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  • IDriuity
  • THE IVY

  • ELLIOTT P RE SS PHI LA .

  • 1:~t l.lrinitv ly JJ1) .. XXIX.

  • W.lNFRED ROBERT ~I"A.RTIN, LL.B., Pu . n.

  • DEDICATED

    TO

    WINFRED ROBERT MARTIN, LL.B., Ph.D.

    BY THE

    1902 IVY BOARD

  • managing Editors WILLIAM HARDIN WHEELER, ew York

    JEWETT COLE, Illinois

    tittrary Editor HowARD RusSELL WHITE, Indiana

    Jfrt Editor ALFRED BuRNETT QUAILE, New York

    Jfssoctatt Editors CHARLES EDWARD TuKE, Pennsylvania WILLIAM PERRY BENTLEY, Connecticut

    JACOB ALEXA DER LAUBENSTEIN, Connecticut

    8

  • Editorial

    IT LTHOUGH we heartily agree with the sentiment expressed by the old t\ writer who said that " Editorials are tiresome," yet they have often-

    times been found useful. As a means of anticipating criticism by apologies thereby offered, they have been long held in esteem by the edit-ors of such a publication as this. Since, moreover, it cannot be said that the writing of editorials is ' ' a custom more honored in the breach than in the observance, " we must follow suit with a few words , which , it is hoped, may stimulate the charitable impulses of the reader to glance over the succeeding pages.

    Every class, as it finds the responsibility of putting out an annual resting upon it, has ideas as to what is meant by such a book . As the means by which such ideas are set forth, the editorial holds an important place.

    \Ve believe an annual performs at least three functions . First. The college has a right to expect a book which may be a

    worthy representative of her before the public. Second. The Alumni looks to it as a means by which they may keep

    in touch with their Alma Mater. Tlzird. The under-graduates hope for a book which may serve in

    the present as an efficient criterion of the college year, and in the future may be a memento of their college life.

    These we believe to be the purposes of an annual , and we take pleas-ure in placing in your hands another Ivv , with the hope that it may succeed in satisfying all that is looked for in such a book.

    V.'e express our sincere thanks to all who have in anyway assisted us in the compilation of this Ivv .

    9

  • J;artfora, onn.

    THIS college was chartered by lhe State of Connecticut in 1823. Its first class was graduated in 1827. It was founded by Episcopalians under the leadership of the Right Rev. Thomas Church Brownell, and has been fostered especially by members of that communion, but it is governed by a self-perpetuating Board

    of Trustees not under ecclesiastical control. While attached to the interests of its church , it is not sectarian. It has included among its students men of every faith . It is a generously equi pped secular institution, religious in spiri t and motives, but not ecclesiastical. It gives its advantages to all properly qualified candidates, irrespective of religious affiliations.

    The corps of instruction consists of eleven professors, fhe lecturers, seven instruc-tors and a librarian.

    oursu of Instruction The college offers four courses of instruction , viz.:

    I. A CO URSE IN ARTS. II. A COURSE IN LETTERS A~D SCIE~CE.

    III. A COURSE IN SCIE~CE. IV. A COURSE IN LETTERS.

    The courses extend over four years. Students completing the Course in Arts receive the degree of Bachelor of Arts. Students completing the Course in Letters and Science or the Course in Science receive the degree of Bachelor of Science, and those completing the Course in Letters receive the degree of Bachelor of Letters.

    Students who do not propose to pursue all the studies of any of the regular course. may be permitted, under the name of special students, to attend any class in such studies as, upon examination, they are found qualified to pursue. Upon honorable dismissal, they are entitled to a certificate from the President, stating the studies which they have pursued. In certain departments the College offers also instruction for grad-uate students. The departments of instruction in the Col!ege number twenty-four, including eighty-two elective and voluntary courses.

    tbe Principl~ of Instruction The number of the teaching force , large relatively to the number of those taught,

    admits of a close relation between instructors and students. Each student is held accountable for his work every day, and receives personal encouragement and guidance in a degree impossible where the number of the taught is g reater. Practical research and laboratory methods are applied wherever possible.

    tbe tibrary The College Library, numbering 40,ooo volumes, is under the superintendence of

    a professional libraria n, who guides the students in the use of books. They have also at their command the Watkinson Reference Library of so,ooo ,olume , the Library of the Connecticut Historical Society, and the Hartford Public Library, with its well-stocked reading rooms.

    10

  • t:aboratoriu and Obm\!atory The Jarvis Physical Laboratory contains in addition to the lecture and apparatus

    rooms, a large laboratory for work in the elementary courses, a reference library and several smaller laboratories adapted and devoted to advancerl work of a special character. The laboratory has a yery complete equipment for work in all the branches of Physics. Special attention has been given to making the facilities for work in electricity as complete as possible. The department is prO\irlerl with standard apparatus for electrical measure-ments, and has a workshop , steam engine ami direct current and polyphase alternating current generators for its special use. The Jarvis Chemical Laboratory is well equipped for work in general experimental and organic chemistry, in qualitative and quantitative analysis, and in assaying and gas analysis.

    The main laboratory has desk space for thirty students working at one time. This room is devoted to work in general experimental chemistry and qualitative analysis. For work in quantitative analysis and organic chemistry separate laboratories are prodded and properly equipped. A room set apart for assaying is fitted up with suitable furnaces and other necessary material.

    The new Hall of Natural History contains biological, botanical, geological and mineralogical laboratories provided with every modern equipment.

    The Observatory contains a six and a half inch refractor, a two and a half inch transit, a standard clock, a chronograph, a smaller refractor, a portable t ransit, a sex-tant, and conveniences for the simpler work in astronomical photography.

    6ymnasium and Jfthl~tic 'tidd A Gymnasium is supplied with the best apparatus, in the use of which the students

    are trained hy a special instructor. An Athletic Field on the college grounds is to be extended and perfected at an expense of $ro,ooo, contributed by friends and alumni of the College.

    ;:~JJowships, Scholarships and Prizes The Russell Fellowship, yielding about $4oo, is awarded biennially to a member

    of the gradnating class, of superior ability, who engages to pursue a tt approved course of graduate study at Trinity College or at some foreign uni,ersity. The Holland Scholar-ships, each having an annual value of $6oo, are awarded to the students attaining the highest rank in the Junior, Sophomore and Freshman classes respecti\ely. Prizes of the aggregate \alue of $49" are awarded in the several departments.

    Exp~nsu The amount of the Treasurer 's bills eacl.1 year \'aries from $rn.so to $142.50.

    Board can be obtained at $3.50 a week and upwards, making the cost of board for thirty-se,en weeks at the lowest rate $12950. The amount of the Treasurer's bills can be reduced to holders of beneficiary scholarships of which there are more than fifty.

    Situation The buildings of the college are situated on a site commanding beautiful views in

    the outh part of Hartford, itself one of the most beautiful cities of New England. The largest ofthe buildings, more than 6oo feet in length, intended to form the west side of a great quadrangle, is of stone in the English secular gothic style, and is one of the most notable collegiate buildings of the country. The Jarvis Laboratories, the Hall of Natu ral History and the Gymnasium, are tasteful and commodious structures of brick. Four .,f the college fraternities ha\e special,chapter houses.

    For catalog-ues apply to the President or to the Secretary of the Faculty.

    I 1

  • ~"C 1\L.f:NDJ\f\

    Sept. 20 Nov.

    28

    30

    Dec. 20

    Jan. 3 28

    Feb. 2

    20

    22

    April 3 5 7

    15

    Thursday Thursday Wednesday Friday Thursday

    17mrsday J11onday Saturday

    Wednesday Friday Wednesday Friday Sunday Mo1zday

    1900 Christmas Term begins All Saints' Day Thanksgiving Recess begins at I P . M. Thanksgiving Recess ends at-:! P. M. Christmas Recess begins at I P. M.

    1901 Christmas Recess ends at 545 P. M . Christmas Examinations begin Christmas Examinations end Trinity Term begins. Toucey Scholar appointed Ash Wednesday Washington's Birthday. Oratorical Prize Contest Easter Recess begins at 4 P. M. Good Friday Easter Day Easter R ecess ends at5.45 P . M.

    12

  • May Wed1zesday Last day for receiving essays for the Chemical Prizes

    "

    2 Thursday 3 Friday

    4 Sattwday

    II

    r6 T!mrsday 23 26 Smtday 30 T!mrsday

    June 2 Su11day 13 T!wrs-iay 20

    21 Friday

    22 Satnrday 23 Stmday 24 Mo11day

    25 Tuesday

    Last day for receiving essays for the Tuttle Prize Last day for receiving essays for the Douglas and Metaphys-

    ical Prizes Greek Prize Examination Last day for receiving essays for the Prizes in History and Po-

    litical Science Examinations for the Mathematical Prizes Ascension Day Prize Version Declamation Whitsunday Memorial Day Trinity Sunday Trinity Examinations begin Examinations for Admission begin Trinity Exami nations end. Examinations for Admission Annual Meeting of the Board of Fellows (evening) Examinations for Admission Baccalaureate Sermon Senior and Junior Standing published Award of Prizes Class Day Annual Meeting of the Corporation (evening) Annual Meeting of the Corporation and of the Association of

    the Alumni 26 Wednesday SEVENTY-FIFTH COMMENCEMENT. Trinity vacation begins

    Sept. 23 JJfonday 26 Thursday

    Dec. 19 Thursday

    Examinations for Admission begin Christmas Term begins at 545 P.M. Christmas Recess begins at 1 P. M.

    13

  • Uisitors THE RT. REV. THOMAS MARCH CLARK, D .D. , LL.D . THE RT. REv .. WILLIAM WoODR FF NILES. D.D., LL.D. TnE RT. REv. HENRYCODMAN PoTTER, D.D ., LL.D., D.C .L .

    eorporation * THE REV. THE PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE

    ex officio PRESIDEN'.r THE REv. GEORGE H. CLARK, D.D.

    Hartford Hartford

    * CHARLES E. GRAVES, M.A., Treasm-er New Haven THE RT. REv WILLIAM W. NILES, D.D. , LL.D. ,D.C.L. Concord, . H .

    * TnE HoN. WILLIAM HAMERSLEY, LL.D. Hartford LuKE A. LocKWOOD, M.A. Riverside, Conn.

    * THE REv. FRANCIS GoODWIN, M .A . Hartford WILLIAM E. CuRTIS, M.A. New York J. PIERPONT MoRGAN, Esq. Jor-rN H. S. QuiCK, M.A.

    * }ACOB L. GREENE, M.A. , S ecrela1')' THE REV. WILLIAM H. VIBBERT , D.D.

    t SYDNEY G. FISHER, L.H.D. * JAMES J. GooDwiN, Esq.

    WILLIAM J. BOARDMAN, LL.B. * P. HENRY WOODWARD, M.A. t WILLIAMS. CoGSWELL, M.A.

    THE RT. REV. CHAUNCEY B. BREWSTER, D.D. * WILLIAM C. SKINNER, M.A. t THE HON. }OSEPH BUFFING1'0N , LL.D.

    * These membe rs of the Cotpora ti o n fonn th e Exec uti\'e Co mtuittee. t Elected by the Alumni.

    14

    New York Chicago Hartford

    ew York Philadelphia Hartford Washington Hartford Jamaica , N . Y. Hartford Hartford Pittsburg, Pa.

  • ,

    faculty

    THE REv. GEORGE WILLIAMSON SMITH, D.D., LL.D. r 15 Vernon St. PRESIDENT; and Hobatt Professor of Metaphysics

    (Office 13 Seabury Hall). THE REv. THOMAS RuGGLES PYNCHON, D.D ., LL.D. 15 Seabury Hall

    Brownell Professor of Moral Pllilosop!ty

    Professor of the Latin Languages and Litemiure THE REV. FLA VEL SWEETEN LUTHER, PI-I. D. , Trinity

    S eabury Professor of Mathematics and AstronomJ', and Secretary On leave of absence for the Academic Year 1900-1901

    THE REv. HE RV FERGUSON, M.A., LL.D. 123 Vernon St. Northam P1'ofessor oj History and Political Science

    CHARLES FREDERICK JoHNSON, M.A., L .H.D. , 69 Vernon St. Professor of English Ltie1'ature

    THE REv. JoHN }AMES McCooK, M.A. 396 Main St. Professor of Modern Languages

    \VILLIAJII LrSPENARD ROBB , PH.D ., Berlin Professor of P!l)'sics

    I r8 Vernon St.

    RoBERT BAIRD RrGGS , PH.D. , Gottingen 35 Forest St. Scovill Professor of C!mnistry and Natural Science, and Registra?'

    WINFRED RoBERT MARTI , LL.B., PH.D., Tiibingen 21 Jarvis Hall Professor of Oriental and Modern Languages

    FRANK COLJ'!: BABBITT , PH.D., Harvard 65 Vernon St. Professor of the G1 eek Language and Literature

    CHARLE LINCOLN EDWARDS, PH.D. , Leipzig 27 Wetbt>rsfield Ave . j. Pierpont Morgan Professor of Natural History.

