•
<brinity C!rollrgr 1ljibrnry Class
~ook Vol.
l '(I ~1.) I:"_)I
G..,_ _ IO\/ (l
SAMUEL HART FUND Established in I8gg bJ! THE ALUMNI Ig ·--
cAccession :J\Co.
THE TUTTLE COMPANY Printers Binders ltUTLAND. VT.
Volum~
XXXVll :: ma:mtX
l)ublls~~~
by
(5~~
:Junior (!:lass of
Z5 rlnl ty a::o ll~g ~ . "l1'art for~ .
a::onn~ctlcut
It has been said, and truly, that college days are the happiest days of a man's life. They embrace the period when the capacity of enjoyment has developed, and when irresponsibility is strong enough to drive away the care that would otherwise impair pleasure. The longer a man lives, and the more insistent his duties become, the greater is the enjoyment he feels in recalling the events of those almost care-free days. Unfortunately, memory is fickle; it often obscures from us that which we would recollect, and to trust the reminiscences of youth to its keeping alone, is to take the risk of losing them forever. For this reason, to recall those college days, this book is issued. We trust that it is such that an outsider can readily discern the elements that have been mixed to make Trinity what she is, and we hope that it will afford the members of the class of 191 0 many happy reminiscences of their days here. The editors wish to express their thanks to Mr. William N . Carlton, for his assistance in proof reading, to Mr. Woodforde H. Plant '09, for his kindly advice, and to Mr. Bion H. Barnett Jr., '12, for his drawings in this book.
.·
•
~~~ication TO
THIS
VOLUME
OF
THE TRINITY IVY IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE CLASS OF 1910
D ITOR
~
-fMtor-ln-{t:l,i~f
Richardson Little Wright . Joseph Groves Ralph Howard Merrill Albert Marston Smith
~u.sln~.ss managn
Pennsylvania New York
Atl,ldlc -fMtors
John Booth Clark . John Richard Cook, Jr., . George William Eugene Draper Benjamin Floyd Turner
Massachusetts Massachusetts South D akota Maryland New York Connecticut
r:J 1909 ]an. ]an. Feb. Feb.
4 Monday 25 Monday 6 Saturday 22 Monday
March I Monday April 5 Monday April 7 Wednesday April 19 Monday April 24 Saturday May I Saturday May May May ]une June June June
8 Saturday 15 Saturday 31 Monday 7 Monday 18 Friday 20 Sunday 21 Monday
June
22
Tuesday
June
23
Wednesday
June June June
24 25 26
Thursday Friday Saturday
Sept. 18 Saturday Sept. 23 Thursday Oct. 30 Saturday Nov. I Monday Nov. 25 Thursday Dec. 22 Wednesday
Christmas Recesss begins at I P . M. Christmas Examinations begin Trinity Term begins Washington's Birthday (a Holiday) Competition for the Whitlock Prizes Last day for receiving applications for the Terry Fellowship. Terry Fellow appointed Easter Recess begins at 4 p. M. Easter Recess ends at 5:45 P. M. Stated Meeting of the Corporation Last day for receiving essays for the Tuttle Prize, the Douglas Prize, and the Prizes in History and Political Science. Examination for the Mackay-Smith Prizes Examination for the Goodwin Greek Prizes. Memorial Day (a Holiday) Trinity Examinations begin Trinity Examinations end Baccalaureate Sermon Senior and ] unior Standing published Annual Meeting of the Board of Fellows Award of Prizes Class-Day Stated Meeting of the Corporation (evening) Stated Meeting of the Corporation, and Annual Meeting of the Association of the Alumni Eighty-third Commencement Trinity Vacation begins Examinations for Admission begin at 2 P. M. Examinations for Admission Examinations for Admission Examinations for Admission Examination for Admission begin at 2 P. M. Christmas Term begins at 5:45 P. M路 Stated Meeting of the Corporation All Saints' Day. Founders' Day (a Holiday) Thanksgiving Day (a Holiday) Christmas Recess begins at I P. M.
SÂŁN.ATVS
rs~~ ~oar~ of t5ru.stu.s of t5rlnlty a::ott~g~
Hartford, Conn. The President of the College ex-officio, President,. Concord, N. H. The Rt. Rev. William W. Niles, D.O., LL.D., D.C.L. Hartford, Conn. The Hon. William Hamersley, LL.D.'fHartford, Conn. The Rev. Francis Goodwin, D.D.'fNew York, N.Y. The Hon. William E. Curtis, LL.D. New York, N.Y. J. Pierpont Morgan, Esq., LL.D. Chicago, Ill. John H. S. Quick, M.A. New York, N. Y. The Rev. William H. Vibbert, D.O. Philadelphia, Pa. Sydney G. Fisher, L.H.D., LL.D. . Hartford, Conn. James J. Goodwin, Esq.'f- . Washington, D. C. William J. Boardman, LL.B. Hartford, Conn. P. Henry Woodward, M.A., Secrelar}),. . Jamaica, N.Y. William S. Cogswell, M.A. . Hartford, Conn. The Rt. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster, D.O. New York, N. Y. Ambrose Spencer Murray, Jr., M.A. William C. Skinner, M.A. 'f. . Hartford, Conn. Berlin, Conn. The Hon. Frank L. Wilcox, B.A. . Concord, N. H. Rev. Henry Ferguson, LL.D. Edgar F. Waterman, M.A., LL.B., Treasurer,. . Hartford, Conn. . Hartford. Conn. Edward B. Hatch. M.A. . Frederick Everest Haight, Ph.D.,. New York, N. Y. The Hon. Joseph Buffington, LL.D. Pittsburg, Pa. Robert Thorne, LL.B. New York, N.Y. "These members of the Board form the Executive Committee
10
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
l.lr~slb~nt
The President of the College ex officio .s~nlor s~llows
William Stimson Hubbard, M.D. E. Kent Hubbard, B. S. Frederick Everest Haight, Ph.D. Walter Stanley Schutz, M .A., LL.B. Alexander Taylor Mason, M.A., f L.B. Charles Shiras Morris, B.S. :31unlor s~llows The Rev. John Taylor Huntington, M.A. The Rev. John ]ames McCook, M.A. George Emerson Beers, M.A .. LL.B. The Rev. Frederick William Harriman, D.O. Percy Shelley Bryant, M.A. Frank Elisha Johnson, M.A.
Association of cs~~ Alumni Lawson Purdy, B.A., LL.D. . . George Dawson Howell, B.A. George William Ellis, B.A., Charles Guilford Woodward, M.A. .Stanblng ~ommltt~~ The President The Treasurer The Rev. Samuel Hart, D.O., D.Can.L. William Stimson Hubbard, M.D. The Rev. Frederick William Harrimaan, D.O. Walter Stanley Schutz, M.A. LL.B.
. President Vice-President Secretar}J Treasurer
The Reverend Flavel Sweeten Luther, Ph.D., LL.D., President of Trinity College
The Rev. Flavel Sweeten Luther, Ph.D., LL.D. President, and Seabury Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy II 5 Vern on Street (Office 13 Seabury Hall) B.A., Trini~, 1870; Ph.D., 1896; LL.D .â&#x20AC;˘ 1904; Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy at Racine College, 1871-1881 ; Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy at Kenyon College, 1881-1883; Professor at Trinity since 1883; President of Trinity College, 1904-; Member of American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Senator from First District of Connecticut, 1907, 1909.
The Rev. George Williamson Smith, D.O. LL.D. Professor of Metaphysics Emeritus B.A., Hobart, 18S7; D.O., 1880 ; D.O., Columbia; LL.D., Trinity, 1887. Chaplain, United States Navy, 1864. Acting Professor of Mathematics, United States Naval Academy, Newport, 1864-S. Chaplain at Annapolis, 186S-8. Rector in various places till 1883. President of Trinity, 1883-1904.
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
Charles Frederick Johnson, M.A. L.H.D. Professor of English Literature Emeritus 69 Vernon Street B.A., Yale, 1855; M.A., 1863 ; L.H .D., 1895. Assistant Professor of Mathematics, United States Naval Academy, 1865-70. Professor at Trinity, 1883- . Author of "English Words"; "Three Englishmen and Three Americans"; "Elements of Literary Criticism"; "What Can 1 Do for Brady?" and other poems; "Outline History of English and American Literature"; "Forms of Verse," etc.
The Rev John James McCook, M.A.
Professor of Modern Languages 396 Main Street B.A., Trinity, 1863; Studied at jefferson College, New York College of Physicians and Surgeons, and Berkeley Divinity School. Second Lieutenant First Virginia Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War. Professor at Trinity since 1883; Rector of St. John's Church, East Hartford, since 1869. Author of reports on poor law administration and prison reform ; also of numerous magazine articles on vagabondage, political venality, pauperism, drink, etc.
Robert Baird Riggs, Ph.D.
Scovill Professor of Chemistry and Natural Science 35 Forest Street B.A., Beloit College, Wisconsin, 1876 ; Ph.D., G ottingen. Chemist for United States Geologica l Survey, 1884-7. Professor of Chemistry, National College of Pharmacy, 1885-7. Contributor to Th e American Chemical j ourna l, The American j ournal of Science, and other journals.
13
14
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
Frank Cole Babbitt, Ph. D. Professor of the Creek Language and Literature 65 Vern on Street B.A., Harvard, 1890; M.A., 1892; Ph.D., 1895. Fellow of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1895-6. Instructor in Greek at Harvard, 1896-8. Professor at Trinity, 1899-. Member of the American Archaeological Institute. Member of the American Philological Association. Author of "Greek Grammar"; also papers in American Journal of A rchaeolog]i, and in H ar-
'Vard Studies in ClaS&Ical Philolog]i.
Charles Lincoln Edwards, Ph.D. ]. Pierpont Morgan Professor of Natural Histor)) 89 Buckingham Street B.S., Lombard, 1884; B.S., Indiana, 1886; M.A., Indiana, 1887; Ph.D., Leipzig, 1890. Fellow in Clark University, 1890-2. Assistant Professor of Biology, University of Texas, 1892-3; Adjunct Professor of Biology, same, 1893-4; Professor of Biology, University of Cincinnati, 1894-1900. Member of the American Society of Naturalists; member of the American Morphological Society; member of the American Folk-Lore Society; President Amencan Folk-Lore Society, 1899. Socia Corre&pomal de Ia Sociedad Geogra/ica ]I Estadistica de _Mexico; Socia Honoraria de Ia Sociedad Antonio Alzate. Author: Bahama Songs and Stories (Vol , 3 Memoirs American Folk-Lore Society); many papers in technical journals and monographs on biology, embryology, etc.; Author of a Bio metric Monograph on the growth development in Holothurians.
Wilbur Marshall Urban, Ph.D. Pofessor of Philosoph)) 71 Vernon Street Graduated from Princeton; Ph.D., Leipzig, 1897. Studied at ]ena and Leipzig and was reader in Philosophy in Princeton and Professor of Philosophy in Ursinus College. Member of the American Psychological Association and of the American Philosophical Association. Has contributed largely to philosophical journals and reviews.
/910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
Henry Augustus Perkins, M .A., E.E.
Professor of Ph:ysics 2 7 Marshall Street B .A., Yale, 1896; M.A., Columbia, 1899 ; E.E., !899. Has published articles in the American j ournal of S ciCIICC, Scientific American, Electrical W or ld, etc.
Karl Wilhelm Genthe, Ph.D
Professor of N alura/ H islor:y 24 Summer Street Graduated with certificate of "Maturitas" from St. Thomas' "Gymnasium" at Leipzig, Germany, I I ; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1897. Private Tutor in Boston, Mass., 1898路9; Instructor of Zoology at the University of Michigan , 1899- 1901 ; Instructor of Natural History at Trinity, 1901-3; Assistant Profeosor, 1903-7; Profeosor, 1907. Member of the American Society of Zoologists ; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Author of various articles in English and German in scientific periodicals and of some articles for the Enc]iclopaedia Americana.
Gustavus Adolphus Kleene, Ph.D.
Professor of Economics 90 Atwood Street Graduated from University of Michigan in 1891. Studied at the University of Berlin and Tiibingen, at Columbia University and the University of Pennsylvania, receiving his Ph.D. from the latter institution. He worked for two winters for the Charity Organization Society of New York City. He was assistant in economics at the University of Wisconsin; Instructor in Economics and Social Science at Swarthmore College, and Lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania. He is a contributer to the Annals of the American Academ]i of Political and Social Science, American Statistical Association Publications, C harilies, Yale Re11ie111, etc.
15
16
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVll
â&#x20AC;˘ Fred eric Robertson Honey, Ph.B.
Instructor in Drawing and Descriptive Geometry 778 Broad Street Received a Marine Engineers Certificate from the London Board of Trade in 1871, and his Ph.B. from Yale in 1885. H was Instructor in Smith College, Sheffield School, and in the Yale School of Fine Arts. He is the author of "Linear Prospective," also of numerous articles in scientific periodicals.
Joseph De, .1e Flynn, M.A.
Professor of Mathematics
145 Washington Street B .A., Trinity, 1897 ; M.A., Tufts, 1908. Instructor in Mathematics at Professor Stearns' School and at the Hartford Public High School. Assistant Professor of Mathematics at Trinity to 1907. Professor of Mathematics 1907-.
The Rev. Cranston Brenton, M.S.
Professor of the English Language and Literature 73 Vernon Street B.S., Trinity, 1899. Graduate of the Berkeley Divinity School, 1901; M .S ., Trinity, 1902. Minister in Charge, and Rector of All Saints Memorial Church, New Milford, Connecticut, 1901-1904. Assistant Professor of English, Trinity College, 1904-1906. From 1906, Professor of the English Language and Literature at Trinity College.
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
17
â&#x20AC;˘... . ,, , _,
Charles Edwin Rogers, C.E.
Professor of Civil Engineering 1 7 Vern on Street Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1896 ; l:.ngineer and Contractor, 1896-1901 ; Instructor Lehigh University, 19011904; Professor Mathematics and Civil Engineering, Clarkson Memorial School of Technology and General Engineering Practice, 1904-05; Professor Civil Engineering, Trinity, 1905-. Member of Sigma Xi, and of the R ensselaer Society of Engineers.
Horace Cheney Swan, M .D.
Director in the CJ;mnasium 11 Lincoln Street M.D., Tufts College Medical School , 1903; Instructor Histology, Harvard Summer School, 1903-5; Director of Gymnasium, Wesleyan University, 1903-5; Medical Di rector and Instructor in Gymnasium, Trinity College, 1905-. Physical Director of Y. M. C. A., St. Johnsbury, Vt., 1890 ; Y. M . C. A., Newton, Mass., 1899; studied Springfield Training School, 1897-1898.; Mem er of Hartford Medical Association, and Connecticut Medical Association.
Arthur Adams, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of English 22 Jarvis Hall B.A., Rutgers, 1902; M .A., 1903 ; Ph.D. , Yale, 1905. Instructor in English at the University of Colorado, 1905-6. Assistant Professor at Trinity, 1906-8. Associate Professor, 1908. Member of the Modern Language Association of America. Author of '"Syntax of the Temporal Clause in Old English Prose"; also of notes in Modern Language Notes.
;. J
18
THE
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Vol. XXXVII
The Rev. Isben Thaddeus Beckwith, Ph.D., D .D. Resident Lecturer in Biblical Studies 14 Seabury Hall B.A., Yale, 1868; Ph.D., Yale, 1872. Tutor in Greek, Yale, 1870-1872 and 1874- 1879; Student in the Universities of Gottingen and Leipzig, 1872- 1874; Professor of Greek, Trinity College, 1879-1898 ; Professor of the Literature and Interpretation of the New Testament, General Theological Seminary, 1898-1906. Member of various learned societies.
Roscoe James Ham, M.A. Professor of Romance Languages 83 Allen Place Graduated f10m Harvard 1896. Studied at Harvard and University of Berlin, 1897-99. Instructor in French, Cascadil'a School, Ithaca, New York, 1899-1901; Instructor in Modern Languages, Bowdoi n, 1901 -03; Assistant Professor, 1903-06 ; Professor, 1906-07 ; Trinity, 1907-. Member of the Modern Language Association of America. joint Author of Brief German Grammar.
Raymond Garfield Gettell, M.A. Professor of History 74 Vern on Street B.A., Ursinus, 1903; Graduate Student of Pennsylvania, 1904-6; M.A., 1906. Instructor in History, Ursinus College, 1902-5. Instructor in History and Economics, Bates Professor, Trinity, 1907-. Member College, 1906-7. of the American Historical Association, and of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, also American Political Science Association. Contributor to the publications of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
19
Frank Gardner Moore, Ph.D.
Professor of the Latin Language and Literature 15 Seabury B.A., Yale, 1886; Ph.D ., Yale, 1890. Tutor in Latin, Yale, 1888-1890, 1891-1893; Studied at Berlin, 1890-91. Assistant Professor of Latin, Dartmouth, 1893-1900. Associate Professor of Latin and of Roman Archaeology, Dartmouth, 1900-1906. Secretary American Philqlogical Assoctation, 1904-. Edited Cicero's De Seneclule, 1904.
Edgar Francis Waterman, M.A., LL.B.
Treasurer I2
abury Hall
B.A. Trinity, 1898: M.A., Trinity. 1901: LL.B ., Columbia, 1901 . Secretary University Club of Hartford.
Perry Blaine Perkins, Ph.D.
Instructor in Physics 7 7 Washington Street B.A., Harvard, 1903; M .A., Yale, 1904; Ph.D., Yale, 1908. Professor of Physics in Western Maryland College, 1905; Substituting for Prof. H . A. Perkins, 1908-9.
20
THE
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Vel. XXXVII
William Newnham Carlton, M.A.
Librarian The Library M.A., Trinity, 1902
The Reverend Henry Ferguson, LL.D.
Lecturer in History Concord, N. H. Edwin Collins Stone, M.A.
Assistant in Chemistry 40 Allen Place Clarence Canfield Stirling
Instructor in Shop- W orq 66 State Street Harold Edward Robbins, B.S.
Instructor in Physics and Mathematics B.S., Trinity, 1908.
â&#x20AC;˘
~=-- ~ ..... ,:-- '--"""' 'i~
College [)~
i ?路路 . .
22
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
Wra~uat~ .Stu~~nts Henry Slater Wilcox, B.S., 1908, Little Fails, N.Y., H. E. Russell Fell ow Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Charles William McKone, B .S., 1908, H art!ord, Mary A Columbia University, New York
Terry Fell ow,
.S.p~cial Stu~~nts William Christian Deppen Harold Oscar Arnurius Paul Fair banks Herrick Harlan Dickinson Pomeroy .
Pennsylvania Connecticut Massachusetts Connecticut
~on-)natriculat~~ Stu~~nts Howard Ray Brockett Frederick Starr Collins Thomas Francis Flanagan Walter Aloysius Kiernan Clarence Ellise Needham Louis Bayard Pike The Rev. Daniel D uke Waugh
.,
Bristol, Hartford, Hartford, Hartford, Hartford, Hartford, Collinsville,
Conn. Conn. Conn . Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn.
