74 Willia ms, A. ]., '96 Williams, C. C., '71 * Williams, E. W ., '53 William s, F. G., '89 Williams, ]., ~ go * William s, ]. H., '54 Williams, ]. W ., '78 Winkl ey, R. L., '79 * \ Vitherspoon, 0., '56 â&#x20AC;˘ Deceased
W offenden, R. H ., '93 *Wood, H. S., ' 71 Wood, P. J\I., '97 vVoodman, C. E., '73 Worthington, E. W., '75 Wri ght, A. H., '83 VI' right, G. H ., '9r Wright, W. G., '91 Yeomans, E . l\1., '95 Young, C. H .. '9 r Ziegler, C. G., '97 Ziegler, P., '72
__ATH
L[T
ID~~
N~tu fnglanb 3Jnt~rrnll~gtat~ Annnriattnu
At~l~ttr
~
®ftirrr£1 1902- 1903 Prnidmt Vice-P•·esidmt Secrctm·y Treasunr
A. T. FosTER. Amherst F. J. {JuiRK, Williams J . T . MAYN ARD, Da rtmouth T . E. JEW ETT, M. I. T.
l.E.xrruttur (!]:ommtttrr C. S. Ai.LEN, Brown T . E. J EWETT, M. I. T. F. J. QuiRK, Williams
Chairman, A. T. FosT ER, Amherst N . K. ·wiLD ER, Bowdoin J. T. MAY AR D, Dartmouth
IDl1r A£1£1nriatinu Amherst College Bowdoin College Brown University Dartmouth College Massaehusetts Institute of T echnology Trinity College
IDrtutty
Tufts College University of Maine University of Vermont Wesleyan University Williams College
Olnll~g~ Atl~l~ttr
Annnriattnu
1902- 1903 President Secretary { Treasurer
H. L. G. MEY ER , '03 C. F . CLEMENT , 'os
l.E.xrmtilir (!!.ommtttrr Sec.-Treas. T . C. A. A. Football Manager, THOMAS, '03 Baseball Manager, MANN, '04 Track T eam Manager, LAI< CHAR, 03
President T . C. A. A. Football Captain, SvPHAX, '03 Baseball Captain , BI<IGHAM, 'o3 Track T eam Captain, R AI'K I:-1, 'o3
~ ra.buatr
Allbisnry (!]:ommittrr E . K. H UllBARD , '92 w. s. LAI' GFO RD, '96
Prof. F. S. L UT HER, '70 , Clwinnan J . H. K. DAVIS, '99, Treas urer G. E. CocswELL, '97
l .
93
ID~r Qtollrgr At~lrtir Qtups ~ THE LEFFINGWELL Cur- Presented by E. DeK. Leffingwell, '95. To be competed for at each field meeting THE McCRACKA N Cur- Presented by W. D . McCrackan, 'Ss. To be competed for at each indoor meet Held by Van Weelden, '03 THE GYMNASI UM CuP-To be competed for at each indoor meet Held by class of 1902 in 1902 ; by class of 1903 in 1903 THE UNDERWOOD CuP- Presented by at each fall underclass meet Held by class of 1905 in 1902
J.
C. Underwood, '96. To be competed for
THE RECORD CuP- Presented by E . Brainerd Bulkeley, '90 THE RELAY TEAM C uP -Won at the First Regiment C. N. G. games, April 18, 1895, by Sparks, '97, Bancroft, '97. Lecour, '98, Coggeshall, '96 THE WESLEYAN-TRI NITY Cur - Won at Second Division, Naval Battalion, C. N. G., Feb. 21, 1Q02, by defeating Wesleyan in indoor meet THE GEORGE SHELDON McCooK CuP- Presented by Prof. J. J. McCook, March 21, 1902, as a memorial of his son, G. S. McCook, '97. To be awarded to the student making the best record in athletics during tha year Held by Henderson, 'o2 94
IDrark IDram ~L]uab
Captaiu, Jlfanager, W. LARCHAR, '03
G.
D.
RANKIN,
'03
Assistant ll:fanager, M.
H. BuFFINGTON, '04
~qua{l G.
D.
RANKIN,
H. C. VA
E.
s.
'03
WEELUEN,
MERRIAM, '02
R. H. HuTCHINSON,
W. S. T . i\L
W. F. BuLKLEY, 'o s A. R . GooDALE, 'os E. L. DuFFEE, 'os H . G. BARBOUR , 'o6 G. D. BowNE, 'o6 P. E. CuRTiss, 'o6 D . W. GATESON, 'o6 ] . H . GEORGE, 'o6 M. S. PHILLIPs, 'o6
.03
TRUMBULL, SYPHAX,
'03
'03
'03
0 . \V. CRAIG, '03
E.
w.
c.
THOMAS,
'03
G. WHERRY, '04
C. W. REMSEN, 'os
E. F. 95
WINSTON, 'o6
Wherry Jones
Walker
White Holden Hill Henderson Merriam Tuke Syphax Velte (Trainer) Rankin (Capt.) Weibel (Mgr.) Watson 1\lcllvaine Lorenz Thomas Boyd Johnson Van Weelden Duffee Hutchinson Bulkley
1"
z.. r
-..e ...t.t.v..
Annual 3Julloor .tlrrt of tqr IDrmity <!lollrgr Atl1ldir 1\.s.soriatiou March ro, 1903
20-YARD DASH First, Trumbull, '03; Second, Gateson, 'o6. POLE VAULT
Time, 3 sec.
Record, 9 ft. 8 in., Sturtevant, 'or
First, Bowne 'o6 ; Second, ·w inston 'o6.
Height, 9 ft. 4 in.
j Record, 7 sec. Applegate, '87; 1 McCook, '90; Davis, '9~; Brinley, 'or
ROPE Cl.IMB!KG
Time, SJ} sec.
First, Short, '03 ; Second, Bulkley , '05.
STANDING HIGH JuMP
R ecord, 4ft.
Fi1'St, Van Weelden, '03; Secotzd, Trumbull, 'o3.
PuTTING 16 PouND SHOT
87S
in., Baxter, '99
Height, 4ft. 4.Yz in.
Record, 37 ft. 6 in., Ingalls, '99
First, Syphax, '03; Second, Johnson, '03.
3~
Distance,
ft. 8 in .
PARALLEL BARS First, Reed, 'o6 ; Second, Short, '03
Record, 5 ft. 11 }.( in., Baxter, '99
RuNl'ING HIGH JuM P
First, Van Weelden, '03; Second, Bowne, 'o6.
Height, 5 ft. 5 in.
Record, 6ft. 11 in ., Hill, FENCE VAULT First, Reed , 'o6, tied with Phillips, 'o6; Seco11d, Van \Veelden , 'o3. Height 6ft. 3.Yz in.
'02
HORI ZONTAL BA R Fi•·st, Van Weelden, '03; Second, Reed, 'o6
30-YARD Low HURDLES First, Syphax, 'o3; Second, Trumbull, '03.
Time,
HIGH KI CK
~
;..,
sec.
Record, 9 ft., Baxter, '99
First, Van Weelden, '03; Second, Reed, 'o6. 0
4t
PoTATO RACE,
Height, 8ft. 3 in. Record, 29} s ec., Walker, 'o2
First, Van Weelden, 'o3; Second, G~teson, 'o6.
Time, 30t sec .
McCRACKEN Cup won by Van Weelden, '03 Points won by 'o3, ,,
23
'04,
u
,. 'os, " 'o6,
12
97
lUt.sltyatt-IDrittity IDrark .Sttt MmDLETOW , May 10, 1902
IOO-YARD DASH
Rankin, Trinity; Bagg, Wesleyan; Tuke, Trinity Time, 101} seconds
220-YARD DA SII
Bagg, Wesleyan; Rankin, Trinity; Shouk, Wesleyan Time, 23 ~ seconds
440-YARD DASH
Rankin , Trinity; Bagg, Wesleyan; Becker, Wesleyan Time, 54} seconds
H Au--MILE RuN
Betts, Wesleyan; Guernsey, Wesleyan; Nixon, Wes:eyan Time, 2 minutes 13} seconds
MILE RuN
Guernsey, Wesleyan; Lorenz, Trinity; Betts, Wesleyan Time, 4 minutes 52~ seconds
Two-MILE RuN
1eeker, Wesleyan; Guernsey, Wesleyan; Rice, Wesleyan Time, I I minutes 20 .~ seconds
12o-YAIW HuRDLES
Walker, Trinity; Corscaden, Wesleyan; Martin, Wesleyan Time, 17} seconds
220-YARD H UR DLES
.
Martin, Wesleyan; Duffee, Trinity Time, 28} seconds
Two-Mru;: BICY CLE R ACE
R uNNING HIGH J uMP
i Merriam, Trinity; Van Surdam, ( Wesleyan; Randle, Trinity Time, 6 minutes 28~ seconds
Van Weeiden, Trinity; Neeld, Wesleyan; Xixon , Wesleyan Height, 5 feet
R UNNING BROAD JUMP PoLE VAULT 16-Po uNo SHOT 16-PouND HAMMER DISCUS
4Yz
inches
Van Weelden, Trinity; Duffee, Trinity; Nixon, Wesleyan Distance, 21 feet 4Yz inches Eyster, Wesleyan; Fletcher, Wesleyan; Merriam, Trinity Height, 9 feet SYz inches
W. Johnson, Trinity; Corscaden, Wesleyan; J Johnson, Trinity Distance, 37 feet 2 inches Hill, Trinity; W. Johnson, Trinity; Agard, Wesleyan Distance, too feet 3Yz inches Henderson , Trinity; Corscaden , Wesleyan; Inglis, Wesleyan Distance, 97 feet 3 inches
Trinity \Vesleyan
Firsts
Seconds
Third s
Total Points
9 6
5 IO
4
6-t 70
98
IO
!
' IDhtttdy-fir.at 1\uuual 111itl1l may of t~t IDriuity Qiollrgr 1\t~ldir 1\.a.anriatiou SATURDAY,
May z, 1903
~
t
Wradt iEbruts 100-YARD DAsH R ecord, 10 J4 sec. , Strong, '9~ First, Gateson, 'o6; Second, Trumbull, 'oJ; Third, Thomas, 'oJ. Time, 10~ liec. 220-YARD DAsH Record , 22 ~;( sec. , Graves , '92 First, Bulkley, 'o5; Second, Gateson, 'o6; Third, Behr, 'o6. Time, 28! sec. 440-Y ARD DASH Record, 5I sec. , Sparks, '97 First, Goodale, '05; Seco1rd, Bulkley, '05; T hird, Simmons, 'o6. Time, 55 sec. 88o-YARD DASH . Record, 2 min. SJ{ sec., Hutchins , '90 First, Goodale, '05; Second, Hutchinson, 'oJ; Thi1路d , Wherry, 'o4. Time, 2 min. I 5 sec. MILE RuN Record. 4 min . J4~ sec., Waterman, 'or First, George, 'o6; Second, Remsen, '05; Thil路d, Craig, 'oJ. Time, 5 min I7 sec. 2-MILE RuN Record, ro min. J9 ~ sec. , White, '97 First, Barbour, 'o6 ; Second, Hutchinson, 'oJ; T hir d, Wherry, 'o~. Time, I I min . 120-YARD HuRDLES Record, I7 ~ sec. , Walker, 'o2 Fi1路st, Phillips , 'o6 ; Sec011d, Curtiss, 'o6. Time, I9} sec. Record,, 27路} sec. , Leffingwell, '95 220-YARD HURDLES First, Phillips, 'c6; Suond, Curtiss, 'o6 ; Third, Thomas, '03. Time, 31! sec.
JJ1trl!l iEhruta THROWING DISCUS Record, 98ft. 6 J{ in ., Brinley, 'or First, Bowne, 'o6; Second, Trumbull, 'o3; Third, Thomas, 'oJ. Distance, 98 ft. 6 J{ in. PuTT ING r6-PouND SHOT Record, J9 ft. 7 J{ in., Carter, '94 First, Johnson, 'OJ; Second, Trumbull, '03; T hird, Thomas, '03 . Distance, J2 ft. THROWING 16-POlJND HAMMER Record, 126 ft. J{ in., Ingalls, '99 First, Blakeslee, 'os ; Seroud, Short, '03; Third, Thomas, '03. Distance, 86ft. 10 in. RUNNING HIGH J UMP . Record, 6 ft. r in., Baxte r , '99 First , Bo\vne, 'o6 ; Second, Phillips, 'o6. Height, 4 ft. 7 in. RUNNING BROAD JuMP Record, 22ft. 5J{ in . ' Van Weelden, '03 First, Van Weelden, 'oJ; Second , Bowne, 'o6; Third, Trumbull, '03. Distance, 20 ft . r in. PoLE VAULT Record, 9ft. 7J{ in., Baxter, '90 First, Bowne, 'o6 ; Seco11d, Winston, 'o6 ; Tltird, Phillips, 'o6. Height, 7 ft . The Leffingwell Cup won by the Class of I906. Points won by 'oJ, 35 ,,
"
, , '04,
2
H
'os,
"
'o6,
26 6r 99
<
"":;:
""c: " (l <'J
""3 ;!
~
~
""'0
~
,. "
.;·
"3
--- -- -
~ --
--=:-----
~
--- ==----~ .- ~--
~--=-~":::
---.-·----~
T. N. DENSLOW, A ssistant Manager
C . C. THOMAS, Manager
Captain
Trainn·
T. M . SYPHAX
GEORGE B . VELTE
A'f!dicnl A ttmdmzt Dr.
J.
B. McCooK
rn
'< 'tl 'tl,.
,."=-·
X -tj' ~"' (l
L. E .
L. T .
ALLEN GRAiiGE
FALKNOR FACKLER
C.
L.G. JOHN SON PHILLIPS
T RU~IBULL
H. G.
l\IEYER GATESON
R . T.
R. E .
BRI GHAM MERRIAM
GARVIN PERRY
Q. B. CL~MENT
MADDOX L . II.
F. B.
R. H.
SYPHAX BRUCE
VAN WEELOEN TowNSEND WYNKOGP
REED SHORT
Captain for 1903, W. B. ALLEN, 'o~
*.{
'83, s. H. GIESY '84. S. T. MILLER 'Ss, W. W. BARBER '86, W. W. BARBER '87, W. W. BARBER '88, E . McP. McCooK '89, E. McP. McCooK 'go, T. P. TH URSTON
ll1onnrr <naptain.s 'gi, w. C. HILL 'gi, 'g2, '93, 'o4 , 'g5, 'g6,
'en,
'98, H. S. GRAVES '99. G. D. HARTLEY 'oo, J . W. EDGERTON 'or, STRAWBRIDGE W. S. LAN GFORD, Jr. 'o2 , '03, A . M. L ANGFORO
J.
100
A. S. WooDLE W. B. SuTTON w. P. BROWN W. P . BROWN J . H ENDERSON T. 1\I. SvPHAX w. B. ALLEN,
"
~
Van Weeldcn
Brigham
Gateson
Clement
-
Townsend Reed
-
Grange
Maddox Wynkoop
Phillips Syphax (Cap t .)
Thomas (1\fgr.) Allen Fackler Perry
Meyer
Johnson
Garvin
Trumbull Bruce Short
â&#x20AC;˘ IDriuity'.a 1J1ootball 1Srrorb ~ Following is a record of T rinity in Football from 1878 to Games Won Lost
Amherst
s
6
Amherst Aggics Boston Technology . Brown Columbia . Cornell Dartmouth Hamilton . Haverford
9
0
2
s
Holy Cross Lafayette . Laureates. M. I. T. Naval Academy New Jersey A . C. New York University
Games Won Lost
Springfield Training School o Stevens 3 St. John's St. Steven's Tufts 0 University of Penosylvania 0 University of Rochester University of Syracuse 0 Un iversity of Vermont Wesleyan 4 West Point
2
3 0
0
0
3
3
3
1902
0 0 0
Williams Worcester Technology Yale.