    CHARLES COFFING BEACH , M.D. 199 Main St. L ecturer on Hygiene

    WILLIAM DENISON MORGA , M.A., M.D. ro8 Farmington Ave. L ecturer on Anatomy and Physiology

    SYDNEY GEORGE FISHER , L.H.D. Philadelphia Lecturer o1t Law

  • FREDERICK ROBERTSON HONEY, PH .B. New Haven Instructor in Dmwing and Descriptive Geometry

    THE REv. JoEL FooTE BINGHAM, D.D., L.H.D. 484 Farmington Ave. Lecturer on Italian Literature

    WALDO SELDEN PRATT, M.A., Mus .D . Instructor in Elocution

    WM. H ARRY CHICHELE PYNCHON, M.A., Harvard Lecturer in Geology

    STANLEY SIMONDS, PH.I). , Johns Hopkins

    86 Gillett St .

    Oyster Bay, L. I.

    22 Jarvis Hall Instructor in charge of tlze Department of Latin

    HAROLD LOOMIS CLEASBY, B.A. 3 Northam Towers Assistant in tlze Classics

    JosEPH DEVINE FLYNN, B.A. Instructor in Mathematics

    MONROE GLEASON HAIGHT, B.A. Assistant in Physics

    CLARENCE WILSON HAHN, B.A. Instructor in Natural History

    GEORGE PENDLETON WATKINS, B.A.

    96 Hudson St.

    19 Jarvis Hall

    20 Jarvis Hall

    4 Northam Towers Assistant in t!ze Department of History and Polt"Hcal Science

    THE REv. HERMANN LILIENTHAL, M.A. 82r Broad St. Assistant in P!tilosopliy

    WILLIAM NEWNHAM CARLTON 40 Jarvis Hall Librarian

    GEORGE BERNHARDT VELTE 4 Francis Ave. Instructor in tlze Gymnasium

    JoHN BuTLER McCooK, B.S., M.D. 396 Main St. Medical Director

    The stated meetings oft he Faculty are held on Mon

  • Board Of fdiOWS

    PRESIDENT

    THE PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE, ex-officio SENIOR FELLOWS

    ALEXANDER TAYLOR MASON, .M.A., LL.B. WILLIAM BEACH OL fSTEAD, B.A. AMBROSE SPENCER M oRR.AY, JR .. M.A. EDWARD MANSFIELD SCUDDER, M.A., LL B . FRANKLIN HAJIIILTO FOWLER, M.A. The R Ev. LuciUS WATERMAN, D.D.

    J UNIOR FELLOWS

    GEORGE EMERSO T BEERS, :\f .A .. LL.B. The REv. FREDERICK WILLIAM HARRIMAN, M.A. PERCY SHELLY BRYANT, M.A. FRANK ELISHA JoHNSON , M.A. The REv. ]OI-IN TAYLOR Hu TI "GTON, M.A. The REv. JoHN ] AMES McCooK, M.A.

    Jlssociation of tb~ Jllumni

    GEORGE LEwis CooK, M.A., LL.B. FREDERICK EVEREST HAIGHT, PH.D. DAVID VAN SCHAACK, B.A. FRANK ELISHA JOHNSON , M.A.

    Standing ommltt~~

    President Vice- f1 esident Secretary Treasurer

    The PRESIDENT The TREASURER

    GEORGE HENRY SEYMS, M.A. HowARD CooK VIBBERT, M.A .

    The REv. SAM UEL HART, D.D.

    I7

  • Secretary F. \V. HARRIMAN, '72

    n~w Englan4 Jtssotlation Of Jtlumni Officers, 190 1

    President LUKE A. LOCKWOOD, 'SS

    Vice-President w. c. SKINNER, '76

    Executive Committee

    Treas1trer P. S. BRYANT, '70

    DR. 'vV. D. MORGAN, ,72 REV. S. HART, D.D., '66

    n~w York Jtssotiation Of Jtlumnl Officers, 190 1

    President REV. Wr-1. H. VIBBERT, D.D., '68

    REV. C. H. \V. STOCKING, D.D., '6o FRANKLIN H. FOWLER, '61

    1-- ice-Presidents

    ecretary and Treasu rer SAMUEL F. JARVIS, JR . , '89

    Executive Co11tm ittee

    A. S. MURRAY, JR., '71 RHV. NEWTON PERKINS, '61

    ROBERT THORNE, '85, Chairman F. E. HAIGHT, '87 G. P. Cor,EMAN, '90

    E. L . PURDY, '84 V. C. PEDERSON, '91

    Phlla4~1Phla Jtssotiation of Jtlumni Officers , 190 1

    President ] . Ewl G MEARS, M. D ., '58

    t'ice-President \ VILLIAM DRAYTON, '71

    Secretary SIDNEY G. FISHER, '79, 328 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia

    Exewtive Committee H. GORDON MCCOUGH, '75 SYDNEY G. FISHER, '79

    r8

  • Pittsburg .:.Rssociation of .:.Riumni

    Vue-President GEORGE C. BURG\VIN, '72

    Officers, 1901 President

    HaN. jOSEPH BUFFINGTON , '75

    Executive Committee

    Secretary M. K. KOSTER, '87

    A. P. BURGWIN, '82 \V. R. Br,AIR, '75 RON. jOSEPH BUFFINGTON, '75

    '

    .:.Rtumni .:.Rssoeiation for tb~ District of totumbia and UicinltV

    President E. M. GALLAUDET, '59

    Secretary

    Office rs, 1901 JSt Vice-P1esideut

    GEO. A . WOODWARD, 'S5 2nd Vice-President

    WM. FELL]OHNSON, '66 Treasurer

    S. HERBERT GrESY, '85 RE\'. j . W. Cr,ARK, '63

    talifornia .:.Rssociation of .:.Riumni Officers , 1901

    Presidwt RT. REV. \V. F. NICHOLS, D.D., '70

    Secretary a1ld Treasurer REV. F. H . CHURCH, (now of Tacoma, Wash.)

    Boston .:.Rssociation of .:.Riumni

    \V. C. BROCKLESBY, '69 Secretary

    C. C. BARTON, '93

    Officers , 1901 President

    REV. E. T. SULLIVAN, '89 Vice-Presideuts

    REV. WICL!Al\! PRF;5SEY, '90 ]. H. GOODSPEED, '66 11easurer

    HORlOX G. IDE, '9~

    D~troit Jlssociation of .:.Riumni

    Vice-President N. C. LOVERIDGE, '86

    Officers, 1901 Presideut

    SIDNEY T. MILLER, '87

    19

    Secretary A. K. GAGE, '96

  • ...

    Cb 01)Uing Of tb Hall Of natural History THE most important acade mic event of the last five years was undoubtedly the opening of the uew Hall of Natural History, which took place on the seventh of December last. When ground was broken for the building in the Summer of r8gg, hopes

    were entertained that it might be finished by the next Co=encement, so that larger numbers of the Alumni might be present than would otherwise be possible, but plans miscarried , so that it was not till the Autumn following that a sufficient state of completion was reached to warrant a formal opening. The date chosen, however, proved a most auspicious one. for seldom has Alumni Hall contained such a throng as that in attendance, or the College walk presenterl so crowded an appearance as rluring the after-noon of the eventful day.

    The ceremonies were of an extremely interesting nature. At two o'clock the in-vited guests and Faculty, preceded by the college marshal, moved in proce sion from the Gymnasium, where lunch had been served, to the hall above, and took their seats upon the stage, which had been greatly enlarged for the occasion . The exerci es were opened with prayer by the Rt. Rev. William W. Miles, Bishop of New Hampshire, after which President Smith delivered an address of welcome, with a short sketch of frinity's past record in the field of natural science. Prof. Edwards, the head of the Department of Biology, next read a few extracts from letters received by him from promine1.1t natur-alists all over the world, representing the important universities and scientific societies of England, Ireland , Scotland, Wales, France, Germany, Switzerland, Italy , Holland, Russia, Norway, Austria, Japan and Mexico. The character of these communications was significant; far f rom being mere formal regrets and acknowledgements, they showed real enthusiasm and interest in the exceptional facilities which were here to be offered to American students for advanced work in natural history .

    After a selection by the Glee Club, tl~e first of the two principal addresses of the afternoon was delivered by Willia m H. Howell, Ph.D., M.D., Professor of Physiology and Dean of the Medical Faculty at johns Hopkins University. The subject," Biology as an Element in College Training, " was one which could not fail to be attractive, to the students in particular, and proved to be of the g reatest practical Yalue. Prof. Henry F . Osborn, Sc.D. , of Columbia University, Curator of Vertebrate Palreontology in the American Museum of Natural History. next spoke on "The Progress of Vertebrate Palreontology in the United States, " illustrating his address with numerous lantern slides. These, as well as the literary part of the lecture, were very interesting both to the tyros and to the more advanced biologists in the audience. Indeed both the chief addresses were of the highest order , and furnished a scientific treat long to be remem-bered by those fortunate enough to gai n standing room in the hall .

    .. A True and Circumstantial Account of the Celebrated Fight Between the Ich-thyosaurus and the Plesiosaurus," written by C. E. \Voodman, '73, was next sung by the Glee Club with great effect, after \vhich President Hadley, of Yale;, P_resident Carter, of Williams; Professor Conn, of Wesleyan, and Doctor Pynchon, of Tnmty, made bnef ad-dresses of congratulation and good wishes. At their conclusion, President Smith for mally announced that the Hall of Natural ~i~tory was ready for use, and OJ?en to the.in-spection of the public, so, after the Benediction had been pronounced ?Y B1shop White, of Indiana, in the absence of Bishop Potter, of ew York. the processiOn re-formed and proceeded to the newly dedicated building.

    Very impressive was the long line composed of gu~sts, Faculty,. student~ by classes, and townspeople, as it moved slowly along the walk 1n the gathenng tw1ltght, the Glee Club and evervone who could join in singing" ' eath the Ehns." Eve1~ when one end began to be s~allowed up by the brightly illuminated Hall of Natural H1story , the other had not yet emerged from the Gymnasium ; indeed, the capacious ~useum and lecture rooms could scarcely contain the throng that congregated for the tnfrmal reception which was held between five an? seven, givi ng everyo.ne an o.pportumty to meet the distinguished guests of the occaswn, and to see the ~01nts of mteresta~out the building, under the guidance

  • n~atb tb~ Elms

    'Neath the elms of our old Trinity, 'Neath the elms of our old Trinity,

    No more shall we meet, Our classmates to greet,

    'Neath the elms of our old Trinity.

    CHORUS-'Neath the elms of our old Trinity, 'Neath the elms of our old Trinity,

    Oh, it 's seldom we'll meet in the moonlight so sweet, 'Neath the elms of our old Trinity.

    On the hills of our old Trinity, In the halls of our old Trinity,

    There is right merry cheer, There are friends true and dear,

    In the halls of our old Trinity.

    College days are from care and sorrow free, And oft will we seek in memory

    The days that are past, Far too joyous to last,

    ' );'eath the elms of our old Trinity.

    Then we'll sing to our old Trinity, To our dear old Alma Mater, Trinity,

    We ' re together to-day, And to-morrow away,

    Far awa:l:' from our old Trinity.

    - J. H. K. BURGWIN, '77.

    22

  • DARK BLUE AND OLD GOLD '

    Ra!t-Ralz-Ralt I Trinity I

    Boom I Ralz, Boom I Ralt, Trinity I

    23

  • 6raduat~ Stud~nts

    NAN.E

    Harold Loomis Cleasby , B.A. , 1899 A ssistant in th~t Classics

    John Kay Clement, B.A. , rgoo H . E. Russell Fellow

    Clarence Wilson Hahn , B.A ., r899 University Cincinnati

    .fustructor in .Natural HiJtory Monroe Gleason Haight, B.A., rgoo

    A sst.stant in Pity sics

    Woolsey MeAl pine Johnson, B.A., r 898

    Victor Forrest Morgan , B.S. , r899

    RESIDE N CE ROOM

    } Hartford 3 N. T ..

    } Sunbury, Pa. r 9 J. H.

    of} Cincinuafi, 0. 20 J. H . } Piitsfield ,Mass. rgJ .H.

    Hartford 69 Vernon St.

    H artford 227 Sig'ney St.

  • CLASS MoTTO

    Novus ORDO S.CLORUlii

    Snior lass

    1901

    ftass til Kiyi, Ki_)li, Ki, Yippi, Kt)'i! Hullaballoo ! R ed and Blue/ 190 r /

    Offlctrs CHRISTMAS TERl\f

    J. M. HuDSON President R. B. BELLAMY Vice-President R. FISKE SecretarJ' R. FISKE T?'easurer J. A. WALES Clironider

    CLASS COLORS

    RED AND BLUE

    TRINITY TERM

    H . D. WILSON, }R. R . B. BELLAMY

    A. H . DERBY A. H. DERBY J. A. WALES

  • History

    IT IS ever the part of the senior historian to chronicle the sorrow of his class at leaving Alma Mater. \Vhat other emotion could we feel when confronted with the necessity of bringing to a close our four years of careless, happy, college days? Four years, they say-nay, four months, four weeks, it seems, so quickly has the time flown.

    Before the entering freshman eternity seems outspread-the senior is counting the precious sands in the hour-glass. The graduate of to-day would scarcely recognize the verdant freshman of four years ago, yet the gap seems brief when bridged by memory.