\!:lass of 1909 \!:lass \to lor.s Orange and Black
O fficu.s
Woodforde Hamilton Plant ]ames Stratton Carpenter Lewis Gildersleeve Harriman Michael Augustine Connor
Israel Loucks Xanders Clinton ]irah Backus Arthur Sobeski Kean William Christian Deppen
President Vice-President Secrelar:y-Treasurer Historian
President V ice-President Secretar:y-Treasurer Historian
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
25
1909 111tstorl? And because we know we have breath in our mouth, And think we have thought in our head.-The Old Men. ~~E~~ HIS is the last chance the Class of 1909 has to give an official
account of itself. (No, it should not be an occasion for rejoicing on your part.) In our first tale, we showed the college how we could walk on our new feet; we swelled with selfimportance during the Sophomore year; we struggled and scrambled through the manifold duties and pleasures of the Junior stage; and now we have arrived at that much yoddelled but really joyful period of the collegiate course-the end . And so we wind up our days as a tale that is told-we hope to live happy and wealthy ever afterwards. Why cry to us to tell you tales of wonder and of nerve-thrilling class achievement? We can take down a copy of the yellow bound book, and show in the pages of the 1909 Ivy all that has brought us to our present felicitous state. These are the passionate stories that have blistered our mouths with their white hot enthusiasm. We boasted of them, we puffed them,-and then they appeared in cold print without the red fire and the brass band accompaniment. Our history up till September 1908 can be found in the pages of the former l vy,-why attempt to gild our old idols? The tales we have to add to this alread1f long list are only two. Some one conceived the idea that we were missing a great opportunity,-we had gathered together at class meetings, we had, in part, attended the banquets of our Freshmen and Junior years, we had posed en masse for the photographer, and we had yelled ourselves hoarse at our own little victories, but we never had tried to gather around one big table and feed our respective faces without the intervention of the Sophomore Class, or the kindly presence of the Freshmen. That is why we held a Senior Smoker. There was nothing exceptional about it, each man brought along his pipe, and each one paid for his feed and his stein of beer . No class assess-
26
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
==============================路-. . ment resulted, and no one was run into debt by extravagance. The smoker brought us together, it gave a sense of solidarity to the class, and it proved to interested outsiders that the Class of 1909 was capable of gathering for a quiet common meal without trying to wreck the place, or make the air blue with acrimonious epithets about the three other classes. We commend this custom to coming Seniors-it is nothing more than the realizing of Richa.r d Hovey's idea of "a stein on 路the table, and a good song ringing clear." The second plan adopted by 1909 was the appointing of a nominating committee. This may seem too trivial to be recognized in this book, but it really had a value. All the hair pulling, to say nothing of the wire pulling that used to give a vile repute to Senior class elections was done away. Seniors should have attained a dignity that does not descend to the level of rank politics. If we have prea ched clean athletics, we might as well begin to practice an equivalent probity in class elections. 1909 has tried to do this. And moreover, if Seniors have attained this :reputed dignity, the rest of the college body should not look to them for judgment on trivial affairs. Why should a Senior decide the shape of the button on a Freshman cap? We do not mention this matter simply to revive the hackneyed subject of the position of the Senior, but because 1909 has quietly laid all matters of such small import to those classes to which they belong. There is not much time left, our college days are numbered, but the associations that we have had will grow deeper with the years, and the peculiarities which we think are indelible weaknesses in our alma mater will be softened as time goes on. For who does not, in memory, erase the wrinkles of work and worry from the loved face of his mother? So we who are passing out will look back upon Trinity with pleasant recollections, with renewed thanks, and with a growing affection for her walls, for her system, for her 'llen.
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
m~mb~rs
William Howard Bailey
of
t~~ s~nior
Manchester, N. H .
Paul MacMillin Butterworth, IKA New Y ark City Sophomore Dining Club; Secretary-Treasurer Misionary Society (2); President Missionary Society (3); Editor-in-Chief of Tripod (3); Treasurer of Tripod (4); Representative N . E. P. A. (3, 4.); Voted into Class of 1909.
<!:lass 1909
27
28
THE
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Vol. XXXVII
Clinton ]irah Backus, ]r., c))r~
St. Paul, Minn.
Entered Junior Class from the University of nesota; Football Squad (3); Football Team Senior Dramatics (3); President ]esters Second Basketball Team (3); Tablet Board Chairman of Class Day Dramatics.
Paul Humphrey Barbour, IKA
Min(4) ( 4) (4)
Hartford, Conn.
Mandolin Club (2); Tripod Board (I, 2, 3, 4); Circulation-Manager ( 4); First Mackay-Smith First Mathematical Mathematical Prize (2); Prize, Church College Competitions (2); Second Mathematical Prize in the Church College Competillons (3).
William Stuart Buchanan, ]r., ~KE Brooklyn, N. Y. Second Baseball Team (I, 2); Second Basketball Team (3); ]esters (4) .
..
1910
TRINITY
George Sumner Buck, AXP
COLLEGE
29
Chesire, Conn.
Senior Honorary Society; Athletic Nominating Committee ( 4); Senior Smoker Committee; Sophomore Smoker Committee; Junior Prom Commitlee; Football Team (1, 2, 3, 4); Track Team (3); Hockey Team (3); Second Basketball Team (3); Second Baseball Team (2); Mandolin Club (I); Chairman of Class Day Committee.
Corwin MacMillin Butterworth, IKA New York City Tripod Board (f. 2, 3, 4); Secretary Tripod Board (I , 2); Alumni Editor (2, 3); Mandolin Club (2, 3, 4).
Robert Mason Cadman, AXP
Hartford, Conn.
Track Team (1, 2, 3, 4); Glee Club (2, 4) .
30
THE IVY
Hollis Smith Candee
Vol. XXXVII
Hartford, Conn.
Holland Prize Scholarship (3) .
]ames Stratton Carpenter, ]r. IKA
Pottsville, Pa.
Senior Honorary Society; Sophomore Dining Club; German Club (2, 3, 4); Secrelary-T reasurer (3); Presidenl ( 4); Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Mandolin Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Leader Mandolin Club (3) (resigned); Assislanl F oolball Manager (3); Manager (4); Chairman Junior Prom Commillee; Class Day Presidenl.
Harold Nathaniel Chandler, L'.~ Fitchburg, Mass. Goodwin Greek Prize (I); Holland Prize Scholarship (I); Class Baseball Team (1, 2); Freshman Banquel Commillee; Sophomore Dining Club; Glee Club (I, 2, 3); Leader of Glee Club (3); Tripod Board (2, 3); Phi Bela Kappa; Class Day Presenler.
1910
31
TRINITY COLLEGE
Michael Augustine Connor, AXP Hartford, Conn. Varsity Baseball T earn ( 1, 2, 3, 4); Captain ( 4) ; Class Day Statistician.
Alexander Wellington Creedon,
<I>r~
H artford, Conn. Sophomore Dining Club; Assistant Basketball Manager (3); Manager (4); Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3); Leader of Mandolin Club (3); Junior Promenade Commillee; Class Day Orator.
William Christian Deppen,
A~il>
Shamokin, Pa.
THE
32
Vol. XXXVll
IVY
Leonard Jerome Dibble, ~KE
Bethel, Conn.
Track Team (2, 3); Football Squad (1, 2); Assistant Business Manager Tablet (3 , 4); Secretary-Treasurer Junior Promenade Committee
(3) .
William Dwyer,
Hartford, Conn.
Indoor Track Team (I); Sophomore Smoker Committee; 1909 Jyy Board.
Welles Eastman,
A~<l>
St. Paul. Minn.
Entered So.phomote Cl.ass fro.T; the University of Minnesota; junior Prom "Committee; 1909 IvY Board; Advertising Manager of Tripod (3, 4) Class Day Historian.
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
George Edward Elwell, ] r.
33
Bloomsburg, Pa.
T ablel Board (I, 2) ; Assistant Business Manager (2) ; Sophomore Smoker Committee; Glee Club (3); Editor-in-Chief 1909 IvY; Chairman Senior Smoker Commi ttee ; Class Day Poet.
Burdette Lee Farnham Chemical Prize (3).
Elliott Stanley Foote
West Hartford, Conn.
East Hartford, Conn.
34
THE IVY
Everett Selden Geer, Jr.
Vol. XXXVN
Hartford, Conn.
Frederick Thomas Gilbert, <I>r .l Montville, Conn. Secretary-Treasurer Naturalist's Field Club (4).
Henry Carleton Goodrich, ~KE Glastonbury, Conn. Freshman Banquet Committee; Sophomore Dining Club; Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Manager of Musical Clubs (3); President (4); College Choir (2, 3, 4); Second Baseball Team (I); German Club (3); Junior Prom <;:ommittee.
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
Karl William Hallden
35
Torrington, Conn.
Lewis Gildersleeve Harriman, \IIY Windsor, Conn. Sophomore Dining Club; Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4) ; Tripod Board (2, 3, 4); 1909 IvY Board ; Goodwin-Hoadley Scholarship.
Henry Otto Hinkel, IKA
New York City
Sophomore Dining Club; Sophomore Smoker Committee ; German Club (I, 2); Junior Promenade Commiltee; Class President (3, 2nd lerm); Senior Dance Commillee.
36
THE
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Arthur Sobeski Kean, IKA
Vol. XXXV/l
Wenatchee, Wash.
Entered ] unior Class from Hobart College; 1909 Ivy Board.
William Gilbert Livingston, 6. w
Detroit, Mich.
Class President {I, I sl term) ; Glee Club {I); Tripod Board {I) ; Assistant Manager Baseball Team (2), {resigned); German Club {2); Soph路 omore Dining Club; Junior Promenade Commitlee ; Secretary-Treasurer Col f Association.
Percy Sherwood McConnel, AXP Groveton, N. H. Assistant Chapel Organist {I) ; Organist {2, 3); College Orchestra (1, 2, 3, 4) .
1910
37
TRINITY COLLEGE
Stephen Essex McGinley, 6-KE New London, Conn. Senior Honorary Society; Sophomore Dining Club; Class President (2, I st term); Assistant Manager Baseball T earn (2); Manager (3); Mandolin Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Leader (2); Toucey Prize Scholarship (2) ; Goodwin Greek Prize (I) ; Sophomore Smoker Committee; Athletic Advisory Committee (3); Athletic Nominating Committee ( 4).
Harry lrl Maxson, >l!Y
GalvestQn, Texas
Senior Honorary Society ; Sophomore Dining Club; Football Team (1, 2, 3, 4); Track Team (2, 3, 4); Captain (4); Second Baseball Team (I); President Class (I, 2nd term); Chairman Sophomore Smoker Committee; ] unior Promenade Committee; Treasurer Athletic Association (3) ; President ( 4) ; Athletic Association Nominating Committee (4).
Charles Eugene Morrow, <I>r6.
Hartford, Conn.
Hockey Team (2, 3); Baseball Squad.
38
THE
IVY
Henry Oliver Peck, A.6.<I>
Vol. XXXVII
Pittsfield, Mass.
Tripod Board (I, 2, 3, 4); Circulation Maaager (2, 3) ; Treasurer ( 4); President Golf AS>ociation ( 4); Marshall's Aide (3); Class Day Secretary and Treasurer.
Woodforde Hamilton Plant, .6.KE Gardiner, Maine Senior Honorary Society; Cla;s Pre•ident ( 4, I st term) ; Tripod Board (2, 3, 4) ; Managing Edi•or (3); Editor-in-Chief ( 4); BusineS3 Manager 1909 IvY (3); Manager Musical Clubs (4); The Jesters (4).
Edward Kilbourn Roberts, ]r., 'I!Y New Haven, Conn. Assistant Manager Track Team (2); Manager (3); German Club; Senior Smoker Committee.
1910
Paul Roberts
TRINITY COLLEGE
39
Hartford, Conn.
Sophomore Dining Club; Football Squad (1, 2, 3); Team (4); Hockey Team (1, 2, 3, 4); Captain (4); Track Team (I, 2, 3); Class President (3, Ist term); Glee Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Leader ( 4); College Marshall; President Missionary Society ( 4); The Jesters ( 4).
I Alfred ] oseph Stafford
Bayard Fran cis Snow
Hartford, Conn.
Wakefield, R. I.
Football Squad (2, 3); Football Team (4).
..
40
THE
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Israel Loucks Xanders, ~ \[!
Vol. XXXVII
Broken Bow, Neb.
Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Football Team (1, 3, 4); Track Squad; Varsity Baseball Team (I, 2, 3); Captain Baseball Team (3); Junior Promenade Committee (3); Chairman Senior Promenade Committee; President of Class ( 4, 2nd term); Athletic Aosociation Nomi nating Committee (3, 4).
Hartford, Conn.
Karl Augustus Reiche
.Somdime. m¢mb¢r.S Joseph P age Aleshire Lewis Gibbs Carpenter Walter Edward Claussen Thomas Robert Clendinen William Cassatt Coleman Harold Bracken Dye Keyes Christopher Gaynor . H amilton H all Leo Griswold Hall .
Washington, D. C. Detroit, Mich. . Hartford, Conn. . Coytesville, N . ] . Saranac Lake, N. Y. Newark, N . ]. Sioux City, la. West Hartford, Conn. Chicago, Ill.
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
41 Hartford, Conn. Taunton, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. West Haven, Conn. . Auburn, N. Y. Pittsburg, Pa. Gloversville, N. Y. Suffield, Conn. North Grafton, Mass. . Terryville, Conn. . Buffalo, N. Y. Waterbury, Conn.
William James Hamersley John Caldwell Hart William Augustus Henshaw Joseph Birney Kilbourn Walter Franklin Lakin Robert Lowell Mason Charles Parnell Mulcahy Byron Edwin Newton Frank Chase Rich . Laurence Bigelow R eineman Carlton Alvord Rosa Elmer Christopher Seymour John Bowie Shearer Jonathan Starr, Jr. Keith Willoughby . Edward John Vaughn /
----- ~ ll _, -~
z:路路路路
(!lass of 1910 <!la.s.s <!olor.s Maroon and Grey
<!la.s.s Offtcu.s (L:I,rl.stmas 'G12.rm William Fred rick McElroy Albert Marston Smith Richardson Little Wright Fred Donald Carpenter
President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Historian
t5rlnltr t5um Albert Marston Smith John Booth Clark . Arthur Linsay Potter Cyril Bathurst Judge
President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Historian
CLASS
O F
1910
44
THE
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Vol. XXXVII
1910 lJftstorl' ~~~~~~ NE of the peculiar joys that comes to a class at the end of its
Junior year is to take a retrospective view of its short life. The first two years are a sort of preparation for the third, they are like the easy jaunt before the snow line is reached. And in climbing, one usually rests before he takes the last stretch. It was, then, in our period of composure that we returned to college last Fall. The details of tl:e first part of the climb have been recorded in a former history, and we can give no better evidence of our success than the fact that the Lemon Squeezer was awarded to the C lass of 1910. So we are now ending what has been the hardest, the steepest, and, also, the most slippery part of our college journey. It is the hardest and steepest because the Junior is expected to have a la.rge share of outside work, and because it is for most men 路the last period for satisfying degree requiremepts; it is the most slippery, because these demands for work give abundant opportunity for all sorts of mistakes and failures. The first event of interest was the ~anquet tendered us by the Class of 1912 at the Worthy in Springfield. All thanks and commendation are due to the Freshmen for their bounty, and for their clever escape from Sophomoric clutches. The memories of this banquet are a great contribution to our store of college anecdote--a store that will be rehearsed in part, for the amusement, edification (though undoubtedly, the distress) of our friends and relatives. Then the second event whose memory will linger was the Prom. Like the fond Mother who claims superior beauty and intelligence for her child, each class can say with rightful pride that its Promenade was the best that Alumni Hall has seen. At least, the 191 0 Prom was the grandest effvrt of the Class; on it we expended every energy; in short, all the functions of Junior Week were carried through with a surprising amount of support, and a merited share of pleasure. We can ask no better standard of judgment for the class than the success of its Junior festivities. There is still another portion of Class History, and that is the production of this book. The scheme, as can be readily discerned, is not to laud any one class,
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
45
but to praise and show forth the college as a whole. We may have put our own stamp upon what little we have done, but we find, after all our effwts, that little has been done through her. What this Lemon Squeezer Class has done for Trinity is nothing to compare with what Trinity has done for it, both as a body and as individuals. And finally, if we, thus far, have assimilated any real Trinity spirit, or have re-echoed her song, it has been because we have tried to be useful rather than crnamental. We say this with a consciousness of our failures, for much power has been sacrificed, at times, to this one faculty. A consistent desire on the part of the Class of 191 0 to be of service is what has brought it to its present state of prosperity. 'Tis true, some of our strongest men have gone, we have lost twentyseven of our original number-a third of those who came to Trinity in the Fall of 1906. But from the start of our history the idea to do things, to be positive rather than negative, has been dominant in our .minds. Yet it would be unjust to say that we were the suppliers of either this idea or this force; we were merely the concentratcrs. College spirit is wasted if one scatters it abroad through a megaphone. The originator of the spirit was Trinity, our task was to focus this intensity upon some collegiate achievement rather than to make it a means of display, so we have tried not to aspire either to greatness or fame, but just to do the stint that others have done, only do it better. It is true that in our attempt to "do" things, we have, on several occasions, collided with collegiate authorities. However lamentable these miscarriages of enthusiasm may have been, we feel well assured that none were committed with malice aforethought. We do not exhibit immaculate records, we have no desire to claim an immense superiority over the other eighty class that have preceded us, but we do hope that the spirit that has prompted us and the little we have accomplished may be an acceptable contribution to the class lore of our most just and gentle Mother-Trinity.
â&#x20AC;˘
â&#x20AC;˘
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
47
m~mb~rs of t~~ 3 unior (!:lass
Raymond Conklin Abbey, IKA Baseball T earn (2).
H arold Oscar Arnurius
Windsor, Conn.
Chester, Conn.
48
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
Charles Hobby Bassford, AXP
Newark, N. ].
THE
First Mackay-Smith Mathematical Prize Football Squad (3) .
(2) ;
Horace Richardson Bassford, AXll Newark, N. ].
John Edward Brown, AXP
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
49
George Cleveland Capen, b.KE Bloomfield, Conn. Sophomore Dining Club; Basketball Squad (I, 2); Football Squad (I, 2); Secretary and T reasurer of Athletic Association; Secretary and Treasurer of Junior Prom Committee.
Fred Donald Carpenter, <t>rt.
Hartford, Conn.
Hartford Admittitur Prize ; Holland Prize (I) ; Second Basketball T earn (2) ; Sophomore Hop Committee; Junior Prom Committee.
Fran cis P. Carrol, AXP
Hartford, Conn.
President Naturalist's Field Club (3) .
THE
50
IVY
David William Clark,
Vol. XXXVII
Rosebud, S. D.
Football Squad (I , 2, 3) .
] ohn Booth Clark,
Rosebud, S. D.
IvY Board.
Hobart Wells Smith Cook, ~KE
Geddes, S. D.
Sophomore Dining Club; Basketball T earn (I, 2); Baseball Team (I, 2) ; F ooiball Squad (1, 2).
1910
TRINITY
John Richard Cook, ]r., 6.'ll
COLLEGE
51
Centerville, Md.
Sophomore Dining Club; IvY Board .
George William Eugene Draper, <I>r6. New York City Foolball Squad (I , 2, 3 ) ; IvY Board.
William Spaulding Eaton, 'l!Y
Nashua, N. H.
Sophomore Dining Club; Chairman Sophomore Hop Commillee; F oolball Squad (3) ; Baseball Squad (1) .
52
THE
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Aaron Fien,
G eorge Seymour . Fran cis,
Vol. XXXVll
Hartford, Conn.
Wethersfield, Conn.
Charles William Gamerdinger,
Hartford, Conn.
Pardee Scholarship (2); Holland Prize (3)
/910
TRINITY COLLEGE
53
Nelson Hall Gildersleeve, wY Middletown, Conn. Sophomore Dining Club; Germar. Club Baseball T earn (I, 2) ; Glee Club (I).
(2) ;
Harold Chamberlain Green, <I>rt. Hartford, Conn.
Joseph Groves, t.KE
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Sophomore Dining Club; Assistant Football Manager (3); Tripod Board (3) ; Business Manager 1910 IVY; Junior Prom Committee; Toucey Prize Scholarship (2); The Jesters (3).
54
THE
William Henry Harris
Arthur Bartow Henshaw, <I>r.l
Vol. XXXVII
I VY
West Hartford, Conn.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Sophomo re Din ing Club; Foolball Team (1, 2, 3); Caplain (3); Caplain-elecl for 1910; Track Team (1) .
Frank Leonard Johnson, 6-KE
Hartford, Conn.
Enlered T rinily from Yale College, 1908.
I
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
Cyril Bathurst judge,
\]JY
55
New York City
Sophomore Dining Club; Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee; Assistant Manager of Track Team (2); Manager (3); Chairman Sophomore Smoker Committee; Chairman Junior Prom Committee.
Frederick Steinfort Kedney, Ail<t> Track Team (1) .
Arthur Kline
Hartford, Conn.
Fargo, N. D.
56
THE
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Archer Eben Knowlton, <I>r~
August Herman Leschke, <I>r~
Vol. XXXVII
Hartford, Conn.
Hartford, Conn.
William Frederick McElroy, ~KE Manchester, N. H. Sophomore Dining Club; Sophomore Smoker Commitlee; Football Squad (1, 2); Second Basketball Team (2); Class President (3, 1st term).
/9/0
TRINITY COLLEGE
Henry Smith Marlor, .l\f/
57
Brooklyn, Conn.
Sophomore Dining Club; Assistant Manager Baseball Team (2); Class President (2, I st term); Junior Prom Committee.
Ralph Howard Merrill,
\)!y
Pittsfield, Mass.
IvY Board; Trip od Board (2, 3); German Club (2, 3); Secretary-Treasurer (3) .
Lucius Augustus Merritt, Jr.
Windsor, Conn.