0 2
0 0
6
102
0
0 0 0
0 0 0
!2
7
0
s 3 IS
so
70
4
ID'rinity Qtollrgr 3Jutrr.sr~nla.ntir 1J1nnthall 1£ragur
FO LNDED 1900
§;dynnl£1 itt
t~r
lliragur
Hartford Public High School Boardman Manual Training School, New Haven, Conn.
t
Meriden High School Torrington High School New Britain High School
Holders; of cup,
1902,
Boardman Manual Training School
A banner is presented to the champion team of each year, and the school obtaining three banners in three successive years retains the cup permanently
103
IDrintty'.a T!iasrhall Qlaptains
w w.
'67.
拢.
'68, '69,
E. R. BREVOO ST A. BROCKLESUV
'70,
A.
BROCKLESUV
'7l,
E.
B. WATTtl
91'
'72,
B. \V ATTS
'q2,
'73.
E. E.
B. WATTS
'93.
G. D. HARTLEY
'74.
c.
E.
CRAIK
94.
J.
F.
T.
LINCOLN
95路
H.
G.
s.
HEWITT
'75' '76.
R . BREV005T
n. w. E.
'87, , S,
G.
'89.
T.
'yo,
R. M eC .
J.
H.
SH ANNON BRINLEY
L. CttER IT REE
s.
BRADY
GRAVES
H. S. GRAVFS
J.
J. PENROSE
R.
J.
DINGWALL PENROSE
C. DuB. BROUGIITO~
R OGE R:>
'96,
'So,
w. WtHTb: w. N. ELBERT w. J. RoDGERs
'97.
D. C. GRAVES
'8 1,
G. D. H OWELL
'98,
D .
'82 ,
A.
H. vV RIGHT
'83,
C.
M.
K URTZ
'99. 'oo,
J. H.
'84.
F.
E.
JOHNSON
路ss.
J.
'86,
J.
'78, '79.
F.
w. w.
A.
J.
M.
H
c.
WILLIAMS CoGGESHALL
GRAVES
K.
DAVIS
H.
McK.
'o r,
R.
FISKE
SHANNON
'o2,
E.
GOOURIDGE, J R.
SHANNON
'OJ,
H.
D.
104
GLA ZEI! IWliK
BRIGHAM
1IItrrrtors ED\VAHD
J.
MAN ',
Jlfauager
B.
LEE WATSON,
Assistant Jl.fanager
1902 urram E. GooDRIDGE, JR., Captazit GooDRIDGE, 'oz, ~
MANN, 'o+. ~ MADDOX, 'o+,
l p.
MANN, "04,
f
EATON, 'oj, BARTON. 'o2,
HENDERSON, '02, C. BRIGHAM,
'03, lb.
CLEMEI'T,
ALLEN , '04, 2b.
SvPIIAX,
'o3. 3b.
WHEELER,
s. s.
t r. l
拢.
'o;. I. f. I f
BARTON,
f C.
.
~
ilanrhall .搂d1rllulr fnr H1U3 March 28, 路westminster, at Simsbury April I' Princeton, at Princeton 7. Harvard, at Cambridge 8, Brown, at Providence 14, Fordham, at r ew York IS, U. of P. , at Philadelphia 16, Villanova, at Villanova 18, Manhattan, at rew York 20, N. Y. U., at New York 23, Yale. at Hartford 25, Springfield Conu. League, at Springfield 29, Theological Serilinary, at Hartford 105
May
2, West Point, at West Point 7, Syracuse, at Hartford 9, Tufts, at Tufts College 16, N. Y. U., at Hartford 20, Tufts, at Hartford 23, Wesleyan, at Hartford 27, Amherst" Aggies," at Hartford 30, N. Y. U., at New York (in case of tie) June 2, Columbia, at Hartford 6, Amherst, at Amherst ' ' 10, 路wesleyan, at Middletown
Barton
Mann H~nderson
Allen
Brigham
Clement Morgan Goodrich \Cap t,)
l~fgr.)
\\'heeler Syphax
~'! add ox
~ra.ao11 1902-1903
H.
c.
P. H.
V A N \ VEELDEN,
B RA IH N,
Mr. G. B.
'03
Captain
'03
Manager Coach
VELTE
Right Forward
H . D.
BRIGHAM,
Left Forward
E. L. DuFFEE, 'os
'03
Center
E. C. T HOMAS, '03 G. D. BowNE, 'o6 Right Guard
H.
c.
V A N W EELDEN,
Left Guard
T. M.
'03
SYPHAX,
'03
FENN I NG,
'03
Substitutu
V. E.
R EHR,
'o6
c.
F. CLEMENT,
107
'os
K. H.
Rehr
Duffee 'l'homas
Bradin
( ~l gr.)
Van Weelden (Capt.)
Brigham Bowne
Clement
Syphax
Nrw
1£nglatt~
3Jntrrrnllrgta1r 1-Gawtt Wrnnta Annndattntt Williams
B. B. VINCENT LYON
Presidmt RoscoE
PAI~'>E
Bowdoin
Vice-Presidmt Brown
ARTHUR U. PoPE
Secretary- Treasurer
IDournauwnt (!louuttjttrr LYON, Williams PAINE, Bowdoin
PorE, Brown Trinity
BRIGHA~I,
As.soriatton Trinity Tufts Verm ont Wesleyan Williams
Amherst Bates Bowdoin Brown Dartmouth
M. I. T.
wrtntty (!lollrgr wrnnts Assortatton H. D. BRIGHAM S. ST. J. MoRGAN
c.
E. BRUCE .
Prof. BABBITT Prof. LUTHER Prof. URBAN Prof. PERK INS JOHNSON, '03 BRIGHAM, '03 MoRGAN, 'o3 RANKIN, '03 BRUCE, '03 LIGHTBOI:RN , '04
President Vice-Presidmt Sec.- Treas.
HEYN, '04 BuFFINGTON, '04 GosTENHOFER, 'os O'CoNNOR, 'os EwiNG, 'os PHILLIPS, 'c6 H UNT, 'o6 BUHGWIN, 'o6 HAIGHT, 'o6
Collrge Tennis Champioll, H. D. BRIGHAM, '03 109
I902
I
"Xlnb billing- wiubom witb eacb utubiouu prar." AN this be said of us, we wonder? Have we indeed, like unto our often quoted friends the buzzy bees, been toiling and moiling, laying away stores of knowledge against the fatal day when we shall need all our supply, aye, and more too? Ah well, who knows,- now ? The time is approaching, however, and that right speedily, when we shall all have to make answer to this pressing question, and shall in return be informed as to whether we are to moye forwa rd gloriously,- or step back into the oblivion of'o-. For the year is gone at last, a lthough we could not perhaps tell you where or how. Gone indeed, and still we live and flourish, and fail to pay our bills, and loll around the campus and cheer the Professors who g ive us cuts, just as we always have done. In fact, so similar is our present existence to what it was a year ago, Jet us say , that a stranger's eye could detect no change. Yet there are alterations. The year has left its mark:3 upon all of us, and if some find that they amount to twenty or more, then are these peculiarly blessed over their fellows, and should share with us their good fortune. With others, the marks may read, 4.95556 , in which case we will all rejoice that the last figure was not a four. Besides th ese pleasant incidentals, there are the soul marks common to all, some of them memorials of pain or sorrow or disappointment, most of them, happily, reminders of irresponsible, careless, joyful days , when all around was bright, and when the future seemed, as it does still, full of the most glorious possibilities. However, we are wandering, as we often do. We must tell you what really happened, and not what we think about things in g eneral. At the beginning of the year, probably for want of better employment, the upper-classmen looked on genially at the childish amusements of the Primary ~nd Kindergarten Departments. These fought numerous duels on various fields, and, as usual , got nowhere in the end, each having precisely the same opinion of itself as when it started. The culmination of the strife came at the I90~-r906 Banquet, on which occasion the older. children certainly scored one on the infants, by dint of much hard work and cheese-cloth. }'Ieanwhile, attention had been turned in other directions, and we thought to see some football games. What we did see,- but le t us not dwell on this painful III
subject. Suffice it to !"ly that we "fell down," hard, and were unable to rise for some time. Gladly enough we hurried away from the awful carnage of the gridiron to watch the basketball team, in yelling for which we partly forgot our troubles. Winning or losing, we cheered just the same, and, if it lost, assured ourselves that it bad the ability to win if only it Mdn't chosen not to exhibit it. One game there was which we remembered, and which consoled us for many mishaps. Surely it is no small thing for j~st a plain college to defeat a "University" in fair fight, yet that is the feat our team accomplished for us, and if later on the "University" returned the compliment, we counted it no shame to ourselves to be vanquished by so mighty an opponent, and.were, on the whole, well pleased, smiling pleasantly when asked to contribute our hard-earned quarters,- wrested from unwilling parents at the cost of many touching appeals, which it took us hours of arduous labor to compose,- to pay for the expenses of the said team. Yes, we smiled pleasantly,- and forgot about the quarters. In the midst of all this excitement, only it was some considerable time before, our soaring spirits suddenly had weights hitched onto their tails and were brought heavily to earth again. As day after day passed by and the 29th of January approached with lightning rapidity we began to bethink ourselves and bestir ourselves, and for a week or two you would hardly have recognized us in the industrious and earnest-faced creatures who swarmed in the lecture rooms. Gracious, bow we did put in licks ! With what rapt attention did we bang on the words of our dear Prof., to see if he wouldn't disclose something which we might want to know for the exam ! What a scansion of note-books, what a scurrying to look up old references, what a mania for early morning crams! And then, Oh then, the four-hour anguish of the dreadful exam ! The brain-racking, soul-torturing, heartbreaking struggle to answer the fiend-devised questions on that double-accursed paper! Suddenly all is changed. Yesterday these were serious college students, unwilling for an instant to remove more than one eye at a time from their beloved text-books; to路day what are they? Gay. frivolous, dashing young blades, dancing and flirting, singing and playing, you might think they bad never known care. In the exuberance of their joy at the close of the exams , they must needs take a week off in which to celebrate, and in order to do the thing thoroughly, they find it necessary to call upon numerous individuals of the fair sex for assistance, who, it may be remarked, are generally only too glad to help in any way they can. And so the campus is alive with youths and maidens for awhile, and the charms of college life as a whole, and of life at Trinity College in particular, are set forth in glowing terms of eulogy for the edification and amusement of the charming visitors, who swallow it all willingly, and even ask for more. Meanwhile, at intervals, there come a tea, and a german, and another tea, and a performance by the so-called Musical Organizations, and finally, to end the show, there is one grand blow-out, at which everyone shows up in his best togs and dances till four o'clock in the morning, and is then waked up at half路 past seven with a headache and sore feet and an unprepared lesson and no chapel cut left, to find the whole business over and all the disagreeable problems of life to be faced once more. Well, we managed to survive this experience about as well as they ever do, that is to say, excellently, and, once it was over, rose in our might and prepared for further combat. While we were getting ready, rolling up our figurative ll2
sleeves and shaking our defiant running-pants at the enemy, and generally disporting ourselves in the li!re defiant fashion, St. Patrick-路 good man!- furnished us with a pleasant diversion, at which we all took time out to laugh. On this occasion, the infants fairly tied the score that had been made against them last rovember, and perhaps even added a trifle on their own side, leading their hotheaded and blood-tqirsty elders down to the Athletic Field to scrap over a few posters, while a select committee quietly shinned up an electric light pole and gracefully draped the 1906 banner therefrom. No bloodshed ensued. Since then we have been b attling manfully against our numerous and powerful foes, with varying success. The baseball team has several good games on its schedule, and has already made an excellent showing. The track team has as yet had no chance to show what it can do, so we must perforce suspend judgment. Thus at length we approach the end of our tale. You see it has really been a very pleasant year, after all. We have met defeat; we have tasted victory; and the one has not soured us, nor the other unduly inflated us. And with all, we have added unto ourselves countless associations and memories to be fondly treasured in after years, long after our names are forgotten by all save the publisher of the Quinquennial. In a flash, all are over: Dramatics, Class Day, Dance, Commencement; and trunks and furniture strew the walk. In a few days Robert will have undisputed sway ; but let us not separate without a word of good-will. To you who are to be gone only for a season, to return again refreshed in mind and body, and ready for fresh struggles against the merciless Professors,- to you we can say but "Au Revoir." But to you others, who have now done with college days, and are for the first time to face the real problems of life, we would say, "Godspeed ! May all good fortune and happiness be with you ! May yon experience the success you deserve, and may you never be too far away from your Alma Mater to recall with grateful and loving hearts the days which you will one day know to have been the happiest of all your lives,- the days of The College Year ! "
8
113
Inscribed to Mrs. H . M . HOPKINS
~atutiuun
i!fymuun 1\nwtmirun (First Suggestio1t)
Words by Prof. H. M. HOPKINS Trinity College, Hartford
Music by Rev . L . WEBSTER Trinity, 'So
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Nunc iubar solis trepidaus rubescit, Nosque surgentes, animis refectis, Laudibus claris hilares canemus Omnipotentem. Ut Deus nostras studiis diei Roboret mentes, tacitae per umbras N octis ut servet vigilans, fideli Corde precaillur. Praesidem doctum et iuvenes et omnes Rore doctores benedictianis Ille suffundat pater angelorum, Hie et ubique, Semper ut nobis liceat canamus Ad thornum stantes penitus beati, Ut volens sanctos Deitas redemptos Fronde coronet. Herbert M.
llftnlrt.a Dearest, my thoughts of thee inspire My fancy to express In glowing words my路 heart's desire, And yearning tenderness. Accept these simple tokens, Dear, As they are all my own ; Whate'er of merit might appear Is due to thee alone. Sometimes more dear than blossoms rare Are modest violets ; And though my aspirations bear Less bloom than violets, If only thou, with tender thought, And insight, love-inspired, Wilt read,- and know their true import, Feel all I have desired,These blossoms of my heart and mind May, to thy fancy, seem Like fragrant violets entwined, Sweet in my thought and dream. L. H. B. ll6
Ho~kins.
llim ~n 11\rtnin1lrr "~~· UXTREE! wuxtree! All about de big football game! Trinity wins! • . • Wu xtree! want a poiper, mister? Yep. Dey won by tree points. Awful exci tin ' game, mister. I wuz gain' up ter see it, but business kep' me home. I had a big contract on hand, so I couldn't go. Was awfu l disappointed , dough. Wot? me contract? \Vy, sellin ' poipers, o' course . 'vVot der yer tink? Wy, I been at dis yere business fer de last five years, I have, ever since I wuz so l,'gh. Ver see dat scar? Well , I got dat little reminder wen I wuz only in business eight months. I could ha' dropped de job den an' dece if I wanted ter, an' been a gentleman at leisure, smokin' nickle cigars, an restin' in de arms of lu xury. But it wuz de one ting dat helped me out of trouble, wen I wuz in trouble, so I taught I oughter stick ter me ole fri en's, like a fell er oughter, an' I done it, an' now I aint a bit sorry nuther. It's de ole frien's dat is de good frien's, mister. But I wouldn't g ive dat fer no oder business on di!> triestrial globe, see . It's been me mai nstay fer de las' five years, boss , an' I reckon it'll be fer de rest of me natural life. D o yer want a poi per? Tanks. Wot? Don't want no change? Gee! dey aint many fellers dat's as good as you. Dey all wants deir change ef dey has ter wait all night. 'vVy, one feller, mister , wanted a Joinal, and give me a nickle, ant! all de small money I had wuz a ten dollar bi ll an' tree fives an' a single. But he waited, just de same. " How'd I get dat scar? It wuz just dis way, boss. Ver know my name's Jim . Wot ? Ver didn't know ? Gee, dat's funny. Well, it is. Me real name's Jim F linn, but de boys calls me 'Hard Luck Jim ,' fer short, Well, as I said, it wuz dis way. I'd been in de business about eight months, an' it wuzn't flourishin', neider. I had all I could do ter get enough of .de staf of life ter keep me pal pi tater movin'. But I managed ter scrape along some how or t'other. Sure I had a fader an' a moder, too, but all de good dey ever done me wuz ter fire me out of de house. Dey used ter lick me all de time, dat is, de ole man did. But me moder didn't care, so it wuz just as bad ez gittin' anoder canin' .