    To give a list of our achievements in detail might be of interest , but we have no wish to add a hundred pages or so to the already well-filled Ivv. We ha,e played our part as best we could, and ha,e shirked no duty. Naughty-one has been more than well represented in every branch of college affairs throughout the course, and the honor of being a "squeezer cla s," seems to an impartial obsener no wore than just. In athleties we have been consistently prominent. and it was the football team of our senior year which made one of the very best records ever made by a Trinity team, incidentally defeating our old rival, Wesleyan. In the various other organizations and clubs we have worked hard and with good result, while in society no class has ever pre-sented such popular and successful "fussers." In scholarship we are not behind, although it is perhaps just as well we are to graduate so soon, for the constant" raising of the standard " is making "the survival of the fittest" mean more than it e\er did in Christian Theism. .

    In freshman year we studied, were llazed, made the teams and clubs, and \\'ere glad when we could at last smoke the handsomest class pipes ever seen on the campus.

    In sophomore year our mishaps as hazers were due more to our inexperience and leniency than to the "fiendish spirit of barbarous atrocity" usually assigned to sopho-mores by newspaper readers and other weak-minded mortals. Iu addition to an extraor-dinary number of cuts, the Faculty generously ga,e the whole class a ix-weeks' vaca-tion in the pleasantest season of the year.

    As juniors we filled several places usually gi,en only to seniors, and our IvY marked a new era in the publication of college annuals. In our last two years we have controlled the football and track teams and the Tablet.

    Senior year saw us assume the administration of every other department of col-lege activity, and that we ha,e performed our duties well is generally conceded. Vve have remedied old evils and put new life into four or five nearly defunct, but deserving organizations.

    Such is our record in four years of college . Let us be glad that we can always be proud of it. As a class of undergraduates, we are about to leave the old walls that seem just now to hold nearly e\erything that is dear to us on this earth; but our love for Trinity cannot die. \Ve shall return again and again, and shall show by our active interest and unflagging efforts in the cause of our college that " 1Vovus ordo sa:cl01'1tllt" is the motto of a class of men who will always be Trinity men-loyal, earnest Trinity men-till the last card in the game of life is played. J. A. W.

  • s~niors

    NAME RESIDENCE ROOM

    Augustine Hugo Wells Anderson, I K A,}; A E, Providence, R. I., 4I J. H.

    rgor IvY Board.

    Robert Bayard Bellamy,"' Y, eKE, Boston, .ll.fass., 44 J. H. Football Team (r, 2, 3, 4); Baseball Team (r, 2, 3, 4) ; Basketball Team ( r,

    2, 3, 4), Captain Basketball Team (4), Manager Basketball Team (3); Senior Honorary Society.

    Godfrey Brinley, I K A, eKE, Newington Junction, 5 N. T. rgor Junior Ball Committee; Captain Track Team (3), Track Team (r, 3, 4) ;

    German Club (2, 3, 4); Football Team (2, 3, 4) ; Basketball Team (r, 2, 3 4), Manager Basketball (2) ; Class President rst term , 3d year; Senior Honorary Society ; College Marshal.

    George Graham Burbanck, Ax P. Tompkinsville, N. Y., 17 N. T. Glee Club ( r, 2, 3, 4). Leader Glee Club (4); College Quartet (2, 4).

    Martin Withington Clement, ..1 'i', Sunblt1J' , Pa., I2 J. H. Sophomore Dining Club; Football Team (3, 4) ; Basketball Team (2, 3, 4).

    Harry Hamilton Cochrane, Mandolin Club (3, 4) ; Banjo Club (3, 4).

    Aubrey Henry Derby, Ax P, ox E,

    Reginald Fiske, "'Y, eX E,

    JVewington Junction,

    "Vewark, !\' . J., Providence, R. I.,

    ewington

    33]. H. I7 s. H.

    Baseball Team ( r, 2, 3 , 4l, Captain Baseball Team (4) ; Sophomore Din in.,. Club; President Athletic Association; Senior Honorary Society.

    Frank Halsey Foss, J K E, '~ JJ K, Norwic!t, Conn., 15 J. H. Salutatorian, Holland Prize Scholarship ( r) ; Alumni Engli h Prize (4).

    Gustav August Hinnen, Cincinnati, 0., zoJ. H.

    James Mosgrove Hudson, J ~ . Syracuse, JV. Y., Football Team (3, 4) ; Sophomore Dining Club; German Club (3, 4) ; Chair-

    man rgor Junior Ball Committee; Business Manager rgor IvY; Tablet Board (3 4); President of Class (4) rst term; Senior Honorary Society.

    27

    7 J. H.

  • NAME RESIDENCE ROOM

    Arthur Paul Kelly , r .:., Nasltua, N.H., r8 N . T. 1901 IvY Board ; Second Prize in Political Science.

    Edward Jarvis King Mason , 4, r 6, Suffield, Conn., Suffield Walter Alfred Mitchell, Hartford, 72 Vernon St.

    Glee Club (3, 4) ; Mandolin Club (3, 4); Banjo Club (3, 4); rgor IvY Board; Track Team.

    Frank Stephen Morehouse, A x P, B K, So. JienL, Dramatics (2) ; President of Mi sionary Society (4); Honor Oration.

    3 J. H .

    Richard Eugene Peck, I K A, e N E, Bridgeport, Conn., ION. T . Baseball Team (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Sophomore Dining Club; Gennan Club (2, 3, 4) ;

    1901 IvY Board; 1901 Junior Ball Committee; Assistant Manager of Football Team (3) , Manager of Football Team (4); Class President 2d year , rst term; Senior Honorary Society.

    Harold Huntington Rudd , 'I' Y , f(noxville, Ill., I7 s. H. Baujo Club (3, 4); Sophomore Dining Club ; Track Team (3, 4).

    Francis Raymond Sturtevant, A x P , B K, Ha1tford, 105 Washington St. Football Tea m ( 1} ; Track Team (1}, Captain of Track Team (4); Valedic-

    torian H artford Admittitur; Holland Prize Scholarship ; Alumni Eng-lish Prize; Whitlock Prize.

    Arthur Reginald Van De Water , -t Y, oNE, ]\lew Yorl.:, rg S. H. Sophomore Dining Club; Baseball Team (3}; Germa n Club (2, 3) ; Class Preside ut

    (r ) 2d term.

    James Albert Wales , Ax l', B K , Stratford, Conn., -1- J. H . Managing Editor Trmity Tablet (3, 4); Art Editor 1901 IvY; Track Team

    (3, 4) ; Mandolin Club (3, 4) ; Manager Basketball Team (4); President Press Club (4) ; Alumni English Prize (3) ; Douglass Prize (3).

    James Merryman Walker , .A .:. , eN E, Brooklyn, 44J- H. Dramatic Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Glee Club ( r , 2, 3, 4); Executive Committee

    of Dramatics (3, 4) ; German Club (3, 4) ; 1901 Junior Ball Committee; Sophomore Dining Club; Assistant Stage Manager Dramatics (2, 3), Stage Ma nager Dramatics (4) ; Class President (3) 2d t erm.

    Francis Ely Waterman, 'I' Y, Hartford, r 37 Lafayette St. Business Manager 190r I VY; German Club (3, 4) ; President Tennis Asso-

    ciation.

  • NAME R ESlDENCE ROOM

    Charles Hath ern \Vheeler , .l 'f, q, B K, Clinton, N. Y., 7 J . H . Football Team (2, 3, 4); Igor Junior Ball Committee ; Mandolin Club (I, 2,

    3, 4) , Leader of Mandolin Club (4) ; Banjo Cluh (3, 4), Leader of Ba njo Club (4); Assistant Ma nager of Musical Organi7-ations (3) ; Manager of Mandolin Club (3); Sophomore Dining Club; German Club ; Senior Honorrtl)' Society.

    Hugh Dempster Wilson, Jr. ,.\ 1\ E, B1ooklyn, 7 J . H. Sophomore Dining Club; Glee Club (2, 3, 4) ; College Quartet (4); Banjo

    Club (4) ; Mandolin Club (4) ; Ma nager Musical Organizations (4) ; President of Class (4) 2rl Term; Alumni English Prize (3) ; Whitlock Prize (3) .

    Augustus Talcott Wynkoop, A .l 4, Utica, 1\T. Y., 38 J. H . German Club (3 , 4); Literary Ed itor Tablet (3), Business Manager Tablet

    (4); Literary Editor rgor Ivv ; Alumni English Prize (4).

    NAME RESIOI:::NCe ROOM

    William Purnell Brown, A .l 4, oX F., Cmtreville, Jll d . , 38 J . H. Football Team (r, 2, 3, 4) , Captain Fcotball Team (3, 4) ; Baseball Team

    (I , 2, 3, 4) ; Basketball (I, 2, 3); Germa n Club (2, 3, 4); Sophomore Dining Club; Presiden t of Class ( 2) 2d Term ; Senior Hon orary Society.

    John Daulby Evans , .l K E , o l\ E , Hartford, r q. Vernon St . Sophomore Dining Club; Business Mauager Dramatic Club (3, 4), Execu-

    tiYe Committee Dramatic Club (3, 4) ; Mauager Track Team (4), Assist-ant Manager Track Team (3) ; Secretary and Treasurer I90J Junior B~ll Committee; Manager Banjo Club (3, 4), Banjo Club (3, 4); rgor IVY Board .

    29

  • Jorm~r m~mb~rs Arthur Eugene Arvedson, I K A Nathaniel Julius Cable, c. K E Jewett Cole , I K A Samuel Walden Cooke, ..Y Y Franklin Whittemore Duwell , 1 11: A Harold Morrell Folsom Harry Townes Forrester , ,.:;. K E Winter Hamilton Everestt, .l '!' Owen Warner Gildersleeve Hubert Dana Goodale * William John McNeil, .l K E John Graham Hargrave John Stuart Hills, c. 'I' William Morse ichols, '!' Y Carlos Curtis Peck , I 1' A *Edwin Franklin Powell , r K A Edgar Augustus Sheldon , I K A Everett Eugene Stacey, A x P Edward Collins Stone, Otis Jewett Story, r K A William Parker Wharton , .l K E

    Deceased .

    Carpentersville, Ill. ew Haven, Conn.

    Chester, Ill. Stamford, Conn.

    New Haven, Conn. . Oldtown , Me. . Mexico, Mex .

    New Milford , Conn. Gildersleeve, Conn.

    Suffield, Conn. Brooklyn , N.Y.

    \Voodbury, Conn. Brooklyn , . Y. San Mateo, Cal.

    Bridgeport, Conn. Port Kennedy, Penn.

    Chateaugay, N. Y. Hartford , Conn. Hartford, Conn.

    Chilicothee , Ohio Howard, Penn.

  • CLASS MOTTO

    CHRISTMA S TERM

    E. B. GOODRICH R.N. W EIBEL C. C. PECK

    C. c. PECK E. }11. ROG ERS

    ]unior lass

    flass Y11 Hullaballoo, lworaJ', hooray!

    CLASS COLORS

    CRIMSON AND GRAY

    W!toop t up for tlze C?-imson and Gray! Ralt-ray-ri-roo, Trinity, Trinity, 'o2 I

    Offlcrs TRINITY TERM

    President J. W. WALKER Vice-President A. B. QUAILE Secretary E. s. MERRIAl\I Treasurer E. s. MERRIAM Chronicler

    31

  • History

    A WISE man has said that each new responsibility is a prop to \irtue. How re-markably well propped, then, our virtue became when the dignities and respon-sibilities of upper-class men fell to our lot. Yet, we undertook our new duties so naturally and gracefully, that the lower classes entertain for us a respectful

    cordiality- the higher class envy. To be very candid, we really do feel considerable pride in our record, for there is

    no department of college life in which we are not represented most creditably-athletic, scholastic and social traditions have received no small impulse from 'o2. Our athletic supremacy is due not to a single all-round man, but the combined efforts of a number of good men. In the 'Varsity teams we have distinguished representatives. Our class teams are champions. What is true of athletics is also true of scholarship. We have no one man pre-eminently auove all others, but, rather, we congratulate ourselves on having so many names on the honor roll, and on the closeness of the competition. Even the chapel services feel our influence, for we play as well as sing an important part in the service.

    As for our social distinctions we can mention the germans led by 'o2 men, and with great complacency we point to the Junior Promenade, and challenge any one to show us one more successful or more thoroughly enjoyable.

    We feel pride, too, in our members, who, acting as managers of different teams and organizations, ha'Oe brought such credit to the college as well as the class.

    Although last, but not least, we are glad to say that always our class has been united-all men shoulder to shoulder- on good terms one with another.

    All these good thin~s our bitterest opponent will admit, despite his depreciating remark that we are Naughty-two.

    Our history would not, however, be complete without mention of our younger brothers, the Freshmen. We are proud of them, and expect them to win the enviable honor of being second to 'o2 in general excellence. We commend their daring in giving a banquet in the city, and we also express our enjoyment of the affair.

    Although proud of our record , we shall not rest on it. In the true Trinity spirit we are preparing for greater things.

    E.M.R.

    32

  • juniors

    N AM E RESID E NCE ROOM

    Philip Lockwood Barton ,~'!', Framing/tam, Mass., I2 J. H. Baseball Team, (r, 2) ; Sophomore Dining Club; Assistant Manager of

    T rack Team, (3); Executive Committee New England Intercollegiate Athletic Associa tion ; 1902 Junior Promenade Committee.

    William Perry Bentley, ~ K E, Plaiuville, 27 J. H . 1 ; o2 IVY Board ; Alum ni E nglish Pr ize.