58
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Vol. XXXVII
William James Nelson, A XP South Woodstock, Conn. Track T earn (I) ; H older of Half- Mile Record; Football Squad (1 , 2) .
William George Oliver, if>rll
Emmorton, Md.
Track Team (1, 2) ; Assistant Manager Basketball Team (3) ; Sophomore Smoker Commillee; -Manage r jesters (3) .
_., -~J
,r Ewald Olson, <I>r~
South Manchester, Conn.
Baseball Squad (I , 2) ; Basketball Squad (I , 2).
1910
TRINITY COLLEG E
59
Arthur Linsay Potter, i'Y Saybrook Point, Conn. Sophomore Dining Club ; Baseball Team (I ); Hockey T earn (I) ; German Club (I , 2) .
James Riordan
Edward Warren Ripley,
!}.
Second Foolball T eam (3).
w
Brandon, Vt.
H artford , Conn.
60
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Ward Slawson,
<t>r.l
Vol. XXXVII
Sloatsburg, N.Y.
Second Football Team (3) .
Albert Marston Smith, AXP
Berlin, N. H.
Baseball T earn (I, 2); Senior Dramatics (2); junior Prom Committee; The jesters (3); Class President (3, 2nd term) ; Sophomore Smoker Committee.
Irving Wright Smith,
Wethersfield, Conn.
College Choir (3); Sophomore Smoker Committee; junior Prom Committee.
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
Wilbert Austin Smith, wY
61
Syracuse, N. Y.
Chairman Freshman-Junior Banquet Commillee; Toaâ&#x20AC;˘tmaster; Mandolin Club (I, 2, 3) ; German Club (I, 2, 3); Football Squad (3); Junior Prom Commillee.
Leon Abbott Stansfield, wY
Syracuse, N. Y.
Glee Club (2, 3); Mandolin Club (2, 3); German Club (2).
James Farley Townsend, IKA Atlantic City, N. ]. Glee Club (I); Sophomore Smoker Commillee.
THE
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Vol. XXXVII
Benjamin floyd Turner, IKA Glastonbury, Conn. IvY Board; Junior Prom Committee.
Jerome Pierce Webster, o/Y
Plymouth, N. H.
Sophomore Dining Club; Mandolin Club (I, 2, 3); Glee Club (3); Second Baseball Team (I); Baseball T earn (2) ; Assistant Manager of the Tablet (3); Class President (3).
Richardson Little Wright, A.6.<P Philadelphia, Penn. Third English Alumni Prize (I); Second Whitlock (I); Tablet Board (2, 3); Editor-in-Chief (3); Editor-in-Chief 1910 IvY; Assistant Manager Musical Clubs (3); Sophomore Smoker Committee; Junior Prom Committee.
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
63
Som~tim~ m~mb~r.s Frederick Samuel Bishop Gilbert Brown Lester Allen Bosworth Raymond Guede Coghlan Harry Foster Ferguson Edward Gabler Douglas Gott . Sturges Harmon Edward Thomas Langford William Edmund Larned Horace Dwight Martin Clinton jessie Muncie Ambrose Spencer Murray, 3rd Henry Conrad Neff . Henry Edward Rau . Walter Carleton Rich Herbert Leroy Richards William Reynolds Ripley Carroll Milton Robertson Robert Keney Skinner Buil Leighton Steel . john Henry Throop Sweet, Jr. William Fran cis Waldron Howard Arnold Willard
. Louisville, Ky. St. Catherine's, Ont. Hartford, Conn. . Newark, N. ]. . Adams, Mass. Brooklyn, N . Y. . Boston, Mass. Chicago, III. Yonkers, N. Y. West Point, N. Y. . Auburn, R. I. Babylon, N. Y. New York, N. Y. . Adams, Mass. East Hartford, Conn. . Melrose, Mass. Glastonbury, Conn. Brandon, Vt. New York, N .Y. Hartford, Conn. . Newton, N. ]. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, CoRn. Wethersfield, Conn.
Sop~omor~ (!:lass, 1911 ~lass ~olors
Grey and Blue
~lass
0
U::~rl.stma.s
fflc¢.r.s t5nm
. President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer . Historian
Clarence Edgar Sherman Alfred Howell . William Allen Bottomley Arthur Cornwallis Eaton
t5rlnltr t5nm Earl Blanchard Ramsdell Arthur Lloyd Gildersleeve George Thurman Keyes Gordon William Stewart
. President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer . Historian
66
THE
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Vol. XXXVII
1911 1Jfistorr ~~~~~HISTORY of the Sophomore Class can be little less than a
blushing though candid confession of many sincere attempts, and few failures. We would blush, because we have not yet attained the dignity of upperclassmen,-a dignitiy that allows of boasting and somewhat of exaggeration; we would be candid because our attempts have met with unprecedented success, and we feel that they can claim a place among the best accomplishments of any class. It is, then, with the shyness of adolesence, that we would relate to you the deeds of the class of 1911 . In September, 190 7, we kept drifting in, one by one, from all quarters of the country and all sorts of prep schools until our ranks for the first time were completely assembled in chapel on that memorable evening. The Freshmen pews were crowded to overflowing, as the enrollment of the entering class was larger than that 路o f any preceding, there being seventy-three new men. We fumbled around the cathedral seats, knew that all eyes were fixed on us,-altogether, we were impressed by the solemnity of the occasion, and its seriousness rested heavily upon our young shoulders. But as we left this sanctified air, we saw for the first time in our lives, the actuality of college tradition. The sudden expulsion from the chapel door was a rude awakening, but we recovered sufficiently to show the Sophomore that we were a strong aggregation. On Bloody Monday the victory in the bulletin board rush was ours. The principal events of our initial year were the winning of the championship of the college in basketball; the Freshman-Junior Banquet; and the St. Patrick's day episode. Shortly before the Christmas vacation of our first year we gave the Juniors a banquet, which they will long remember as one of the most enjoyable festivities of their college course. To some it may have been decidedly tame, for it was a quiet protest against the abuses that hitherto had attended such banquets. It was given in Hartford without any intervention whatsoever. Evidently, this plan was a failure to a few, for 1912 returned to the old scheme, yet no one would say that our efforts were in vain.
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
67
On St. Patrick's Day we gained a complete victory over the Sophomores. Our banner was hoisted on the Sage-Allen Building early in the morning. The setting was perfect for the act-the cold grey sky was streaked with the lemon yellow of the rising sun, the March air blew up in frapped gusts from the river, and several hundred feet above the pavement, the corners of our banners flapped in the breeze. The Sophomores below uttered groans of anguish, and acted like martyred heroes, when in reality they were only sorely disappointed ~nd deeply stung underclassmen. So there it hung for several hours, despite the efforts of the Sophomores to get it down or burn it. Close upon the heels of this victory came another, for the vigilance of the night before had completely wornout the class of 191 0, and we were able to overcome them in the campus scrap. In September 1908, nearly all of our former number returned, though some who had contributed an inestimable amount of support could not be with us. But, undaunted, we continued our record by winning the push rush on Bloody Monday. The season of class athletics gave us victories in the F reshman-Sophomore baseball game, track meet, and football game. We also defeated the Freshmen in the first game for the college basketball championship. The spirit of the class for social events was well shown in the Sophomore Hop, the second in the history of the college. Nothing was spared that could contribute to the joy of the evening and all who attended said the dance was a complete success. The final attempt of the class, and, by all means, its most ambitious, was the abolition of hazing. We obviated all uncomfortable and embarrassing circumstances by not using pyrotechnics in this movement. We did not employ a megaphone to tell all the college body that we would not haze; we simply tried to control our feelings. Our actions were based on the supposition that the man who could satisfy the entrance requirements for Trinity had enough grey matter to be convinced that he was not the consummation of all learning and experience, and that the college could get 'along without his candid self-expression, though it deeply appreciated and urgently solicited his support. Two events, then, toward what we believe to be sane college spirit have been attempted by the class of 1911. We have tried to hold a Freshman-Junior banquet without any odious and depreciating scandal; we have foregone the opportunity of exhibiting the beast in our natures and have left off the paddle. In short we might say that our class ideal has been to be less like boors, and more like men.
68
THE
Vol. XXXVJ/
I VY
So.p~omor~ <!:lass. 1911 Elmer Barnes Blackman William Allen Bottomley Frank judson Brainerd William Whitaker Buck Vere Gerald Burdick Hasel Hill Burgwin . Joseph Oliver Carroll Sherman Cawley Harold Nelson Conover Christie Albert Clark . Thomas James Conroy, Jr. Ashley Lyman Cook . William Waters Cotter William Chapman D ewey Arthur Cornwallis Eaton Gustave Alexander Feingold Philip James Flanders Leon R. Foster William Burr Gibson Arthur Lloyd Gildersleeve Stephen William Green Stanley Poole Grint . Sherman Orton Haight Sherman Post Haight John William Harrison Levi P . Morton Hickey Asa A Hollings Alfred Howell Harold Clarence Jaquith George Thurman Keyes Wade Hunt Knowlton Charles Moulton Konvalinka
. West Hartford, Conn. South Glastonbury, Conn. Portland, Conn. . Cheshire, Conn. Hartford, Conn. . Pittsburg, Pa. Pittsfield, Mass. Hartford, Conn. Pt. Pleasant, N. ]. Lee Masso Hartford, Conn. . Hadley, Mass, Hartford, Conn Memphis, T enn 1 Pittsfield, Mass. Hartford, Conn. Rochester, N. H. South Manchester, Conn, . Utica, N. Y. . Portland, Conn. Bar Harbor, Me. New London, Conn. P ittsfield, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y, Torrington, Conn. East Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn Uniontown, Pa. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Riverdale, N. H. Cedar Rapids, Iowa
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
Paul Maxon . Thomas Lynn Morris Richard MacDonald Nelson Willard Oakley Pease ei.on Frederick Pitts Hulan Dickinson Pomeroy James Porteus . Frank Rice Prout Alfred Ely Pulford Earl Blanchard Ramsdell Harry Kollock Rees . John Davis Reichard John Howard Rosebaugh E:barles Tarbox Sanford William Oliver Sanford Sheldon Beardsley Shepard Clarence Edgar Sherman William Converse Skinner, ]r. Allan Kellogg Smith . Gordon William Stewart Paul Herbert Taylor . Allan judd Welton . BlUm Francis Yates . Wheelock Young Clarence Stoll Zipp .
69
. Detroit, Mich. . Pittsburg, Pa. Albany, N. Y .. Lee, Mass. Ballston Spa, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. East Springfield, N. Y. South Tacoma, Wash. Lee, Mass. Hartford, Conn. . Fairplay, Md. Erie, Pa. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. . Illion, N. Y. Brockton, Mass. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Portland, Conn. Hartford, 路 Conn. Hartford, Conn. Buffalo, N. Y. Leavenworth, Kan. Hartford, Conn.
70
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Vol. XXXVII
Som~tim~ m~mb~rs Walter Ellsworth Batterson . William Gabriel Berman . Arthur Worthington Bunnell Alexander Keith D avis Eugene Hoffman D ooman . Harold de Wolfe Hotchkiss Harold Edwin Jones . Louis Kofsky . Herman Stumpf Murray Alan Thaxter . John Walter Woessner Bermon Tisdale Woodle
New York, N . Y. Hartford, Conn. Norwich, Conn. Middletown, Conn. Wakayama, Japan Thomaston, Conn. Winsted, Conn. Hartford, Conn. New York, N. Y. Portland, Maine Corpus Christie, Texas Norbeth, P a.
:fr~.s~man (!1a.s.s. 1912 a::ta.s.s a::olors Red and Blue
a::ta.s.s 0 fftcus <!brtstma.s "Gum
Laurence Hutchinson McClure Edward Bulkely Van Zile John Farnsley Reddick Charles Richardson Whipple
. President Vice-President Secretary- T reasurer . H istorian
"Grlnltl' "Gum
Alfred Erwin Rankin . Chapin Carpenter Charles Richardson Whipple William Augustus Bird, IV
. President Vice-P resident Secretary-Treasurer . Historian
TRINITY COLLEGE
73
1912 Sfistorr ~.WHAT
WOULD IT PROF-IT YOU, GEN-TLE READER AC-CUS-TOMED AS YOU ARE TO PEACE-FUL SCENES OF DO-MES-TIC TRAN-QUIL-I-TY, SHOULD WE RE-LATE TO YOU WITH WHAT HOR-RI-BLE BLOOD-SHED WE HAVE RE-PEATROUT-ED THE HOSTS OF 1911 ? WHY SHOULD WE YOU OF YOUR PA-CIF-IC SLEEP WITH PIC-TURES OF AND SLAUGH-TER IN-EF-FA-BLE, WHICH COULD BUT HAUNT YOUR DREAMS THROUGH IN-TER-MINFUGUES OF THE YEAHS? AH, NO, RATH-ER WOULD FORE-GO ANY TEM-PO-RA-RY GLO-RY THAT MIGHT TO US THROUGH THE PUB-LI-CA-TION OF SUCH AR-RA-TIVE; RATH-ER DO WE SIT IN SI-LENCE AND .!JI'illft&&..&.. BE-A-TIF-IC-AL-LY WHILE THE EN-E-MY CHOW VICTHAN GIVE TO THE WORLD THE TRUTH THAT TRY THE NERVE E-VEN OF A MED-I-CAL STUHIS-TO-RIES RE-PEAT THEM-SELVES. SUC-CES-SIVE PAGES DEM-ON-STRATE SAT-IS-FAC-TO-RI-LY (TO THE SEVER路AL AU-THORS THERE-OF) THE UN-CHAL-LENGED AND PRE.EM-1-NENT SU-PREM-A-CY OF THREE DIF-FER-ENT CLASS-ES. TOOT-ING ONE'S OWN HORN IS COM-MENDA路BLE AS A PROOF OF LUNG-CA-PAC-I-TY, TO BE SURE, BUT IS THE EF-FI-CIENT MAN AL-WAYS HE WHO CAN TALK LOUD-EST AND LONG-EST? SEN-TI-RI QUAM AU-DI-RI.
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THE HEN LAYS THE EGG, BUT IT IS EV-ER THE COCK THAT MAKES THE MOST NOISE. THERE-FORE LET US ORAW THE VEIL OF CHAR-I-TY OVER THE E-VENTS OF THE YEAR, NOR PER-MIT E-VEN THE UN-RI-VALLED TRI-UMPH OF THE FRESH-MAN-JUN-IOR BAN-QUET TO CLAIM MORE THAN A MEN-TION BY NAME. TRUE, WE KEPT THE SE-CRET OF ITS DATE AND PLACE INVI-O-LATE UP TO THE HOUR OF DE-PAR-TURE; TRUE, WE SO FAR OUT-WIT-TED OUR JEAL-OUS RIVALS THAT THEY CAP-TURED NOT A MAN ;- BUT WHY DWELL VAIN-GLO-RIOUS-LY, E-VEN THOUGH IT BE OUR RIGHT, UP-ON THESE CON-QUESTS ? 'TIS NAUGHT: FOR IN THE LIGHT OF GREAT-ER DEEDS TO COME, THESE OF OUR MOST IM-MEMO-RI-AL YEAR WILL BE E-VEN AS LAST WIN-TER'S SNOWS. FOR FRESH-MEN LAY OFF THEIR MAN-TLE OF GUILELESS IN-NO-CENCE, PASS THE AWK-WARD STAGE OF BOYHOOD THE SUC-CEED-ING YEAR, GROW FIVE YEARS OLDER IN TWELVE MONTHS AND ARE AC-COUNT-ED JUN-IORS. IN DUE TIME, BY DINT OF RIG-OR-OUS SELF-DE-NI-AL, THEY FOR-GET HOW TO LAUGH, AND ARE THEN KNOWN AS SEN-IORS. THERE IS NO STA-TION IN LIFE MORE PU-ISSANT THAN THIS, THOUGH THE FAC-UL-TY COME A CLOSE SEC-OND. AT LAST, ON THE SU-PREME DAY, THEY ANNEX TWO EX-TRA IN-I-TIALS AND ARE COL-LEGE GRAD-UATES. THEN THEY AC-CEPT A PO-SI-TION UNDER AN OLD PREP-SCHOOL FRIEND WHO NEV-ER HAD A CHANCE TO GO TO COL-LEGE.
"TO WHAT BASE USES WE MAY RE-TURN, HO-RA-TIO!"
TRINITY COLLEGE
7r~s~man Aloysius Ahern King Allison Christy Andrews Jacob Arnold . Lawton Barnes Hall Barnett, Jr. Shirley Barrett Webster Bateman
Augustus Bird, IV
Edwin Blake Hill Bleecker, Jr. Brooke Bonnell
Carpenter Shrewsbury Craik Redmond Curtis Herbert Evison Erastus Foote . Gildersleeve, Jr. Castlemain Hauert Fairbanks Herrick Howard Humphrey lngleson Albert Jamieson Clinton Kelley . Maxwell Kendall
75
\tlass, 1912 Hartford, Conn . . Granby, Conn. Allentown, Pa. Granville, N. Y. Ansonia, Conn. Jacksonville, Fla. Jersey City, N. ]. Brooklyn Hills, N . Y. . Everett, Mass. Westport, Conn . . Buffalo, N. Y. Brooklyn, Conn. Flushing, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Hartford, Conn . . East Hartford, Conn. . Pottsville, Pa. . Louisville, Ky. Point Pleasant, N. ]. Albany, N. Y. Andover, Conn. Gildersleeve, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Springfield, Mass. Waterbury, Conn. Hoboken, N. ]. Utica, N.Y. . Walton, N.Y. Framingham, Mass.
76 Noah Levine . Laurence Hutchinson McClure Guy Hubbard Newhall Raymond Jay Newton Fergus Oliver . Leslie Gilbert Osborne Willard Oakley Pease Clarence Irving Penn Elliott Fielding Pettigrew Harlan Dickinson Pomeroy Thomas James Quish, Jr. Alfred Erwin Rankin John F arnsley Reddick Ralph Henry Saltsman James William Scully Raymond Hubbard Segur William Short, Jr. . Merrill Wolverton Smith Karl Louis Sommer . Maximilian Sporer William Ernest Steven Edward David Town send Dudley Charles Turner Guy Harrison Tyrrell Edward Bulkeley Van Zile . Nicholas Vincent Walsh Harry Wessels Charles Richardson Whipple
THE
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Vol. XXXVII Rockville, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Tompkinsville, N.Y. New Milford, Conn. Milwaukee, Wis. New Milford, Conn. Lee, Mass. Weehawken, N. ]. New York, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. South Manchester, Conn. Wellesley Hills, Mass. Faribault, Minn. . Bayonne, N. ]. Easthampton, Mass. Hartford, Conn. . St. Louis, Mo. Bloomsburg, Pa. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Clairton, Pa. West Hartford, Conn. Watervliet, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Norwich, Conn. New Britain, Conn. Malone, N . Y.
78
THE
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Vol. XXXVII
-1Local :frat~rnitr
of 11. lK. A. FouNDED,
1829,
AT
TRINITY COLLEGE
1909 Paul Humphrey Barbour Paul MacMillin Butterworth Corwin MacMillin Butterworth
James Stratton Carpenter, Jr. Henry Otto Hinkle Arthur Sobeski Kean
1910 Raymond Conklin Abbey James Farley Townsend Benjamin Floyd Turner
1911 William Converse Skinner, Jr. James Porteus Clarence Stoll Zipp
1912 Chapin Carpenter
Guy Hubbard Newhall William Short, Jr.