" But fer me story. I wouldn't have time ter tell yer if dis wuzn't me las' poiper. But bein' ez it is, I can take a little recrashion frum me dooties ter talk ter me frien's, yer know. Well, wen de ole lady fi red me out, I lived by sellin' poipers, an ' sleepin' in doorways an' empty bar'ls, or any old ting I could git a night's lodgin' in widout payin' any rent. I had ter keep one peepl:!r workin' all de time fer de ole man, cuz wen he ketched me, he took all me ready cash an' endorsed checks, an' got drunk, an' den dere wuz de ole Nick ter pay. But, az I wuz sayin', I Jived mostly on de little money I got sellin' poipers, but pretty soon business began ter lag, an' I had ter scratch gravel sometimes, an' stuff me poipers between me pants an' meself ter fill up de achin' void in de pit of me stommik. An' one day , I remember, I wuz hungry enough ter eat carpit and chair tacks, mister, but I couldn't sell a poiper ter save me life. All me regular customers wuz away. It wuz in de spring, yer know, wen most of me regular wuz down ter Atlantic City. I didn't go ter de city dat year, cuz me bank account wuz low, an' I had ter keep me eye peeled on me affairs in W all Street. '' Well, not be in' able ter git any grub dat even in', I taught I would take a walk up de street ter see wot's doin' among me fri en's, de Astors an' Goulds. I went up Broadway.
II7
an' before I knowed it wuz eleven o'clock by me new watch an' chain. I wuz directly in front of de Metropolitan Opra House wen it let out, an' de people wuz comin' out like flies off a dead horse. I hung aroun' fer a while, watchin' a little girl an' her mamma cross de street. I see de kid leggo de ole girl's hand an' run in front of an uptown trolley. She just got acrost in time, but she wuz goin' so fast dat she didn't see de downtown car comin' slidin' along for all it wuz worth. Well. I see it, an' I see she wuz goin' ter be in trouble if somebody didn't jump in in a hurry. So I runs acrost de sidewalk, bein' on de opposite side from de theater, an' grabs de kid just in time ter save it from de car. She wuz already blattin' fer her rna at de top of her lungs, wen all of a suddint I see a great big horse, looked ez big ez an elephant, come swoopin' down us, an' I only had time ter give de kid a shove, wen I fell rite in front of de horse on a hunk of orange peel, an' de fust ting I knowed I aidn't know anyting. "But wen I woke, I wuz in a dandy wite bed, an' dey wuz a half a dozen guys standin' aroun', and a couple of ladies, whisperin' ter each oder. I noticed dat me head wuz achin' ter beat de band, an' me eye was shut, but I didn't say anyting, just kind of mumblin' a little. Den one of de men said dat I would pull trough all right in a couple of days, but he didn't tink I'd ever see out of dat one lamp again. De fust ting r said wen I woke wuz: ' How's de kid?' and ' 'V'ere am I?' cuz I wuzn't used ter fine beds an' company in me bedchamber. Den dey tole all about wot happened, an' de wimmen folks turned on de waterworks, an' called me 'Dear' an' all dat rot, but I didn't mind it mrich, oney me head ached like de mischief, an' I felt all kind of broke up like, "Well, dat's how I got dat dere scar. It looks kind of bad, an' I can't see out of me eye yet, but de oder one does de work just ez well ez two. De people kep' me dere, an' took care of me, an' treated me like Prince Henry of de Sandwich Islands, or w'erever he lives, fer about two months. I wuz pretty well by dat time, an' wanted ter git out ter work again. Dey didn't want meter go; wanted me ter stay an' marry de kid, I suppose, but I wuzn't stuck on gittin' married, cuz I seen Pop an' Mom togeder, an' dey wuz married. So I tole dem I had ter go, an路 after a wile dey wuz will in' an' Jet me go. But dey made me promiss ter call an' see dem again, an' dey gib me dis watch ter remember 'em by. But I didn't need it fer dat. I have di! scar, an' dat's ez good a remembrance ez I want. It'll stay longer dan all de Ingersoll watches in de worl', an' dat's a fact. "Dat's all, mister, an' now I got ter be goin' along, ez I got ter send in me orders fer ter-morrer's poipers. Tanks, mister, fer buyin' me last poiper, I didn't want ter boder yer talkin' so long, but you is de fust person I tole dat story to, an' I reckon it took me a long wile ter tink up de details. Well, good路night, mister, do yer want a poiper termorrer night? All right. Tanks; I won't boder yer any longer. Good-night.
D. W. G
II8
i!Jamrut nf tqr IDq.rhau l!ltrgiu.s for tEtrndr.s Jfnlynirr.s
au~
CHORUS
l
Omnipotent Zeus, and gods of our land, Who have saved our towers with outstretched hand, Mighty preservers ! Shall we sing as they bring glad news from afar How our spearmen stood 'mid the waves of war, Dauntless defenders? Or shall dirges arise as with streaming eyes We mourn for the light of Thebes that dies? For the heroes twain in the fierce fight slain Let the salt tears flow as sad and slow We wail for the dead who have gone below, Equal offenders ! STROPHE
Oh sad the fate that comes, though late, To the sons of CEdi pus, sons of hate ! And to my heart what terrors dart, As Tbyad-wise, with frenzied eyes, I raise my unavailing cries! I raise a dirge for the fallen head, The twain who fought, the twain who bled, Alas! now numbered with the dead! The fateful song of luckless spears Is ringing, ringing in my ears, I mourn with unavailing tears! ANTI STROI'I-IE
Accursed sire ! thy fell desire Brought woes incredible , sword a nd fire ! Alas! the hor ror passing faith! Alas ! the brothers' double death ! And slowly through the city street I hear the muffled marching feet. STROPHE
Ah, true, alas ! the message , for a double-dealing doom Has fallen on our heroes, and I see them borne along The unreturnlng journey, while the sorrow of the tomb Now comes to dwell beside the hearths that once were glad with song. ANTISTROPHE
But, 0 my dearest friends, before Ply about the head an urging And send the black-sailed ship on Adown the stream of Acheron
a storm of sighs, stroke of bands, which the hero lies to unseen, sunless lands ! H~rbert Mill!~r
I-Iopkins.
When the brown, bare earth is await for spring, And a patient look is on everything, And the waters, freed of their icy chain, Begin to murmur and talk again, And the first dim scents from the ground arise Foretelling flowers, and the windy skies Are full with sounds which seem to say That winter perished but yesterday : Oh then, Oh then, dost thou speak thy word, Thou hardu herald, thou prophet-bird, Thou song sparrow, in the treetop heard ! Richard Burton
.. ~till 11llfatrr.s i!tun irt.p 路路 "Still waters run deep." - I t is true; And clear and pure below Flow living springs that only few Are privileged to know. " Still waters run deep." -Far below, Hidden from prying eyes, Flawless gems in radiance glow, Reflecting the light of the skies. " Still waters run deep." - Gn their breast The frailest boat may glide ; No treacherous rocks disturb its rest, Nor restless, changeful tide. " Still waters run deep." -Choose who woul d The shallow, babbling streamRushing along in fickle moodChanging with each sunbeam. " Still waters run deep." - Let who will Trust in the rapid river ; My barque I'll entrust to the still, Deep waters forever. " Still waters run deep." -Yet some day Their depths my soul will sound ; In their hidden springs my thirst allay, And by their gems be crowned. L. H. B. 120
1\ iay ir.ram itt 1Juu.r The balmy breezes breathe of JuneSweet month of roses, and of Love; Softly the fragrance-laden air Steals o'er my senses like some tune Of subtle charm ; -till, far above The bounds of earth, it seems to bear My yearning spirit in a swoon. Once more my hand is clasped in thine; Ijeart to heart, our spirits meet ; And, gazing in thy tender eyes, \Vhere glowing fires, love-kindled, shineI read anew assurance sweet Of constancy worth sacrifice, And promise of thy love divine.
Only a dream;- a phantasy. The fair June day and roses' scent Have mingled with my thoughts of thee And wrought the spell. A prophecy, It seems, of future glad event. And so my soul in ecstasy Still thrills,- and waits in sweet content. L. H. B.
121
J
THE TRINITY TABLET ES'nABLISHED APRIL u, 1868
REEVE HUNTINGTON HUTCII I NSON, 1903
EDWARD JAMES MANN, 1904
Editor ;,. Chitf
Business
HERVEY BOARDMAN VANDER BOG ART, 1903
Mauag~r
CHARLES FRANCIS CLEMENT, 1905
Literm路y Edito1'
Secretary
WILLIAM LARCI!AR , Jr. , 1 903
EDM UND CRAWFORD THOMAS, 1903
Athletics
Perso1zah
PHILIP SAFFORD CLARKE, 1903
TIIEOPHILUS JoHN MINTON SYPHAX, 1903
Excha1tges
hrtercol!~giate
ROBERT WI GHT TREI\BATH , 1903
Collrge aud Campus
122
Notes
1£ibrnry ornmmittrr ~ THE PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE SYDNEY
G.
FISHER, L.H.D.
PROFESSOR FERGUSON THE LIBRARIAN
1£ihrarian WILLIAM NEWNHAM CARLTON
.A!Uii.atant OwEN MoRGAN
124
INCE the date o~ the last annual report there have been added to the Library 2,482 volumes and I ,095 unbound pamphlets, a much larger increase than ever before, making the total strength of the Library 45,130 volumes and 28,185 pamphlets. The most notable single gift of the year was that of the splendid 75-volume edition of f...e "Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents" presented by Mr. George E. Hoadley, of Hartford. Only 750 numbered sets of this most valuable collection have been printed, and the College is very fortunate in possessing it. Mr. Sydney G. Fisher, '79, was the donor of mor e than a thousand volumes of standard literature and history. Numerous other gifts, together with purchases, have swelled the total of acquisitions in the scientific departments, to which a steadily increasing amount of attention has to be given. The following table shows the reference use of the library by months :
wablr of Attrnllanrr 1900-1901
1899-1900
Daily
Month
Evening
,------"--------
June September. October November December January February March April May
Evening
,--- - --"-- - - - - ,
121 So 268 269 ns 271 447 873 393 476
48 93 47 51
126 41 441 363 357 335 391 429 3II 347
3.313*
239
3,141
26 165 26 1 225 148 276 367 181 195 !,844
1901-1902 Daily
28 49 74 82 69 130 I 12 77 64 6Bs 3,141 3,826
â&#x20AC;˘ This total includes Evening attendance.
125
®ffirrrs nf !lustral ®rgantzattnns ~ President RoBERT WIGHT TRENBATH
Manager
A ssis fant llfanagn·
CHARLES ERASTUS BRUCE
PHILIP SAFFORD CLARKE
n
~.ra.snn
1.9U2-1.9U3
CONCERTS December IIth,- HARTFORD (Retreat) January 13th,- WIND SOR February 12th, - ALU~I 1 HALL February qth,- CHRI ST CHURCH PARISH Hou sE February 19th,-COLT MEMORIAL HousE February 27th,- MANCHESTER March qth,- SHILOH BAPTI ST CHURCH April 30th,- SIMSBURY May 8th,- RocKVILLE
127
Leade1路 ROBERT WIGHT TRENHATll
搂in~t
P.
s.
D.
W. GATESON,
CLARKE,
m:cnorn
'03
W. 'o6
C.
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G. H. HEYN, '04 F. B. BARTLETT,
w.
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C. THOMAS,
H.
B. CARPENTER,
TREN BATH,
c. E.
BRUCE, BRADIN,
R EED,
W . LARCHAR,
R.
P. H.
M.
'o6
m:enorn
'04
D . M. H.
'o6
G. GRANGE,
L. SCHWARTZ,
'03
'o6
F ACK LER,
'o6
'03
J. P. J. W.
'03
E. l\I. HuNT, 'o6
'03
'03
GARVIN,
'03
GRAI-IAME,
'o6
H. C. Bovo, 'os
'03
c. E. J oNEs, 'os
T. M. SY!'J! AX, '03
J. 128
H.
GEORGE,
'o6
Bartlett Carpenter
George Reed Syphax Grange
Jones Bruce Heyn
Schwartz Fackler Thomas Trenbath (Leader) Clarke Garvin
Hunt Brad in Gateson
Grahame
Boyd
IDrittUy (!J:ollrgr flatt!tolitt (!J:luh ~ Leadtr HARRY CLAYTo
R. M.
BoYD, 'os
EwiNG, 'os
H . B. CARPENTER, '03
M.
S. PHILLIPS,
D. W.
GATESON,
'o6
'o6
~uitu rs \ V.
H.
P. S路muMAN, 'os
c.
BoYD,
'os
Qlollrgr (@uartrt Fil路st Tenor PHILIP SAFFORD CLARKE, '03
Second Tozor FREDERICK BETHUNE BARTLETT, '04
First Bass RoBERT WIGHT TRE!':BATH, 'o3
Second Bass HARRY CLAYTON BOYD, '05
'iattjo IDrio WILLIAM LARCIIAR, JR., '03
PERCIVAL HA UTREV BRADIN, '03
R . NILES GRAHA~f, '05
130
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loyal itgyptiau ORGANIZED
A.D.
速drttr
1879
'1ft ~nnurary ~rlllh.rr.a Hoffman Miller H . R. Thompson G. P. Ingersoll A. P. Burgwiu J. R. Bacon T. H. Yardsley J. W. Lewis E. F. Burke DeF. Hicks G. S. McCook J. S. Carter W. H. Eaton S. P. B. Trowbridge H. S. Martindale C. C. Peck W. D. McCrackan
R. E. Burton H. Parrish C. C. Trowbridge W. C. D. Willson E. DeK. Leffingwell 0. T. Paine G. E. Cogswell M. R. Cartwright J. II. K. Davis W. H. Boardman C. A. Appleton C. W. Bowman G. H. Hills R.N. Weibel C. H. Talcott
F. P. Johnson F. M. Vermilye R. H . Macanley M. M. Sibley E. C. Beecroft L. G. Reynolds W. B. Sutton R. H. elson E. B. Bulkeley R. S. Saltus H. T. Greenley C. A. Lewis W . W. Vibbert P. L. Carton P. J. McCook
E. Parsons H. G. Barbour J. H. Page, Jr. H. D . Plimpton J. W. Nichols J. K. Clement R. H. Fox Theo Case A. R. Van De Water M. W. Clement R. Fiske G. Brinley A. T. -Nynkoop E. Goodrich C. H. Hills
1!15uitar E. J. Dibble, '04
'lJ)uicimer W. B. Allen, '04 ~ad1but
)l)!lalter!.'
)l))lbawm~
G. D. Rankin, '03
H. D. Brigham, '03
E. C. Thomas, '03
:Uute
Warp
J. MeA. Johnson, '03
W. H. Wheeler, '03 ~ uoie
A. C. Short, '03 Freshmen may come and Seniors may go, But yet there remains the R . E. S. 0.
133
/ ............-
-~t:~,.-;r,. c
IDqr flrllusa ~
~tttinr ~nttnrary ~nritly
Arliht iltmbtrn H. L. G. H . D.