    Edmund Janes Cleveland , J r.,

    Jewett Cole, 11' .1 , ~ A E, Business Manager 1902 I vY.

    Saxon Cole, r K A, ~ A E,

    Joseph Baird Crane, Ax P,

    Hartford , rgr Sigourney St . Cltester, I ll. , 42 J. H .

    Clzester, Ill. , .p J. H .

    WaterburJ' , Conn. , II N. T. Football Team (2) ; Basketball Team (2, 3), Acting Captain Basketball Team.

    Robert Burton Gooden , Ax P, Santa Barbara, Cal., I9 . T . Glee Club ( 1, 2, 3); College Quartet; Goodwin Greek p rize.

    Edward Bruce Goodrich , '1' Y , Littleton, N . H. , IS N . T . Sophomore Dinin g Club; 190~ Jun ior Promenade Committee ; Class P resi-

    rl ent rst term , 3rd year.

    Edward Goodridge , J r. , '1' Y, Exeter, N. H ., I6S . H . Baseball team ( r, 2, 3); Sophomore Dining Club; German Club (2, 3) ;

    1902 J unior Promenade Com m ittee .

    James Henderson , A X P, Somerville, Mass . , ..J. J . H. Pootball Team (r, 2, 3), Captai n Football Team (4) ; Baseball Team ( r ,

    2, 3 ); Bask e tball ( r , 2, 3).

    Fred Augustus Higginbotham, Ax P, Waltlzam , Mass .,

    Charles Hawley Hill , r K A, H iawatha, Kan . ,

    I J . H.

    . T . IO Mandolin Club (7, 3); Ba nj o Club (2, 3); Football Team ( r, 2, 3); German

    Club (3); Soph om ore Dining Club ; Track Team.

    33

  • ~AME

    Harry Leslie Howe, r .l, Thonpsonville, Thompsonville

    William Stewart Hyde, ~ r .l, So. Jl;fanc/zester, So. M. Jacob Alexander Laubenstein , q, r .-. ,

    1902 IVY Board.

    Colliusville, 32}. H.

    Anson Theodore McCook , i' Y , Hartford, 396 Main St. Yfandolin Club (1, 2, 3) ; Hartford Admittitur Prize (1) ; Holland Prize

    Scholarship ( r, 2) ; Greek Metrical Version Prize.

    Edmund Sawyer l\Ierriam , i' Y, Hartfo?d, 314 Collins St. Preside nt Class rst te rm , rst yea r; Bask etba ll Team (1, 2, 3) ; Track Team;

    Strength Record (r , 2) ; Second Prize Goodwin Greek.

    Karl Philip Morba , Ax P , Goodwin Greek Prize Second.

    Hartford, 32 Capitol Ave.

    Carlos Curtis Peck, J K A, Bridgeport , Conn . , 37 J. H . Soph omore Dinin g Club ; German Club (2, 3) ; Chairman 1902 Junior Prom-

    enade ; Ma nager Baseball Team (3).

    Alfred Burnett Qnaile, .l '1' , New York, Assistan t Business Ma nager Dram atic Club (2), Dramatic Club (1, 2, 3) ;

    Art E ditor 1902 I\' Y.

    8J. H.

    Edgar ~Iartin Rogers , A x P ,

    Marshall Bowyer Stewart , .\ x P ,

    ~Vasli in;;ton , D. C. ,

    / . indcn, /VI d .,

    14 N. T.

    r4N . T . Glee Club (2, 3) ; Mandolin Club (3) ; Coll ege Quartet (3) ; Toucey Schola r-

    ship ; Alumni E ng lish Prize ; Secreta ry and Treasurer of 1902 Junior Prom e nade.

    Joseph Pemberton \Vells Taylor ,'!' Y, Sophom ore Dining Club.

    Charles Edward Tuke, .l x P,

    Plainfield , N.].,

    P!tiladelplzia Pa.,

    16 S . H.

    17 J. H . Track T eam 11, 2 . 3) ; Glee Club (2, 3) ; Football Team (2,3) ; I v Y Board 1902.

    John White Walker , A x P, Preside nt o f Class (3), 2nd term.

    Richard Nicks Weibel , A .l q, ,

    Hartford , 3 J. H.

    Riverhead, L. I. , 36 J. H. Sophom ore Dining Club; German Club (3) ; Junior Promenade Committee ;

    Preside nt of Class (2 ), rst t erm .

    34

  • NAME RESIDENCE ROOM

    William Hardin Wheeler , -.r 1 , Little Falls, N. Y., 15 N. T. German Club (3); Mandolin Cluh (1, 2, 3) ; Banjo Club (3) ; Managing Editor

    1902 Ivv; President of Class (2), 2nd term; Assistant Manager of Base-ball Team (2); Assistant Manager of Football Team (3), Manager of Football Team (4) . .

    Howard Russell White , A .l , ,1iclligan City, Ind., 36J. H. Sophomore Dining Club; Literary Editor 1902 Ivv.

    Albert Lincoln Wyman , Hartford, ro1 Hudson St.

    Sptdal Studtnts Edwin Schively Carson , Ax P,

    GleeClub (1,2, 3). Clzesbmt Hill, Pa., 17 J. H.

    Ed ward Henry Lorenz, A x P, Track Team (2); Mackay-Smith Prize 1st.

    Julius Levin, Mackay-Smith Prize 2nd.

    Hartford,

    Hartford,

    form tr mtmbtrs

    96 Garden St.

    16 N . T.

    *James Whiting Allen Richfield Springs, N.Y. Harold Simeon Backus , r .l . Herbert Stanley Bradfield, A .l Nathaniel Julius Cable , .l K E William Lawrence Carter Fred Raymond Clapp , A .l q, Samuel Walden Cooke , i' Y John Henry ~laginnis ,

  • 1903 CLASS MOTTO

    NON lNSTRENUI LABORAli!US

    CLASS COLORS

    OLIVE GREEN AND WHITE

    CHRISTMAS TERM

    S . St . J. MORGAN H. D. BRIGHAM A.C . SHORT

    A . C. SHORT

    P . s. CLARKE

    lass Ytll Bim-boom-brarna-kootra 1 .Hip-lzi-dra 1 Hullaba loo-/zullabaloo Ralz-ralt-ralz 1 Rickety-axe-coax-coax 1 Ricket_y-axe-coax-coax 1 Rall-ralz-ree 1 ralz-ralz-ree 1 Trinity I903 /

    Offlctrs

    President Vice-President S ecretary Treasurer Chronicler

    TRINITY TERbl

    H. D. BRIGHAM E. c. THOMAS A. c. SHORT A. C. SHORT

  • History

    " S OME are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them." Of no class can this last phrase be more literally true than of the class of rgo3. Two years ago, when we first came to college, we looked just the same as any freshman class, for our hidden greatness was concealed

    by a veneer of verdancy too thick for the eye to penetrate. aughty-two's " patient efforts, however, gradually wore this away, so that at the enrl of our first year we began to shine forth in our true light.

    Then , at the beginning of the sophomore year, we suddenly realized our posi-tion. \Ve were no longer members of that lowest order of humanity-freshman, and, in consequence, the class entered chapel on the opening day of the present college year with a dignity which was marred only by the fact that some of our number at first absent-mindedly resumed their old places in the ireshman seats. After the services, however, we reinstated ou rselves in public opinion by the hearty way in which, co-operating with the upper classes, we welcomed the new class into our midst, holding out to each one a helping hand, occasionally varied by a helping foot.

    At the bulletin board we showed that our pugilistic faculties were by no means undeveloped, " Naughty-four" bearing strong testimony to the fact. Later in the evening we magnanimously conceded the push-rush to the freshmen, fearing that if we took this, as was at first intended, the entering class would become discouraged at the succession of defeats, and leave college.

    Then came the under-class meet. True, it was excellent practice for the sopho-mores, but, nevertheless, a considerable waste of time. In one or two events the freshmen came along to see how the trick was done, but modestly dropped back at the finish and allowed the sophomores to win . Needless to say, we won the meet, securing nearly all the points.

    There were two other athletic contests with the freshmen , but of them it is diffi-cult to write. Various accounts of the football game have come to the ears of the chronicler, but none have much authenticity . Several think the sophomores won, others are inclined to a different opinion, but as there was no moon and the night was cloudy, the truth about the game will probably never be known. In the basket-ball game we were "out of practice," and were unable to get our " regular team" to-gether. Consequently we were somewhat outclassed.

    The time for the Freshman-Junior banquet at last came, and, by our secret method, we discovered the fact. The matter was considered for some time, and it was finally decided that the pursuit of freshmen at a temperature of 20 below zero was beneath our dignity, so we told them to go and have a good time , as we would not dis-turb them . Such kindness could only emenate from truly great natures.

    Briefly, this is what we have done during our Sophomore year. We fold our arms and await your applause. Thank you.

    But, seriously, although our achievements have not been as great as we would have had them, yet we have tried to fill our place as part of the college, and it is during the sophomore year that it is hardest to do this rightly. At times the class has been censured for courses which it has taken, but it has, nevertheless, adhered to its own opinion of the right, and it is hoped that, in carrying out the motto, 1l01t instrenui /aboramus, we have not labored altogether in vain for the advancement and glory of our Alma Afater. P. S. C.

    37

  • NAME

    Arthur Muirson Bellamy, s. Percy Hawtree Bradin, S. Henry Day Brigham Charles Erastus Bruce, Jr ., L.S. Henry Bernard Carpenter Philip Safford Clarke Stuart Harold Clapp, S. Harry Gray Cozzens , S. Ora Wilfred Craig Noel Guilbert Cunningham, S. Richard Arthur Edwards Clark Thompson Falkner, S . James Philip Garvin Harry Clifford Golden Adkins Henry , L.S. Reeve Huntington Hutchinson , S. Jarvis McAlpine Johnson William Larchar Robert Carey McKean Henry Louis Godlove Meyer Samuel St. John Morgan Arthur Chadwell Short Edmund Crawford Thomas, L .S. Robert Wight Trenbath Hervey Boardman Vanderbogart Harold Clifton Van Weelden, L.S.

    RES IDENC E ROOM.

    Boston, Mass. 6 J . H . Hartford 30]. H . East Orange, N. I II J. H. Elmira, N. Y. I I J. H . Brooklyn, N. Y. 8 N. T . Point Pleasant, N. I 28 J . H. Pittsfield, Mass. IoJ. H. C/n"cago, Ill. 4I J . H. Ashland, N. H. 6 N. T. Watertown 10 J . H . Portland Hartford

    39J. H. 45 Hungerford St.

    Sanbornville, N. H. J\'ttanning, Pa . Cambridge, /11d. Hig ldand Pa1'k, i ll.

    8 N. T .

    23 J. H. 35 J. H.

    9 J. H. 69 Vernon St . Hartford

    Providence, R. /. Wasltington, D . C. St. Louis, 1lfo . Hartford St. Louis, flfo. Tamaqua, Pa.

    Some1'ville, N. I TrOJ', N. Y. Babylon, N. Y.

    44 J. H . 13 J. H.

    8 J. H . 6 J . H .

    31 J . H. 27 J. H . 28 J . H. 29J. H. 33 J. H .

  • NAMR

    George Douglas Rankin Walter Slater Trumbull Howard Bell Ziegler

    Sp~dal Stud~nts RESIDENCE

    Saybrook Point CMcago, Ill. Detroit, !11iclt.

    ROOM

    18 S. H . 18 S. H . II . T .

    'form~r m~mbtrs Charles Townsend William Winton Tucker Duncan Hodge Brown Karl Herbert Fenning Malcolm Appleton MacLean Christopher Carson Thurber Edward William Fothergill Robert Ashley Gaines James Rogers Veitch .

    39

    E lizabeth, N.J. Buffalo, N.Y.

    New York, N.Y. Washington, D. C:

    Bay City, Mich. Norwich, Conn. Hartford , Conn.

    West Hartford , Conn . So. Manchester , Conn.

  • CLASS MOTTO

    CHRISTMAS TERM:

    Enw ARD J. MANN M. H. BuFFINGTo

    WALTER B. ALLEN

    WALTER B. ALLE

    P . H . M.P. BRINTON

    rr~sbman lass

    lass Y~ll

    CLASS COLORS

    DARK BLUE AND WHITE

    Trinity! Trinity! raiL-ralt-ralt, Trinity! T rinity ! walt-w!to-U'al!, Boom-a-lacke1', boom-a-tacker, Roar, roa1', roar, Sumus populi, 'o4!

    Offlcns President Vice-President

    Secretary T reasurn-H istorian

    40

    TitlNITY T.RRM

    F. B. BARTLETT

    A . G. HUMPHRIES FRANKs. BROWN

    FRANKs. BROWN

    THEO . N. DENSLOW

  • lass History

    THE strength of a muscle depends upon the quality, not the size of U1e muscle. A small, hard muscle has more strength in it than a large flabby one. Some people's muscles do not grow large by exercise, but they undoubtedly grow strong. It is quality, not quantity, which counts.

    So it is with our class. Although few in numbers, we are great in strength. We proved this at the bulletin board , where, although outnumbered, we succeeded in putting up our challenge to the ::ophs. It was immediately torn down, but we think that we did well to hold it there even for an instant against such odds.

    In the push-rush we had only nineteen men, but so determined were we to win that the large number of sophomores was completely outclassed, and once again our quality stood the test against quantity.