TRINIT Y
COLL EGE
'J. 1K. A. -:fratr~.s
in l.Crh
John
R obert W . G ray, '98 H. Brocklesby, '65 E dward ] . M ann, '04 William C. Brocklesby, ' 69 H enry G . Barbour, '06 Arthur K. Brocklesby, '70 H arold G . H art, '0 7 William D. Morgan, '72 Irving R. Kenyon, '0 7 William C. Skinner, 76 ] acob L. H artzell, '08 Ernest de F. Miel, '88 LeR oy A Ladd, '08 George W. Ellis, '94 R aymond I. Maplesden, '08 Dudley C. Graves, '98 Robert K . Skinner, ' 10
<!:orporation Edward Mansfield Scudder William Denison Morgan Dudley Chase Graves
john Henry Stevens Quick W'dliam Sterling Cogswell William Claiborne Brocklesby illiam Converse Skinner J ames Stratton Carpenter Ceolle Watson Beach
President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Charles Erling Hotchkiss H obart Warren Thompson Ernest de F remery Miel Arthur Collins G raves T homas M cKean Charles Luther Burnham
79
80
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
Founded in 184 7 at Columbia College and University of New York
)\oll of a::~aptns Alpha Delta Epsilon Lambda Phi Upsilon Sigma Tau
Columbia College University of Pennsylvania Trinity College Williams College University of Mississippi University of Virginia Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University Massachusetts Institute of Technology
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
81
'G~~ 1E.p.silon (t~a.pt~r jt)~tta l.l.si
~ra~uatu
Cranston Brenton Robert Habersham Coleman
1909 Harold Nathaniel Chandler George Edward Elwell, ]r.
William Gilbert Livingston Israel Loucks Xanders
19/0 john Richard Cook, ]r. Henry Smith Marlor Edward Warren Ripley
/911 Frank Judson Brainerd Sherman Orton Haight Reginald Burbank Sherman Post Haight William Chapman D ewey Charles Moulton Konvalinka Arthur Cornwallis Eaton Paul Maxon Richard MacDonald Nelson
1912 Bartlett Brooke Bonnell Merrill W overton Smith Kilbourn Maxwell Kendall Charles Richardson Whipple Edward Bulkeley Van Zile
82
THE
I VY
Vol. XXXVII
Founded in 1832 at Hamilton College
)\oll of <!~a,pt~rs Hamilton Columbia Yale Amherst . Brunonian Hudson Bowdoin Dartmouth Peninsular Rochester Williams Manhattan Middletown Kenyon Union Cornell Phi Kappa Johns Hopkins Minnesota Toronto Chicago McGill Wisconsin California
Hamilton College Columbia College Yale University Amherst College Brown 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 ronto University University of Chicago McGill University University of Wisconsin University of California .
1832 1836 1836 1836 1836 1841 1841 1845 1846 1850 1851 1855 1856 1858 1859 1869 1877 1889 1891 1893 1896 1897 1902 1908
1910
TRINITY COLLEGE
1909 William Christian Deppen Welles Eastman Henry Oliver Peck
1910 Richardson Little Wright
Frederick Steinfort Kedney
1911 George Thurman Keyes Thomas Lynn Morris Harry Kollock Rees Blinn Fran cis Yates
Albert Clark Walter Murray Farrow William Burr Gibson 路 Alfred Howell
1912 Bion Hall Barnett, Jr. William Redmond Curtis William Augustus Bird Paul Fairbanks Herrick William Hill Bleecker Elliott Fielding Pettigrew John Farnsley Reddick
83
84
THE
Allen, A. W., Yale, '04 Alvord, Samuel M ., Yale, '96 Bassett, Prof. A. B., Williams, '81 Beckwith, Rev . I. T., Yale, '68 Bennett, Hon. Edward B., Yale, '66 Bryant, Percy S., Phi Kappa, '70 Bunce, Charles H ., Yale; '60 Cady, George F., Middletown, '69 Calder, W . P., Middletown, '03 Calhoun, David S., Yale, '48 Chester, T. Weston, M.D., Hamilton, '92 Clark, Walter H., Yale, '96 Fuller, Horace S., M.D., Amherst, '58 Garvin, John, Yale, '02 Gillett, Rev. Arthur L., Amherst, '80 Goodwin, Charles A., Yale, '98 Goodwin, F. S., Yale, '93 Goodwin, H., Yale, '96 Goodwin, James, L., Yale., '02 Goodwin, Rev. James, Phi Kappa, '86 Goodwin, P. L., Yale, '97 Goodwin, Walter L., Yale, '97 Gross, Charles E., Yale, '69 Hammond, Fred. H . L., Middletown, '88 Hastings, Panel! M., M.D., Hamilton, '39 Hatch, Edward B., Phi Kappa, '86 Huntington, Rev. J . T., Phi Kappa, '50
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
Hunt, E. M., Phi Kappa, '06 Johnson , William C., Middletown, '94 Kelley, Solon C., Brunonian, '86 Lampson, E . R., Jr., M.D., Phi Kappa, '91 Lawrence, Thomas F., Yale, '99 Maercklein, B. C., Phi Kappa, '06 Marvin, L. P. Waldo, Yale, '92 Morse, Leonard, Amherst, '71 Northam, Charles, Jr., Middletown, '04 Peck, John H ., Yale, '63 Perkins, Edward C., Yale, '98 Perkins, Hen ry A., Yale, '96 Schutz, Robert H., Phi Kappa, '89 Schutz, Walter S., Phi Kappa, '94 St. John, Samuel B., M.D., Yale, '66 Starr, Robert S., M.D., Phi Kappa, '97 Stearns, Rev. Charles C., Yale, '72 Stearns, C. M., Johns Hopkins, '98 Stiles, Rev. Samuel M., Middletown, '60 Storrs, Melancthon, M.D., Yale, '52 Thompson, Arthur R., Yale, '96 Twichell, David C., Yale, '98 Van Schaack, David, Phi Kappa, '91 Williams, Arthur C., Yale, '98 Wolfe, R. R., Phi Kappa, '08 Wright, A. B., Union, '90
19/0
TRINITY COLLEGE
85
Founded in 1844 at Yale University
)toll of <.t~a.ptu.s Phi . Theta
Xi
.
Sigma Gamma Psi . Upsilon Chi Beta Eta Kappa Lambda Pi Iota . Alpha Alpha Omicron Epsilon Rho Tau Mu Nu Beta Phi Phi Chi Psi Phi Gamma Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi . Delta Chi . Phi Gamma Gamma Beta Theta Zeta Alpha Chi Phi Epsilon Sigma Tau Delta Delta Alpha Phi . Tau Lambda Delta Kappa Tau Alpha Sigma Rho Delta Pi Rho Delta .
Yale University Bowdoin College . Colby University . Amherst College Vanderbilt University University of Alabama Brown University University of Mississippi University of North Carolina University of Virginia Miami University . Kenyon College Dartmouth College Central University Middlebury College University of Michigan Williams College . Lafayette College . Hamilton College . Colgate University . College of the City of New York University of Rochester Rutgers College D epauw University Wesleyan University Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Adelbert College . Cornell University . Syracuse University Columbia University University of California Trinity College . . University of Minnesota Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Chicago . . University of Toronto Tulane University . . University of Pennsylvania McGill University . . Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Illinois University of Wisconsin
1844 1844 1845 1846 1847 1847 1850 1850 1851 1852 1852 1852 1853 1853 1854 1855 1855 1855 1856 1856 1856 1856 1861 1866 1867 1867 1868 1870 1871 1874 1876 1879 1889 1890 1893 1898 1898 1899 1900 1902 1904 1906
86
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXV II
ts~~ Alp~a \t~i \t~apt~r 'Jl)~lta 1Kappa ~psilon
<&ra~uatct
John Daulby Evans /909 William Stuart Buchanan, Jr. Henry Carlton Goodrich Leonard Jerome Dibble Stephen Essex McGinley Woodforde Hamilton Plant 19/0 George Cleveland Capen Joseph Groves Hobart Wells Cook Frank Leonard Johnson William Frederick McElroy 1911
Harold Nelson Conover Christie Stanley Poole Grint
Nelson Frederick Pitts, Jr. Clarence Edgar Sherman 1912
Arthur Shirley Barrett Charles Edwin Blake ]ames Howard Humphrey
Laurence Hutchinson McClure Dudley Charles Turner Harry Wessels
/910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
~~lta 'J\a,p,pa 1E,psilon -:fratr~.s in lCrb~ Allen, W. B., Yale, 'OJ Ayres, W. A., Yale , '64 Babcock, A . L., Colgate, '03 Bennett, M., Toscan, Yale, '98 Boyd, H . C., Trinity, '05 Bulkeley, M. G., Jr., Yale, '07 Call, A. D ., Brown, '96 Camp, j. S., Wesleyan, '78 Case, T. G., Trinity, '00 Clark, C. H., Yale , '7J Cole, F. W., Yale, '04 Collins, Atwood, Yale, '73 Conan!, G. A., Amherst, '78 Cone, ]. B., Yale, '57 Cooley, C. P., Yale, '9J Cooley, F . R. , Yale, '86 Day, A. P., Yale, "90 Day, E. M., Yale, '90 Davis, F. W., Yale, '77 Evans, ]. D., Trinity, '01 Fenn, E. Hart, Yale, '79 Flynn, B. D., Trinity, ex -'05 Forrest, C. R., Yale, '65 Foss, F. H., Trinity, 'OJ Freeman, H. B., Yale, '62 Freeman, H . B., Jr., Yale, '92 Gates, A. F., Yale, '87 Godard, G. S., Wesleyan , '9J Grant, R. M., Wesleyan, '92
Harbison, J. P ., Trinity, (H .) Hine, C. D., Yale, ' 71 Howe, D . R., Yale, '74 Hyde, A. W ., Yale, '02 Hyde, W .W ., Yale, '76 Ingalls, Dr. P . H . Bowdin, '77 Keith , Dr. A. R., Colby, '97 Lake, E . J ., Harvard, '92 Lord, J . W ., Trinity, '98 Matson, W. L., Yale, '62 Olmsted, H . B., Trinity, '08 Parker, Rev . E . P., Bowdoin, '56 Pa ttison Rev . H., Rochester, '92 Philbrick, M . P ., Colby, '97 Pike, C. S., Chicago, '96 Pond, D. C., Trinity, '08 Pratt, W . W ., Adelbert, '85 Prenti ce, S. 0., Yale, '73 Robbins, E . D., Yale, '74 Rowley, Dr. A. M ., Amherst, '95 Smiley, E. H., Colby, '75 Smith, E . W ., Yale, 'OJ Smith, F . M., Yale, '80 Starr, Dr. P . S., Yale, "60 St. John, W. H ., Yale, 9J Taylor, J. M ., Williams, '67 Traver, Rev. H . R ., Colgate, '66 Welch, A. A., Yale, '82 Wentworth, G . R. , Trinity, ex-'08
87
88
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
Founded in 1833 at Union College
)toll of a::~a.ptus Theta Delta Beta Sigma Gamma Zeta Lambda Kappa Psi
Xi Upsilon Iota Phi Pi Chi Bet<'. Beta Eta Tau Mu Rho Omega Ep3ilon
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
/9/0
TRINITY COLLEGE
89
(5~~
~~ta ~~ta <.t~apt~r
'1)si Upsilon
1909 Lewis Gildersleeve Harriman Harry Irl Maxson
Edward Killbourn Roberts, Jr. Paul Roberts
19/0 William Spaulding Eaton Nelson Hall Gildersleeve Cyril Bathurst judge Ralph Howard Merrill
Arthur Lindsay Potter Wilbert Austin Smith Leon Abbott Stansfield Jerome Pierce Webster
/911 Hasel Hill Burgwin Philip James Flanders
Arthur Lloyd Gildersleeve Gordon William Stewart
1912 George Turner Bates Franklin Nelson Breed James Shrewsbury Craik Samuel Herbert Evison
Oliver Gildersleeve, Jr. Fergus Oliver Alfred Erwin Rankin Edward David Town send
90
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
1.1 si Upsilon 7ratu.s ln J. P. Andrews, Bela, "77 E. S. Ballard, Chi, '98 L. C. Barbour, Beta, '()() E . N. Bement, Della, '67 M. B. Brainard, Bela, '00 N. C. Brainard, Bela, '02 Rt. Rev. C. B. Brewster, Bela, '68 J. H . Buck, Bela, '91 J . R. Buck, Xi, '62 C. C. Bulkely, Bela Bela, 75 P. D. Bunce, M. D ., Bela '88 C. W . Burpee, Bela, '83 W . S . Case, Beta, '85 A St. C. Cook Bela, '89 W. H. Corbin, Bela, '89 R. D . Cutler, Bela, '07 J . H . K . Davis, Bela Bela, '99 G. P . Davis. M.D .â&#x20AC;˘ Beta. '66 J. C. Day, Bela, '57 L. N. Denniston, Xi, '02 L. A Ellis, Bela Bela, '98 C. E. Fellows, Bela, '56 G. H . Gilman, Bela, '90 L. E. Gordon, Xi, '90 Hon. W . Hamersley, Bela Bela, '58 R. W . Huntington, Beta, '89 Prof. C. F. Johnson, Bela, '55 F. E . Johnson, Bela Bela, '84 J. MeA. Johnson, Bela Bela, '03
l.Crb~
W . MeA. Johnson, Bela Bela, '98 M. S. Lillie, Bela, '07 A T. McCook, Bela Bela, '02 Prof. A . R. Merriam, Beta, '77 C. S. Morris, Bela Bela, '96 J. J. Nairn, Bela, '80 P. S. Ney, Beta, 'OS F. Parson, Bela, '93 A. Perkins, Bela, '87 Hon. H . Roberts, Bela, '77 H . S. Robinson, Bela, '89 J . T . Robinson, Bela, '93 L. F. Robinson , Beta, '85 E. W . Robinson, Bela Bela, '96 E. F. Sanderson, Gamma, '96 G. i-{. Seyms, Bela Bela, 72 H . P. Schauffler, Gamma, '93 F. Shepherd, Bela, '92 A L. Shipman, Bela, '86 T . E. V. Smith, Beta '77 L. E. Stanton, Beta, '55 F. H . Taylor, Xi, '84 J . R. Trumbull, Beta, '92 Rev. J. H . Twichell, Bela, ' 59 E. F. Waterman, Beta Bela, '98 F. E. Waterman, Bela Bela, '01 L. S. Welch, Bela, '89 H . H . Whaples, Bela, '02 C. G. Woodward, Bela Bela, '98
TRINITY
1910
COLLEGE
91
Founded m 1848 at Washington and Jefferson College
)\oll of a:~a.pt~u Omega Mu Iota Mu Pi Iota Pi Rho Deta Nu Alpha Chi Tau Alpha Nu Deuteron Omega Nu Upsilon Theta Psi . Kappa Nu Chi . Sigma Nu . Beta Sigma Deuteron Beta Chi Beta Mu Della Xi . Gamma Phi Omicron Zeta Deuteron Alpha Pi Rho Deute.on Xi Deuteron Lambda Deuteron Sigma
. University of Maine Massachusells Institute of Technology Worcester Polytechnic Institute Brown University Dartmouth College Amherst College Trinity College Yale University Columbia College New York University Colgate University Cornell University . Union College Syracuse University University of Pennsylvania Lafayette College Lehigh University Johns Hopkins University Bucknell University Gellysburg University Pennsylvania State College University of Virginia Washington and Lee University Washington and Jefferson College Allegheny College Wooster University Adelbert College Denison College Witlenberg College
92
THE
Omicron Deuteron Theta Delta Zeta
Vol. XXXVII . Ohio State University Ohio Wesleyan University Indiana
Lambda
University
De Pauw University
Tau
Hanover College
Psi
Wabash College
Lambda Iota Kappa Tau Nu
Purdue University University of Tennessee . Bethel College
Theta Tau
IVY
University of Alabama Delta
Alpha Deuteron Gamma Deuteron Chi Iota Alpha Phi
University of Michigan University of Wisconsin
Mu Sigma
University of Minnesota
Chi Upsilon Zeta Phi
University of Chicago William ] ewe ll College
Chi Mu
University of Missouri
Pi Deuteron Lambda Mu .
Sigma Tau Lambda Sigma Rho Chi . Alpha Iota Chi Sigma
Knox College University of Illinois
Mu
Delta Xi
University of Texas Illinois Wesleyan University
Kansas University University of Nebraska University of California University of Was~ington Leland Stanford R ichmond College Iowa State University Colorado College
li''t"-'tt-i'llllll
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
93
rs~~
'Gau Alp~a \.t~apt~r
of 'lJ~i Wamma -:!1>~lta :Act lv~ m~mb u.s
1908 William Howard Bailey
1909 A lexander Wellington Creedon Clinton Jirah Backus, ]r.
Frederick Thomas Gilbert Charles Eugene Morrow
1910 Fred D onald Carpenter H arold Chamberlain Green Arthur Bartow Henshaw 路ward Slawson August Herman
George William Eugene Draper Archer Eben Knowlton Ewald Olson William George Oliver Leschke
1911 j oseph Oliver Carroll Stephen William Green Wade Hunt Knowlton
Earl Blanchard Ramsdell Ashley Lyman Cook Vere Gerald Burdick
1912 Wi lliam Christy Andrews R obert lngleson Karl Louis Sommer
Henry Arthur Beers Clarence Irving Penn Ralph Henry Saltsman
94
THE
1.1 ~i
IVY
(bamma )l)~lta
-:fratn ..s in
Urb~
Clifford B. Brainard, Nu Deuteron, '98 James N. H. Campbell, Nu Deuteron, '03 Carl W. Davis, Nu Deuteron, '02 joseph D. Flynn, Tau Alpha, '97 James W . Gunning, Tau Alpha, '96 Frederick T. Jarman, Nu Deuteron, '02 Philip T. Kennedy, Tau Alpha, '05 H. E. Adams, Nu Deuteron, '02 George D . Chambers Tau Alpha, '06 Austin D . Dunham, Tau Alpha, '06 E. S. Fallow, Tau Alpha, '06 Henry Hinchlilf, Omega Mu, '03 Walter Lakiu, Tau Alpha, '09 F. M. Ownes, Tau Alpha, '05 Harold E. Robbins, Tau Alpha, '08 Henry Nichols, Zeta, '93
Vol. XXXVII
1910
T RI N I TY COLLEGE
95
Founded in 1895 at Trinity College
)\oll of <.t~a.ptu.s Phi Psi
Trinity College
Phi Chi
Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn
Phi Phi
University of Pennsylvania
Phi Omega
Columbia
University
Phi Alpha
Lafayette College
Phi Beta
D ickinson College
Phi Delta Phi Epsilon Phi Zeta
Yale University Syracuse University University of Virginia
Phi Eta .
Washington and Lee University
Phi Theta
Cornell University
96
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
(?~~
'1J~i '1Jsi (t~apt~r A.l,p~a (t~i )\~o
1909 George Sumner Buck Michael Augustine Connor Robert Mason Cadman Percy Sherwood McConnell Clarence Standish Sherwood
1910 Charles Hobby Bassford Horace Richardson Bassford John Edward Brown
Fran cis Patrick Carroll William ]ames Nelson Albert Marston Smith
/911 William Whitaker Buck
John Howard Rosebaugh
/912 George Lawton Barnes Robert Erastus Foote
Walter Albert Jamieson Leslie Gilbert Osborne
tf'.l'.'ln:'l~' 19(}6
Alpltrc. (YriHho..Frrttenu l tf .JJrrlf,-t Pllil<t. â&#x20AC;˘
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
Hastings, F. H., Phi Psi, '96 Beach, C. C., M.D., Phi Psi, '96 Morgan, V. F., Phi Psi, '99 Hall, A. C., Phi Psi, ex-'00 Moody, W . H ., Phi Psi, '07 Lorenz, E. H ., Phi Psi, '02 Moria, K. P ., Phi Psi, '02 Blakeslee, R. H., Phi Psi, '05 Ozon, W. W., Phi Psi, ex-'08 Brainerd, C. C., Phi Psi, '06 Skilton, H . 1., Phi Psi, '08 Buths, L. 5 ., Phi Psi, '08
97
THE
98
Vol. XXXVII
IVY
Founded in 1776 at William and Mary College
)\oll of ~~aptu.s Alpha of V irginia Alpha of Connecticut Alpha of Massachusetts Alpha of New Hampshire Alpha of New York . Alpha of Maine Alpha of Rho~ Island Beta of Connecticut . Gamma of Connecticut Alpha of Ohio . Alpha of Vermont Beta of Massachusetts Beta of Ohio Beta of New York Gamma of Ohio . Gamma of Massachusetts Gamma of New York Beta of Vermont Alpha of New Jersey Delta of New York Epsilon of New York Zeta of New York Eta of New York Theta of New York Alpha of Pennsylvania Beta of Pennsylvania Iota of New York Alpha of Indiana Alpha of Illinois Alpha of Kansas Gamma of Pennsylvania Delta of Massachusetts Delta of Pennsylvania .
路.