BRI G HAM,
S. ST. J. MoR GAN E. C. THOMAS
MEYER,
Presidmt
Secretmy and Treasurer G. D. RANKIN T. M. SYPHA X
~rabuatr
j\{.rmbrrs
Allan, Edwin Stanton, '94 Austin, William Morris, '98 Bacon, Frederick Stanley, '99 Barbour, Henry Grosvenot路, '96 Barton, Charles Clarence, '93 Barton, Philip Lockwood, 'oz Bates, Robert Peck, '93 Beecroft, Edgar Charles, '97 Bellamy, Robert Bayard, '0 1 Brines, Moses James, 'oo Broughton, Charles Du Bois, '95 Brown, William Parnell, 'or Brinley, Godfrey, 'or Bulkeley, John Charles, '93 Carter, Julian Smart, '98 Carter, Lawson Averill, '93 Carter, Shirley, '94 Churchman, Clarke, '93 Coggesh all, Murray Hart, '96 Cogswell, George Edward, '97 Collins, William L1'rench, '93 Cullen, James, Jr., '93 Danker, Walton Stoutenburgh, '97 Davis, John Henry Kelso, '99 Davis, Cameron Josiah, '93 Dingwall, Harrie Renz, '95 Edgerton, Francis Cruger, '94 Edgerton, John Warren, '94 Ellis, George William, '94 Fiske, Reginald, '01. Glazebrook, Haslett McKim, 'oo Goodridge, Edward, Jr., 'oz. Graves, Dudley Chase, '98 Greenley, Howard Trescott, '94 Hamlin, Edward Percy, '95 Hartley, George Derwent, '93 Henderson, J ames, 'o2 Hill, Charles Hawley, 'o2 Hornor, Harry Archer, 'oo Hubbard, Louis DeKoven, '93 Hudson , J ames Mosgrove, 'o1 135
Langford, Archibald Morrison, '94 Langford, William Spaight, Jr., '96 Lewis, John William, '93 Littell, Elton Gardiner, '99 Lord, James Watson, '98 Lockwood, Luke Vincent, '93 Macauley, Richard Henry, '95 McCook, George .Sheldon, '97 Mcilvaine, John Gilbert, 'oo Morse, Bryan Killikelly, '99 Nichols, John Williams , '99 tl!iles, William Porter, '93 Olcott, William Tyler, '96 Paine, Ogle Tayloe, '96 Page, John Henry, '97 Parsons, Edgerton, '86 Pearce, Reginald, '93 Peck, Carlos Curtis, 'o2 Pelton , Henry Hubbard, '93 Penrose, John Jesse, Jr., '95 Prince, Frederick Welles, 'oo R emson, Henry Rutgers, '98 Reynolds, Lloyd Gilson, '98 Rich, Earnest Albert, '99 Schutz, Walter Stanley, '9~ Schwartz, David Louis, 'oo Sparks, William Albert, '79 Strawbridge, John, '95 Taylor, Charles Edward, '94 Vibbert, Aubrey Darrell, '99 Vibbert, William Welsh, '94 Wainwright, Jonathan Mayhew,'95 Weed, Charles Frederick, '94 Weibel, Richard Nicks, 'o2 Wheeler, Charles Hathorn, 'or Wheeler, William Hardin, 'o2 Willson, Wm. Crosswell Doane, '93 Wilson , George Hewson, '93 Woffenden, Richard Henry, '93 Woodle, Allan Sheldon, '99
I
,...r;)路
, .. {/
'
. .~ .f
t
..,..
\
/
/
I
•
•
•
•
• •
•••
'57 Receiver, G. R. HALLAM, '59
Presenter, W . H . BENJAMIN. '57
'5!1 lnveniam viam aut faciam Receiver, W. S. CoGSWELL, '6 1 Presenter, G. R . HALLAM, '59
'.61 Per aspera ad astra Receiver, N. D. DAYTON, '63 Presenter, W. H. WEBSTER, '61
'.63 ~e
tentes aut perfice Presenter, R . F. GooDWIN, '63 Receiver, C. W. MuNRO, '65
'.65 Facta non verba R eceiver, RoBERT SHAW, '68 Presenter, H. G. GARDNER, '65
137
'liS Semper crescens Prese nter, F. L . NORTON, '68
R eceiver, E. V. B. KISSAM, '69
'li!l Prese nter, JACOB LE ROY, '69
Nunquam non paratus Receiver, D. P. CoTTON, '71
路n Nulla vestigia retrorsum Presenter, WILLIAM DRAYTON, ' 71
Receiver, F. 0. GRANNIS, '73
' 73 AlEv aaryi<> Presenter , C. E. WooDMAN, '73
Receiver, C. E . CRAIK, '74
'74 Presenter, R. M EDW ARDS, '74
R eceiver, H. V. RuTHERFORD, ' 76
'7li Inservit honori Presenter, C. E. MoORE, '76
Receiver, W. C. BLACKMER, '78
'78 'Ave a;ea-BE Presenter,
J.
D. HILLS, '78
R eceiver, D. L . FLAMING, 'So
路so Pre Presenter, W. R. LEAKEN, 'bo
Receiver, A. P. BuRGWIN, "82
'82 Presenter, A. P. BuRGWIN, '82
Respice finem R eceiver, S. H. GIESY, '85
Presenter, A. D . NEELEY, "85
Duris non frangi R eceiver, G. S. WATERS, '87
'85
P re
' 87 Multa in dies addiscentes Receiver, E. C. JoHNSON, 2d, '88
P resenter, A. H. ANDERSON , '87
'88 Per angusta ad augusta Receiver, E. M P. McCooK, 'go Prese!lter, E. C. JoHNSON, 2d, '88
·go Presenter,
'r. A . CoNOVER,
Semper agens aliquid Receiver, I. D. RussELL, 'g2
'go
'92 To ICaA.ov
cptA.ov
Receiver, F. F. JoHNSON, 'g~
Presenter, G. HALL, '92
'94 Agere pro viribus Receiver, Presenter, J . W. EDGERTON, '94
J.
STRAWBRIDGE, '95
'95 En avant I Receiver, G. E. CoGsWELL, 'g7
Presen ter, E. P. HAMLIN, '95
'96 L7r a pTa v
€A.axE<>
TavTa l' ICo<rp.EL
Receiver,
Presenter ,
'99 Presenter,
Fortiter, fideliter, feliciter Receiver, ----------------------
'01 Presenter, -
N ovus ordo saeclorum Receiver,
'04 Tpo7roc;
OCICaLOc; ICTijp.a np.ulJTa T ov
Keepers of the Lemon Squeezer 139
WALTER SLATER TR UMBU LL, RICHAR D NILES GRAHAM,
P residmt
Sartfary mzd Trmsttt er
~rmhrrs P.
H. BRADI N, .03
c . F.
CLE\IENT, 'os
H.
D.
R. M.
E w ll\ G, 'os
BRIGHAM, '03
R. H. HuTCHINSON , '03
R. N. GRAHAM , "os
J. MeA. J o HN soN, ' o 3 A .
c.
SHORT, '03
C.
E.
J.
W . O 'Co NNo R, 'os
W. S . TRUMBU LL , '03
c. w .
w.
P.
B. ALLEN, '04
M. H. B UFFINGTON, '04
RFM SEN, 'os
T. WELLEs, 'os
C. B. WY NKOOP, '05
First Germall
R.
SecotLd Germ an
R. M.
N. GRAHAM
EwiNG
Tllird German
w.
B. ALLE N
Fourth Germmz
P.
T. WELLES
Fiftlt German
F. P. H.
Six th German
GosTEN H OFER, 'os
C.
J.
w.
O'CONNOR
C. W. REMSEN M . H . B uFFINGTON C. B . WYNKO OP
E.
CLEME NT
C.
BR ADIN
A. C . SHORT
140
GOSTENHOFE R
<!Hprb ID'riutty
~trnum
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY lOTH L ead~rs
M.
W. B . ALLEN
H . B UFF IN GTON
O!olltgt Wta WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY li T H, IN AL UMNI H ALL, FROM
~Itt. iSaujo.
4
TO
6
P.M.
aub :!llltauboliu O!luh.s. follobttb by inuring THURS DAY , FEBRUARY 12TH
3Juuior Jromtuabt FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13TH
1Juntor Jromrnabr GIVEN BY THE CL AS
OF 190~
illommittrr Chair111all Sardary and Treasttrer
MoRGAN HYDE BOFFINGTON, EDWARD }AMES l\lANN, WALTER BEST ALLEN
FREDERICK BETHUNE BARTLETT
PHILII' LEWELLYN LI GHTBOURN
BAYARD QuiNC Y M o RGAN
WILLIAM GEORGE WHERRY
J atronl'!1!11'!1 ::llrs. L. B. Barbour Mrs. J. L. Barbour Mrs. C. C. Beach Mrs. G. W. Beach Mrs. M. T. Bennett Mrs. Arthur Bosanko Mrs. R. H . Buell Mrs. F . Bushnell Mrs. R. H. Chapman Mrs. T. B. Chapman Mrs. J. R . Claghorn l\Iiss Mary Clark l\Irs. Samuel Colt Mrs. R. W. Cutler Mrs. F. W. Davis l\Jrs. P. Davis l\Irs. G. H. Day Mrs. C. L. Edwards Mrs. R. G. Erwin l\f rs. J. Evans Mrs. Henry Ferguson Mrs. C. C. Goodrich Mrs. Francis Goodwin Mrs. J. L. Greene l\Irs. E. B. Hatch Mrs. H. Havirland l\Irs. E. C. Hilliard Mrs. E . B. Hooker Mrs. H . M. Hopkins l\Irs. F. L. Howard Mrs. W. W. Hyde l\Irs. C. B. Ingraham Mrs. T. M. Lincoln
Mrs. F. S. Luther Mrs. L. P. W. Marvin Mrs. \V. R. Matson Mrs. J. J. McCook Mrs. A . R. Merriam frs. J. B. Moore Mrs. W. D. Morgan Mrs. W. G. :\forgan Mrs. Burton Parker Irs. J. D. Parker l\Irs. Robert Parker Mrs. Henry Perkins Miss Phelps l\Irs. W. H. Post l\Irs. W. H. Post, Jr. Mrs. H. S. Redfield l\Irs. R . B. Riggs Mrs. George Rye Roberts l'l'I rs. Robeson Mrs. Edward Robinson Mrs. l\Iary R. Hoot Mrs. A. P. ~age l\Irs. F. Sampson Mrs. R.N. Seyms Mrs. W. C. Ski1mer 1Irs. G. W. Smith Mrs. S. T. St. John Mrs. B . R. Stillman Mrs . E . Strong Mrs. l\1. P . Taylor .l\'Iiss Ada Taylor Mrs. l\I. H. Whaples Mrs. P. H. Woodward
IDrintty O!nllrgr ilmtsninnary
~nrirtu
Fo uNDED 1832
" Pro Christo
d
ecclesia."
<!tlrri!ltma!i IDrrm 1902 0 . w. H. C. W. B. C.
J.
Pruidmt
CRAIG, '03
Vice- Pruidmt
GoLDEN, '03
&cretary
RoBERTs, 'os
Treasurer
H ARRIMAN, '05
H. K. B.
OGLE,
of Trinity Church
Chaplaitt
IDrittity IDrrm 190.3 H. C. GOLDEN, '03 C. E. JONES, '05 W. B. ROB ERTS, '05 0 . W . CRAIG, '03 H . K. B. OGLE , of Trinity Church
President
0
10
Vice-Pruidmt Secretary Treasurer Chap!aitt
145
~tltd
Jrrarqrrn at IDrtuity Qlollrgr Qtqaptl H102- 1903
1902
THE REv. GEoRGE McCLELLAN FISKE, D.D. Rector of St. Stephen's Church, Providence, R. I.
Oct.
10.
Nov.
'9.
Dec.
14.
THE RT. R Ev. FREDERICK BuRGEss, D. D. Bishop of Long Island
Jan.
18.
THE REV. \ . H. VIBBERT, D.D. Vicar of Trinity Chapel, New York city
Jan.
25.
THE RT. R Ev. CHAUNCEY B. BREWSTER, D.D. Bishop of Connecticut
Feb.
8.
THE REv. J. HousTON EccLESTON, D.D. Rector of Emmanuel Church, Baltimore, Md.
1903
THE RT. REV. ALEXANDER H. VI TON, D.D. Bishop of Western Massachusetts
March
22.
THE REV. WALTON W. BATTERSHALL, D.D . Rector of St. Peter's Church, Albany, N. Y.
April
26.
THE REv. G. BRINLEY MoRGAN Rector of Christ Church, New Haven, Conn.
May
31.
THE Rr. REv. BoYD VINCENT, S.T.D. Bishop-Coadjutor of Southern Ohio
The Special Preachers spend a part of Saturday and the whole of Sunday at the College.
IDrtutty Qtollryr Qtl1aprl ~ PRESIDENT SMITH,
®r~rr
Chaplain
of .§rrbtr.ra VOLUNTARY
OBLIGATORY
Sunday
Daily Morning Prayer, 8:30 A. M.
Holy Communion,
A sit Wedmsday: 9.15 A. M. Sunday: 9.15 A.M. Ascension Day: 8.30 A. M.
Evening Prayer,
R. W.
Lmt-Daily 11.55 A . M. (Litany) Tlwnksgiving Day: 10.30 A.M.
TRENBATH, '03,
P1·umtor
'IDecani
<tantorill
CLARKE, '03 BRADIN, '03 CARPENTER, '03 HEYN, '04 }ONES, '05 DuFFEE, 'os
TRENBATH, '03 THOMAS, '03 SYPHAX, '03 GARVIN, '03
Bovn, 'os GATESON, REED 'o6
'o6
C.
PROF. H. M. HoPKINS, Organist C. BRAINERD, 'o6, Assistant Orgmlist
<tbapel 0. W.
8 A. M. 5 P. M.
~ onitor!l H. B. VANDERBOGART, '03
CRAIG, '03
147
ยงtu!lrut.g~
Sept.
Qtalru!lar (Uunffirial)
I9.
Syphax, 'o3, looks at Football Team, and says we shall beat Yale this year.
20.
Vanderbogart, '03, says no more girls for him.
22.
Craig, '03, shows up with a moustache.
23 . Goodale, '03, comes back with a new bug.
"
Oct.
Nov.
24.
Van Weelden, '03, comes back with a new joke. Clarke, 'o3, comes back with a new tongue (old one worn out).
25.
Everyone else comes back. of Freshmen.
26.
Craig takes off his moustache. Rain takes color out of it, and, incidentaJly, spoils bulletin rush.
27.
First Football game of season, Trinity vs. Yale. fear of offending Yale.)
29.
Push rush won by Freshmen.
First chapel, and first official appearance
(Score withheld for
Beer rush a tie.
2.
Psychology class serenades Prex. "Oh, wouldn't he ramble?" Class requested to serenade Prof. Luther.
4.
Trinity vs. Springfield Y. M. C. A. Training School. up old scores.
8.
Underclass football game. either.
Let us not rake
Nobody lost anything; or won anything,
II.
Matriculation: new students perjure themselves to obey college laws. Underclass Field Day won by 1905, 23 ~ - r2 ~ . Trinity football team goes to West Point.
IS.
I906 wins at baseball, 8- s. N. Y. U. football team comes to Trinity.
25.
Wesleyan football team comes to Trinity.
8.
Challenge to a debate received from Bates College. I49
Trinity accepts.
Nov.
Dec.
IS.
Freshman-Junior banquet,- five Freshmen unwillingly sport Princeton colors.
27.
Resolutions taken on the death of Adams.
I2.
Senior banquet in E. Hartford,- no beer.
I9.
