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Page 20 text:
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Page 19 text:
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, .Y.-m.--..-,.- ......-,, afar-. ..--.,. .- .. ,. ' H rg, - 1 I .f g . .. - f X, -, 1 ., N .X , X 3 , , ,.--x 1 ' ' B. ,. 1 H f. R K I , f ' ' ff J V I 1 1 1 . - as . 1 if I 4 I j ., 1 . , 1. 1. x, 3-rj ' l l l I l ' ik ll J , I f, 2 1 1 , 1 f i 1 Hi: ' ,g T I 15 ' ' 1 1-' 1? ld' 1' W ln ,Vff f ll if l 1 lfl-.4:giZ.I::.L.-.1.g4 i 'g.g:1 1L:..i',g.:.g4ig.l.1g11.14.. ,....,g,- ,.,, gILggM41,L,g:,Q'! U1 Xl-Lg, X'Q,.,if'! 1 'I Txl-ll l,,.1j,V, l Mr. Culver, who was beyond all things a hustler, did not let this disturb him from carrying out his plans, and hardly had the embers of the destroyed structure ceased to glow when plans were started for the erection of a large and fireproof building, which is the present Main Barracks. The corner stone was laid on the 16th of May, 1895, and the school reopened with thirty-two cadets the following fall. In September, 1896, on the destruction by fire of the Missouri Military Academy of Nlexico, Mo., Mr. Culver made a generous proposition to its superintendent, Col. A. F. Fleet, to unite the two schools at Culver. This was accepted, and on October 5, 1896, the seventy-two Missouri Military Academy boys and their teachers came to Culver. Colonel Fleet was put in command of the one hundred Cadets. From this time on began the consistent policy of development which has continued to the present day. In the january, following the arrival of Col. Fleet, Col. Gignilliat joined the faculty as Commandant, having graduated but a short time before from the Virginia Military Institute. V Maj. G-ignilliat, as he was then called, imbued the cadets from the very start with that same spirit of exactness and precision which he had become accustomed to at the V. M. I. and which has remained until the present day. Soon the school began to be looked up t more than through local sources, and it was not long before it was ranked amogyg the honor schools by the War Department. . One building after aiiother went up in rapid succession, the East coming first, then the West, the South in 1904 and so on until as everyone knows it contains now an equipment which is unrivalled by that of any f'Prep. school in the world. In the fall of 1910 Colonel Fleet retired from the active duties of superintending the Institution, and was succeeded by Col. L. R. Gignilliat. The place as Com- mandant of Cadets was filled by Maj. B. H. Greiner and that of Head Master by Nlajor. I-I. G. Glascock. A In the year IQO2 a Summer Naval School was started just as an experiment and eighteen boys were enrolled for the first year. Although the attendance was very small they all seemed to have a very enjoyable time, indeed, for the following summer the school opened with double the number of Middies. The Naval Department proved so successful that several years later a cavalry school was started. This also met with equal success until last year's summer schools CNavy, Cavalry and Woodcraftl had a total of 916 members. ' - The growth of the winter Battalion has been equally wonderful and it is only the lack of sleeping quarters that has kept the enrollment down to five hundred. Culver has always from the very first stood for the highest and best 1 h things in life. She has become ' A known all over the world not only 1 through her Military prowess but on account of the high standards which she maintains. The school is no longer a thing of the state but a thing of the Nation i and she will prove herself full worthy of her reputation in the great inter- , national crisis, which now threatens A GLIMPSE or THE oLD LAGOON N I V 2 5 f C 5 Q . R. ' 1 l. T E 5 i 1, if V if Q Q9 F1 , , . 1 V, 3' F 5 1 .v Our safety. FROM THE MAIN BARRACKS, 1896 I 1, Nine - 1 lsr
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