William and Mary College Yale University Harvard University Darhnouth College . Union University Bowdoin College Brown University Trinity College Wesleyan University Adelbert College University of Vermont Amherst College Kenyon College New York University Marietta College Williams College College of the City of New York Middlebury College Rutgers College Columbia University Hamilton College . Hobart College Colgate University Cornell Univenity Dickinson College Lehigh University Rochester University De Pauw University Northwestern University University of Kansas Lafayette College Tufts College University of Pennsylvania
1910 Alpha of Minnesota Alpha of Iowa Alpha of Maryland Alpha of Nebraska Beta of Maine . Kappa of New York Epsilon of Pennsylvania Beta of Indiana . Alpha of California Mu of New York Zeta of Pennsylvania Alpha of Wisconsin . Epsilon of Massachusetts Delta of Ohio Beta of New Jersey Lambda of New York Beta of Illinois . Alpha of Tennessee Alpha of Missouri Eta of Pennsylvania Alpha of Colorado Zeta of Massachusetts Beta of California Alpha of North Carolina Beta of Colorado Eta of Massachusetts Epsilon of Ohio Theta of Massachusetts Alpha of Texas Beta of Maryland Zeta of Ohio Eta of Ohio Gamma of Illinois Alpha of Michigan Alpha of Louisiana Beta of Virginia Beta of Iowa Theta of Pennsylrania
TRINITY COLLEGE
..
99
University of Minnesota University of Iowa Johns Hopkins University University of Nebraska Colby College Syracuse University Swarthmore College Wabash College University of California . Vassar College Haverford College University of Wisconsin Boston University . Cincinnati University . Princeton University St. Lawrence University University of Chicago . Vanderbilt University University of Missouri Allegheny College University of Colorado Smith College Stanford University University of North Carolina Colorado College Wellesley College . Ohio State University Mount Holyoke College University of Texas Woman's College, Baltimore ' . Oberlin College Ohio Wesleyan University . University of Illinois University of Michigan Tulane University University of Virginia Iowa College Franklin and Marshall College
100
THE
IVY
Vol . XXXVII
Officus Rev. John T. Huntington, M.A. '50 President William G . Davies, M.A. '60 Vice-President Rev. Samuel Hart, D .O., '66 . Secretary George Lewis Cooke, M.A .. '70 Treasurer Harold Nathaniel Chandler, '08 Assistant Secretary and Treasurer
'"l:ocar_.Socldy ~bmltt~b ln 1908 Robert Lowell Mason, '08 Harold Nathaniel Chandler, '09
)\~pr~s~ntatl"u at )lint~ "Grl~nnlal a::ouncll Wtlllam an~ mary <I:oll~gt. s~pltmbor. 1907
Rev. Samuel Hart, D .O., '66 . Philip De Witt Phair, M.A. '94
Senator Delegate
lass OCi~tl~S.
s~ntor "lionorary Soct~ty Established 1893
Allen, Edwin Stanton, '93 Allen, Walter Best, '04 Austin, William Morris, '98 Bacon, Fred. Stanley, '99 Badgley, Oliver Warren, '07 Barbour, Henry Grosvenor, '96 Barton, Charles Clarence, '93 Barton, Philip Lockwood, '02 Bates, Robert Peck, '93 Beecroft, Edgar Charles, '97 Bellamy, Robert Bayard, 'OJ Bowne, Garrett Denise, '06 Brigham, Henry Day, '03
Brines, Moses James, '00 Broughton, Charles DuBois, '95 Brown, William Parnell , '01 Brinley, Godfrey, '01 Bryant, Percy Carleton, '07 Bulkeley, John Charles, '93 Carter, Julian Stuart, '98 Carter, Lawson Averill, '93 Carter, Shirley, '94 Churchman Clarke, '93 Clement, Charles Francis, '05 Coggeshall, Murray Hart, '96 Cog>well, George Edward, '97
/910
TRINITY COLLEGE
Collin•, William French, '93 Crou, William Rich, '08 Cullen, James Jr., '93 Cunningham, Gerald Arthur, '07 Danker, Walton Stoutenburgh, '97 Davis, John Henry Kelso, '99 Davis, Cameron Josiah, '93 Dingwell, Harrie Renz, '94 Dougherty, Philip, '07 Donnelly, Edwin Joseph, '08 Dravo, Marion Stuart, '07 Duffee, Edward Llewellyn, 'OS Edgerton, Francis Cruger, '94 Edgerton, John Warren, '94 Ed.all, James Kirkland, '08 Elli•, George William, '94 Ewing, Robert Mosby, 'OS Farrow, Malcom Collins, 'OS Fi.ke, Reginald, '0 I Fiske, William Sydney Walker, '06 Gateson, Daniel Wilmot, '06 George, Eugene Evan, '07 Glazebrook, Haslett McKim, '00 Goodridge, Edward, Jr., '02 Go.tenhofer, Charles Edward, 'OS Graves, Dudley Chase, '98 Greenly, Howard Trescott, '94 Haight, Austin Dunham, '06 Hamlin, Edward Percy, '9S Hartley, George Derwent, '93 Henderson, James, '02 Hill, Frederick Charles, Jr ., '06 Hornor, Harry Archer, '()() Hudson, James Mosgrove, '01 Langford, Archibald Morrison, '96 Langford, William Spaight, Jr ., '94 Lewis, Elton Gardiner, '99 Lord, James Watson , '98 Lockwood, Lub Vincent, '93 Macauley, Richard Henry, '9S Mann, Edward James, '04 McCook, George Sheldon, '97 Mcilvaine, John Gilbert, '00 Meyer, Henry Lvuis, '03 Morgan, Samuel St. John , '03
103
Morgan, Owen, '06 Morse, Bryan Killikelly, '99 Nichols, John Williams, '99 Niles, William Porter, '93 Olcott, William Tyler, '96 Olm•ted, Horace Bigelow, '08 Paine, Ogle Tayloe, '96 Paige, John Henry, Jr. , '97 Parsons, Edgerton, '96 Pearce, Regmald, '93 Peck, Carlos Curtis, '02 Peck, Richard Eugene, '0 I Pelton, Henry Hubbard, '93 Penrose, John Jesse, Jr., '9S Pond, Harvey Clark, '08 Powell, John Franklin, '06 Prince, Frederick Welles, '00 Rankin, George Dougtas, '03 Remsen, Cornelius Wagstaff, 'OS Remsen, Henry Rutgers, '98 Reynolds, Lloyd Gilson, '98 Rich, Ernest Albert, '99 Schultz, Walter Stanley, '94 Schwartz, David Louis, Jr., '00 Sparks, William Albert, '97 Strawbridge, John, '9S Syphax, T. Minton, '03 Taylor, Charles Edward, '94 Taylor, Martin, '08 Thomas, Edmond Crawford, '03 Townsend, Herman Edward, '04 Trumbull, Charles Lamb, '08 Vibbert, Aubrey Darrell, '99 Vibbert, William Welch, '94 Wainwright, Jonathan Mayhew, '9S Weed, Charles Frederick, '94 Weibel, Richard Nicks, '02 Welles, Philip Turner, 'OS Wheeler, Charles Hawthorne, '02 Wheeler, William Hardin, '02 Wilson, William Crosswell Doane, '93 Williams, Alexander John, '96 Wilson, George Hewson, '93 Wolfenden, Richard Henry, '93 Woodle, Allen Sheldon, '99
.s~nior 1J1'onorarr .Soci~tr President
Stephen Essex McGinley
Secretary and Treasurer
W oodforde Hamilton Plant
m ~mbu·.s
George Sumner Buck
Harry lrl Maxson
James Stratton Carpenter, Jr.
Stephen Essex McGinley
•
W oodforde Hamilton Plant
-:foun~~~ by l~<' <i:la.ss of ' 99
on J<'bruary l 5. 1897
W. B. Allen, '04 P. L. Barton, '02 H. C. Boyd, '05 G. D. Browne, '06 H. S. Bradfield, '02 j. W. Bradin, '00 P. H. Bradin, '03 H. D. Brigh am , "03 W. P. Brown, '0 1 D. H . Browne, '03 T . P. Browne, J r., '03 C. E. Bruce, J r., '03 P. C. Bryant, '07 B. Budd, "08 M. H . Buffington, '04 H. Bu rgwin, J r., '06 W. C. Burwell, '06 P. M. Butterworth, '08 J. S. Carpenter, J r., '09 L. G. Carpenter, '09 H. N. Chandler, '09 S. H . Clapp. '04 C. F. Clement, 'OS M. W . Clement, '0 1 D. S. Corson, '99 F. H . Coggeshall, '07
A . C. Coburn, '07 A. \V. Creedon, '09 W . R. Cross, '08 G. A. Cunningham, '07 R. Cunningham, '07 H . L. Curtin, '07 T. C. Curtiss, '07 J. H . K. Davis, '99 H. de \V. de Mauriac, '07 T. N. Denslow, '04 E. ]. Dibble, '04 E . .J. Donnelly, '08 M. S. Dravo, '07 \V. H . Eaton, '99 J. K . Edsall, '08 J. D. Evans, '0 1 R. M . Ewing, 路as R. Fiske, '01 \V. S. \V. Fiske, '06 R. H. Fox, 路oo S. R. Fuller, Jr., '00 C. V . Ferguson, '07 D . \V. Gateson, '06 H. \V. Greer, '08 E. E. George, '07 H . C. Goodrich, '09 C. E . Gostenhofer, 'OS H . McK. Glazebrook, '00 E . B. Goodrich, '02 E. Goodridge, Jr. , '02 R. N . Graham, 'OS W . T. Grange, '06 \V. T . Grange, '06 H . D. Green, '99 M. G. Haight, 路oo H. G. Hart, '07 J . C. Hart, '09 L. G. Harriman, '09 C. B. Hedrick, '99 A. Henry, '03 C. H . Hill, '02
Hill, 路oo G. S. Hine, '06 H . 0 . Hinkle, '09 H . A . Hornor, '00 G. \V. Hubbard, '08 ]. M. Hudson, '01 H . H uet, '06 R. H. Hutchinson, '03 B. D . Jewett, '00 J . MeA. Johnson, '03 G . T. Kendal, '99 I. R. Kenyon, '07 \V. Larchar, Jr., '03 P . T. Lightbourn, '04 E . G. Littell, "99 \V. G. Livings!on, '09 H. F . MacGuyer, '08 G. B. McCune, '07 S. C. McGinley, '09 H. R. Mcilvaine, '04 J. G . Mcilvaine, '00 P. L. McKeon, '04 \V. J . McNeil, '0 1 \V. F. Madden, '08 E. H . Maddox, "04 ]. H . Maginnis, '02 F. C. Meredith, '05 H. L. G. Meyer, '03 S. St. J. Morgan, "03 0 . Morgan, "06 J . 0. Morris, '08 B. K. Morse, '99 ]. \V. Nichols, '99 H . B. Olmsted, '08 A. H . Onderdonk, '99 H . C. Owen, '99 J . \V. O 'Connor, '05 C. C. Peck, '02 R. E. Peck, '01 M. S. Phillips, '06 G. P . Pierce, '06
w. c.
THE
106 H . C. Pond, "08 F. W . Prince, 路oo C. G. Randle, 路os G. D . Randall, '08 G. D. Rankin, '03 C. W. Remsen, 'OS C. Reed, '06 C. M. Rhodes, 'OS E. A. Rich, '99 F. C. Rich, '09 P. Roberts, '09 H . H . Rudd, '01 D. L. Schwartz, '00
IVY
H . L. Schwartz, '06 B. Shearer, '09 A. C. Short, '03 P. R. Smith, '07 W . P . Stedman, 'OS E. K. Sterling, '99 F. Stevens, '08 W. B. Sutton, '99 ]. P . W . Taylor, '02 M. Taylor, '08 H . E. Townsend, '04 C. L. Trumbull , '08 W . S. Trumbull, '03 A. R. Van de Water, '01
J.
TAP DAY
V ol. XXXVII R. B. Van Tine, '04 A. D. Vibbert, '99 ]. M. Walker, '01 C. D. Wardlaw, '07 H . L. Watson, 'OS B. G. Weekes, '06 R. N. Weibel, '02 P . T . Welles, 'OS C. H . Wheeler, '01 H . R. White, '02 H . D. W ilson, Jr., '01 K. W illoughby, '09 C. B. W ynkoop, 'OS
.Sop~omor~ Jl)ining <.tlub ::Actlv~ m~mb~rs
of 1910
Gilbert Brown Sturges Harmon George Cleveland Capen Arthur Bartow Henshaw Raymond Guede Coghlan Cyril Bathurst judge William Frederick McElroy Hobart Wells Smith Cook Henry Smith Marlar John Richard Cook, Jr. Ambrose Spencer Murray, 3d William Spaulding Eaton Nelson Hall Gildersleeve Henry Conrad Neff Arthur Lindsay Potter Joseph Groves Jerome Pierce Webster
TRINITY-WESLEYAN BASEBALL GAME
110
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
't?rtnitr \t:oll~g~ 'At~l~tlc A.s.soclatlon Offtcu.s Harry Irl Maxson
President
George Cleveland Capen
H. I. Maxson G. C. Capen ]. S. Carpenter, Jr. H. S. Marlor C. B. Judge A . B. Henshaw M.A. Connor
Secretary-Treasurer
President A. A. and Captain Track Team Secretary-Treasurer A. A. Manager Football T earn Manager Baseball Team Manager Track Team Captain Football Team Captain Baseball Team
F. L. Wilcox, '80 J. F. Forward, '96 Professor ]. ]. McCook, '63 ]. H. K. Davis. '99
Chairman Secretary-Treasurer Professor R. B. Riggs Professor ]. D . Flynn, '9 7
1910
Ill
TRINITY COLLEGE
JFootball Captain
A B. Henshaw, '1 0
Manager
]. S. Carpenter, ]r., '09
Assistant Manager
Joseph Groves, '1 0
Coach
Professor Raymond G. Gettel!
Y. G. Burdick, '11, Left End
E. B. Ramsdell, '11, Right End
]. 0. Carroll, '11, Left Tackle
A L. Gildersleeve, '11, Right Tackle
B. F. Snow, '09, Left Guard
F. N. Breed, '12, Right Guard
P. Roberts, '09, Center C. ]. Backus, ]r., '09, Quarter Back
H. I. Maxson, '09, Left Half Back A B. Henshaw,' 10, Right Half Back I. L. Xanders, '09, Full Back
.Sub.stltutu G. C. Capen, 'I 0 C. H. Ba~~ford, '1 0
Fergus Oliver, '12 Oliver Gildersleeve, '12
:2 <C
uJ
f-
...J ...J
<C c:o f-
0 0
(..:..
TRINITY COLLEGE
1910
)t~cor~
of
<bam~s
October
3
At Hartford
October
At West Point Trinity
0 0
October
10 17
At Hartford
Trinity
18
October
24
At Amherst
Trinity
6
October
31
At Hartford
November
7
113
Trinity
Worcester Technology ew York University
6 0 0 0
Trinity
28
Holy Cross
42
Wesleyan
At Hartford
Trinity
27
November 21
At Ithaca
Trinity
6
Haverford
18
Cornell
.Summar!' Trinity Opponents
Trinity Won Trinity Lost Trinity Tied
127 65
-:form~r
4 3
<!:aptalns
'63 S. H. Giesy
H. S. Graves
'99 W . P . Brown
'84 S. T. Miller
路oo
W . P. Brown
'65 W. W. Barber
'92 G. D. Hartley '93 ]. W. Edgerton
'0 1
J.
'86 W . W. Barber
'94
'67 '68 '69 '90
J.
Henderson
'02 T. M. Syphax
Strawbridge
Jr.
'03 W . B. Allen
W . W. Barber
'95 W. S. Langford,
E . McP. McCook
'96 A M . Langford
'04 0 . Morgan
E. McP. McCook
'97 A. S. Woodle
'05 J. C. Landefeld
T. P. Thurston
'98 W . B. Sutton
'06 P. Dougherty
'91 W. C. Hill
4
Amherst
At Middletown Trinity
November 14
4 33
West Point
'07 E.
J.
Donnelly
THE TEAM IN ACTION
/9/0
TRINITY
)\~"l~w oft~~
COLLEGE
115
-:f'ootbaU s~ason
~~~~~HE football squad spent part of the month of September at Wes-
brook. At the opening of college it was learned that we would lose Coach Laudefeld's valuable services. Professor Gettell, who was of inestimable assistance to the 1907 team, offered his services freely. The material was promising, but light. As usual, much interest was shown by the students, and we were disagreeably surprised when Worcester Tech beat Trinity 4-0, and West Point defeated us 33-0. But the team easily disposed of New York University, and faced Amherst with confidence, the twenty-fourth of October. When eleven little men wearing the "Blue and Gold" trotted on the field, Amherst smiled. The smile broadened when Amherst scored a touchdown and goal during the f~rst ten minutes of play. But the smile faded when Trinity completed a like performance and kept Amherst at a desperate defence for the remainder of the game. The result was 6-6. Hcly Cross expected an easy victory, and it was easy-for Trinity. Wesleyan expected to plow a victory through Trinity's light line, but after vainly searching- for that light place, Wesleyan found herself submerged, with a record of 42-0 against her. The plucky Haverford team held us to a 2 7-0 score, while in the final game with Cornell, the score stood 18-6 against Trinity, and all the scoring was done in the first half. The latter fact may give some idea of the good condition of the men. The men made a very creditable showing against Cornell. Great credit is due Coach Gettell for producing a team, from very light and inexperienced material, that could cope successfully with Amherst, make it interesting for Cornell, and overwhelm any of the smaller colleges. The only criticism that can be made of the team is its slowness in getting into form, and its nervousness during the first ten minutes of every game. But when one sees the score recorded after those first ten minutes, one almost invariably forgets to criticize. The team sustained heavy losses the first of the season. However, the spirit remained strong.
116
THE
I VY
Vol. XXXVII
The feature ground gainers were Ramsdell and Xanders. Captain Henshaw proved a marvel in every way, having a "happy faculty" of interference which gained many a yard for Trinity. He kept his men on the jump all the time, and his favorite amusement was pulling Xanders through center at the rate of ten yards a down. The ends were fast and strong, while the line made up in speed and aggressiveness what it lacked in weight. A team cannot be a success without a good and willing scrub, and there were few afternoons that Trinity Field didn't see a glorious scrimmage, often ending in favor of the scrubs. So we may again say that Trinity has successfully held her accustomed position on the gridiron.
THE GYM
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
117
~as~ ball I. L. Xanders; '09
Captain
S. E. McGinley, '09
Manager
H. S. Marlor, '1 0
Assistant Manager
]. P. Murphy
Coach
R. C. Abbey, '1 0, First Base
M. A. Connor, '09, Left Field
]. 0. Carroll, '11, Second Base
]. P . Webster, '10, Center Field
I. L. Xanders, '09, Third Base
A. L. Gildersleeve, '11, Right Field
N. H. Gildersleeve, '1 0, Short Stop
A. M. Smith, '10, Catcher
H. W. S. Cook, '1 0, Pitcher
B. T. Woodle, '11, Pitcher
.Sub.stltutu
G. D. Randall, '08
E. Ollsson, '1 0 F. ]. Brainerd, '11
TRINITY
1910
)\~cor~ April April April April May May May May May May May june june June
II 24 25
5 9
9 15 20 27 30 6 20 23
At At At At At At At At At At At At At At
New Haven H oboken South Orange Brooklyn Hartford Hartford Hartford Hartford Hartford West Point Middletown Williamstown Hartford Middletown
COLLEGE
119
of ~am~.s
Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity
2 8 5 0 8 4 I 0 3 0 0 0 4 3
Yale Stevens Seton Hall Pratt Institute Boston College Soringfield Training Dartmouth Villa Nova Holy Cross West Poin t Weslevan Williams Wesleyan Wesleyan
.Summary Trinity
38
Trinity Won
5
Opponents
52
Trinity Lost
9
:f"ormu a::a,ptain.s '67 '68 '69 '70 '71 '72 '73 '74 '75 '76 '77 '78 '79 '80 '81
E . R. Brevoort E. R. Brevoort A. Brocklesby A. Brocklesby E. B. Watts E. B. Watts E. B. Walls c. S. Craik F. T. Lincoln G. S. Hewitt W . E. Rogers F. W. White W . N. Elbert W . J. Rogers G. D . Howell
'82 '83 '84 '85 '86 '87 '88 '89 '90 '9 1 '92 '93 '94 '95
A. H . Wright
'96
C. M . Kurtz F . E. Johnson } . W. Shannon } . W . Shannon J . w . Shannon G . W. Brinley T . L. Cheri tree R. McC. Brady H. S. GraYes H . S. Graves G . D. Hartl ey }. J. Penrose H. R. Dingwe ll J. J. Penrose C. DuB . Broughton
'97 '98 '99 '00
'01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08
A. } . Wi ll iams M. H . Coggeshall D . C. Graves D . C. Graves } . H . K. Davis H. McK. Glazebrook R. Fiske E. Goodridge H. D . Brigham E. j. Mann C. F. Clement C. F. Clement J. F. Powell 0. W. Badgley I. L. Xanders
5 6 6 2 I 2 3 4 2 5 9 7 I 4
THE
120
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
)\~vt~w of t~~ ~a.s~ball s~a.son m~~~~ N THE fifteenth of March, Coach Murphy called out the base-
ball candidates for practice. Captain Xanders, however, pad been watching the batteries during the two preceding weeks. Nine of the I 90 7 team reported for practice, with a number of promising freshmen. The coach was well liked, and the men worked hard and willingly. Cook, the 1907 pitcher, always good, was especially so during the whole season. Woodle, a freshman, having exceptional speed, lacked the first requisite, control, and the season was near its close before he was to be depended upon. It was apparent at the start that the men could not hit, although day after day they faced the pitchers in severe practice. The coach, meanwhile, developed a strong fielding team, drilling the men carefully in what is commonly called "inside" play. The result of this fielding proficiency was that Trinity pulled out ahead in many games when her opponents had all but won. No team can be a success (barring the White Sox} unless it has hitters of good quality, for the best it can hope for is a "no-score" game. This can be illustrated by the Dartmouth-Trinity game. In three innings, with a man on second and another on third, Trinity failed to materialize the necessary single. But what the team lacked in hitting, it made up in base running and "inside" play. In the feature game of the season, Holy Cross scored two runs on hits and an error during the first inning . Trinity came back with two in her. half. Connor drove out a two-bagger. A single and a "pass" filled the bases, and a clever bunt netted two runs. By steadiness in fielding, Holy Cross failed to score again, and in the eighth inning Xanders sent the wmmng run across the plate with a clean single. Captain Xanders and Connor, the captain-elect, proved the only creditable hitters on the team, but in speed, cleverness and fielding ability, Trinity ranked with the best.