Syphax petitions Faculty. I 1'. M. Prof. Luther interviews Syphax.
23.
Clear the way for Santy Claus!
'03.
Jan.
6.
" 6-25.
Feb.
Apr.
Work(?) begins again. Nothing doing.
All noses ground ..
25 .
Midnight oil begins to burn.
29路
Agony commenced.
6.
Agony relieved ! ! !
IO.
All<l> Tea. '04 German.
II.
College Tea.
12.
Concert of musical clubs.
I3.
Junior Ball commences at 9
14.
Junior Ball ends at 4.30 A. M. College body retires to rest at 5 A.
P. M.
M.
IS .
College body awakes at-
IO.
Indoor meet.
I7.
Debate at Lewiston, Maine, with Bates College.
24.
Contest for Whitlock Prizes in Alumni Hall.
A. M.
Several records stand intact,- never touched.
No seats reserved.
Apr. 8-20. Easter recess brings relief. May
2.
Outdoor meet.
No comment necessary.
June 9-I9. Closing death-struggle. 22 .
Class-Day. Class-Day dance in evening, with free lunch attachment.
24.
CoMMI'NCEMENT.
"All over ! "
15Ll
Wrtnity 1ÂŁtmrrtrks A Trinity student named Bradin Said, "Notice the mold I am made in." Said his f.-iend, "When you're dressed You appear at your best; But, suppose you attempt to go wadin' !"
There once was a student named Heyn Who went into commons to deyn. When he came out he said, As be smote his chum's head, "My pickles ! They served them in weyn! "
A student who answered to Golden, Remarked, " See all the prizes l 've holden." But the air filled with cries, For they said, " What's a prize ? By gracious ! this man is a bold 'un ! "
One who went by the surname of Bruce Said, "This strenuous life is no use. If I ever reach home I'll never more roam, But live the life of a recluse.''
A fellow whose name is Bill Wherry Was as beautiful as be was merry. But he lost the two-mile, Which stirred up his bile, And we fear we shall have him to bury.
There's a well-known Trinity guy Who's just a bit too fond. of puy. One day, for a bluff, He ate ten , a quant. suff., And the doctors all fear he will duy .
A young man whose surname is Trumbull Is built with a nature so humbull That, though oft he received A goose-egg, and was grieved, It is said he would not even grumbull.
There once was a Trinity bloke Whose parents forbade him to smoke. So be bought cigarettes, Had "D. T 's " for his pets, And now they are sorry they spoke.
A pitcher who might have bee n Grange, When a game wa s on, once muttered, "Strange ! I could do nothing finer Than catch a hot liner, But it always seems out of my range ! Yes, no one could be bounder T o stop a swift grounder, But it always seems out of my range ! Oh , so often I try For to land a nice fly, But it always seems 路out of my range, range, range, Oh , it always seems out of my range !"
Wqt t1nnorary 1J1ratrrnity of il(appa ~rta
Jqi
FouNDED IN 1776 AT MARY AND WILLIAMs CoLLEGE
ALPHA OF GREAT BRITAIN
Trinity College, Cambridge
ALPHA OF IRELAND
Trinity College, Dublin
A LPHA OF FRANCE
Ecole de Beaux Arts, Paris
BETA OF FRANCE
Emynxt University
ALPHA OF MASSACHUSETTS
Smith College
BETA OF MASSACHUSETTS
Wellesle y College
GAMMA OF MASSACHUSETTS
Harvard Annex
ALPHA OF Co NECTI CUT
Trinity
BETA oF CoNNECTICUT
Wesleyan University
ALPHA OF NEw YoRK
Wells College
BETA oF NEw YoRK
Vassar
GAMMA OF NEw YoRK
Sage College, Cornell University
DELTA OF NEW YORK
Zymtba College
EPSILON OF NEW YORK
Blypqksm University
ZETA OF NEW YORK
Dnjlucix Institute
ETA oF NEw YoRK .
Qvltjmin
THETA oF NEw YoRK
Lytnqbmp Atljo
I oTA OF NEw YoRK .
Combinojint
ALPHA OF PENNSYLVANIA
Bryn Mawr
BETA OF PENNSYLVANIA
Nowhereatal
BETA OF GERMANY
Heidelberg
ALPHA OF RUSSIA
University of Mskovitchjski
ETA OF CHINA
University of Shanghai
OMEGA OF JAPAN
University of Tokio
0MIKRON OF THE PHILIPPINES
University of Manila
153
l\lpqa of Qtonnrrtirut CHARTERED 1889
G. D.
Prtside1lt
RANKIN
W. S.
TRUM BULL
Via-President
H. B.
CARPENTE R
Secretary and T r easurer
(ltla.s.s of 1903 J.
P.
GARVIN
T. M.
SYPHAX
154
c.
E.
BRUCE
' Nee te pomiteat cala11lO trivisu labrllum
185.6 il(~~v~rs uf tl1~ Jip~ uf J~ar~ tul1us~ Nam~s arr <!rut uu tlr~ i!Jux H. M. Gregory, 's6 S. McConihe, 'so H . W. Kloppenburg, 'sS J. E. Mears, 'sS T. B. Sexton, '6o W . H . Tibbits, '6r L. K. Storrs, '63 N. B. Dayton, '63 G. M. Stanley, '6S H. S. Carter, '69 H. Van B. Kissam, '69 B. E. Backus, '70 J . K. Stout, '70 W. Drayton , '71 E. P . Cotton, '71 G. C. Burgwin, '72 J. T. Bowditch, '73 C. E. Craik, '74 T. L. Stedman, '74 H. E. Whitney, '74
W. R. Blair, '7S W. J. Roberts, '7s E. N. Burke, '76 B. E. Warner, '76 W. E. Rogers, '77 B. F. H. Shreve, '78 0. Buffington, '79 0. Holway, 'So C. Carpenter, 'S2 J. R. Cunningham, 'Ss C. G. Child, 'S6 C. H. Tibbits, '87 F. B. Whitcomh, 'S7 J . W . R. Crawford, â&#x20AC;˘sa L . H. Paddock, '88 E. N. Scott, 'S9 E. B. Bulkeley, '90 G. W. Sargent, '90 T. L. Elwyn, '92
T . H. Yardley, '92 L. D. Hubbard, '93 G . D. Hartley, '93 F. C. Edgerton, 94 H. T. Greenley, '94 F. S. Burrage, '9s C. DuB. Broughton,'9s DeF. Hicks, '96 E. W. Robinson, '96 E . F. Waterman, '9S H. R. Remsen, '98 J. W. Nichols, '99 J . H . K. D avis, '99 J . G. Mcilvaine, 'oo E. P. Taylor, Jr., 'oo R. Fiske, 'o1 H. H. Rudd, 'or S. St. J. Morgan, 'o3 G. D. Rankin, '03
G. D. Rankin, '03
S. St. J. Morgan, '03 ISS
[As every member voted for himself, no officers were elected.)
fttrmhrr.s
c.
R. N. GRAHAM, 'os J. W. O'CoNNOR, 'os
E. BRUCE, '03 H. D. BRIGHAM, '03
i.'lnttnrary filitrmhrr 0MAR KHAYYAM
~
ID4r A. 1J1.
1Jj.
or the Order of the Stave and Hoop Germmzi bdlacissimi et j'n·risimi sun! Patron Saint: CARRIE NATION
g,taur fttrmhrr.a 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.
"BuNNY" BRUCE .. BILL .. LARCHAR '' HIGH " MEYER "MuNs" TowNsEND ••BoB" EwiNG "MAcK" JoHNSON "SAM" MORGAN ''DuG" RANKIN
i!;nnp fttrmhrr.a Chief Chaser . . Queen of the May Pole
"BRICK .. BRA DIN " PAT .. GARVIN
§np4nmnrr lining Qlluh FOUNDED BY THE CLASS OF
Q5ntlluntr
'99
ON FEBRUARY 15,
1897
~rnthrrn
W. B. Allen, 'o4 P. L. Barton, 'o2 H. S. Bradfield, 'o2 J. W. Bradin, 'oo P. H. Bradin, 'o3 H . D. Brigham,'o3 W. P. Brown, 'oi D . H. Browne, 'o3 T. P. Browne, Jr., 'oo C. E. Bruce, Jr., 'o3 M. H. Buffington, 'o4 S. H. Clapp, 'o4 M. W. Clement, 'o• D. S. Corson, '99 J. H. K. Davis, '99 '1". N. Denslow, 'o4 E. J . Dibble, 'o4 W. H. Eaton, '99 ] . D. Evans, 'o•
R. Fiske, 'ot R . H. Fox, 'oo S. R. Fuller, Jr., ' oo H . McK. Gla1.ebrook ,'oo E . B. Goodrich, 'oz E. Goollridge, Jr., 'o2 H. D. Green, '99 1\I. G. Haight, 'oo C. B. Hedrick, '99 A. Henry, 'o3 C. H. Hill, 'o• W . C. Hill, 'oo H. A. Hornor, 'oo J. M. Hudson, 'o • R. H. Hutchinson, '03 D. B. Jewett, 'oo J. MeA. Johnson, 'oJ G. T. Kendal, '<JQ
W. J. McNeil, 'o• E. H. Madd ox, 'o4 ]. H. Maginnis, 'o2 H . L. G. Meyer, 'o3 S. St. J. Morgan, 'o3 B. K. Morse, '99 ] . W. Nichols, '99 A. H . Onderdonk, '99 H. C . Owen, '99 C. C. Peck, '02 R. E. Peck, 'o• F. W . Prince, 'oo
G. D. Rankin, 'o3 E. A. Rich, '99 H. H. Rudd, 'o• D. L . Schwartz, 'oo A. C. Short, ' o3 E. K. Sterling, '99 W. B. Sutton, '99 J. P. W. Taylo r, 'o2 H. E. Townsend, 'o4 W. S. Trumbull, 'o3 A. R. Van de Water, 'o• R. B. Van Tine, 'o4 A. D. Vibbert, '99 J. M. Walker, 'oi R. Na Weibel, 'o2 C. H. Wheeler, 'oz H. R. White, 'o• H . D. Wilson, Jr., 'oi
C. F. Clement R. M. E wing
C. E. Gostenhofer C. W . R e msen
C . M. Rhodes W . P . Stedman
H. L. Watson C. B. Wyn koop
W . Larchar, Jr., 'o3 P. L. Lightbourn, 'o4 E. G. Littell, '99 H. R. Mc ilvaine, 'o4 ]. G. Mcilvaine, 'oo P. L. McKeon, '04
157
1Juuior 1J1rrn4man TSauqurt l904 ftom l906 NovEMBER 15TH, 1902.
TJiauqttd at tqr :Llla.s.sa.sntt ~ptingfiellJ, ~a~~.
wuantn L.
Toastmaster
HERMAN
I 904 . The College
OwEN MoRGAN
Athletics
HERMAN E. T OWNSEND
Euw ARD
J.
SCHWARTZ
MANN
The Sop!ts
EDWARD H. MADDOX
The Facu lty
BAYARD
Advice to the I 906
w.
Fresh1Jte~t
,
Q.
MoRGAN
B. ALLEN
WI LLIAM G. WHERRY
C!!ununillrr ELMER M. H uNT, GARRETT
D.
Chairma"
BowNE
J AMES S. HINE OwEN M oRGA •
:!larnqaLs
Qtnll~g~
~ 1836
PLINY A. JEWETT
1869
GEORGE E . ELWELL
1837
ALBERT DODD
1870
D. PAGE COTTON
1838
GEORGE W. BEERS
1871
J O HN
1839
THOMAS T. GuiON
1872
RussELL MuRRAY
1840
C . B. VARLEY
1873
L. ]\f.
CHARLES D. SCUDDER
w.
GRAY
PLUMER
I84I
GEORGE R. HALL
1874
1842
FRANCIS J. CLERC
1875
HENRY H. BRIGHAM
G.
1843
JoHN
1876
J. ELLIS KuRTz
1844
SAMUEL FLOWER
1877
R. B. BRUNDAGE
1845
JAMES B. WAKEFIELD
1878
w~~. N. ELBERT
I 846
DAVID F . LUMSDEN
I879
HENRY C. Lo vEIJRIDGE WM. B . NELSON CHARLES H. CARTER
STERLLNG
WI..,LIAM C. PETERS
1880
1848
EDWARD H. BRINLEY
1881
1849
SAMUEL SHERMAN
1882
J. ELDRED BROWN
1850
CHARLES E. TERRY
1883
E.
IS 51
JAMES
!884
S. S. MITCHELL
I847
w.
SMYTH
s.
vAN ZILE
E. B. HATCH
1852
A. HAMILTON POLK
I885
1853
J.
1 886
1854
W. BuTLER KRUMBHAAR
1887
w. w.
1855
JARED STARR
1888
E. N. ScoTT
r856
SIDNEY HALL
!889
E. McP. McCooK
1857
J oHN H. S. QuiCK
1890
T. P. THURSTON
1858
SAMUEL B. WARREN
I89I
WM. JOSEPH MILLER
1859
W~L G. DAVIES
!892
WM. FRENCH COLLINS
186o
WM. B. TIBBITS
1893
ROBERT PRESCOTT PARKER
1861
G.
1 894
J oHN MooRE McGANN
!862
JoHN J. McCooK
I895
WM. SPEA!GHT L ANGFORD, JR.
1863
THOMAS R. AsH
1896
J AMES WATSON L ORD
1864
c. T.
1897
}AMES WATSON L ORD
186 5
CHARLES WANZER
!898
ELTON GARDINER LI TTELL
I866
HENRY K. HUNTINGTON
I 899
HARRY ARCHER HoRNOR
I867
HowARD C. VrBBERT
1901
GoDFREY BRINLEY
1868
JOSEPH B. CHESHIRE
1902
RICHARD NICKS WEIBEL
GARDINER WHITE
w.
HUGG
OLMSTED
159
B. OLMSTED F. MORGAN, J R.
0 11\NS ~AN 0""' .ltLU'T/\ TOR~l\1'10 ~ v. s.
1827 Isaac E. Crary Samuel C. Goldsborough
v. s.
1828 Henry G. Smith William H. Walter
v. s.
1829 Joshua G. Wright .Samuel S. Lewis
v. s.
1830 Augustus F. Lyde Isaac W. Hallom
1837 Abner Jackson S. John T. Cushing 1838 v. Charles Gillette S. Cyrus Munson
v.
1839 Isaac G. Hubbard Nathaniel 0. Cornwall 1840 v. Robert B. Fairbairn S. Vandervoort Bruce
v. s.
1841 V. William H. Frisbie v. Henry D. Noble s. Thomas R. Pynchon 1842 v. George Rossiter s. Henry C. P reston
1831 V. Nathaniel E. Cornwall s. Joseph R. Eccleston
v. s.
1832 E . Edwards Beardsley John W. French
v.
s.
1833 Hugh L. Morrison Edward Hardyear
v. s.
1834 William Payne Solomon G. Hitchcock
v. s.
1835 Robert Tomes Edward Van Deusen
v. s.
1836 James H. Elliott Isaac H. Tuttle
v. s.
1843 Thomas S. Preston George Ker
v. s.
1844 David P. Sanford Tilton E. Doolittle
v. s. v. s. 160
1845 Robert C. Rogers John A. Paddock 1846 John W. Bacon Samuel M. Whiting
v. s.
1847 Samuel Benedict George S. Gilman
v. s.
J86 2 James B. Murray George W. Hugg
v.
s.
1848 Benj. H. Paddock N ath. N. Belden
v. s.
J863 John S. Smith W. N. Ackley
v. s.
1849 John M. Atwood George W. Giddings
v. s.
1864 Robert A. Benton Joseph F. Ely
v. s.
185o J ohn T. Huntington Daniel E. Loveridge
v. s.