    After the push-rush. although we threw ont a few taunts after the sophs during the march down town , we remembered our Sunday School lessons of early years, and seeing that our enemies were thirsty, gave them to drink.

    On the following Monday night several of us again showed the kindness of our hearts. Some sang, some recited poetry , others danced. Some did a ll three. And all this was for the amusement and ple:1sure of the class of 1903. In certain instances we men of 1904 rose from our beds, whither we had betaken ourselves at ten o'clock, and dirl our best to entertain our visitors, whom we did not wish to disappoint since they had climbed three flights of stairs expressly to see us. We here gave proof of two well-known facts: That a man can be kind as well as brae , and that he can love his enemy.

    In the inter-class meet ''e met defeat for the first time. But perhaps this was pol-icy on our part, for , had we won in that also, our class might not now be as large as it is. Yes, undoubtedly, it is a wise plan to humor an enemy now and then , lest he resort to deep and underhand scheming and thus harass you.

    At football we showed up ,-ery well. Fi,e men in the class made the team, and, although other men were substituterl now and then, each man played three or more col-lege games, one man playing through the entire season. Our class football team played well against the sophomores, and, had it not been for the darkness a nd the opportune arrival of a man not in college, who seemed to have appeared especially for the occasion (for he has not showed up about college since), we would undoubtedly ha,e beaten them. As it was, the game turned out a t ie.

    VJe have two men who have playerl in games on the 'Varsity basketball team, and one is such an excellent player that he is greatly rnissed whenever he is unable to play. Onr class team showed itself to be very much superior to that of 1903.

    It is not our place to say whether the banquet to 1902 was a success. W/e leave that to the Juniors. One thing we can say, however: As far as the sophomores were concerned. it cuuld not have been more successful.

    With such a fine record for only a part of our first year , who can doubt that the possibilities of our class are greater than those o f many a larger one? Let us follow the advice of St. Paul, and, " reaching out unto those things which are before," "press to-ward the mark. " T. I. D.

    41

  • NAMR

    Walter Best Allen Frederick Bethune Bartlett Frank Seiders Brown Morgan Hyde Buffington Theodore North Denslow Edgar Johnson Dibble Winter Hamilton Everest George Henry Heyn Arthm George Humphries Robert Lincoln McKeon Edward Hugh Maddox Edward James Mann George Franklin Seymour Moore Bayard Quincy Morgan Abner Packard William George Wherry

    RESIDENCE

    Bayonne, N.J. So. Mane/tester Salmon FaLls, N.H. Kittanning, Pa. Muncie, Ind. Betliel West Haveu, Ct . Sparkill, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Oneonta, N. Y.

    ROOM

    9 ]. H. I4J . H. 29]. H. 23]. H .

    3I J. H. I3]. H. I2 N.T. IS J. H. I7 J. H. 30}. H. I5 J. H .

    2 J. H. IS N. T. Quincy, ILL.

    Hartford Quincey, Mass. Uuion Hill, N. J.

    227 Sigourney St. 5 J. H .

    IS J. H.

    Spttlal Stuatnts NAME

    Frank Howard Ensign Robert Glenney Herbert Robinson Nicllvaine Herman Edward Townsend Raymond BrinckerhoffVan Tine

    RESIDENCE

    East Hartford So . Maudzcste1' PliiladeLpl!ia, Pa. Was/ziugton, D. C. Bayonne, N.J.

    ROOM

    East Hartford So. Manchester

    43]. H. 5 ]. H.

    37 J. H.

    rormtr mtmbtrs Paul Henry Mallet Prevost Brinton Ralph Charles Belcher Moore Mather Ingraham Rankin

    42

    Philadelphia , Pa . Chatham, N.J.

    Saybrook Point, Ct.

  • [. [ . [. [. I. r . I. I. f. f. f. r. )t. fl. fi.

    >rd ter H. H . H.

    Pa. . J. Ct.

    summary

    Course Course in Co urse Course iu Letters and in 10 Special

    Arts Science Science Letters Students T o tal

    Seniors 14 4 5 2-!-

    Juniors 20 4 8 32

    Sophomores r8 5 7 30

    Freshmen 13 3 17

    Special Students 19 19

    Undergraduates . 65 16 20 2 19 122

    Graduate Students 6

    Total !28

    ABBR.EVIATIONS-J. H., Jards Hall; S . H ., Seabury Hall; N . T. , N o rthatn To wers .

    43

  • Sttrtt rrattrnititS

    I. K.A.

    F ounded 1829

    Epsilon Chapter of Delta Psi Established 1850

    Phi Kappa Chapter of Alpha Delta Phi Established 1877

    Alpha Chi Chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon

    Established 1879

    Beta Be;ta Chapter of Psi Upsilon Established 188o

    Tau Alpha Chapter of Phi Gamma Delta

    Established 1893

    Phi Psi Chapter of Alpha Chi Rho

    Founded 1895

    45

  • (b [Otal rratrnitV of 1. R. Jl. FOUNDED 1829 AT TRINITY COLLEGE

    47

  • JlttiOt mtmbtrs

    RICHARD EuGENE PECK

    GODFREY BRINLEY

    AUGUSTINE HUGO WELLS ANDERSON

    CARLOS CuRTIS PEcK

    CHARLES HAWLEY HILL

    }EWETT COLE

    SAXON COLE

    ARTHUR CHADWELL SHORT

    HARRY GRAY CozzENS

  • rratr~s in rb~

    CHARLEs E. GRAvEs, 'so

    jOHN H. BROCKLESBY, '65

    WILLIAM C. BROCKLESBY, '70

    ARTH R K. BROCKLESBY, ' 70

    WILLIAM D. MoRGAN, '72

    RoBERT G. ERWIN, '74

    WILLIAM C. SKINNER, '76

    GEORGE W. B EACH, '8o

    HERMANN LILIENTHAL, ' 86

    ERNEST D EF. MIEL , ' 88

    GEORGE w 0 ELLIS , ' 94

    CHARLES L. B URNHAM, 'g8

    ROBERT W. GRAY , '98

    49

  • eorporation

    President

    JoHN HENRY STEVENS QuiCK

    Secretary and Treasurer

    CHARLES L uTHER BuRNHAM

    CHARLES EMMET GRAVES

    WILLIAJ\1, CLAIBORNE BROCKLESBY

    WILLIAM DENISON MORGAN, M .D.

    ROBERT GALLAUDET ERWIN

    WILLIAM STERLING CoGSWELL

    WILLIAM CONVERSE SKI NER

    EDWARD MANSFIELD ScuDDER

    so

    R EV. ERNEST DEFEMERY MIEL

    ARTHUR COLLINS GRAVES

    GEORGE WATSON BEACH

    THOMAS McKEAN

    HOBART WARREN THOMPSON

    ALEXANDER TAYLOR MASON

  • 1. R. Jt. 6raduatt mtmbtrs

    Abbott, C. W., '49 *Abbott, J.P., '49

    Adams, G. z., '39 *Adams}. R., '49

    Allen, E. T., '41 Andrews, C. M., 'S4

    * Anistaki , J., '37 Arvedson , A. E., 'ot

    * Ashe,J. B., '30 * Backus, C. A. , '52

    Bacon, F. S., '99 Bacon , }. W ., '46 Bakewell, J. , '59

    * Barbour, J. H. , '73 Barclay, R ., 'So -Bartlett, H. P ., '72

    * Bayard, W. H., '41 * Bayley, J. R. , '35

    Beach , E. S., 'S3 Beach , G. W. , 'So

    * Belden , N. M., '4S *Benton, M. F. , '5S

    Benton,J. R. , '97 * Bond, J. , ' 40 "' Bondurant, W . E., '63

    Bowman , C. W. , 'S7 * Brainard, N. L. , ' 4 .~ Brander, H. M., '45 * Brandt, L ., '49 *Brewer, W. L ., '3S

    Brinley, E. H ., '49 Brinley, P., '47 Brocklesby, A. K., ' 70

    Brocklesby, J. H ., '65 Brocklesby, W. C., '69

    * Browell, T. S., '35 * Buchanan,}., '53

    Bull, W. M. , '39 Burnham, C. L. , 'g8

    * Butler M. N., ' 44 * Caldwell, C. E., 'S2 * Campbell, C. I., '30

    Candee, H. S., '93 Carpenter , J. S., ' 79 Carpenter, J. T., 'SS Carpenter, R . H ., 'Rr Chapin, D. D., '56 Chapin, W. M., '74

    *Chapman, C. R. , '47 Clapp , F., '55 Clark, A. M., '77 Clark, E . S., '65 Clarke, R. M., '45 Clem~nt, P. W., '68 ( Coggeshall, G. A., '65 Cogswell, G. E., '97 Cogswell, W. S., '61 Collins, W. F., '93

    *Comstock, J. C., '38 * Conyngham, C. M., '59 * Cossit, P. S ., '45 * Cowling, R. 0., '61 * Curtis, W. E., '43

    Daves, G., '57 Davies, W. G., '6o

    * DeForrest G. A., '55

  • *Delancy, T. J., '40 * Delano, F. R., '65

    Deming, W. C., '84 Dewell, F. W., 'o1

    * DeZeng, E., '40 *Dick, J. M., '54 *Dirickson, L. L ., '41 *Dorsey, W. H. I., '36

    Downes, L. T., '48 *Driggs, T. I., '48 *Dyer , A., '70

    Ellis, G. W . , '94 Erwin, J. B., '76 Erwin , R. G . , '74 Evans, S. K. , '95

    *Faxon, E., '47 * Ferrill, W. C., '78 * Foote, I., '42 * Franklin, E . C., ' 54 * Gadsden, C. E., 'so * Gadsden , J. A., 'so

    Gallaudet, B. B. , 'So Gallaudet, T. , 42

    * Gardner, H. G., '65 Gowen, F. C. , '82

    * Goddard, F. M., '96 * Gordon, 0 . K. , 's8

    Graves, A. C., 'gr Graves, C. E., 'so Graves, D. C. , 'g8 Graves, G., '49 Graves, H. S., '92 Graves, 'R. S., '94

    * Gray, J. W., '72 Gray, R. W . , 'g8

    *Hale, C. F., '47 Hale, C. S., '62

    *Halsey, A., '37 *Hamilton, H. C., '51

    Hamilton, I. K., Jr. , 91 Hardee, C. H. , 'Sr

    *Harris, T. L. , '41 * Hasell, B. D., '49 * Hasell, L. C., so

    Hawley, F. M., '6r * Hazlehurst, G. H., '42

    Hazlehurst, J. \V., 'sr Hazlehurst, R. , '41

    52

    * Henry, J. F. , '34 *Hewlett, S. H., '74

    Heydecker, H. R ., ' 86 * H eyward, J. F. , '48 * Hoadly, C. J. , '51

    H ollister, J. B., '84 H olly, J. A. , '91

    * Hopson, E. C., ' 6~ Hopson, G. B., '57 H orton, P . A., '68 Hotchkiss, C. E. , '82 Hovey , H. E . , '66 Hubbard, G . A., '94 Hyde, T. McE., 'go

    * Ingalls, T., '52 Jackson, R. E . , '45

    * Jarvis, J. S . , '57 * Johnson, E. P. , '65

    Johnson, W . F., '66 * Jones, C. H., '35 * Kellogg, H . L., '36 * Ker,J., '43 * King, H. W., '36 * Lambert, D. , '36 * Lansing , C. A. , '66

    Leaken , W. R., 'So * LeRoy, A. N . , '42

    LeRoy, J., '69 *LeRoy, T. 0 . , '42

    Lilienthal, H. , '86 Lynch, R. Leb., 'go Mack, J. E. , ' 71

    * Mallory , G. S., '58 Mallory , R. H., '92

    * Mallory , W . H. , '6o Marbl e , F. P., '82

    * Marshall, J . , '42 Mason, A. T., '8r

    * Matthewson,}. , '46 McConihe , A., '89 McConihe, M. S. , '92 McConihe, \V., 'go

    * Mcintosh, J. H., '53 McKean , T. H. , '92 McKennau , J. D. , '76 McLt>more, M. C., '89

    * Meech, H. J., ' 42 Miel, E. DeF. , '88

  • *Millard, A. B., '36 *Miller, N., '47

    Moffett, G. H., '78 Moore, C. E., '76 Moore, D. S., '64 Morgan, G. B., '70 Morgan, W. D., '72

    *Morgan, W. F., '35 Morrill, C. A., '67

    * Mowry, D. S., '67 Nelson , H., '87 Nelson, Vi/. B., '8r Nicholls, G. H., '39

    * ~ichol , R. W., '33 Noyes, A. H., '89 Olmsted, W. B., '87 Olmsted, J. F., '84 ~Overfield, J. L., '5 5 *Pardee, D. W., '40

    Parks, S. H., '82 Paine, J., '92 Paine, 0. T., '96

    *Paine, R. T., '32 *Paine,]. \V., '6r *Peake, C. F., '42

    Peck, T. M., 'So *Peck, W. E., '7r *Perkins, L. H., '34

    Peters, G. E., 'so Peugnet, L. D. , '93

    *Phelps,]. S., '32 Potter, Louis, '96

    * Powel, E. F., 'or *Proctor, C. H. , '73

    Quick, G. A., '94 Quick, J. H., '98 Quick, J. H . S., '58 Quick, W. F., '92 Richardson, L. W. , '73 Richardson , R. D., '71