TRINITY
1910
COLLEGE
121
t5rack H. B. Olmsted, '08 E. K. Roberts, Jr., '09
Captain Manager
C. B. Judge, '1 0
. Assistant Manager
C. ]. O'Connor
. Coach and Trainer
I 00 Yard Dash 220 Yard Dash 440 Yard Dash 660 Yard Dash I Mile Run 2 Mile Run 120 Yard Hurdles 220 Yard Hurdles High jump Broad jump Pole Vault Shot Put . Hammer Throw Discus Throw
M. Taylor, '08; V. G. Burdick, M. Taylor, '08; G. S. Buck, M. Taylor, '08 ; ). 0. Morris, '08; G. S. Buck, ). 0. Morris, '08; W. G . Oliver, D . C. Pond, '08; W. W. Buck, D. C. Pond, '08; L. ). Dibble, H. B. Olmsted, '08; H. C. Pond, H. B. Olmsted, '08; H. C. Pond,
'I I '09 '09 '10 'I I '09 '08 '08
H. B. Olmsted, '08; P. Roberts, '09 H. C. Pond, '08 ; S. Harmon, 'I 0
R. M. Cadman, '09; S. Harmon, ' I 0; P. Maxon, ' I I . E. ]. Donnelly, '08; C. W . Collins, '08 E. ). Donnelly, 08; H. I. Maxson, '09 ; I. L. Xanders, '09 E. J. Donnelly, 08; H. I. Maxson, '09; P. Roberts, 09
Degnan, R. Cox, R. Donnelly, T.
Lippert, R. Cox, R. Maxson, T. Torney, R.
Pole Vault
Shot Put Hammer Throw Discus Throw
8,
I
---
RECORD
6.
Thirds:
38 ft. 6 in. 106 ft. 6 in. 97 ft. 4 in.
9 ft. 6 in.
10 2-5 sec. 24 sec. 57 3-5 sec. 2 min. 17 sec. 5 min. 7 1-5 sec. 10 min. 46 sec. 16 2-5 sec. 27 2-5 sec. 5 ft. 3 in. 19 ft. 7 1-4 in.
Rensselaer
Taylor, T. G. Buck, T. Morris, T. Oliver, T. W. Buck, T. Dibble, T. Beall, R. H. C. Pond, T. Olmsted, T. Hargesty, R. {Harmon, T. Cadman, T. Donnelly, T. Donnelly, T. Roberts, T.
THIRD
Summary-Firsts: Trinity 4, Rensselaer 10. Seconds: Trinity Total Points: Trinity 54, Rensselaer 70. Trinity 12, Rensselaer 2.
H igh jump Broad Jump Maxon, T.
SECOND
Schellinger, R. Schellinger, R. G. Buck, T. Connery, R. D. C. Pond, T. D. C. Pond, T. Olmsted, T. Olmsted, T. MeN augh ton, R. Harmon, T.
- -I
I
Torney, R. Taylor, T. Taylor, T. Morris, T. Scrafford, R. Mayer, R. Emigh, R. Emigh, R. Cox, R. Beall, R.
I--
FIRST
100 Yd. Dash 220 Yd. Dash 440 Yd. Dash 880 Yd. Run 1 Mile Run 2 Mile Run 120 Yd. Hurdles 220 Yd. Hurdles
--
EVENTS
at 'Groy. mar 'l . 1908
"'Jl)ual m~~t---'Grlnitr v.s. )\~n.s.s~la~r 'G¢c~.
.......
\..;.)
N
tr1
C)
0 t-o t-o tr1
n
'"<:::
.....,
< .......
:::v
.....,
c
'C
--
-
Bacon, W. Maxon, T. Moore, W.
{ Harmon, T. Maxon, T.
Wright, W. Olmsted, T. Kent, W.
{ Rokttâ&#x20AC;˘, T.
Robson, W. Robson, W. Gray, W. Gray, W. Connor, W. Connor, W. Olmsted, T. Kent, W.
FIRST
I
Donnelly, T. Xanders, T. Maxon, T.
Edsall, W. Harmon, W. Collins, T. Donnelly, T. Donnelly, T.
36 ft. 9 1-2 in. 104 ft. 2 in. 96 ft. 3 1-2 in.
9 ft. 6 in.
3.
10 2-5 sec. 23 1-5 sec. 53 1-5 sec. 2 min. 3 2-5 sec. 4 min. 39 sec. 10 min. 32 1-5 sec. 16 3-5 sec. 27 sec.
RECORD
H. C. Pond, T. 20 ft. 7 1-2 in. { C.dmao, T.
Burdick, T. Taylor, T. G. Buck, T. Oliver, T. Thompson, W. Dibble, T. Sherwood, W. Sherwood, W.
Kent, W. Faraday, W. Faraday, W. Morris, T. D . C. Pond, T. D . C. Pond, T. H. C. Pond, T. Olmsted, T.
Harmon, T.
THIRD
may 16, 1908
SECOND
Sfartfor~.
Summary- Firsts: Trinity 3 2-3, Wesleyan I 0 1-3. Seconds: Trinity I 0, Wesleyan Thirds: Trinity 9 1-3, Wesleyan 3 2-3. Total Points: Trinity 60 1-3, Wesleyan 65 2-3.
Shot Put Hammer Throw Discus Throw
Pole Vault
Broad Jump
High Jump
100 Yd. Dash 220 Yd. Dash 440 Yd. Dash 880 Yd. Run 1 Mile Run 2 Mile Run 120 Yd. Hurdles 220 Yd. Hurdles
EVENTS
at
Jl)ual m~~t--- t5rlnity vs. w~.sl~yan
:::: '""'
><: ><: ><:
'~ ""'
'""' "<
......
t"rl
::t:
.....,
~
N
1910
TRINITY
)\~\'l~w of t~~
COLLEGE
t5rack
125
s~ason
~~~~ITH the first week of March, Coach O 'Connor called the track candidates out for what seemed a very prosperous season. Most of the 1907 team were in good condition, and many new candidates promised to be of value. The team was a good team, but from the start it failed to produce good results. The meet with Rensselaer Polytechnical Institute at Troy taught our men a lesson in over-confidence and its certain results; and when Trinity faced Wesleyan, although it was conceded that Wesleyan had a number of "stars," Wesleyan faced a surprising confidence, yet no over-confidence. Wesleyan won the meet by five points, and it was a "never-to-oe-torgotten" struggle to the end. The team did not fail from lack of "grit" or work, and in one way the season proved a success, for it taught the lesson of courage against odds.
"THE BOA RD WALK"
THE
126
2 Mile Run 120 Yard Hurd lea 220 Y a1d Hurdles High Jump Broad Jump Pole Vault Shot Put Hammer Throw Discus Throw
10 1-4 sec. 22 3-5 sec. 51 sec. 2 min . 7 sec. 4 min. 44 2-5 sec. 10 min. 39 sec. 16 sec. 26 1-5 sec. 6 ft. I m. 22 ft. 5 1-4 m. 10 ft. 4 3-4 m. 37 ft. 7 1-2 in. 126 ft. 1-2 m. 98 ft. 10 in.
Dale
Name
Record
Event
110 Yard Dash 220 Yard Dash 440 Yard Dash 880 Yard Run I Mile Run
Vol. XXXVII
IVY
A. W. Strong, '94 H . S. Graves, '92 W. A. Sparks, '97 W . J . Nelson, '10 F. E. Waterman , '01 D . C. Pond, '08 H . B. Olmsted, '08 H. C. Pond, '08 I. K. Baxter, '99 H. C. VanWeelden, '03 S. Harmon, 'I 0 S. Carter, '94 F. C. Ingalls, '99 G. D. Bowne, '06
1892 1892 1897 1907 1901 1906 1907 1906 1897 1902 1907 1893 1898 1904
-:formu a::aptaln.s '88
'89 '90 '91 '92 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98
M. C. Warner W. E . A. Bulkeley R. H . Hutchins E. R. Lampson, Jr. E . S . Allen C . A. Lewis L. I. Belden E. de K. Leffingwell W. A. Sparks W . A. Sparks C. W. Henry
'99
C.
w.
Henry
'00 G. Brinley '01 F. R. Sturtevant '02 G . D . Rankin '03 G. D. Rankin '04 c. w. Remsen '05 C. W . Remsen A. R. Goodale '06 D . W. Gateson '07 H . B. Olmsted '08 H . B. Olmsted
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
127
~ask~tball Captain
E. ]. Donnelly, '08
H. F. MacGuyer, '08
Manager Assistant Manager
A W. Creedon, '09
H. B. Olmsted, '08, Left Forward G. C. Capen, 'I 0, Right For ward
H. W . S. Cook, '1 0, Right Forward
E. ]. Donnelly, Center A L. Gildersleeve, 'I I, L eft Guard
]. 0. Carroll, '11, Right Guard
-:formu \taptaln.s SINCE 1900
'00 H. McK. Glazebrook '04 '0 1 R. B. Bellamy '02 ]. B. Crane '05 '03 H. C. Van Weelden '06 '07 E. ]. Donnelly
E . L. Duffee E. H. Maddox ]. F. Powell T. S. Marlor
TRINITY
1910
129
COLLEGE
~~~~~HERE are various reasons for the poor showing of the basket-
ball team last year. There is, and has been, a lack of interest in the "National Indoor Game" for a few years here at Trinity. But the greatest hindrance to success was the desire of the members of the team to play without training. The result was that most of the games saw Trinity ahead at the close of the first half, and behind her opponents at the end of the second half. Captain Donnelly again undertook sole charge of the team, and produced good individual players, but no team.
)\~cor~ December December December December January January January January January February February February
6 13 20 23 3 II
15 18 21 15 21 29
At At At At At At At At At At At At
Hartford Hartford New York New York Utica West Point Williamstown Worcester Hartford Troy Mididletown Providence
Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinitv Trinity
of
(f)am~.s
48 7 12 28 14 14 16 10 10 19 12 14
3
Stor rs Yale
c. c. N. Y. Signal Corps Company B West Poin: Williams Holy Cross Wesleyan R. P . I. Wesleyan Brown
.Summary Opponents Trinity
301 204
Trinity Won Trinity Lost
2 10
12 . 24 13
.'35 33 28 23
15 25 26 54
/9/0
TRINITY
)\~vl~w
COLLEGE
of 'lfock~l'
131
s~ason
THE PAST TWO winters have seen a growing popularity of hockey at Trinity. There is one drawback to the game, however, and that is, lack of ice and poor weather conditions. It is hoped to have a rink arranged by another year, which will doubtless make this vigorous outdoor game the leading winter sport.
1908 Captain Manager Assistant Manager
J. 0. Morris, '08 H. C. Neff, 'I 0 . S. P. Haight, 'I I
Forwards ]. 0. Morris, '08 C. E. Morrow, '09 H. C. Pond, '08 P . Roberts, '09 G. S. Buck, '09, Co1ier Point R. W. Stevens, '08, Point B. Budd, '08, and F. ]. Brainerd, '11, Coal )\¢cor~
January 18 January 25
At Springfield At West Point
Springfield T. S. 3 West Point 6
Trinity 1 Trinity 0
1!109 Captain Manager
P. Roberts, '09 S. P. Haight, '11 ZS~¢
"G¢am Forwards
P. Roberts, '09 S. P . Haight, 'I I G. S. Buck, '09, Cover Point F. ]. Brainerd, 'I
F. N. Breed, '12
A E. Rankin, '12 W. S. Eaton, 'I 0, Point I, Coal
)\¢cor~
January 9 January 13 January 20 January 23
At At At At
Hartford Pomfret Cheshire Amherst
H. P. H. S. Alumni 1 Pomfret 3 Cheshire 0 Amherst 0
Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity
2 I 4 I
THE
132
Vol. XXXVII
IVY
m~n w~o w~ar t~~ 路路 T
"
sootball B. F. Snow, '09 I. L. Xanders, '09 ]. Backus, Jr., '09 V. G. Burdick, 'I I S. Buck, '09 ('06 and '07 teams)]. 0. Carroll, '11 A. L. Gildersleeve, ' 1 1 I. Maxson, '09 Roberts, '09 E. B. Ramsdell, '1 I F. N. Breed, '12
]. S. Carpenter, '09, Manager A. B. Henshaw, 'I 0, Captain C. G.
H. P.
~as~ball
M. A. Connor, '09, Captain S. E. McGinley, '09, Manager I. L. Xanders, '09 R. C. Abbey, 'I 0 H. W. S. Cook, 'I 0 N. H. Gildersleeve,
A. L. Potter, '10 ('07team) A. M. Smith, '1 0 ]. P . Webster, '10 ]. 0. Carroll, '11 A. L. Gildersleeve, '1 I '10
"Grack H. I. Maxson, '09, Captain E. K. Roberts, Jr., '09, Manager
P. Roberts, '09 P. Maxon, '10
~as kdball
A. L. Gildersleeve, 'II, Captain H. W. S. Cook, 'I 0
G . C. Capen, '1 0 ]. 0. Carroll, 'II
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
133
The George Sheldon McCook Cup-Presented by Professor]. ]. McCook, '63, as a memorial to his son, G. S. McCook, '97; to be awarded to the student making the best record in athletics during the year.
Sfol~~TS
0. Morgan, '06 P. Dougherty, '0 7 E. ]. Donnelly, '08 (present holder)
]. Henderson, '02 H. D. Brigham, '03 W. B. Allen, '04
The Record Cup-Presented by E. Brainerd Bulkeley, '90, to be awarded to students who break college athletic records.
H. B. Olmsted, '08 D. C. Pond, '08
H. C. Pond, '08 W . ]. Nelson, ' 10
The Underwood Cup-Presented by ]. C. Underwood, '96; to be competed for at each fall underclass meet.
1911 The Gymnasium, Leffingwell, and McCracken cups are at present no longer competed for.
A BUNCH OF POINT WINNERS
/910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
137
musical ~tubs H. C. Goodrich, '09 P. Roberts, '09 A Howell, ' 1 1 . W. H. Plant, '09 R. L. Wright, '1 0
President of Musical Clubs Leader of Glee Club Leader of Mandolin Club Manager of Musical Clubs . Assistant Manager
Slut t5cmor
slut
]. S. Carpenter, Jr. , '09 I. W. Smith, '1 0 H. K. Rees, ' 11 .S¢con~
H. N. Chandler, '09 N. H. Gildersleeve, '1 0 ]. S. Craik, ' I 2 C. H. Whipple, ' 12 ]. H. Humphrey, '12
0¢nor
]. P. Webster, 'I 0 G. E. Elwell, '09 J. F. Reddick, '12 B. H . Barnett, ' 12 B. F. Yates, ' 11 L. J. H arri man, '09 P. M. Butterworth, '09 man~olln
Slr.st man~ohn.s W. Creedon, '09 S. Carpenter, Jr., '09 E. McGinley, '09 P. W ebster, '1 0 C. M. Butterworth, '09 F. N. Breed, '12 A Howell, ' II
A J. S. ].
<6ultar.s ]. F. Townsend, '1 0 W . A Smith, 'I 0 N. F. Pitts, '11
~a.s.s
.S¢con~ ~a.s.s
P. Roberts, '09 L. A Stansfield, ' 10 ]. Porteus, '11 0 . Gildersleeve, 'I 1
<.tlub .5¢con~ man~olln.s
P. ]. Flanders, ' II A ]. Welton, ' II G. S. Buck, '09 Vlohn.s L. A Stansfield, ' I 0 C. Carpenter, ' 12 S. W. Green, ' 11
ST. PATRICK'S DAY, 1907
HIC JACET COLLEGII
TRINITATIS
TABULA
NATA MDCCCLXVIII OBIIT MCMVIII
FORAN ET HAEC
OLIM MEMINISSE JUVABIT
Established I 8 7 I ~oar~
Richardson Little Wright Joseph Groves Albert Marston Smith } 路 Ralph Howard Merrill
John Booth Clark John Richard Cook, Jr.
of -1EMtor.s Editor-in-Chief Business Manager A thleiic Editors
George William Eugene Draper Benjamin Floyd Turner
/9/0
TRINIT Y
COLLEGE
141
Established 1904 Published Tuesdays and Fridays in each week of the college year by students of Trinity College
Editor-in-C hie! Woodforde Hamilton Plant, '09
Athletic Editor
Alumni Editor
Louis Gildersleeve H arriman, '09
Corwin McMillan Butterworth, '09
Managing Editors Blinn Fran cis Yates, 'II
Alfred Howell, ' I I
Assistant Managing Editors Ralph Howard Merrill, 'I 0
Harry Kollock Rees, ' I I
Secrelar:y Joseph Groves, 'I 0
~u.slnu.s "'Jl)~.pa.-tm~nt
Treasurer Henry Oliver Peck, '09
Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager
Welles Eastman, '09
Paul Humphrey Barbour, '09
g
~ 0 0:: <(
0
ill
0 0
a..