1865 Charles T. Olmsted EdwardS. Johnson
v. s.
1851 Charles J. Hoadly Alex. G. Cummings
v. s.
1866 Samuel Hart Henry A. Metcalf
v. s.
1852 Lucius H. jones Francis Chase
v. s.
1867 William R. Mackay George G. Nichols
v. s.
1853 Alfred L. Brewer William G . Spencer
v.
1868 FrankL. Norton S. Frank H . Potts J86g v. George 0. Holbrooke s. Arthur McConkey
1854 George D. Johnson S. James H. Williams
v.
v. s.
1855 Luke A. Lockwood Edwin C. Bolles
v. s.
J870 George McC. Fiske Harlow R . Whitlock
v. s.
1856 Daniel E. Holcomb Samuel F. Hotchkin
v. s.
1871 George W. Douglass Chauncey C. Williams
v. s.
1857 路 Samuel Herman George B. Hopson
v.
1872 Paul Ziegler S. James H. George 1873 v. Leonard W . Richardson S . Oliver H. Raftery
1858
V. GeorgeS . Mallory
s.
William H. Vibbert
v. s.
1859 Samuel B. Warren Edwin E. Johnson
v. s. v. s. II
1874 V. Edwa rd N. Dickerson S. James D. Smyth 1875 v. George M. Hubbard s. Edward W. Worthington
186o Charles H. W. Stocking Augustus Johnson 1861 Arthur W. Allen A. B. Jennings
v. s. 161
1876 Isaac Heister Charles E. Moore
!877 Charles C. Edmunds, Jr. John Prout !878 v. John D. Hills S. John G. Williams
v. s.
1879 Alfred Harding James S. Carpenter r88o V. T . M. N. George S. S. Lorin Webster 1881 v. J. Russell Parsons s. Charles W. Jones 1882 v. Seaver M. Holden s. John H. McCrackan 1883 v. R. T. Reineman s. ]. E. Brown !884 v. Henry R. Neely s. William S. Barrows 1885 v. H. B. Loomis s. Robert Thorn 1886 v. Herman Lilienthal s. William ]. 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
v. s.
v. s.
1890 Clifford S. Griswold William H. C. Pynchon 1891 Harry Howard Charles Herbert Young
v. s.
!892 Albert Crabtree Romily F. Humphries
v. s.
1893 March Chase Mayo s. Robert Peck Bates 1894 v. Nathan Tolles Pratt S. Cameron Josiah Davis
v.
v. s.
v. s. v. s.
1897 路Hermann von W . Schulte John Robert Benton
v. s.
1898 Woolsey MeA. Johnson Albert Morey Sturtevant
v. s.
1899 Harold Loomis Cleasby Charles William Henry
1900 Simon Lewis Tomlinson Harry Archer Hornor 1901 v. Francis R. Sturtevant S. Frank Halsey Foss 1902 v. Anson T. McCook s. Karl Philip Morba
v. s.
1903 Harry C. Golden S. Henry L. G. 1eyer
v.
1895 Edward Myron Yeomans Sydney Key Evans 1896 George Nahum Holcomb George Blodgett Gilbert
i;nnnr fllllrn for tqr Jrar 1901--1902 i~ottors in tl]r (!!.lass
1902
11f
A NSON TH EODORE M cCOOK
Valedictory . Salu t atory Honor Oration
KARL PHIL!!' MORBA MARSHAL BOWY ER STEWART
EDMUND JANES CLEVELAND, JR. *THE CHEMICAL PRI ZE E ssAY Arthur Muirson Bellamy
First Prize Second Prize T UTTLE P RIZE EssAY 1\'f ATil EMATICAL PRIZE
5 Hubert Dana Goodale
I
Jarvis McAlpine Johnson Erlmund Janes Cleveland, Jr . Edmund Samuel Carr
GooDwiN GREEK PRI ZES
First Prize . Second Prize
Edmund Samuel Carr [Not awarded]
PRI ZES IN HISTORY AND PoLITICAL SCIENCE
First Priz e . Second Prize HoLLAN D PRI ZE SCHOLARSHIPS fn the Class of 1903 bt the Class of 1904
In the Class
of 1905
HARTFORD ADMITTITUR P RIZE ALUMNI PR IZES IN EN GLISH COMPOSITION In tlze Class of 1902
In the Class of 1903
[Not awarded] Karl Herbert Fenning Henry Louis Godlove :Meyer Bayard Quincy Morgan 5Edmund Samuel Carr I Walter Beach Sherwood Horace North Anson Theodore McCook Karl Philip Morba Thomas McBlain Steele Harry Clifford Golden Edmund Crawford Thomas
FRA I'K W . WIIITLOCK PRI ZES
First Prize . Second Prize THE Do uGLAS PRI ZE 'fHE METAPHYSICAL PRI ZE THE
MACKAY-S~IITH
Thomas McBlain St!ele Edmund Crawford Thomas Har ry Clifford Golden Marshall Bowyer Stewart
PRI ZES
First Prize . Second Prize
Bayard Quincy Morgan Karl Herbert Fenning
â&#x20AC;˘ The prizes are arranged in the order of their fo unda tion.
速ptimi ~ SAMUEL H ART,
'66
GEORGE OTI S HOLBROOK E,
'69
LUCI US WATERMAN, ' 71 LEONARD WOODS RI CIIARDSON, HIRAM BENJAMIN L OO MIS, HERMAN N LILlllNTHAL, WILLARD S cuD DER,
'73
'S s
ORA WILFRED
'86
'89
HA ROLD LOOMIS CLEASBY,
'99
F RANCIS RAYM OND ST URT FVANT , '0 1 \VILLIAM P E RRY BENTLEY, '02 Mo EDWARD HENRY LORE NZ, '02 ANSO N THEODORE McCooK, '02
M Sno
KARL PHILIP MoREA, '02 ::vfARSHALL BowYER STEWART, 'o2
T RUM HUTC
BRU
THO
SHOR
CLAR
QHann iay J UN E 22, 1903 PHILI P SAFFORD CLARKE PERCIVAL HAUTREY BRADI N . TH EOPIIILUS J O HN MINT ON SVPHA X HERVEY BOARDMAN VANDERBO GART REEVE Hu NTINGTON H uTCH!NSON A RT H UR CHADWELL SHO RT •
P1·esidmt Prese1tter Orator P od H istorimt Statisticim•
ORA WILFRED C R AIG
Treasttrer j C!tainnan Commit( tee on Committees.
HARRY CLIFFORD G OLDEN
mommtttrr.s <tlauu IDap CLARKE,
Cltait·nzan
M ORGAN MEYER SHORT
THOMAS CRAIG T RENIJATH
!Rrccption BKI G IIAM ,
r./tainnnn
TRUMBULL HUTCHINSON
TR ENIJ ATII BRADIN
j'Jnuitation J o ii NSON,
C!tairmnn -
BRUCE
H uTCH INSON
1Finance VAN \V EELDEN,
C!tairman
THO MAS
FALKNOR
~botograpb BRA DIN, C!tnir111n1l SHORT
GARVIN
IDramaticu SII ORT,
C!tairman
CLARKE
LA RCI!AR
r 6s
R.INITY • CH\JR-CH -=>r-' 'L. . # CHOOL·CL\JB
®fftrrr.a w. w.
B. ALLEN, '04
President
G.
Vice-President
\VHERRY,
'04 .
G. H. HEYN, '04
Secr etary and Treasurer
®ffirrr.a P. H . D. W. T . S.
Presiden t
BRADIN, '03
Vice-Preside nt
GRAHAME, 'o6
Secretary and Treas u rer
MARLOR, 'o6
166
~ttrtfnr!l ~igq ~rqnnl
(ltluh
®ffirrrn E.
s.
Pruidmt
MERRIAM
S. ST. J. M oRGAN
Viu-Pruidn•t
B. Q. MoRGAN
Surdary- Truzsurtr
!tttrmbrrn G. D. BowNE, 'o6
S. ST. J. MoRGAN, 'o3 B. Q. MORGAN, '04
C. C. BRAINERD, 'o6 P. E. C uRT ISS, 'o6
R. H. BLAKESLEE, '05
F. W. LYCETT, 'o6
P. T. KENNEDY, 'os
B. C. MAERCKLElN, 'o6
W. B. RoBERTs, 'os W. B . SHERwooD , 'os
C. F. MOULTON, 'o6
J. MeA. JoHNSON, 'o3
H . NoRTH, 'o6
H. G . BARBOUR, 'o6
~·f1atturk ~rf1nol
(ltluh
®ffirrrn HENRY L . G. M EYER
President
CARLOS E. JONES
Viu-Pruidmt
HARRY HuET.
Suretary Treasttrtr
GEORGE P. PIERCE
TRINITYST. PAULS (LVB. " ~arllrn OJity " ~ Ralt! Ralt! Ralt I Ralt I Ralt I Ralt I Ralt I Ralt I Ralt I St. Paul's - -
J.
President, Viu-Pruidmt, Sardary and Treasurer,
W.
c. B.
J.
O'CoNNOR, WY NKOoP,
S. HINE, 'o6.
tirmhrr.n J. w.
R. NILES GRAHAM, os A. D. HAIGHT, 'o6 J. S. HrNE, 'o6 0. MoRGAN, 'o6
O'CoNNOR,
'os
C. M. REED, 'o6 C. W. REM SEN, '05 S. WIMBISH, 'o6
C. B.
WYNKooP, 'os
168
'os 'os
wrtutty O!nllrgr 1llrbttting O!lub ~ HARRY CLIFFORD GOLDEN ,
P residmt
EDM UND CRAWFORD T HO MA S
Suretary- Tr~asunr
~rmhrrs H. C. G o LDEN , '03
B. Q. M ORGAN, '04
E. C. THOMAS, '03
C. J. HARRIMAN, '05
H . L . G . MEYER, '03
C . E . G o sTENHOFER, 'os
0. W . C RAIG, '03
C . E . JoNEs, 'os
R. H. HuTCHI NSON, 'o3
R . E. CAMERON , 'o6
P . E. CuRTISS, 'o6
irbatr With Bates College at Lewiston , Maine, April 17, 190 3
E . C . THOMAS , '03
H . C . GoLDEN, 'o3
H . L. G . M EYER, '03
C. J . HARRIMAN, 'os , Alt~rna t~
Wriutty o.tnllrgr 1Btnlngtral ยงrmtuar :tlll(tmbtr!i PROF. C. L. EDWARDS, Chairman H . D. GooDALE, '03 , Secretary DR. GJ>NTHE Miss STONE, of the Hartford Public High School Miss WATKINSON, of S mith College
w.
B. SHERwooD, 'os
W . S. PERRY, 'o6 D . E. L AUDERBURN , 'o6
Regular meetings on Tuesqays at 4 the Boardman Hall of Natural History.
P. M.
in Professor Edwards' office, in
The purpose of the Seminar is strictly scientific, the g eneral object being to enable the members to keep abreast with recent discoveries in biology.
170
f1\tarrtagrs ~ Married, in avy Yard Chapel, ~[are Island, Cal., October 22, 1902, John Henry King Burgwin, '77, and Jl[i s Ruth Leeds K err. Married, in Brooklyn, N. Y., October IS, 1902, Lloyd Saltus, '87, and Jl[iss Sarah Seaman. Married, in St. Peter's Church, J\Iorristown, N. J., June 17, 1902, th e Rev. Godfrey :vlalbone Brinley, '88, and l\liss E li zabeth M iller. Married, in St. George's Church, Hanover Square, London, August 7, 1902, Edward Norman Scott, '89, and Miss Fio rence Nicoll. Married, in Hartford, Jan uary q., 1903, Edwin Stanton Allen, '94, and Miss Alice R obbins Clark. Married, in St. George's Church, Fl ushing, L. I., June 4, 1902, Francis Cruger Edgerton, i\I.D., '94, and Uiss Edith Hopkins A rnold . Married, in Hartford, May ro, .1902, George Ed1Yin Hamlin, '95, and i'vli ss El izabeth May Woodworth. Married, in Hanko11路, China, October 20, 1902, the R ev. Samuel Harrington Littell, '95, a nd Miss Charlotte l\Iiiller Mason. Ma rried, in Washington, D. C., Feb ru a ry 4, 1903, the R ev. George Blodgett Gilbert, '96, and Jl[iss Mary Jane Shelley. l\'larried, in the Church of the l\Iessiah, Graynold, Penn., December 27, 1902, Allen Reshell Van Meter, '99, and Miss Agnes Howard Converse.
171
Nrrrnlngy THE REv. DR. GEORGE HuNTINGTON NicHOLLS, D.D., '39 Died ovember II, I902. THE REv. THOMAS GALLAUDET, L.H.D., D.D., '42 Died August 27, I902. SAMUEL JAMES CLARKE, '45 Died December 26, I902. THADDEUS CRANE, '45 Died March 9, I902. RICHARD WILLIAM HART JARVIS, '48 Died January 21, 1903. EDwAnD HuNTINGTON BRINLEY, 1\I.D., '49 Died 1\Iarch 14, 1902. THE REV. CHRISTOPHE!l STAR!l LEFFINGWELL, '54 Died April I r, I9Q2. MAJOR GRAHAM DAVIS, '57 Died October 27, I902. THE REv. JAMES EYnON MuRRAY, D.D., '62 Died June I9, 1902. STEPHEN HoLBROOK£, '67 Died April 22, 1902. THE RT. REV. ROBEUT \VOOIJ7/ARD BARNWELL, D.D., LL.D., '72 Died July 24, I9Q2. THOMAS RAWDON FISHER, '72 Died 1\Iarch 9, 1902. THE REv. WILLL\ r FosTER MoRRISON, '74 Died September IO, I902. CHAULES CLARKE NORTON, '77 Died pril 25, 1902. FI<EDERJCK GRENVILLE RussELL Died September 8, 1902. JAMES DAYTON GALLAGHER, '95 Died April I, I90I.
173
I
3ht :!lllltmoriam
I
ILLIAM COURTNEY ADAMS, familiarly know.n as" Uncle Billy," "Professor," etc., who for more than fifty years was connected with the undergraduate body at Trinity College as a â&#x20AC;˘ loyal and willing attendant. Simple and kindly, thoughtful of others, free from all taint of malice or uncharitableness, faithful iu the performance of his duties, he endeared himself to the entire College body, and his death has come as a shock to Trinity Alumni all over the country, who knew and loved him. He passed away quietly at his horne, o. 5 Walnut Street, November 25, 1902 . Resolutions were passed by the College body, and a movement is now on foot to erect a suitable memorial to him, in some part of the College grounds or buildings, that his name may not be forgotten iu the institution he loved and served so long and faithfully.
174
-
-
-
--
THE END . •
Tiffany & Co .. 1lliamnub aub ~rm ilrrrqauts AWARDS AND APPOINTMENTS
1901
Appointed Jewelers and Silversmiths to H. M. KI G EDW ARD VII H. M. ~UE E N ALEX AN DR A 1901
Pan-American Exposition, 8 Gold Medals 1900
Paris Exposition, 3 Grand Prix, Medals 1853
10
Gold
1900
Grand Prizes and other A wards from all the International Expositions 23 RoYAL A PPOINTMEJ-;TS from the principal Courts d Europe and 3 Decorations upon members t>f the firm. Makers of the Yale Bicentennial Medal, Fraternity Pins, Class Rin gs, Class Cups, Trophies for Sports, Invitations to Commencement Exercises, etc.; Heraldic Engravings, Book Plates, etc.
UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CORRESPONDENCE INVITE D
IDrintty O!nllrgr ~ HIS ILLUSTRATION shows the principal building of Trinit)• College, 6; 3 feet Jon!(", in t he
English secular Gothic style. At right angles with it, on the south, are the Observatory, the new Hall of Natural History, and the Jan·is Laboratories for Chemistry and for Physics. To thE' north of it are the Gymnasium, houses of the President and Prolessors, and Chapter Houses of the Fraternities. Below the College Campus to the east, and within three minutes' walk, a new Athletic Field bas just been completed. In beauty of situation, healthful conditions of life, and equipment for its special work, the College is not surpassed. The College has distinct courses in Arts, in Science, in Letters and Science, and in Letters. The Faculty includes eleven professors, six instructors, five lecturers, a librarian, and a medical director. Among the elective studies within the respective courses there is scarcely a single important subject for which adequate provision is not made. Properly qualified candidates not desiring to pursue the whole studies of any course areallowed as Special Students to pursue certain subjects, receiving certificates of satisfactory work. The Library contains ~6.66o volumes and over 29,000 pamphlets. 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 Natural History contains Biological Laborat0ries provided with the most modern appliances. There are about fifty scholarships for the aid of necessitous students. The three H< lland 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 Ssoo are also awarded to undergraduates for success in the work of the various departments. Two examinations for admission are held at the College in each year, the first in the ·week preceding the Annual Commencement, viz. : June 2 1- 23 , and the second in September, immediatelv before the beginning of the Christmas 1'erm, September 17-2c . • For Catalogues, Examination Papers, or informat10n apply to the President or to the Secretary of the Faculty. •
THE JoHNs-PRATT Oo .. HARTFORD. CONN.
VuLCABESTON MouLDED MicA
SAcHs
'"N oARK ..
]jusEs
All not ground:
ORIN OS. " Better to be damned than never ground at all."
ESTADLISllED 1.81.8.
BROOKS BROTHERS Broadway, Cor. 22d Street,
NEW YORK.
Suits and Overcoats in the latest Shapes and newest Fabrics, readymade or to measure, from the medium to the higher priced. Paddock Coats, Sandowns, Coverts, Boulton Overcoats, Riding Breeches and Leggings. Rainproof Overgarments made from specially prepared Tweeds and Coverts. All equipment for Riding, Polo or the Hunt, Liveries for Carriage, House or Club Servants, Automobile Garments and Sundries. Neckwear from Spitalfields Silks in original designs and colorings. Special confined patterns for Weddings. Trunks, Valises, Luncheon Baskets, Leather and Wicker Goods, and all accessories for various sports. Catalogue con taining over rso illustrations, with prices, and directions for self-measurement, sent upon request.
( ii)
Brigham, 'OJ : " I eat and eat, I s wear. "
The SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITER CO., No.
82
PEARL
STREET,
:
:
:
HARTFORD,
THE SMITH PREMIERTrPEWRITfR . is a_h\1\dmark of every welJ requlated business community.
111£ SPIITif PREMIERTYPEWRITER Co. .SYRACUSE.
N.Y. U.S.A.
(iii)
CONN
Trenbath, '03:
"M istake n o m ore, I am n ot a musfcian."
------------------ ------
THE
CONNECTICUT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company. Of the $222,022,804.83 which the CONNECTICUT MUTUAL
has received from
its policyholders, it has
returned to them or paid to their beneficiaries
$220,472,548.69 or 99.30 per cent. What it has so paid back and what it sti ll holds as security for policy contracts aggregates
$286,117' 185.40 or J28.87 per cent. of its receipts from policyholders. This has been done at an expense ratio of on ly 9.2J per cent. of the total receipts. That is a record of a Mutual Life Insurance Company, doing actual Mutual Life Insurance, and it challenges comparison. JACOB L. GREENE, Pres't.
JOHN M. TAYLOR, Vice Prc.s't.
HERBERT H. WHITE, Sec'y. DANIEL H. WELLS, Actuary. A. T. RICHARDS, General Agent, Room J6, Company's Building. ( iv)
Clarke, '03:
" A gentleman who loves to b ear himself talk."
Hartford & New York Transportation Co. HHARTFORD LINE." NEW YOR.K OFFICE, Pier 33 (New), East River .
HAR.TFOR.D OFFICE, Foot of State Street.
TWO NEW TWIN - SCREW STEEL STEAMERS
"HARTFORD"
"MIDDLETOWN"
CAPTAIN , FRED H . BEEBE . STEWARD , J . P . MURPHY.
CAPTAIN , R . H . HILLS . STEWARD , ALONZO H. CORWIN.
LEAVES~HAR.TFORD , 1 -~
:LEAVES HAR.TFOR.D
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
Monday, Wednesday and friday
At 5 P. M. until OCTOBER 15th. Leave New York each Alternate Day, from Pier 33 (New) , E ast River at From October rs to close of navigation, leave Hartford at 4 P. M.;
P. M.
Ne w York at
s
P. M.
PASSENGER FARES. Deck Fare, State Room, one way, Meals, each, .
One Way, $r.so Round Trip, good for season, 2.so Children, 6 to r2 yrs. of age, Half Price
$I.IS I.OO
.so
E. S. GOODRICH, Presid e nt. EDGAR L. SMITH, Sec'y and Ass't Treasurer. C. C. GOODRICH, General Manager. E . B. WILLIAMS, Supe rintendent. GEO. C. H ILLS, General Fre ight and Passenger A gent, Pier 33 (New), East River, N . Y. W. B. SMITH, New York Agent , Pier 33 (New), East River, N.Y.
R. F. GOODRICH , Local Agent, No. 285 State Street, Hartfo rd, Conn (v)
North, 'o6: "It is a fearful thing to see a dissipated youth."
Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Company Corner of Main and Pearl Streets.
SURPLUS, $3oo,ooo.
BANKING BUSINESS.
Conducts a general banking business. Accounts opened and deposits r eceived subj ect to check at sight. Accounts solicited.
ALSO The most capacious and
SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS. impregnable in the city. One thousand safe boxes for rent at from $1o to $1oo per annum, according to size.
I s authorized by its charter t o act as trustee for individuals and corporations, executcr or ad ministr ator of estates, guardian of minors, etc.
TRUST DEPARTMENT.
MEIGS H. WHAPLES, President. JOI-IN P. WHEELER, Treasurer. HosMER P. REDFIELD, Assistant Treasurer. HENRY S. R olli NSON, S ecretary and Manager of Trust Department. (vi)
Buffington , 'o4:
"Cupid and I are one .
1836-1903
Case, Lockwood and Brainard Co.
The
BOOK and JOB PRINTING Binding and Blank Book Manufacturing . PRINTERS OF THE TRINITY IVY
Corner o~ PEARL and TRUMBULL STREETS
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
Townsend, '04: •· Hath he ever fed of the dainties that are bred in a book? "
(vii)
Maddox, 'o•:
r
'c Men 's evil manners live In bras s."
---
~
IMcCLUNIEI loECORATORI
r-·---
-~
L_FLAGS. 6UNTIN6. Etc.:..J
. I
DECORATIONS FOR COLLEGE PROMENADES
I
I
.I
DECORATIONS FOR COLLEGE GERMANS
DECORATIONS FOR FAIRS
II
)
DECORATIONS FOR BALLS 0
DECORATIONS FOR LAWN
DECORATION:A::I:S ALL PUBLIC
I
II
II
CELEBRATIONS
I I
1
I 177 ASYLUM STREET, HARTFORD, - CONN.
\..
--(viii)
I
J
Chapel Choir:
"Swans s ing before they die; 'twere no bad thing, Oid certain persons die before they sing."
CHARTERED 1866.
HARTFORD Life Insurance Company, HARTFORD, CONN. GEO.
E.
KEENEY,
.P1-uident.
CHAS.
H.
BA CA LL,
Secretary.
Up=to=date in Business Methods, in Contracts, in Plans.
Best Insurance to Buy for Indemnity or Investment. ORDINARY LIFE and LIMITED PAYMENT POLICIES, AUTOMATIC ENDOWMENTS at 80. Amounts $15.000 to $10. Ages 2 to 60. FINANCIALLY
STRONGEST.
$141 for every $100 Liabilities. $25,000,000 Paicl to Beneficiaries.
Home Office, 252 Asylum Street,
( ix)
HARTFORD, CONN.
Carpenter, '03 : " Inertia personified."
T. SISSON & CO.,
Druggists, CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL APPARATUS, SPONGES, CHAMOIS, FEATHER DUSTERS, ETC.
150° SECURITY OIL 729 Main Street,
Headquarters for GRISWOLD'S FAMILY SALVE.
HARTFOR~ CONNECTICU~
Worth Leart1it1g - -the merits of the cele· brated STBIN·BLOCH Tailor made ready-to• wear smart clothes for men. It is the exceptionally good quality of these clothes that has won over so many particular men from the custom tailors, and the good looks and "wear-right" fabrics have made many satisfied cuStomers for us. STEINBLOCH Clothes cost half the price of the cuStom tailors' produCt. KNOX HATS, CUSTOM SHIRTS, TRUNKS, BAGS and SUIT CASES. ATHLETIC CLOTHING.
Horsfall &
Rothschild.
93.99 ASYLUM STREET.
OUTFITTERS.
HARTFORD, CONN.
( x)
NEW
Oarvin, 'oJ: " In his calling, let him call but trot, trot, trot ; 0 for a trot, ye gods I"
NATIONAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, of Hartford~ Conn.~ DIRECTORS. WILLIAM B. FR A NKLIN , F R ANK W. CHENEY, JAMES NICHOL S, J o HN R. B ucK,
H ENR Y C. FRANCIS T BYRON A . CH A<;. H .
JAMES NICHOLS, President,
J u DD, . MAX WELL , SIMMONS, B RISCOE,
B. R. STILLMAN , Sec ' y,
RALPH B . ENSIGN , J . M . ALLEN, ]As. P. T AY LOR, L . A . BARBOUR.
H. A. SMITH, A ss' t Sec'y .
Statement, January 1, 1903. CAPITAL STOCK,
$I,ooo,ooo.oo
Re-Insurance Reserve . Legal Standard, Unsettled Losses and other Claims , Net Surplus over Capital and L iabilities,
Total Assets, January
I,
WESTERN DEPARTMENT : Office, ' 7' La Salle St., Chicago. F RI<D. S. ]AM ES , Gen ' i Agent. GEO. \V. B LOSSOM , A ss' t Gen' l Ag ent. CHAS. RI C H ARDSON , 2 d A ss ' t Ge n ' l Agent.
3, 23I,I6o.64 423 430·33
x,sso,Soo.74
1903,
$6,205,393·71
PA C IFIC D EP ART M ENT: Office, 32- 34 Sansome St. , Sa n F rancisco. GEo. D . D oRNJ N, Manager, GEo. \ V. D o RN IN, Ass' t :M anager.
GULF DEPARTMENT, SOUTHWESTERN DEPARTMENT, R . L. Emery, Gen'l Agent, Trezevunt & Cochran Co., Gen'l Agents, New Orleans, La. Dallas, Texas.
339
N Ew Y oRK OFFI CE
€aton=Durlbut
pap~r
co.
MAKERS OF HIGH GRADE PAPERS AN D = = = = =
SOCIETY STATIONERY
mass. ( x i)
B ROA DWAY
Morgan , '04:
" A very wise a nd comfortable jackass."
THOROUGH INSPECrfiON
Organize d 1866
Insurance Against Loss or Damage to Property and Loss of Life and Injury to Person Caused by
Steam Boiler Explosions J . M . ALLEN , Presi d e nt
J . B. PIERCE, S ec r e tary
WM. B . FRANKLIN, Vice-Pr esident F. B. ALLEN , S econd V ice- President
L. B . BRAINERD , Treasurer L . F . MIDDLEBROOK, Asst. Secreta ry
COLLEGE WORK A SPECIALTY
~
1)f 1039 Main
Street~
Leading Photographer
1~ . WE EXCEL IN GROUP WORK ( x ii)
Van W eelde n , '03:
"Chas t e as on icicle ."
Chas. M. Gaines
Printing and
Em~ossing
COUR..HNT BUILDING
66 State Street,
Hartford, Conn. T e l e phon e 2 4 5
J .J.
SEIN SOTH
South End P harmacy i\ .EANEST FIRST-CLASS DR('C; STORE TO T IUJ\'JT Y COLLEGE
I I-1 5
Main Street,
opposite Har11ard Park
P . 0 . Station N o. 5
N . B. BULL
G. S. BULL
N. B. BULL B SON 345 d1sylum Street ~
CJJealers in •••
Hot cAir and Hot Water Heaters WINTHROP RANGES ~
Tin Wa.re a.nd Housefurnishing Goods
Plumbing a.nd Ventita.fing a. Specia.lty
EsfabUshed 1854
Tdel)hone 831-5
(xiii)
Water Colors Carbon P rints P hotogravures Facsimiles Artistic Picture Framing Over l,OOO Patterns always in
STOCK.
S!fphax,
'03: ..And when
!Duf'l'ee,
.7 ope
".!/ anz Si,. O,.acle, nz!J lips, let no dog ha,.fll " .
'05: ":faith, thou hast sonze c,.ofchefs in fh!l h ead now."
P h illips, '06 :} " 7 ,, , d 7finlle/, , : ,/his is bze wng an 06
t
h
, I' , e s ,w,.f o if.
GooJale, '03: "7fe J,.awefh out the fh,.ead of' his ue,.hosif!l f'ine,. than the staple of' his a,.gunzenf." ...Atann,
'04:
".!Js nzan no nzo,.e !han this?"
7fe!Jn,
'04:
"..;\low .!/oue, in his next conznzoJif!l of' hai,., send thee a hea,.J I "
When Your Check Is Overdue WE WOULD RESPECTFULLY SUGGEST TO YOU THAT WE'VE PATRONIZED YOUR "IVY," WE BELIEVE, SINCE 1890. THEREFORE WE THINK WE SHOULD HAVE THE PREFERENCE
COLLATERAL LOAN COMPANY 71
Asylum S t ree t ....Room 10
Money Advanced Liberally on Dia:rnonds and Jewelry (xiv)
~eport
card : "An ill-favored thing, sir, but mine own. "
97th Semi-Annual Financial Statement of th e PH 0 EN/ X JANUARY Jst, J903. INSURANCE CO. OF HARTFORD, CONN.
Assets Ava ilable for Fire Losses, $6,497,612.14 AS FOLLOWS : Cash on Hand, in Bank, and with A gents, $1,076,043路 70 rr,6oo.oo State Stocks and Bonds , Hartford Bank Stocks, 583.480.00 Miscellaneous Bank Stocks, 471,637路00 Corporation Stocks and Bonds, 699,962.50 2. 768,865.75 R ailroad " " " County, City and Water Bonds, 30J,695.oo Real Estate , 415,696.32 L oans on Collateral, 34,000.00 Real Estate Loans , . . 88,036.75 Accumulated Interest and Rents, 44,595 .12 Cash Capital, $2,ooo,ooo
T oTAL CAsH A ssETS,
$6,497,6J2.J4
LIABILITIES. Cash Capital, . . Reserve for Outstanding L osses, Reserve for Re-Insurance, . . Reserve for all other Claims and Liabilities, NET SURPL US,
$2,000,000.00 396.429.60 2,635,214.31 128,045路00 1,337.923 .23
T OTAL ASSETS,
$6,497,6J2.J4
Surplus to Policy-holders, TOTAL
LOSSES
PAID
$3,337,923.23
SINCE ORGANIZATION OF COMPANY, $50,169,929 . 91.
D. W. C. SKILTON, President. J. H. MITCHELL. Vice-President. EDW. MILLIGAN, Secretary. JOHN B. KNOX, Assistant Secretary. L OVEJOY & SPEAR, :.tanagers Western Department, Cincinnati, Ohio. GEOKGE H. T YSON, Manager Pacific Department, San Francisco, Cal. ] . W. TATLEY, Manager Canadian Department, Montreal, Canada.