    *Ripley, P., '47 *Robertson, J. A., '54

    Rodgers, G. W ., '87 Rodgers, R. E. L., '87

    *Rogers, R. C., '45 Rowland, E., '57

    *Sargent, G. D., '51 Sawyer, J. L. , 'so

    53

    Scott, E . G., '57 *Scudder, C. D., '75

    Scudder, E. M., '77 *Scudder , H. J., '46

    Scudder, H., '91 *Scudder , T., '54

    Scudder, W., '89 Sedgwick, W. R ., '84 Shannon, J. W., '87 Sheldon , E. A., 'or

    * Sherman, H. B., '38 Sherman, H. M., '77

    * Sherwood, W. B., '36 *Shipman, P. W., '82

    Short, William, '69 * Singletary, G. E . B., '49

    Skinner, W. C., '76 Small, E. F., '74

    *Smith, C. H., '36 Smith, J. H., '74

    *Smyth, J. W., '52 tarr, J., ' 56

    *Starr, S., '29 Stedman, R. S., '63

    * Stirling, W. H., '44 * Stone , J. A., '44

    Stone, L. H., '87 * Stoug hton, N.C., '38

    Story, 0. J., 'or * Summer, A. E. , '61

    Sutton, E. B., '76 Taylor, C. E., '92

    * Taylor, F. L., '43 Taylor , H. E . , '96

    * Taylor, W. F., '44 * Terry, C. E., 'sr * Thomas, E. H., '41

    Thompson, H. W. , ' 83 Titus, A. S., 'oo

    *Todd, C.J. , 'ss Tolles, W. A., '46 Townsend, C., Jr. , '03

    * Tracey, vV. D., '42 *Tracey, J. R., '39 * Tudor, H. B., 'so

    Turner, J. H. , '38 *VanZandt, C. C., '51 *VanZandt, " ' '29

  • * Varley, C. D ., '41 Wainwright, F. C., '88 Wainwright, J. M., '95

    *Wainwright, W. A. M., '64 * Wait, J. T., '35

    Warner, L. F., '85 * Warren, E. I., 'So

    Warren, G. T ., '90 Warren , J. M., '32

    * Warren, W. H ., '34 Warren , W. H., '90

    * Waring, C. M., '36 Washburn, L. C., '8r

    * Way, J. A., '37 * Webb, E. C., ' 75

    * Deceased

    54

    * Webb, W. E., '40 Webb, W. W., '82 Welch , L. E., '86 White, J. G., '54 White, R . A., '8 1 Wiggin, A. H. , '68 Willard, D. , '95

    *Wolcott, F. H., '86 * Wolcott, S. G., ' 47 * Wood , H. S., ' 71

    Woodbury, T. C. , ' 71 Woodward, G. A., '55 Woodworth , F. A., 'So Wright, A. E., '89 Wright, M. R., '91

  • Cbt rrattrnity of Dtlta Psi FOUNDED I N 18 47 AT COLUMBIA COLLEGE AND UNIVE RSITY OF NEW YO R K

    ALPHA

    DELTA

    EPSILON

    LAMBDA

    PHI

    UPSILON

    SIGMA

    TAu

    Columbia College

    University of Pennsylvania

    Trinity College

    Williams College

    U niYersity of Mississippi

    University of Virgin ia

    Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    55

  • \VALTER BEST ALLEN

    PHILIP LocKWOOD BARTON

    HENRY DAY BRIGHAM

    CHARLES ERAST S BRUCE , JR.

    STUART HAROLD CLAPP

    l.lARTIN WITHINGTON CLEMENT

    RoBERT HABERSHAM CoLEMAN

    NoEL GuiLBERT CuNNINGHAM

    JAMES MoSGROVE HuDSON

    REEVE HUNTI "GTON H TCHINSON

    THOIIIAS McLEAN

    HENRY Lours GoDLOVE MEYER

    ALFRED BuR "ETT QuAILE

    CHARLES HATHERN \VHEELER

    57

  • Qraduatt mtmbtrs Of tbt Epsilon . bapttr ~

    Allen, E . S., '94 Butler, W., '58 Allyn, A. ,V. , '6r Cady, J. C., '6o Appleton, C. A., '82 Camman , E. C., '96 Appleton, E. D., 'So * Carter, C. L., '54 Appleton, H. C., 'Ss * Cenas, B. C., '56 Arundel, W . B. Von H ., 'oo Chapin, F. W .. '79 Atkinson, J . G., '64 Chapin , W . V., '78 Austin, W. M., '98 Chapman , T. B. , 'So Bacon , ]. R., '92 Cheever, J. D. , Jr., '81 Balch, F. A. , '98 Clark, J . W. , '63 Baldwin, F. T ., 'oo Clement , J K. , 'oo Barnwell, R. W., '72 * Clemson, T. G., '56

    * Barnwell, S. E. , '72 Clifford , S. W., '68 Barton, C. C., '69 Clyde, W. P., '62 Barton , C. C., Jr. , '93 Colema n, R. H., '77

    * Beckwith, C. M. , '88 Comfort, B. F., '89 Beers, G. E . , '86 Cookson, F. M., '6 1 Benedict, L. LeG. , '88 Coons, S. W ., 'oo Bibb, W. A., 1' 75 * Coxe, J . N., '55 Blackwell , J., Jr., '66 Crane, R . N. , '55 Bliss, G. H. , '64 * Curtis, F. R ., 'So Bohle n, D. M. , '82 Curtis, G. M., 'So Bowen, A., '63 Curtis, R. H. , '68 Brainerd, J. B., '82 Curtis, W . E., '75 Brandegee, J. E ., '74 * Darrell, A. S., '59

    * Brandegee, I.. C., '77 * Dayton , W . B. , '56 Breckenridge, A. E. , '70 Deal, J. A., '72

    * Breese , H . I.. , '57 DeForest , J . G., '82 Brenton, C., '99 DeRossett, A. I.., '62 Brigham, H. H ., '76 * DeRossett, E. S., '64

    * Brown, T. M. , '64 * Devendorf, G. S., '55 * Buckingham, W. B., '69 Dobbin, E. S. , '99

    Bulkeley, J . C., '93 DuBois, G . M., ' 74 Bulkeley, W. E. A. , '90 DuBois, H . 0., ' 76 Burke, E. F., '95 Eaton, V.f . H. , '99 Burr, W. H ., '78 Edson, S., '55

    ss

  • Edwards, A. N., '76 Elbert, \V. N. , '79 Ellis, A. L., '98 Elton,J. P., '88 Elwell, G. E., '70 Everest, W. H., 'or Finch, E. B., '91 Fisher, T. R., '62 FitzGerald, F., '89 Fordney, T. P., '62 Fuller, J. R., '70

    *Fuller, s. G., '58 Fuller, S. R., ' 70 Garrlner, C. H., '70 Gibson, B. S., '69

    *Glazier, T. C., '6o Goldthwaite, A. C. , '99 Goodspeed, J. H., '66

    Goodwin , G . H., '62 Graham, C. M., 'so Grannis, F. 0. '73 Greene, J. H., '91 Haight, F. E., '87 Haight, M. G., 'oo Hall, A. C., '88 Hall, C. L., '92 H all, F. DeP., '78 Hallett, W. T. , '62 Harding, N., '73 Harraden, F. S., '67 Harris, W. R., '58

    *Hartshorne, E. M., '56 Hayden, R. C. , '93 Hazelhurst, G. A., '79 Henderson , E. F., '82 Hendrie , G. T., '97 Hendrie, S., '87 Hill, G. H., '91

    *Hill, W. C., '93 Hill, W. C., 'oo Hills, J. S., 'or Hitchings, H. B., '54

    * Hoffman, c. F., '51 Hoisington, F. R., '91 Holbrooke, G. 0., '69 Holbrooke, S., '67 Hotchin, S. F., '56 Hull , A. S., '66

    59

    Ingersoll, G. P., '83 *Jardine, H. D., '68

    Jarvis, S. F., Jr., '89 Jennings, A. B., '61 Kane, G., '75

    * Kerr, E. L . '55 *Kirby, J. w., '65

    Knoblock, A. F . , '55 *Lamson, W. , '56

    Lawrence, C. V., '56 * Leacock, J. H., '58

    Lewis, C. A., '93 *Lewis, E. B., '65

    Lewis, E. G., '92 * Lev.,js, J. I., '62

    Le\\,js, J. W. , '93 Lewis, S. S., '6r

    *Lewis, T. C., '71 Le,vis, w. H., '65

    * Lincoln, F. T., '76 Lincoln, G . \V., '75 Macauley, G. T., 'go Macauley, R. H., '95

    *Mackay, W. R., '67 Maginnis, J. H., 'o2 Martindale, H. S., '79 McClory, H., '51 McCullough, D. H ., '73 McCook, E. McP., '90 McCough, H. G., '75 McLean, T., '75 Miller, H., 'So

    * Miller, P. S., '64 Miller , S. T., '85

    *Mines, F . S., '64 *Mines, J. F., '54

    Morgan, B. T., '6r Morse, J. F., '66 Murray, A. S., Jr., ' 71 Murray, F. W., Yale, '77 Murray, R . , '73 Nelson, R. H., 'So Nichols, G. G., '67

    * Norris, E . C., '61 Norris , H., '63

    *Norton, F. L., '68 Nott, R. H., '71 Orton, W. 0., '92

  • Owen, F. \V., 'S4 Padgett, P., '76

    *Palmer, C. C., '51 Parker, B., '93 Parker, R. P., '94 Parsons, H., 'S3 Parsons, J. R., Jr., '81 Parsons, W. W., '96 Parsons, E., '96 Pattison, G. B., 'Sr Paxon, H. C., 'sr Pearce, J. S., '62 Pearce, R., '93 Peck, B. D., 'g6

    * Peck, D. L., '62 Perkins, G. E., 'Sr

    * Pierce, H. H., 'sS *Pinckney, F. S., '62

    Platt, Chas., Jr., '75 Platt, Clayton, ' 74

    *Platt, W . A., '75 Potter, A. H . , ' 92 Re.ed, H. P., 'S4

    * Roosevelt, F., 'S3 Russell, F. G., 'So Russell, I. D., '92 Russell, H., '84 Rutherford, H. V. , '76 Schulte, E. D. N., '97 Schulte, H. vonW., '97 Scott, H. B., '7S Scudder,J. A., '97 Sheldon, W. C., Jr., '82

    *Shreve, W. I., 'S3 Sibley, A. S . , '92 Sibley, M. M., '97 Smallwood, S. B., '63

    * Smith, B. S., '62 * Smith, I. S., '64

    Smith, I. T., 'gr Smith, R. H., '69 Smith, W. G. W., '71 Stark, B., Jr., '79 Stark, W . M., '75

    *Stedman, T. W., '74 * Steele, H. D., 'sr

    *Deceased.

    6o

    Sterling, E. K., '99 * Stevens, S., '65 * Stillwell, R. M., '7o

    Strawbridge, J., '95 Strong, C. M. , '64 Strong,]. R. , 'S2 Stunner, C. A., '56 Swenson , E. P., '75 Swenson , :-5. A., '8r Talcott, A. B., 'go Talcott, C. H., 'gr Thompson, H. R. , '87 Thompson, S.C., ' ,2 Thorne, . D., '71 Thorne , R., '85 Totten, C. A. L., '69 Trowbridge, C. C. , '92 Trowbridge, S. P. B.,'S3

    * Underhill, G. B., '73 Van Zile, E. S .. '84 Vibbert, A. D., '99 Vibbert, H. C., '68 Vibbert, W. H., '58 ~- Vibbert, W. W., '94

    \VarlZer, C. , '66 Waterman, L ., ' 71 Waters, G. S., '87

    * Watson, W. C., '63 Watts, E. B., '73

    * Weeks R. D .. '93 Welsh, R. F., '95

    * Whistler,W.G.McN. ,'57 * White, F. W., '7S

    Wilcox, F. L. , '8o Wilcox, E. P. , '8o

    " Wildman, T. G., '57 Williams, C. C., '71 Williams, C. G . , 'So Wilson, W. C. D., '93 Wilmerding, H. , 'Sr Winkley, R. L., ' 79 Woodin, W. R., '58 Woodruff, E. H., 'S2 Wright , G. E . , '74 Young, A. M., 'Sz

  • Cbt rrattrnity of Jllpba Ddta Pbi FOUNDED IN 1832 AT HAMII, TON COLLEGE

    Roll of bapttrs HA~!IL'l'O:\! Hamilton College 1832 COLUMBIA Columbia College !836 YALE Yale niversity !837

    A~!IIERS'I' Amherst College !837 BRUNONIAN Brown University 1837 HARVARD Harvard University !837 Hunso:sr Western Reserve University 1841 BOWDOIN Bowdoin College 1841 DARTl\lOU'l'H Dartmouth College !845 PENI"SULAR University of Michigan !846 ROCHESTER University of Rochester r8so WILLIA"'!S Williams College r8sr 1\L\:-