" 1Lr.J
:r:
1-
1\.nnnriutinun
I
144
THE
Vol. XXXVII
I VY
-{ocal 'Alumni Associations 'G ~~ Sfa rtfor~ :::-A.s.sociatlon George William Ellis, '94 Rev. James W. Lord, '98
President . Secretary and Treasurer Executive Committee
William E. A Bulkeley, '90 ]. Humphrey Greene, '91 Harold Gross Hart, '0 7
President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer
Rt. Rev. Alexander Mackay-Smith, D.O. , '72 William Drayton, '71 ] ames Albert Wales, '0 I
zs~~ ~o.ston ::2\.s.sociatlon
Rev. ]ames Goodrich, '66
President . Vice-Presidents William E. Rogers, '77
Secretary Treasurer zs~~
President . Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer
Rev. E. T. Sullivan, '89 Rev. George W. Sargent, '90 . James M. Hudson, '01
'Groy ::2\.s.sociatlon . George B. Pattison, '81 Hobart W. Thompson, '83 . John Paine, '92
TRINITY
/9/0
(S~~ ')l~w
COLLEGE
145
York A.s.soclatton . Edward S. Beach, '83
President Executive Committee
Charles L. Burnham, '98 Rev. Philip Cook, '98 Harmon S. Graves, '92 Charles E . Hotchkiss, '82 George P. In gersoll, '83 (S~~
1J ltt.sburg
:-A.s.soclatlon
Secretar}l
Hon. Joseph Buffington, '75 William R. Blair, '75 M. K. Coster, '87
President
. John H. S. Quick, '58
President Vice-President
Stat~ :-A.s.sociatlon of mtc~lgan
President Vice-President Secretor}) and Treasurer
President Vice-President Secrelar}l- Treasurer
Sidney T. Miller, '85 H. C. Loveridge, '80 William H. Gage, '96
George Lewis Cooke, ' 70 Louis Welton Downes, '88 Frank Marshall Barber, '91
146
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
Founded 1832
Pro Christo et ecclesia Offlc~r.s
Paul Roberts David W. Clark Paul H. Barbour
. President Vice-President Secretar:y and Treasurer
C. M. Butterworth P. M. Butterworth Chapin Carpenter ]. S. Carpenter, Jr. G. L. Barnes ]. B. Clark Welles Eastman N. H. Gildersleeve Oliver Gildersleeve, Jr. ]. F. Townsend
]. S. Craik P. ]. Flanders S. W. Green A S. Kean F. S. Kedney G. H. Newhall F. R. Prout A E. Rankin William Short, Jr. B. F. Turner
~rot~~r~oo~ of St. An~r~w (tbaptu 1743
Philip J. Flanders George L. Barnes John B. Clark
Director Vice-Director Secretar:y and Treasurer m~mb~r.s
P. G. P. ]. D. 0.
H. Barbour L. Barnes M. Butterworth S. Carpenter, Jr. W. Clark Gildersleeve, Jr.
S. W. Green A S. Kean F. S. Kedney F. R. Prout A E. Rankin Paul Roberts ]. F. Townsend
148
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
:Junior w~~k t5~urs~ay. -:J'~bruary 4t~
I. K. A Danes
Evening
7rl~ay. -:f~bruary .5t~
Afternoon
Alpha Delta Phi Tea
Evening
Delta Psi German
.Satur~ay. -:J'~bruary 6t~
Afternoon
College Tea
Evening
Junior Hop .Sun~ay. -:J'~bruary 7t~
Afternoon
College Vespers mon~ay. -:J'~bruary 8t~
Afternoon Evening
Psi Upsilon Tea Junior Promenade
1Junior '1Jrom~na~~ \.tommitt~~ Cyril Bathurst Judge George Cleveland Capen
Chairman Secrelar:y and Treasurer
Fred Donald Carpenter
Irving Wright Smith
joseph Groves
Wilbert Austin Smith
Henry Smith Marlor
Benjamin Floyd Turner
Albert Marston Smith
Richardson Little Wright
~ 0 c:::
c.. c:::
Q
z
:J .......
s 0
p
~ 0
m 0
lJ{op <blv¢n by t~¢ \.tla.s.s of 1910 to t~¢ \.tla.s.s of 1908 J!>~c~mb~r 19t~.
1907
\.tommltt¢¢ William Spaulding Eaton
Chairman
Gilbert Brown Fred Donald Carpenter Sturges Harmon Henry Smith Marlor Henry Conrad Neff
.Sop~omor~ .Smok~r marc~ 26t~. 1908
\tommltt~~
Cyril Bathurst judge
Chairman
Harry F. Ferguson William F. McElroy William G. Oliver William R. Ripley James F. Townsend jerome P. Webster Richardson L. Wright
1910
TRINITY
153
COLLEGE
<!:lass of 1909
s~nior A.s.s~mbly---)lov~mbu 17t~.
1908
Chairman
Henry Otto Hinkel Stephen Essex McGinley Harry lrl Maxson
Woodforde Hamilton Plant, ex-officio
.S~nior .Smok~r <.t:~a.s~路 .s )\at~.skdl~r. ""1P~c~mbu
ht. 1908
Chairman
George Edward Elwell, Jr. George Sumner Buck Edward Kilbourn Roberts, Jr.
Woodforde Hamilton Plant, ex-officio
THE
154
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
7r~s~man- "3 unior )?,anqu~t 1912 to 1910
\tommitt~t~t
A E. Rankin
Chairman
E. F. P ettigrew W. E. Stevens H . L. Sommer
G. Barnes C. R. Whipple C. Carpenter L. H. McClure, ex-officio
'Goa.st.s A Erwin Rankin, 'I 2 "1912" "Our Lady Friends"
Toastmaster
William F. McElroy, 'I 0 Cyril B. Judge, 'I 0
"Athletics"
Arthur B. Henshaw, 'I 0
"Advice to Freshmen"
Jerome P. Webster, 'I 0
"The College"
Richardson L. Wright, '1 0
"1910"
Laurence H. McClure, '12
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
155
Presenting
" ts~~
.Strang~r
in t~~ \t~urc~ "
(A Comedy in one act and a prelude)
By PHILIP EVERETT CURTISS, '06 Alumni Hall, June 20, 1908
lJ~rson.s oft~~ lJr~lu~~
]. Milligan Brock, editor of the Ladies' Own Journal . . Michael Flash, editor of the Horseman's Friend Ebenezer Silo, editor of the Model Dairyman Linotype Slugs, a printer's devil Edna, the beautiful typewriter
Edwin J. Donnelly, Robert W. Stevens, Thomas M. Phillips, Albert M. Smith, . Sturges Harmon,
'08 '08 '08 '10 '10
Frederick ]. Corbett, Myles Forward, a Trinity Senior . Paul Roberts, . Jack Handy, also a Senior . Van Deusyn Stave, a Senior, President of the Anti路 Fussing League . . Charles M, Konvalinka, CtJrry Favor, a Senior, President of the German Harold N. Chandler, Club William S. Buchanan, Hardly Pasd, a student Standing Start, of the Track T earn Clinton J. Backus, Bat Strongly, of the Baseball T earn Harvey C. Pond, Gridiron King, of the Football T earn Edwin J. Donnelly, Bern Budd, I. Caulfer Dates, Professor of Archeology Herman F. MacGuyer, Duffy and . Sturges Harmon, EDNA
'08 '09
lJu.son.s oft~~ -..plal'
'11 '09 '09 '09 '08 '08 '08 '08 '1 0
lJrom <&lrl.s Mollie de Winsome Margaret Steppe Myrtle Vynne . m~mbu.s
" Dutch" Treat Noah Lesson . "Si" Kology " Phil" Osophy Overthe Rocks F ul!er Prunes .
Jerome P . Webster, '1 0 . Blinn F. Yates, '11 Gilbert Brown, '1 0
of
t~~
:2\ntl 7u.s.slng
-{.~agu~
Harry 0. Hinkle, Joseph Groves, Clarence E. Sherman, Arthur B. Henshaw, Albert M. Smith, Robert W. Stevens,
'09 ' 10 '11 '1 0 '1 0 '08
FACULTY NOT ON DRESS PARADE
CoMMENCEMENT
THE
158
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
lJrogram MUSIC
Lampe
Remick's Hits PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS
Harvey Clark Pond, Connecticut MUSIC
Van Alstyne
Afraid to Go Home in the Dark CLASS HISTORY
Thomas Mitchell Phillips, Connecticut MUSIC
Tobani
Hearts and Flowers PROPHECY
Le Roy Austin Ladd, Oklahoma MUSIC
Van A lst:yne
Dreaming POEM
Ralph Reed Wolfe, Connecticut MUSIC
Cohan
Harrigan STATISTICS
Henry Slater Wilcox, New York MUSIC
Lampe
Intermezzo-Punch and judy PRESENTATION OF ATHLETIC AWARDS
The George Sheldon McCook Trophy for Out-Door Sports Certificates of the "T" and the "ATA" The Gold Footballs and the Gold Baseballs MUSIC
Herbert
Scenes from The Red Mill ORATION
Frederick Joseph Corbett, Connecticut MUSIC
Cohan
Yankee Prince March PRESENTATION
Edwin joseph Donnelly, New York MUSIC
'Neath the Elms
19/0
T RI N I TY
COLLEGE
159
<!:omm~nc~m~nt '3un~. 1908 Or~u of ~xuci.s~.s
MUSIC
Salutatory
Thomas Mitchell Phillips, Connecticut MUSIC
The Conscience of the ] apanese .
Ralph Reed Wolfe, Connecticut
Men, Morals, and the Creative Mind
Frederick joseph Corbett, Connecticut
MUSIC
The Prince and the P hilosopher
Henry Slater Wilcox, New York MUSIC
The Preserva tion of O ur Forests, with the Valedictory Addresses
Charles William McKone, Connecticut MUSIC
160
THE
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
111onors anb '1Jriz~s for t~~ Y~ar 1907-1908 "'Jfonor.s in t~ ~ a::ta.s.s of 190 8 Valedictory Salutatory . Honor Oration
Charles William McKone Thomas Mitchell Phillips Henry Slater Wilcox
The Chemical Prize Essay [Not awarded .] FirJI Prize Second Prize Burdette Lee Farnham Subject: Denatured Alcohol. Committee of Award: Mr. E . C. Stone. Martin Taylor. Tuttle Prize Essay Subject : The Social and Economic Functions of Corporations. Committee of Award: Colonel Norris G. Osborn, of New Haven. Goodwin Greek Prizes
Fir•l Prize Second Prize
Louis Kofsky. Alfred Howell. Committee of Award: Professor A . R . Benner, of Andover Academy. Prizes in History and Political Science
[Not awarded .]
Alumni Prizes in English Composition Fir•! Prize
Frederick Joseph Corbett Martin Taylor. Thomas Mitchell Phillips. Committee of Award: Mr. E. S. Van Zile.
Second Prize Third Prize
Frank W. Whitlock Prizes
[Not awarded.]
Douglas: Prize Thomas Mitchell Phillips. Subject: The Origin, History, and Present Efficacy of Trial bv Jury. Committee of Award: Honorable Joseph Bullington, LL.D. Mackay-Smith Prizes Charles Hobby Bassford. Harry Faster Ferguson. Second Prize Professor Thomas Emory McKinney, Ph.D., of Wesleyan Committee of Award: University. Frederick Joseph Corbe tt. The F. A . Brown Prize Committee of Award: The Rt. Rev. Samuel C. Edsall , D.O., the Rev. H enry Ferguson, LL.D., and the Hon Frank L. W ilcox.
Fir.t Prize
• The prizes are arranged in the order of their foundatio n.
1910
TRINITY
1836 Pliny A. Jewett 1837 Albert Dodd 1838 George W. Beers 1839 Thomas T. Guion 1840 C. B. Varley 1841 George R. Hall 1842 Francis J. Clerc 1843 John G. Sterling 1844 Samuel Flower 1845 James B. Wakefield 1846 David F. Lumsden 1847 William C. Peters 1848 Edward H. Brinley 1849 Samuel Sherman 1850 Charles E. Terry 1851 James W. Smyth 1852 A. Hamilton Polk 1853 J. Gardiner White 1854 W . Butler Krumbhaar 1855 Jared Starr 1856 Sidney Hall 1857 John H. S. Quick 1858 Samuel B. Warren 1859 William G. Davies 1860 William B. Tibbits 1861 G. W. Hugg 1862 John J. McCook 1863 Thomas R. Ash 1864 C. T . Olmsted 1865 Charles Wanzer 1866 Henry K. Huntington 1867 Howard C. Vibbert 1868 Joseph B. Cheshire 1869 George E. Elwell 1870 D. Page Cotton 1871 John W. Gray
COLLEGE
161
1872 Russell Murray 1873 L. M. Plumer 1874 Charles D. Scudder 1875 Henry H. Brigham 1876 J . Ellis Kurtz 1877 R. B. Brundage 1878 William N. Elbert 1879 Henry C. Lovebridge 1880 William B. Nelson 1881 Charles H. Carter 1882 J . Eldred Brown 1883 E . S. Van Zile 1884 S. S. Mitchell 1885 E . B. Hatch 1886 W . B. Olmsted 1887 W. F . Morgan, Jr. 1888 E . N . Scott 1889 E . McP. McCook 1890 T. P . Thurston 1891 William Joseph Miller 1892 William French Collins 1893 Robert Prescott Parker 1894 John Moore McGann 1895 W. Speaight Langford, Jr. 1896 James Watson Lord 1897 James Watson Lord 1898 Elton Gardiner Littell 1899 Harry Archer Hornor 1901 Godfrey Brinley 1902 Richard Nicks Weibel 1903 Samuel St. John Morgan 1904 Herman Edward Townsend 1905 Cornelius Wagstaff Remsen 1906 Oliver Warren Badgley 1907 Harvey Clark Pond 1908 Paul Roberts
THE
162
Val~~ictorian.s an~ Val ~Mctorlan.s
1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860
Isaac E. Crary Henry G. Smith Joshua G. Wright Augustus F. Lyde Nathaniel E . Cornwall E. Edwards Beardsley Hugh L. Morrison William Payne Robert Tomes ]ames H. Elliott Abner Jackson Charles Gillelle Isaac G. Hubbard Robert B. Fairbairn William H. Frisbie, H enry D. Noble George Rossiter Thomas S. Presion David P . Sanford Robert C. Rogers John W. Bacon Samuel Benedict Benjamin H. Paddock John M. Atwood John T. Huntington Charles ]. Hoadley Lucius H. Jones Alfred L. Brewer George D. Johnson Luke A Lockwood Daniel E . Holcomb Samuel Herman George S. Mallory Samuel B. Warren Charles H . W . Stocking
Vol. XXXVII
IVY
Salutatorians .Salutatorians 1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860
Samuel C. Goldsborough William H . Walter Samuel S. Lewis Isaac W. Hallom Joseph R. Eccleston John W . French Edward Hardyear Solomon G. Hitchcock Edward Van Deuscn Isaac H. T ullle John D. Cushing Cyrus Munson Nathaniel 0. Cornwall Vandevoort Bruce Thomas R. Pynchon Henry C. Presion George Ker Tilton E. Dooliule John A Paddock Samuel M. Whiting George S. Gilman Nathaniel H. Belden George W. Giddingâ&#x20AC;˘ Daniel E. Loveridge Alex. G. Cummings Francis Chase William C. Spencer James H . Williams Edwin C. Bolles Samuel F. Hotchkin George B. Hopson William H . Vibbert Edwin E. Johnson Augustus Johnson
1910
TRINITY
Val~Mdor-lans
1861 Arthur W. Allen 1862 James B. Murray 1863 John G. Smith 1864 Robert A. Benton 1865 Charles T. Olmsted 1866 Samuel Hart 1867 William R. Mackay 1868 FrankL. Norton 1869 George 0. Holbrooke 1870 George McC. Fiske 1871 George W. Douglass 1872 Paul Ziegler 1873 Leonard W. Richard;on 1874 Edward N. Dickerson 1875 George M. Hubbard 1876 Isaac Heister 1877 Charles C. Edmunds, Jr. 1878 John D. Hills 1879 Alfred Harding 1880 T. M. N. George 1881 J. Russell P .mons 1882 Seaver M. Holden 1883 R. T. Reineman 1884 Henry R. Neely 1885 H. B. Loomis 1886 Herman Lilienthal 1887 Orrin A. Sands 1888 Lewis H. Paddock 1889 Willard Scudder 1890 Clifford S. Griswold 1891 Harry Howard 1892 Albert Crabtree 1893 March Chase Mayo 1894 Nathan Tolles Prall 1895 Edward Myron Yeomans 1896 George Nahum Holcomb 1897 Hermann von W. Schulte 1898 Woolsey MeA. Johnson 1899 Harold Loomis Cleasby 1900 Simon Lewis Tomlinson
COLLEGE
163
Salutator-lan.s 1861 A . B. Jennings 1862 George \V . Hugg 1863 W. N . Ackley 1864 Joseph F. Ely 1865 Edward S. Johnson 1866 Henry A . Metcalf 1867 George G . Nichols 1868 Frank H . Potts 1869 Arthur McConkey 1870 Harlow R. Whitlock 1871 Chauncey C. Williams 1872 James H. George 1873 Oliver H. Raftery 1874 James D . Smyth 1875 Edward W . Worthington 1876 Charles E. Moore 1877 John Prout 1878 John G . Williams 1879 James S. Carpenter 1880 S. Lorin Webster 1881 Charles W . Jones 1882 John H . McCrakan 1883 J . E. Brown 1884 William S. Barrows 1885 Robert Thorn 1886 William J . Tate 1887 William A . Beardsley 1888 Charles E . Purdy 1889 Joseph W. Fell 1890 William H. C. Pynchon 1891 Charles Herbert Young 1892 Romily F . Humphries 1893 Robert Peck Bates 1894 Cameron Josiah Davis 1895 Sydney Key Evans 1896 George Blodgett Gilbert 1897 John Robert Benton 1898 Albert Morey Sturtevant 1899 Charles William Henry 1900 Harry Archer Hornor
164
THE
IVY
Val¢Mdorian.s 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908
Vol. XXXVII
Salutatorians
Francis R . Sturtevant Anson T. McCook Harry C. Golden Bayard Q. Morgan Edmund S. Carr Frederick Augustus Grant Cowper Philip Dougherty Charles W . McKone
"PREXY"
1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908
Frank Halsey Foss Karl Philip Morba Henry L. G. Meyer Philip L. Lightbourn Carlos E. jones Henry G. Barbour Frederick Cleveland Hedrick Thomas M . Phillips
1910
TRINITY
COLLEGE
165
O.ptimi Samuel Hart, '66
George Otis Holbrooks, '69
Lucius Waterman, '71
Leonard Woods Richardson, '73
Hiram Benjamin Loomis, '85
Herman Lilienthal, '86
Willard Scudder, '89
Harold Loomis Cleasby, '99
Francis Raymond Sturtevant, '0 I
William Perry Bentley, '02
Edward Henry Lorenz, '02
Anson Theodore McCook, '02
Karl Philip Morba, '02
Marshall Bowyer Stewart, '02
Edmund Samuel Carr, '05
1908 TREE PLANTING
CLASS DAY- 1908
\t~ap~t President Luther, Chaplain Or~~r
of
s~nlcu VOLUNTARY
OBLIGATORY
Daily Morning Prayer, 8.30 A. M. Ash Wednesday, 8.30 A. M. Sunday, 9.15 A. M. Ascension Day, 8.30 A. M. Roberts, '09 Harrison, ' 1 1 Harriman, '09 Stansfield, '1 0 Xanders, '09
Sunday Holy Communion, 7.45 A. M. Evening Prayer, 5.30 P. M. Lent-Daily, 12.45 P. M. Thanksgiving Day, 10.30 A. C hoirmasler
Elwell, '09 Chandler, '09 Nelson, '11
monltor.s Livingston, '09
Organist Smith, '1 0 Butterworth, '09 Carpenter, '09 Webster, '10 Wright, '10
M.
President Flavel Sweeten Luther
Professor Robert Baird Riggs
Sydney George Fisher
William N ewnham Carlton
William Newnham Carlton, M.A.
Stu~~nt
:A.s.si.stant.s
Clinton Josiah Backus, Jr. , '09 Leonard Jerome Dibble, '09 Richardson Little Wright, 'I 0
170
THE
"lJru~ntu-
IVY
Vol. XXXVII
'::l\~cdvu-
'57
G. R. Hallam, '59
W.H. Benjamin, '57 '59 G. R. Hallam, '59
w.
ln veniam 'Vi am aut faciam
W. S. Cogswell, '61
'61 H. Webster, '61
ad astra
N. D . Dayton, '63
Ne lenles aut perfice
C. W. Munro, '65
Per asp era
'63
R. F. Goodwin, '63
'65 H. G. Gardner, '65
Facta non verba
Robert Shaw, '68
'68
F. L. Norton, '68
Semper
cre~ccns
E. V. B. Kissam, '69
'69 Jacob LeRoy, '69
Numquam non paratus
D. P. Cotlon, 71
'71 William Drayton, '71
c.
Nulla vestiga retrorsum
F. 0.
Grannis, '73
'73 E. Wodman, '73
C. E. Craik, '74
1910
TRINITY
171
COLLEGE )\~c~\v~t'
'74 R. M. Edwards, '74 C. E. Moore, '76 J . D . Hills, '78 W . R. Leaken, '80 A. P. Burgwin, '82 A. D . Neeley, '8S A. H. Anderson, '87 E. C. Johnson, 2d, '88
T. A. Conover, '90 G. Hall, '92 J . W . Edgerton, '94 E. P. Hamlin, '9S
H . V . Rutherford, '76
'76 lnseruit honori
w. c.
Blackmer, '78
'78
D. L. Fleming, '80
'80
A. P . Burgwin, '82
'82 Respice {tnem
'8S Duris non frangi
s.
H . Giesy, '8S
G . 5. Waters, '87
'87 Multa in dies addiscenles
E. C. Johnson, 2d, '88
'88
E . McP . McCook, '90
P er angusta ad augusta '90 S emp er agens aliquid '92 '94 A gere pro uiribus '9S En avant! '96
'99 F ortiter, {tdeliter, f eliciter '01
N ouus or do saeclorum '04
'06
'08 ' 10
Keepers of the Lemon Squeezer
I. D. Russell, '92
F. F. Johnson, '94
J.