THE BEST QUALITY
COAL and WOOD MAY BE HAD AT
7 46 Main Street.
W. C. MASON & CO. (Successor to
J. J.
P oole & Co.)
R. SPIEGEL Clothes Cleaned and Pressed Suits Made to Order
20 Church St. (xv)
Gateson,
'0.1: • • A
pretty boy ; yo ung , but Oh My 1 "
LIBBY & BLINN, 164 State Street, Hartford, Conn., CONTRACTORS FOR
stoam, Hot wator Boating ana voutilating DDDaratus FAN SYSTEM for Heating and Ventilating. a
Specialty.
MERCER- COTTAGE- GOLD-MILLS BOILERS In charge of the Heating of the Trinity Natural History Building. SEND FOR CATALOGUES.
A. D. BERMAN, Dealer in
NEW AND SECOND HAND
CLOTHING. Knee Caps , and Anklets, \ For the support of ( Varicose Veins, Swelled Limbs, Weak Joints, Sprains, &c. Mad<: of "tout Silk, Medium Silk, Linen and Cotton.
)I : :·
2
TRUSSES C. P. GLADDING
Boots and Shoes also bought and sold. 160 Front Street,
HARTFORD, CONN. PAYING t-jiGtiEST CASti PR.ICES FOR. WtiATEVER.. CAST - OFF CLOTtiiNG
s. Gg~'ij~~~t& co
YOU MAY tiAVE TO DISPOSE Of.
Druggists,
1203-5
M9.in St.
(/ ~~~~~ 1 Schwartz, 'o6:
Drop me a Postal, giving your address, and I will call on you.
"A head that's to be let, unfurnished. "
( xvi)
N. H . :
"Tush!
T u sh !
Fear boys with b ugs!"
CLASS AND FRATERNITY PINS DIAMONDS, RICH
L eadi n g
WAT C H E S
J E W E LRY
J e \N elers of' Connecticut
HENRY KOHN & SONS 890 Main Street
THIS
BOOK
WERE
MADE
BY
~
THE
8t:~,t拢 C6'~8~~<a~~路 .?C7=oJo ~fad/ten?t'on ~__, BUFFALO, N.Y. LARGEST ENGRAVING HOUSE FOR COLLEGE PLATES IN~ THE STATES. WRITE FOR PRICES AND SAMPLES. OUR WORK IS ENDORSED BY OVER TWO HUNDRED BUSINESS
~ GERS
OF COLLEGE ANNUALS.
(xvii)
J~
Johnson , ' 03 :
'' Doubtless God c ou ld have made a h omelier man , but doubtless h e nev er did. "
~~~1 I JJewellews9 1 ~ Silversmiths and D iamond Merchants, ~ ~
Ii 3E
Fine Watches, Bric-a-Brac, Optical Goods, 94 1 Main S treet, n ext to Opera H ouse, H ART F O RD, CO NN.
~
Dem psey & Carroll's Fine E ngr aving, Society S tationery, W edding Invi tations, R ecep tio n and V isiting Car ds, N .Y . City
~
Lwm
~ ~
~
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm~
EXCELLENCE IN STYLE AND WORKMANSHIP PREDOMINATES THROUGHOUT OUR
WE INVITE YOUR INSPECTION.
... SHOES
M
A
LARNED & HATCH, 945 MAIN STREET, HARTFORD, CONN. FINE FOOTWEAR. ( xviii)
s
Dibble, '04 :
.. How is' t with you , That you do be-nd your eye on v aca ncy?"
Holderness School FOR BOYS REP ARES for Colleges and Technical Schools. High order of training in mind and body. Individual influences and instruction. Gymnasium. Athletic field, running track. Moderate terms. Catalogue.
P
Rev. Lorin Webster, M. A.â&#x20AC;˘ R E C T O R.
PLYMOUTH, N.H.
Publisher of Genre Photographs and Reproductions of the Paintings in the Yale School of Fi ne Arts. Medal at Chicago, Photographers' Ass'n of America, 1887. 1st Prize, Buffalo, Photographers' Ass'n of America, 1891 1st Pri ze , Edward L. Wilson, New York City, 1892 Eastman Co., Rochester, New York, 1893 Art Magazine Competition, 1st Pri ze, 1899-1900 Michigan State Association, 1897-1898-IS99
W orld 's Fair, 1893 Paris, 1895 i\Iunich, 1895 London, 1895
Pictures !Iung Permanently in Art Galleries of Munich, Paris and London, 1895
1-ll~RBER".r
IL-\.N1::> ALL,
P ORT.UA.ITU R E
STUDIOS: New Haven, Conn., l062-l 064 Chapel Street. Hartford, Conn., Cor. Main and Pratt Streets. Ann Arbor, Mich., Washington Block. ( xix)
STOUT'S : "Was ever book containi n g s u c h v ile m atter ? "
ANYTI-ilNG YOU WANT Tt-jAT A DR.UG STOR.E Sl-fOULD 1-f AVE You will f i nd at th e
MAR._WICI\ DR._UG STOR._ES CORNER M AIN and ASYLUM STREETS
-
-
-
-
A SYLUM and FORD STRE ETS
QUALITY TliE BEST, PRI CES TliE LOWEST
I can give you a HAIR CUT, SHAVE, SHAMPOO, or any old thing that you want me to. When you're on Asylum Street just stop for a shave at the
TRINITY BARBER SHOP J. G. MARCH, Room 1, Connecticut Mutual Building E ntr a n ce$ : 783 Main Street, 36 Pearl Street.
INDEMNITY COMPANY g uarantees the fid e lity of p e r s ons holding pos itions of trus t ancl th e execution of contracts othe r than ins urance polici es, including cons tr u ction work and furni s hing s upplies. Whe n r e quire d to fnrni s h a g路uarantee, our
SURETY BONDS will b e found a mos t s atisfa c tory and conveni e nt f o r m to m eet this r e quire 1ne ut. Corres ponde nce inv ite d. ~X !!:CUT IV I!:
HOM!!: 0 1""1'"'\CI!:
650 MA IN STREET HARTFO R D PLATE GLA SS
O FI'"'/C I!:
68 WILLIAM STREET NEW Y O RK A ND
BURGLARY INSURAN C E
(xx)
R.ehr, 'o6 ~ "Th ey s a y we are Pierce , 'o 6 : . , Gateson , 'o6 Almos t as Joke as eggs.
SCHMIDT & Watcgmafter~
anb
FOX
9le\tlder~
Dealers in Fine Watches, Diamonds. Jewelry . and Sterling Silverware.
19 P e arl
St., n ea r
Main ,
HARTFORD, CONN .
CLARK & SMITH
PRINTERS 49 Pearl St., HARTFORD, CONN.
R OBERT G A R V I E PRACTICAL PLUMBER
GAS FIXTURES A
No.
12 MULBERRY S'r.
AND GAS
FITTE~
SPECIALTY
HARTFORD,
( xxi)
Oo:r-."N.
B lakeslee , 'o6:
" The bi g round t ears Cours ed o ne anot h er down his innocent nose In piteous chase.' '
GO TO THE
BIG CIGAR STORE l â&#x20AC;˘' OR
YO U U .
CIGARS, TOBACCO, PIPES.
Pra11k H. Crygier, 248
ASYLUM
H artfo rd
ST R EET .
Wholesale and Retail.
L ife
Build i n g .
Smoke " Crown Jewels . "
HARTFORD, CONN.
Playing only First-class Attractions ~~ H. C. PARSONS, Manager.
The Heublein)
European Plan.
FACING BUSHNELL PARK
Junction of Lewis, Wells and Trumbull Streets.
HARTFORD , ( xxii)
CONN .
E
THOMAS
J. SINNOTT,
Sanitary Plumber and Gas Fitter, Steam and ... Hot Water Heating.
248 PARK STREET. E s tim ates Furn is h ed on App licatio n .
" The hand that hath made thee fair hath made thee good. " Larchar, 'o3: "And now am I, if a man s hould speak trul)!, little better than one of the wicked."
Class of 'o3: " The one thing finished in this hast )! world."
Vanderbogarl, 'o3: " Th e lunatic, the lover and the poet are of imagination all compact. "
Sherwood, 'o5: "A man I am, crossed with adversi"t)!."
ohe 'Wm. H. Post Carpet Co. CARPETINGS ~
~W'l.................... ~YlpAw~a) RUGS, WALL PAPERS, AND UPHOLSTERY, 219 Asylum St .â&#x20AC;˘
HARTFORD, CONN. (xx iii)
J . H. 0.:
"A nd if h is n a m e be Oeorge, I' ll call him P et er , Por new-made h onor do th fo rget men 's names."
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY,
~edicat
Dept.
The Uni'Versity and CJ3elle'Vue Hospital Medical CoUege.
SESSION OF 1903-1904. ~
T HE Session begins
on ~ednesday, SEPTEMBER 30, 1903, and continues for eight months. For the annual circular, giving requirements for matriculation, admission to advanced standing, graduation, and full details of the course, address Dr. Egbert LeFevre, 26th St. and First Ave., New York. ~
EDWARD G. JANEWAY, M. b., LL.D., Dean.
PHONOGRAPHS.
HIGH GRADE RECORDS AND ALL SUPPLIES.
Disc Talking Machines. All Repairing Promptly Done.
ELECTRIC ยง'{OVEL TIES.
N. A. SPERRY, 85 P ratt Street,
HARTFORD, CONN.
85-93 PR ATT ST.
M
f
0
~, ~~~ .
Compare work and prices a nd yo u will kn ow where to go for your Photos. ENTIRE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. ( xxiv)
p
Graha m , 'OS :
OUR GOODS
"Th e devil h a th p ower To a ss ume a pleas in g s hape . "
THE BARBER INK CO.
TALK FOR US IF YOU ARE NOT USING THEM ATRIAL WILL CONVINCE YOU OF THEIR SUPERIORITY OVER OTHERS. QUALITY AND PRICE CON-
FRANK
E.
j o H ;-.;so s,
Pres.
\ V!LLIAM
G. V A LES TI NE, Vice-Pres. Scc' y and Treas.
NATHA.l\IE L
P.
B Al{ UR R ,
Manufacturers of ·~STANDARD" INKS AND MUCILAGE .J1. INK EXTRACTS .J1. WHITE PASTE.;~- AMMONIA AND BLUEING MANUFACTORY and OFFICE: J66 PEARL STREET HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT $$ Telephone Connection
SIDERED~~$
PLIMPTON MFG. CO. liiGii GR.ADE PRINTING , EMBOSSING AND liALf-TONE WORK A SPECIALTY PLATE
PRINTING AND
ENVELOPES Of
AND
EVER.Y
liAR..TfOR.D
.;J.
.J1.
.J1.
ENGRAVING
BLANK
BOOKS
DESCRIPTION
.JI.
.;J.
.;J.
CONNECTICUT
35 Nassau Street, NeW' York City Follows t he DW'ight Method o f legal instruction, the method of that great teach~r, Prof. Theodore W. Dwight. 2. Gi ves thoroughly practical instruction, developing the principles of the Jaw and the reasons up •n which they rest. 3· Is in New York Cit y,-the best place to learn New York Law and proced ure,-the most desirable place in which to establish a lawyer's practice. Its location in the city affor ds a n opportunitv to a tte nd the sessions of the courts, and also to gai n practical experience in lawyers' offices, in connection with the law school stud y of legal principles. 4· Con fers the degree of LL. l:l . in two years; of LL. M. in three years. 5· H as a Day School and also an Evening School. A student can attend either. 6. Had 831 students in attendence t he past year (•9ot - HJ02); of these 289 w ere college g raduates. 1.
GEORGE CHASE, Dean, 35 Nassau Street. (xxv)
.
_.-,_.., . • _.. '
.
•o: ~, ~
.
.
·--.·~-~
.
'":
.
.
' -.... :·.. ::·__
..
-~
Cam er on , ' o6 ~ Cameron , ' o6 : '' A ll gall is divided in t o t hree par ts. " Cam eron , ' o6
Adn1iral Cafe M. B. SMITH, Proprietor.
SCHLITZ MILWAUKEE, BURTON AND BASS FROM THE WOOD.
TOOTHAKER BROS.,
Tailors, New S age.::.lllle n Buildi n g,
902 Main Street, Hartford, Conn. Room.s J2, 33, 34, 35.
American and European Plans. >I'
Loca ted in the business center, corner As]!lum a nd T rumbull S treets.
E lectric cars pass the
doo r ever )! two min utes.
H otel Electric Bus
m eets all /rains. >I' ROB ERT J , AllYN , PROP. JOHN J. DAHILL, ,._ANAG£1'1.
Ameri can P lan:
$3. 50 t o $!5 .00 p er day.
E u r opean P lan:
$1 . 50 t o $3.00 p er d a y .
B Eve Firs
Up •
HANLON & MURPHY,
Plumbing and Heating, }Si ec trical }Sng iJJ eering
;.w-
a11d Co n s tru c tiOJJ • •. ••
GAS and ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES.
280 Asylum Street, Hartford. (x:wi)
C IIJ
Trumbull, 'oJ:
" I am s low of stud y ."
Wqr Jqrenix :mutual 14ifr 3Jnauranrr Qln.
1851
0 F
HART F 0 R D, C 0 N N E C T I CUT
ASSE'rS,
-
-
-
816,000,000
L ---------------------------------Issues every desirable form of Policy known to Modern Life Insurance. The Life, Endowment and Annuity Policy issued only by this Company combines PRO'.l'ECTI0:-1', I:\'"VES'.l'~IEY.l' , PROYISIO:-. l ?OR OI~D AGE
in one Contract. Sample Policy, Rates, etc., mailed upon application to the Home Office.
1Juljll
1Jon<JtllUll i!l. i!lttttn>. Jrrsillrut lOillium .A . .fl'luorr. S>rr"y .A . .A. ntdrl! . .Actuary uull .Armistuut S>rrntury S>. lij. Qlurn\urll, .Aas"t S>rr"y
m. ljulrmubr, 11lirr-1frrs't
THE STUDENTS' RESORT
ohe CAPITOL POOL
AND
BILLIARD P.ARLORS Everything First;Class and Up =To =Date
141
to
145
Asylum Street
EIMER &
Strictly Temperate Popular Prices Ten Tables
AMEND
20Z-2ll '.l'UIRD A V E:-(UE
C. P. Cllli~UCAL
CIIE~.IICAI~S .~xn
ACmS,
APPARATUS, SCIENTIFIC
SOLE
AGE>ITS l ''OR
JR:-IA_ NOR~IAJ-
INSTUU~I1~:-.TS
GLASS,
BEST LAUOR .\.TORY GLASS EVER 1\IADE
(xxvii)
Orahame , 'o6: " The hairs of thy head are all numbered. "
TWENTY-ONE LARGE GREENHOUSES IN CULTIVATION OF FLOWERS.
fiarnord,
688
main
Conn.
Str~~t
THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE FLOWER STORE IN NEW ENGLAND. Prex: " Know a house when you sec one? '' R.ankin , 'oJ "Yes, sir." Prex: u Humph r " Craig, ' OJ: " I'm not very pretty, but I' m awfully good." There once was a dear little bro . , Who tried his s mall sister to smo., When he found she was dead He cried , but they s aid : " Never mind, we'll get yo u ano." Thomas, ' OJ: " For m y voice, I ha ve lost it wilh howling and s inging of anthems ." Brad in, ' o3: " His equal lives not: Thank Ood for that I" Meyer, ' oa : " How long, 0 Lord , how long!"
E.
HABENSTEIN~~~ Hartford's Leading
~J路CATERER路l~ 805 Main Street, PHCENIX BANK BUILDING ,
HARTFORD, CONN. Telephone Connection. (xxviii)
Date Due
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