  • Cbt Pbi Rappa bapttr

    Jlctlv~ m~mb~rs

    PERCY HAWTREE BRADIN

    WILLIAM PURNELL BROWN

    THEODORE NORTH DENSLOW

    ADKINS HENRY

    RoBERT LI coLN McKEoN

    EDMUND CRAWFORD THOMAS

    RAYMOND BRINCKE RHOFF VAN TINE

    ]AlliES MERRYMAN WALKER RICHARD NICKS WEIBEL

    HowARD RussELL WHITE

    AUGUSTUS TALCOTT WYNKOOP

  • rratr~s in Urb~

    Hon . Edward B. Bennett, Yale ,'66 Percy S. Bryant, Phi Kappa , '70 Charles H. Bunce, Yale , '6o George F. Cady, Wesleyan , '69 Darid S. Calhoun, Yale , '48 George H. Day, Geneva , '73 Rev. E . S . Ferry , Wesleyan, '8 2 Horace S . Fuller, M.D. , Amherst ,

    ' ss

    Arthur L . Gillett, Amherst , 'So Charles A. Goodwin, Yale , '98 Maitland Griggs , Yale , '96 Charles E. Gross, Yale , '69 Frederick H. L . Hammond , Wes-

    leyan , '88 Panett M . Hastings, M .D ., Ham-

    ilton , ' 39 Edward B. Hatch. Phi Kappa , '86 Frederick Van H . Hudson , Dart-

    mouth , '6o Harwood Huntington, Phi Kappa ,

    '89 Rev. John T . Huntington, Phi

    Kappa. 'so Thomas F . Lawrence , Yale , '99 E. R. Lampson , Jr. , '9 1 Solon C. Kelley , Amherst , '92 L. P . Waldo Marvin , Yale , '92

    Leonard Morse , Amherst , ' 71 ReY . Kingsley F. Norris , Am-

    herst , ' 73 Edward C. Perkins, Yale , '98 Henry A. Perkins , Yale, '96 Rev. Thomas R . Pynchon , D. D. ,

    L.L.D. , Phi Kappa , '4 1 W . H. C. Pynchon , Phi Kappa , 'go Robert Wells Root , Williams , '96 Robert. H . Schutz , Phi Kappa , '89 Walter S . Schutz , '94 Hon. NathanielShipman , Yale , '48 Hon. George G . Sill , Yale , '52 RobertS. Starr , Phi Kappa , '97 Rev . Charles C. Stearns, Yale , '72 C. M . Stearns , Johns Hopkins , '98 Rev . Samuel M. Stiles, Wesleyan ,

    ' 6o Samuel B. St. John , M .D. , Yale ,' 66 Melancthon Storr10, M.D ., Yale, '52 Henry E. Taintor, Yale, '65 Arthur R. Thompson , Yale , ' 96 David C. Twichell , Yale, '98 David Van Schaack , Phi Kappa , 'gr Prof. Williston Walker , Amherst ,

    '83 Philip C. Washburn , Phi Kappa, '96 Arthur C. Williams , Yale , '98

  • Allen, H. W. , '97 Almy, S., '92 Andrews, R., '53 Applegate, 0., Jr. , '87 Armstrong, D. M., '5H Barber, W. W. , '88 Barto, R. V., '82 Beecroft, E. C., '97 Bellinger, E. B., '92

    *Bixby, R . F., '70 Blackmer, W. C., '78 Boardman , " ' H., '85 Boardman, \V. J. , '54 Booth, T . R., ' 52 Bowie, C. L. , '93 Bowman, J .P., '53 Bradfield , H. S., 'o2 Braclin, J. \V. , 'oo

    *Brainard, E. \V., '42 Brainard, J ., 'sr Brainard ,}. M., '84 Briscoe, J ., Jr. , '9.'i Brownell , H. B., '88 Bryan , \\'., '75 Bryant, P. S. , '70

    * Bulkeley, C. E .. '56 " Buxton , J. B .. ' 72

    Buxton , J C., '73 Cameron , J. I. H. , '79 Cameron , L., '86

    * Capron , A., '45 Cary. H. A., '93 Carter. B. M., '82 Carter, C. H., '82 Carter, G. C., '87 Carter, J. R. , '83 Carter , J. S., '98

    Carter, L. A. , '93 Carter, S . , '94 Chase, F., '52 Cheritree, T. L. , '90 Cheshire, J. B., Jr., '69 Chipman, G. C., '45

    * Chipman , G. S., ' 78 Chrystie, T. M. L., '63 Church, S. P. , '41

    *Churchman , C., '93 Churchman, E. G. , '95 Clapp, F. R. , 'o2 Clark, A. F ., ' 75 Cadman, A. , '85 Coe, G. J., '74 Coil, C. W., '82 Coleman , G. P. , '90 Coley, J., '62

    * Conklin, H . H ., '38 Cook, P., '98 Cooke , G. L., '70 Cooke, 0. D ., ' 44 Cowl, M . L., '83 Crane, T ., '45 Crocker, H. D. , '84

    *Crosby, D . G., ' 51 Culle n , J ., Jr., '93 Curtiss, H. C., '81 Da,enport, J. S., '98

    *Dickinson, E. L., '93 Ding wall , E. A. , '92 Dingwall, H. R. , '95 Drane, H. M., ' 52 Dyett, W. F., '96 E lliott, J . H ., '72 Fisher, R ., '56 Flagg, E. 0. , '48

  • *Flagg, J. B., '46 * Flower, S . , '45

    Foot, E. H., '98 Foote, C. E . , ' 76 Fox, R . H . , 'oo Freeland, C. W . , '8r

    * Fuller, F . B., '92 Fuller, S. R., 'oo

    * Geer, G.] ., '42 Gilmore, A. P., '74 Glazebrook, F . H., '99 Glazebrook, H. McK., 'oo Goodwin , J. , '86

    * Goodwy n , W. S. , '38 Gordon, T. H. , '71 Graham, H. C. , '6r

    * Graham, J., ' 72 Grinnell , H . , ' 97 Griswold, B. H. , '66 Hager, W. C., '79

    * Hall, G . R. , ' 42 H amlin , A . C ., '87 H amlin, E . P. , '95 H amlin , G. N. , '91 Harding , A., ' 76 Hatch, E. B. , '86 Hays, J . McC. , '86 H ays, W. W., '58 H azelhurst, G. B. , ' 77

    * H eath, J. F. , '38 H edrick, C. B. , ' 99 Hensh aw, C. H. , '53 Heister, I. , ' 76

    * Hills, G . M., '47 Hills, J . D., '78 Hills, G . H., '84 Hills , R. , '84 Holcomb, B. T., ' 59 Holley , W . W . , '6r

    * Hoof, ] . L ., '46 Hooker, S . D., ' 77 Hooper, G. G. , '66 Horner, H. A. , 'oo Howell, G . D. , '82 Hubbell, J. H. , '56

    * Humphrey, G. F. , '85 * Hunter, C . , '78

    Huntington , G . S. , '81

    66

    * Huntington, H . K., '67 Huntington, J. T., 'so Huntington, J . W., '83 Huntington, R. W. , '64 Huntington , H . , '84 Huske , J., '77 Hutchins, R . H ., '90 Ide, H. G. , '94 Ingersoll, C. M. , '39

    * Ives, A . M. , '56 *Jacobs, E. C., '55 * James C. , '61 * Jewett , P. A., '37 * Kennedy , F ., '68

    Kerner, H. S. , '99 Kidder, H . , '92

    * Kirtland, J . , ' 70 * Kneeland , G . , 'So

    Kurtz , C. M., '83 Kurtz, J . E. , '77 Lampson , E . R., Jr. , '91 Langford, A. M. , '97 Langford, W. S ., Jr., '96 Leaver , H . K ., '59 Littell, J . S . , '90 Littell , S. H . , '95 Littell, E. G ., '99 Lockwood , L . V ., '93 L yman , A.J . , ' 78 McGann , J. M. , '95 Maddox, W . T ., '59

    * Malle tt, W. P. , '40 Middlebrook, L . N. , '48 Moore, J. A. , ' 97 Mock, L. C., ' 78 Morgan , W. F ., '88 Morrison, P. B., '94 Morse , B. K., '99

    * Morss, ] . R. , '47 Newton , E. P . , '8r Norton, G. H. , ' 75

    * Olmstead, H ., '42 Onderdonk, A. H. , '99 Pag e, J. H ., Jr. , ' 97 Palmer, N., '45 Peabody, F . B., ' 45 Perry, J. B., ' 72

    * Perryman, E. G. , '55

  • *Peters, W. C., '48 * Pitts, c. H., '65

    Plumb, J. F., '91 Plumer, L. M., '74 Plumer, S., Jr., '97 Porter, T. A., '76 Potts, F. H., '68 Prescott, 0. S . , '44 Preston,]. A., '55 Putnam, \V. T. , '1!8 Pynchon, T. R., '41 Pynchon, \V. H. C., '90

    *Randall, E. D., '92 Reynolds, L. G., '98 Rich , E. A., '99 Richardson, F. W., '8 ~ Robbins,]. P., '69

    * Sartwelle, W. D., '75 Schutz, R. H., '89 Schutz, w. s., '94 Schwartz, D. L., 'oo Sennett, L. F., '89 Sherwood, G. H., 'oo Sistare, C. G., '47

    *Smith, P. , '90 Smyth,]. D., '74 Snow, A. H. , '79

    *Deceased.

    Snyder, E., '72 Starr, R. S., '97

    :,]. H., '54 * \Vilson, G. H., '93

    Woodruff, F. D., '83 * Yale , H. A. , '46

  • Cbt rrattrnity of Dtlta Rappa Epsilon

    PHI THETA. Xr SIGMA. GAMMA PSI UPSILON CHI BETA . ETA KAPPA. LAMBDA PI IOTA ALPHA Al.PHA OMICRON EPSI[,ON RHo TAU Mu Nu BETA PHI PHI Car PSI PHI GAMMA PHI PSI OMEGA BETA CHI . DEl.TA CHI . PaiGAMMA GAMMA HE:TA THETA ZETA Al.PHA CHI. PHI EPSILON SIGMA TAU DEl.TA DELTA AI:,PBA PHI. TAU LAMBDA DE:l.TA KAPPA TAU Al.PHA

    FOUNDED IN I844 AT YALE UNIVERSITY

    Roll of bapttrs 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 TTniversity 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 . De Pauw University Wesleyan University Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute Adelbert College Cornell University Syracuse University Columbia .Gollege 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

    68

    1844 1844 1845 1846 1847 1847 I85o r85o 1851 1852 r852 1852 1853 I853 1854 I855 1855 rSss r8s6 r8s6 r8s6 r8s6 I86r I866 r867 1867 r868 1ts70 1871 1874 1876 1879 1889 r8go 1893 1898 1898 1899 1900 ~

  • Jllpba bi bapttr

    Honorary mtmbtr GEN. JOHN P. HARBISON

    JfctiVt mtmbtrs HARRY BEEBE ALTEMUS

    WILLIAM PERRY BENTLEY

    EDGAR JOHNSON DIBBLE

    JoHN DAULBY EvANS

    FRANK HALSEY Foss

    ARTHUR GEORGE HUMPHRIES

    EDWARD HUGH MADDOX

    RoBERT CAREY McKEAN

    HUGH DEMPSTER WILSON, }R.

    6g

  • Cb~ onn~cticut Jllumni Jlssociation of tb~ Ddta Rappa Epsilon rrat~rnity

    CoL. jACOB L. GREENE, Michigan, '61 CHARLES P. COOLEY, Yale, '91

    omens

    mtmbtrs

    Presidettt Secretary and Treasurer

    The four hundred and fifty Alumni of the Fraternity in the State of Connecticut.