Strawbridp;e, '9S
G. E . Cogswell, '97
Founded in 1776 at Mary and Williams College
~l,p~a of \tonn~cticut Chartered 1889 L. ]. Dibble M. A . Connors W. C. Deppen W. S. Buchanan
President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer
)\oll of <!~apt~r.s Alpha of Great Britain Alpha of Ireland Alpha of F ranee Beta of F ranee . Alpha of Massachusetts Beta of Massachusetts Gamma of Massachusetts Alpha of Connecticut Beta of Connecticut Alpha of New York Beta of New York . Gamma of New York Delta of New York Epsilon of New York Zeta of New York . Eta of New York . Theta of New York Iota of New York . Alpha of Pennsylvania Beta of Pennsylvania Beta of Germany Alpha of Russia Eta of China Omega of Japan Omicron of the Philippine>
Trinity College, Cambridge . Trinity College, Dublin E cole de Beaux Arts, Paris Emynxt University Smith College Wellesley College Harvard Annex Trinity College Wesleyan University Wells College Vassar Colle~e Sage College, Cornell University . Zymtba College Blyrqksm University Dnjlucix Institute . Qvltjmin Lytnqbmp Atljo Combinojinf Bryn Mawr Nowhereatal Heidelberg University of Mskovitchjski University of Shanghai University of Tokio University of Manila
TRINITY
1910
173
COLLEGE
N ec poeniteat calamo trivisse Ia bellum
1856 l'Ku..pu.s oft~~ 'lJt.p~ of -.p~ac~ w~o.s~ ')tam~.s ar~ a:ut on t~~ ~ox H M. Gregory, '56 S. McConihe, '56 H. W. Kloppenburg, '58 J. E. Mears, '58 T. B. Sexton, '60 W. H. Tibbits, '61 L. K. Storrs, '63 N. B. Dayton, '63 G. M. Stanlev '68 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, '75 W. J. Roberts, '75
E. N. Burke, '76 B. E. Warner, '76 W. E. Rogers, '77 B. F . H. Shreve, '78 0. Buffington, '79 0. Holway, '80 C. Carpenter, '82 J. R. Cunningham, '85 C. G . Child, '86 C. H. Tibbits, '87 F. B. Whitcomb, '87 j. W. R. Crawford, '88 L. H. Paddock, '88 E. N. Scottt, '89 E. B. Bulkeley, '90 G. '1!./. Sarge n~. '90 T. L. Elwyn, '92 T. H. Ya rdley, '92 L. D . Hubbard, '93 G . D. Hartley, '93 F. C. Edgerton, '94 H . T. Greenley, '94 F. S. Burrage, '95
C. DuB. Broughton, '95 DeF. Hicks, '96 E. W. Robinson, '96 E. F. Waterman, '98 H. R. Remsen , '98 J. W. Nichols, '99 J. H. K. Davis, '99 J. G . Mcll~aine, '00 E .P. Taylor, Jr., '00 R. Fiske, '01 H. H. Rudd, '01 S. St. J. Morgan, '03 G. D. Rankin, '03 M. H. Buffington, '04 H . E. Townsend, '04 R. M. Ewing, '05 C. W. Remsen, '05 H. Burgwin, '06 W. S. W. Fiske, '06 C. V . Ferguson, '07 C. L. Trumbull, '07 J. 0. Morris, '08
-_pru¢nt lKupus L. J. Ha rriman ,
H . I. Maxson, '09
'09
THE
174
rAs
Vol. XXXVII
IVY
every member voted for himself, no officers were elected.]
m~mbu.s
G. E. Elwell, '09
W. C. Dewey, '11
]. R. Cook, '1 0
E. B. VanZile, '12
'lionorary m~mb~r Omar Khayyam
'Gabl~
of
<!ont~nts 4
Greeting D edication Editors Calendar Board of Trustees Board of Fellows Faculty Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen Fraternities Class Societies Athletics Musical Associations Publications
5 6 8 9 10 12
24 42
64 71 77
101 109
135 139 143
Associations
147
Social Events
157
Commencement Miscellaneous
167
AMERICA 'S OLD ES T COM PANY FOUNDED 1792
Insurance Cotnpany of North America PHIL A DELPHIA, PA.
$12,006,998. 25 7,258,156. 97
Total Assets, January 1, 1909 Total Liabilities, January 1, 1909 Surplus ove r all Liabilities, January 1, 1909
$4,748,841.28
CHARLES PLATT, President EUGENE L . ELLISON, Vice-President BENJAMIN RUSH, 2d Vice-President T . HOWARD WRIGHT, Secretary HENRY W. FARNUM, Asst. Secretary JOHN 0. PLATT, Ass t. Secretarr
NEW ENGLAND DEPAR TMENT,
HARTFORD, CONN.
Charles E. Parker & Co. MANAGERS
50 State S treet
First National Bank Building
II
Hartford, Conn.
Hartford's Shopping Center IS THE BEST
PLACE IN CONN. TO BUY EVERY-
THING. TRY US. Brown, Thomson & Co. BROWN , THOMSON & CO.
AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN Located in business center, corner of Asylum and Trumbull Streets
Electric cars pass the door Hotel Bus meets all trains
every two minutes
ALLYN HOUSE, Hartford, Conn. EUROPEAN PLAN $1.50 to $3.00 per day
ROBERT J. ALLYN, Proprietor
JOHN J. DAHILL, Manager
JOHNSON & ERIKSON Merchant Tailors Suite 36, Catlin Building
HARTFORD, CONN. UP-TO-DA TE TA IL ORING
839 Main Street,
II(
wqr irrkrlry ittututty ~rqnnl ~ibblrtown.
Q!onnrmcut
7C'OUNDED in 1854, ;.-, continuation ofa Theolol(ical department at Trinity College, by Bishop John Williams. It offers to students of Theology full instruction in the studies required of Candidates for Orders, with various courses of Lectures and advanced work in the several departments. The degree of Bachelor of Divinity is conferred on any graduate who attains a high standard in examinations, ahows a scholarly acquaintance with Greek and Latin, and presents a sati sfactory thesis .
2Jl
The fifty-fifth Ordination will be held on the 2d of June, and the fifty-sixth year will open on the 21st of September, 1909 . All communications should be addressed to the Dean, the REV. DR. SAMUEL HAR<J"
Richard Birch & Co. WM. H. POST CARPET CO.
Plumbing and Heating
Decorators Carpets, Rugs Wall Papers and Upholstery
21 CHURCH STREET 219
Asylum
Street
HARTFORD, CONN.
Telephone Connection IV
What's
Your
Under
Hand?
Every typist knows that instant of confusion-brief, but mightily annoyin~on hastily returning the hands to operatine; position after being obliged to remove them.
WlTH THE NEW MODEL
L. C. SMITH & BROS.
TYPEWRITER
All the
Always
Writing
tn Sight
Every operating device is under the operator's hand Shift-key, shift-lock, space-bar, back-spacer, tabulator spacer and margin release - all-rie;ht on duty in the places where most needed when quickly wanted. Evt:n the line space lever is operated without leaving position.
HOW IS IT WITH YOU?
LOOK UNDER YOUR HAND!
Send lor Descriptive Book
L. C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter Co. SYRACUSE, N.Y., U.S. A.
Branches in all Large Cities v
HOTEL CUMBERLAND NEW YORK S. W. Corner Broadway at 54th Street Near 50th St. Subway Station and 53rd St. Elevated
Kept by a College Man Headquarters for College Men Special Rates for College Teams Ideal Location, Ncar Theatres, Shops, Central Park
New, Modern
and
Absolutely
Fireproof
The most attractive hotel in New York . Transient Rates $2.50 with bath and up . All outside roo ms.
10 Minutes Walk to 20 Th eatres HARRY P. STIMSON, Formerly with Hotel Imperial R. J . Bl GHAM, Formerly with Hotel Woodwud
SEND FOR BOOKLET HEAD QUARTERS
THE
FOR
TRIN ITY
MEN
RABENSTEIN
Chas. L. Willard Co.
The Caterer of Hartford
College Engravers and Printers
SOCIETY NOTES
That all social functions placed with the Habensteins receive Mrs. Haben stein's personal attention
Makers of Trinity Class Day and Dance Proarrama
Printers of the 1909 West Point Annual
" THE HOWITZER"
Her style is not surpassed even .by the New York Caterrrs
Souvenir Calendars Dance Programs Class Day Programs
RESTAURANT
Embossed Stationery
156 Fifth
Dinner from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. Supper from 5 p . m. to 8 p. m.
Avenue
111 PEARL STREET
NEW YORK VI
To Our Friends and Custom ers : We thank our patrons for the gen erous orders given us, and tru st our husiness relations for the coming year will continue as pleasant as in the past; we solicit the continued patronage of old and new customers.
THE TUTTLE COMPANY Established 183Z
Printers, Booksellers and Stationers II and 13 Center St., RUTLAND, VT. VII
Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Company CORNER
OF
MAIN
AND
PEARL STREETS
Surplus, $400,000
Capital, $300,000
BANKING BUSINESS-SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT TRUST DEPARTMENT JOHN P. WHEELER, Treasurer
MEIGS H . WHAPLES, President
HOSMER P. REDFIELD, Assistant Treasurer ARTHUR P. DAY, Secretary and Manager of Trust Department
T. SISSON & CO. GEO. 0. SIMONS DRUGGISTS Successor to
Simons & Fox 240 Asylum St. CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL APPARATUS, SPONGES, CHAMOIS, FEATHER D USTERS, ETC . INTERTOR VARNISHES AND WOOD FINISHING MATERIALS -==~
Headquarter• for
GRISWOLD'S FAMILy SALVE
All kinds of Silk, Bunting and Felt Flags. Favors for Gentians and Cotil-
729 Main Street
Hartford,
Conn.
lions. VIII
Official decorator for the Prom.
THE OLIVER S.TUDIO COLLEGE
PHOTOGRAPHER
I
Fine Portraits, Groups, Views of College Buildings, and Interior of R ooms OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER
1910 IVY SATISFACTION GUARANTEED on all work 7 53 MAIN STREET
HARTFORD,
CONNECTICUT
HEADQUARTERS FOR
TELEPHONE CONNECTION
The Trinity Boys
W I L S 0 N Successor to Spencer
Suppers BEEF STEAK
and
Hack, Cab and Baggage Express
Banquets Parson's
Theatre
Cafe
~0
In Parson's Theatre
UNION PLACE
Carriages
for
all
Functions
Telephone 803-3
IX
College
Cigars }.. 11l1Jrlrnm.r
~ift itt
Pipes
any Jinm.r
THE " MOST POPULAR" MUSIC FOUOS
Cigarettes
Home Songs ( TVords all({ Piauo) .......... . $0.50 National Songs (IVorris and Piauo)... . .... .50 Hymns ( TVords and Piau ol:. ...... ... .. . ... .50 Love Songs ( IVonls aud Ptano). .. ......... .50 College Songs (IVorris and Plauu).. ... .. . . . .50 New College S o ng~ (/Vordr anti Piano) .... . 50 New Songs for Glee Clubs ( IVordsaud Piano) .50 New Songs for 1\Iale Quartets ( IV. and 1'. ) 50 Piano Pieces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75 Piano Duets...... . .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .75 Piano Dance Folio.................. .. . .. . . .75 Selections from the Operas, (Piauo A rr.). .75 Mandolin Pieces Piano Accompaniment... . .. ..... . ... .50 Guitar Accompaniment.. . . . . . ....... .40 First Mandolin.. .. .. . . . . .. .. . .. . . .. . . . .40 Second Mandolin..... . . .. . . . .. .. .. .. . .40 Violin Obligato... ......... .. .. . ...... .40 Flute Obligato...... . ... . ............ .40 Cello Obligato... ...... .. . .. . . .. . .. . . . .40 V iolin Pieces (withPiauo A ccompauimeut) . .75 Violin, Cello and Piano .. .. .... . ..... 1.00 Violin, Flute and Plano........ . ..... 1.00 Violin, Ce llo, Flute and Piano ....... 1.25 New Violin Solos (with P iano A ccomp.) .. .75 Cornet Solos (w itlt Piano A ccompauimmt) . .75 Flute S olos (with P,'a no A ccompanimeut) .. .75 Trombone Solos ( unlit Pimw Accomp.).... .75 Cello Solos (with Piano A ccompauiment)... .75 Tlte llfost Popular Orchestra Folio Full Orchestra and Piano........... 2.50 10 Parts, Cello and Piano . ........ . .. 2.00 Tlullfost Pojmlar Band Folio Concert Band, (86 Parts)............ 5.00 Full Band, (2 ~ Parts).. .. ... . ........ 4.00 Small Band, (19Parts) .............. 3.00
Tobaccos
L. R. BRADLEY 4 36 A SY L U M STR EE T
Trinity College Barber Shop
SOME OF OUR OTHER MUSICAL PUBUCA TIONS All with Words and Piano Kindergarten So:1gs ... ........... . ........ 1.00 Songs of the Flag and Nation.. . .... . ..... .50 School Songs with College Flavor.... . .... .50 Songs o f AllColleges . ..... . ............ : .. 1.50
:: :: ~a:;~::'n Coll:fres:::::::::::::::: : Songs o f the University of Chical(o .. ..... u u 14 " " :1 \lichJgan .. . .. :: :: ;: ;; :: Pennsylvania. Virginia ......
Mon lcur ln i! b y Lad y Atte ndant
J. G. MARCH HAIR CUTTE R
u~
1.50 1.25 1.60 1.00
Vibration Shampooing and Massaging ; Electrical Facial Massage
At Bookstores, Music Dealen, or the Publi.shen,
Rooms 1 and 2
Hinds, Noble & Eldredge
C onn ecticut Mutual
31-33-35 West 15th St., N. Y. City
8uil ~ in l!
Phone c onnection
ENT RANCES
783 Main St. X
36 Pearl St.
Thorough Inspection ORGANIZED 1866
Insurance Against Loss or Damage to Property and Loss of Life and Injury to Person Caused by
Steam Boiler Explosions C. S. BLAKE, Secretary
L. B. BRAINERD, President an d Treasurer
L. F. MIDDLEBROOK, Assistant Secretary
F. B. ALLEN, Vice-President
Wright & Ditson
INTERCOLLEGIATE BUREAU
Cottrell & Leonard ALBANY, N. Y.
Varsity-Outfitters 18 WEST 30th ST.
NEW YORK CITY Send
MAKERS OF
for
Complete
Catalogue
Caps and Gowns To the American Colleges (rom the Atlantic to the Pacific
Bulletin
and
Samples
on
Wright & Ditson
Request XI
•
ENGRAVINGS
BY ELECTRIC CITY
ENGRAVING Co.
BUFFALO , N . Y .
X II
THE JOHNS-PRATT CO.
"VuIcabeston " "Moulded Mica" "Noark" Fuses & Fuse
HARTFORD,
Accessories
-
CONNECTICUT X III
BESEMAN & BOSTWICK MANU FACTUR E RS O F
Architectural Sheet Metal Work of Every Description Cornices, Skylights, Ventilators, G utters, Conductors, Ash Chutes, Etc. Metal F ire Pro of Wind ows
Roofing All Kinds
Hot Air H e ating, Ventil a tion,
â&#x20AC;˘
Jobbing and Fac tory Work
Sheet Brass and Copper Work
I 0 Hoadley Place Hartford, Conn. TELE PHONE 2447
MULCAHY'S
C. H. Christensen, President M. Stal!cr. Secretary P. Smoke, Treuurer
CHASE'S CHOP HOUSE
Hack, Cab and Baggage Express
300 Asylum Street G entlemen who desire the best of service, surroundings and eatables that can be had in the state will appreciate thi s new resort.
OFFIC E
54 Union Place
RATHSKELLER can be eneaged for Private Parties A La Car te Service At all hours
TELEPHO NE CONNECTION
Directly Opposite Depot XIV
Lowest Prices in the City
FIDELITY TRUST
co.
49 PEARL STREET
BANKING AND TRUSTS The officers of the Bank give their entire time to its business, are glad to know each customer, and to give special attention to particular requirements . We solicit individual, fraternal, household and business deposit accounts. F. L. Wilcox, Pres.
Loomis A. Newton, Sect'y Thos. A. Shannon, Asst. Sect'y
H. G. Holcombe , Asst. Treas.
We're Tailoring Specialists We're looking for the hard -to-please . The more particular you are, the bttter we like to serve you. Our patrons are discriminating men. There's a dash and distinctiveness about our garments you'll appreciate keenly. There's a lure about our prices you cannot re&ist. It' s best picking today.
R. H. BENJAMIN,
Moderate Price Tailor
No. 36 Allyn St., Near Trumbull St.
HARTFORD,
CONN.
J. F. MORAN Trinity Banners, Pennants, Pillow Tops, Room Decorations;.==:================
Freshman Cap Maker 8 6 9
MAIN
E. C. Quiggle, Pres .
STREET
A. M. Wilson, Vice-Pres. & Treas. F. E. Beach, Sec'y
WHY
NOT BUY'---==-=
HELMET BRAND COFFEE AND GET THE BEST
ALWAYS RIGHT For Sale by Your Grocer
THE E.
s.
KIBBE
co.
Wholesale Grocers
HARTFORD,
CONN. XV
/
"lfartfor~.
<.t:o nn ~c t ic ut
T
RINITY COLLEGE, under the name of Washington College, received its Charter in 1823. The present name was adopted in 1845. Its chief founder was the Right R ev. Thomas Church Brownell, Bishop of Connecticut. Established by Episcopalians as a contribution to higher education, it is not a Church institution in the sense of being directed by the Church. Its advantages are placed at the service of those of every creed. Formerly on the site of the present Stale Capitol, it was transferred in 1878 to the southwestern part of the city. The principal building, in the English Secular Gothic style, 653 feet long, including Jarvis and Seabury Halls and Northam Towers, is one of the most imposing and admirably fitted educational edifices in the United States. It was intended to form the west side of a great quadrangle. Outside of the lines of this quadrangle at the south are the Observatory, the Boardman Hall of Natural History, and the Jarvis Laboratories for Chemistry and for Physics. To the north of it are the Gymnasium, houses of the President and Professors, and Chapter Houses of the Fraternities. Below the College Campus to the east and within three minutes' walk is the spacious Athletic field. In beauty of situation, healthful conditions of life and equipment for its special work, the College is not surpassed. The F acuity includes sixteen professors, four instructors, librarian, and medical director. Among the Elective studi~s within the respective courses there IS no important subject for which adequate provision is not made. The Library contains 56,000 volumes. Generous contributions of the Alumni are making possible a rapid addition to its resources. A reference Reading Room is open every day and five evenings of the week. The Jarvis Chemical and Physical Laboratories have an excellent equipment for Elementary and Advanced work. The Hall of Natural History contains the Museum, Biological Laboratories, and the Psychological Laboratory. In the year 1903-1904 a full technical course m Civil Engineering was for the first lime made available for all qualified applicants. There are numerous scholarships providing pecuniary assistance for deserving students. The three Holland Scholarships yielding each $600 per annum, are awarded to the three best students in the three lower classes respectively. The Russell Graduate Fellowship of $500 is awarded biennially in the interest of higher graduate study. The Mary A. Terry Graduate F ellowship, of $550, is awarded annually . Prizes to the amount of $500 are also awarded to undergraduates for success in the work of the various departments. Two examinations for admission are held at the College each year, the first during the days following the Annual Commencement, and the second in September, immediately before the beginning of the Christmas term. For Catalogues, Examination papers, or information, apply lo the President or Secretary of the Faculty.
XVI
THE STANDARD COMPANY IN C ORPORATED
84 PLEASANT STREET,
HARTFORD, CONN.
MANUFACTURERS AND PACKERS OF
"Standard" Pickles and Relishes GHERKINS, MIXED, SWEET CHOW, ONIONS
CATSUP, MUSTARD, VINEGAR PEPPER RELISH
Ammonia and Blueing, Royal Standard Polish, Inks, Mucilage, etc.
When Considering Quality We are Always on Hand
HYNES BROS. 373 PARK STREET
Phone Connection
"SERVICE UNEXCELLED"
Henry l{ohn &Sons Connecticut9 s Greatest Jewelry Establishment
FIFTY CENTS Sent by mail postpaid on receipt of price
Salomon & DeLeeuw Cigars, Pipes, Tobacco
Pipe Repairing a Specialty
7 Asylum Hartford,
S~reet
Conn. XVII
890 Main St., Hartford Factory, Newark, N. J.
...
,
.
Date Due
rr ro I
114AY 1
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I"ILIHa fQUII"ML!:NT BUII:' At.
Cat. No. 1090A
Trinity Q
(1910)
lflT TO DE TAKEN fROM LIBRARY
Trinity hy