    Alden, H. W., M. I. T., '93 Ayres, W. A., Yale, '64 Bacon, Dr. W. T., Yale, '68 Baldwm, H. S., M. I. T., '96 Beardsley, E. R., Yale, '79 Calkins, F. H., C. C. N.Y., 'So Camp, J. S., Wesleyan, '78 Case, Hon. VI/. C., Yale, '57 Clark, C. H., Yale, '71 Collins, A., Yale, '73 Conant, G. A., Amherst, '71:! Cone, J. B., Yale, '57 Cooley, C. P., Yale, ' 91 Cooley, F. R., Yale, '86 Day, A. P., Yale, '90 Davis, F. W., Yale, '77 Forrest, C. R., Yale , '65 Freeman , H. B., Yale, '62 Freeman, H. B., Jr., Yale, '92 Graves,]. A., Yale, '72 Goddard, G. S., Wesleyan, '91 Greene, J. L., Michigan, '61

    'fratru in Urbt Howe, D. R., Yale, '74 Hyde, F. E., Yale, '79 Hyde, W. W., Yale, '76 Ingalls, Dr. P. H., Bowdoin, '77 Matson, W. L., Yale, '62 Parker, Rev. E. P., Bowdoin, '56 Pattison, Rev. Harold, Rochester, '92 Porter, J. A., Yale, '78 Pratt, W. W., Adelbert, '85 Prentice, Hon. S. 0., Yale, '73 Robbins, E. D., Yale, '74 Ryce, L. C., Yale, S., '86 Smiley, E. H., Colby, '75 Starr, Dr. P. S., Yale , '6o St. John, \1./ . H., Yale) ' gr Taylor, J. M., Williams, '67 Tucker, J.D., Yale, '61 Utley, G. B., Brown, '99 \1./ay, C. L., Yale, '85 \Velch, A. A. , Yale, '82 \Villiams, Rev. H. D., Amherst, '91 Woodman, Charles, Colby, '98

  • Anderson, Alexander Hopkins, 'S7 Barrows, John Chester, 'So Barrows, William Stanley, 'S4 Bartholomew, Dana Wightman, '97 Baxter, Irving Knott, ' 99 Bales, Robert Peck, '93 Benson, Reuel Allan, '99 Benton, William Lane Hall, 'S9

    *Bidwell, Lawson Brewer , '8o *Bidwell, Walter DaYison , '8r

    Birdsall, Paul, 'S6 *Bishop, Nelson Howard, '92

    Black, Harry Campbell, 'So Bowie, \Villiam, '93 Brewer, Seabury Doane , '82 Brooks, Rcelif Hasbrouck, 'oo Brown, George Israel, 'S8 Brown, Thomas Prosser, 'oo Brown, Duncan Hodge, '03 Burchard, John Dixon, 'oo Burnham, John Bird, '9 1 Burt, Luther Harold, 'oo Burton, Richard Eugene, '83 Cable, Julius "athaniel, '02 Cartwright, Morgan Rouse , '98 Case, Theodore Grafton , 'oo Chapman, Thomas Bion, 'S3 Cole, Marc Wheeler, '97

    *Cook, Charles Smith, '81 Coster, Martyn K erfoot , '87 Coster, \Villiam Hooper, '91 Coster, Charles Calvert, '97 Cowles, Arthur \Voodruff , 'Sr Crabtree, Albert, '92 Danker, \Valton Stoutenburg, '97

    * Dauchey, Nathan Follin, 'Ss Davis, Cameron Josiah , '94 Deuel, Charles Ephraim, '87 Eastman, Roger Charles, '88 Fleming, David Law, 'So Forrester, Henry Townes, 'or French, George Herbert, '92

    * Goodrich, William Sloo, '82 Graff, Henry Addison. '86 Grint, Alfred Poole. '8r Griswold, Clifford Standish, 'go Hall, Gordon, '92 Hamilton, Charles Anderson, 'S2 Hammond, Otis Grant, '92 Holden, Seaver Milton , '82 Hopkins. Louis Albert, '97 Horne, Charles Albert, '93 Hubbard, William Stimpson , '88 Humphries, Harry Richard, '94

    Deceased

    71

    Jewett, David Baldwin, 'oo Johnson, Charles Amos, '92 Johnson, Edwin Comstock, 2d, 'SS Johnson, Frederick Foote, '94 Leaf, Edward Bowman , 'S '\ Lecour, Joseph Henry, '9S Leonard, Loyal Lovejoy, '96 Linsley, Arthur Beach, 'S2 Loomis, Hiram Benjamin , 'S5 Lord, James Watson, '9S Loveridge, Henry Clarence, 'So Lund , Frederick Albert, '99 Mead, Ralph Cutler, '99 Mitchell, Samuel Smith, 'S5 McCulloch, William Hugh, '91 McLean, Malcolm Appleton, '03

    *McNeil, William John, 'or Olcott, William Tyler, '96 Pedersen, Victor Cox, '91 Penrose, John Jesse . Jr., '95 Plimpton, Howard Daniel, '97 Pnrdy. Charles Edward, 'SS Ramsdell , Julian Elroy, '92 Reese, \Vard Winters, '95 Reiland, Carl George, '97 Reineman, Adolph William, 'Sr Reineman, Robert Theodore, 'S3 Remington, Charles Hautrd, 'S9 Rogers , Wellington James, 'So Smart, John Harrow, '95 Smith, Joseph Sewall, Jr., '94

    * Smith, Oliver Alcott. 'Q4 Stockton, Elias Boudinot, '91 Stoddard, Solomon. '94 Strong, A !bert William , '94 Strong, Charles H e nry, 'or Stuart, Albert Rhett, Jr., 'SS Stuart. William Clarkson, 'SS Thurston, Theodore Payne , '91 Tomlinson , Simon Lewis, 'oo Walker, William Dundas, 'S2 Warner, William Alfred, '99 Waters, Charles Thomas, 'S7 \Veed, Arthur H enry, '02 Weed, Charles Frederick, '94 Wharton, \Villiam Parker, 'or \Vheeler, Francis Melville, 'S:. Wildman , \Valter Beardslee, 'gS Willcox, Reginald Norton, '99 Williams, Francis Goodwin, '89 Wright. Arthur Henry, 'S3 Wright, Boardman, 'S9 \Vright, George Herman. '91 Wright, William George. '91 Wright, Frederick Amaziah, '94

  • Cbt rrattrnity of Psi Upsilon FO UNDED IN I 833 AT UNION COLLEGE

    Roll of bapttrs

    THETA Union College DELTA New York University BETA Yale University SIGMA Brown University GAMMA Amherst College ZETA Dartmouth College LAMBDA Columbia College KAPPA Bowdoin College PSI Hamilton College XI . Wesleyan University UPSILON University of Rochester IOTA Kenyon College PHI University of Michigan PI Syracuse University CHI Cornell University BETA BETA Trinity College ETA Lehigh University TAu University of Pennsylvania Mu University of Minnesota RHO University of Wisconsin OMEGA University of Chicago

    72

  • (bt Btta Btta baJ)ttr

    Jl~tl~~ m~mbtrs ARTHUR MUIRSON BELLAMY

    ROBERT BAYARD BELLAl\IY

    MORGAN HYDE BuFFINGTON

    HENR\ BERNARD CARPENTER

    R EGINALD FISKE

    J Al\IES PHILIP GARVIN

    HARRY CLIFFORD GOLDEN

    EDWARD BRUCE GooDRICH

    EDWARD GooDRIDGE, JR.

    JARVIS McALPINE JoHNSON

    WILLIAlll LARCHAR , JR.

    ANSON THEODORE 'IcCOOK

    HERBERT ROBINSON MCILVAINE

    EDMUND SAWYER MERRIAM

    SAMUEL ST. JoHN MoRGAN

    ABNER PACKARD

    GEORGE DouGLAS RANKIN

    HAROLD HuNTINGTON RuDD

    JosEPH PEllfBER'rON wELLES TAYLOR

    HERMAN EDWARD TowNSEr D

    "WALTER SLATER TR l\1BULL

    ARTHUR REGINALD VAN DE WATER

    FRANCIS ELy wATERMAN

    WILLIAM HARDIN WHEELER

    74

  • fratrs in Urb

    James P. Andrews, Beta, '77 Rt. Rev .. Chauncey B. Brewster, Beta, '68 John H. Buck, Beta, 'gt Hon. John R. Buck, Xi, '62 Clarendon C. Bulkely, Beta Beta, '75 Philip D. Bunce, M.D., Beta, '88 Charles W. Burpee, Beta, '83 E. W. Capen, Gamma, '94 WilliamS. Case, Beta, '85 Albert St. Clair Cook, Beta, '89 William H. Corbin, Beta, '89 G. Pierrepont Davis, M.D., Beta, '66 J. H. Kelso Davis, Beta Beta, '99 John C. Day, Beta, '57

    Louis~. Denniston, Xi, ' 02 Leonard A. Ellis, Beta Beta, 'g!l Charles E. Fellows, Beta, '56 Re\'. Prof. Henry Ferguson, Beta Beta, '68 Samuel Ferguson, Beta Beta, '96 George H. Gilman, Beta, '9;) T . Welles Goodridge, Beta Beta, '92 Wilbur F. Gordy, Xi, '70 Hon. Wm. Hamersley, LL.D., Beta Beta, '58 Hon. Joseph R. Hawley, LL.D., Psi, '47 R. W. Huntington, Beta, '!lg Prof. Charles F. Johnson, Beta, '55

    75

    Frank E. Johnson, Beta Beta, '84 Prof. A. R. Merriam, Beta, '77 Charles Shiras Morris, Beta Beta, '96 John J. Nairn, Beta, 'So Francis Parsons, Beta, '93 Arthur Perkins, Beta, '87 Edward L. Pollock, Beta, '84 Henry Roberts, Beta, '77 HenryS. Robinson, Beta, '89 John T. Robinson, Beta , '93 Lucius F. Robinson, Beta, '85 Edward W. Robinson, Beta Beta, '96 E. F. Sanderson, Gamma, '96 George H. Seyms, Beta Beta, '72 Henry P. Schauffler, Gamma, '93 Forrest Shepherd, Beta, '92 Arthur L. Shipman, Beta, '~6 Lewis E. Stanton, Beta, '55 James U. Taintor, Beta, '66 Franklin H. Taylor, Pi, '84 James R. Turnbull, Beta, '92 Re\. Joseph H. Twichell, Beta , '59 Edgar F. Waterman, Beta Beta, 'gS Lewis S. \Velch, Beta, '89 Charles G. Woodward, Beta Beta, '98 P. Henry Woodward, Beta, '55

  • tiraduat~ m~mb~rs of tb~ B~ta B~ta bapt~r ~

    *Alexander, H. W., '57 Bull, F. S., '9r Backus, B. E., '70 Bull, W. A., '9[ Bailey, M. K., '79 *Bull, A. B., '59 Baldwin, L. B., '6o Burgwin, G. C., '72 Barbour, H. M., ' 70 Burgwin, J. H. K., '77

    * Barbour, H. G., '96 Burgwin, A. P., '82 Beardsley, W. A., '87 Burke, E. N., ' 79

    * Beaupillier, A. L., '56 Burrage, F. S., '95 *Beckwith, J. W., '52 *Cady, D. K., '55 * Benedict, S., '47 Cammann, D. M., '72

    Benjamin, W. H., '57 Campbell, R. M., '78 * Betts, J. H., '44 Carpenter, C., '8 2

    Birckhead, J. B., '94 Carpenter, S. B., '73 * Birckhead, W. H ., '61 Carter, H. S., '69 * Bishop, H., '6r Chase, H. R., '72

    Blair, W. R., '75 Child, C. G., '86 Bolles, E. C., '55 Child, E. N., Jr., '85

    * Bostwick, H. P., '46 * Clark, G., '70 *Bostwick, W. L., '5I *Clerc, C. M., 45

    Bowdish, J. T., '73 Clerc, F. J., '43 Bowles,J. H., '6o Coggeshall, M. H., '96 Boylston, C. W., '78 Coleman, C. S., '82 Brady, R. McC., '90 * Collins, J. B. J ., '74 Bredin, W. S., 'So *Colt, W. U., '44 Brevoort, E. R., '68 Cook, S. W., 'o2

    *Brewer, A. L., '53 Corson, D. S., '99 * Bridge, J., '47 Cotto11, D. P., '7I

    Brinley, G. M., '88 Cotton, H. E., '74 Brinton, P. H . M.P., '04 Craik, C. E., '74 Bronson, M., '52 Crawford, J. W. R., '88 Broughton, C. DuB., 'y5 * Crosby, W. L., 'So

    * Brown, T. M., '5o Cummins, A. G., '5I Brown, J. E., '83 Cunningham, J. R ., '85 Brundage, R. B., '78 * Dashiell, E. F., '46 Buffington, J., '75 Davis, J. H. K., '99 Buffington, 0., '79 *Dayton, M. B., '63 Bulkeley, E. B., '90 * Dewey, D.P., 64 Bulkley, C. C., ' 75 Dickerson, E. N., Jr., 'H Bulkley, W. H. , '73 Dockray, E. L., '83

    76

  • Douglas, G. W., '7! Douglas, A. E., '1:!9

    *Douglas, M., '46 Downes, L. W., 'SS Drayton, W., '7 1 Drumm, T. J., '74

    * DuBois, J. C., '53 *Easton, G. C., '51

    Edgerton, F. C., '94 Edgerton , J. W ., '94 Edmunds, C. C., Jr., '77 Ellis, L. A., '98 Elmer, W. T. , 'Sr Elwyn, T. L. , '92

    *Ely, J. F., '64 Emery, R., '51 Emery, W. S., 'Sr Everest, C. S., '7 I Ferguson, E. M., '59 Ferguson, H., '6S

    *Ferguson, J. D., '51 *Ferguson, S., '57

    Ferguson W., '63 Ferguson, W., Jr., '93 Ferguson, S., '96 Fiske, D. W , 'oo Fiske, G. McC., '7o

    *Flower, Samuel, '45 *Fogg, T. B., '52

    Fowler, F. H., '6r French, G. A., '89 French, L. , '53 Frye, P. H. , '1:!9 Gage, A. K., '96 Gage, W. H., '96 Gallaudet, E. M., '56 Gardiner, E. R., '56 George,J. F., '77 George, J. H., '72 George, T. M. N., 'So Giesy, S. H. , '85

    *Gilman, G. S., '47 Golden, H. L., 'S3

    *Goodrich, A. B., '52 Goodrich,]. B., '66 Goodridge, E., '6o

    *Goodridge, F., '57 Goodridge, T. W., '92

    77

    Gould, C. Z., 'S2 *Greene, F. H., 'S2

    Greene, G., '83 Green, H. D., '99

    *Green, V., '6o Greenley, H. T., '94 Gregory, H. M., '56 Gwinn, F. W., '72

    * Hall, S., '54 Hamersley, W., '5S

    * Harriman, F. D., '45 Harriman, F. W., '72

    * Hart, G., '70 Hart, S., '6o Hartley, G. D., '93 Hayden, C. C., '66

    * Hermann, S., '57 * Hewitt, S. G., '77

    H