Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA)

 - Class of 1902

Page 11 of 240

 

Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 11 of 240
Page 11 of 240



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Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 12
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Page 11 text:

HON. ALILXANDER HAMILTON. ' ON. Alexander Hamilton, president of the Board of Visitors of the Virginia Military Institute, was born in Granville Count} ' , North Carolina, March iSth, 1851. His grandfather, Patrick Hamilton, emigrated to this countrj ' from Scot- land about the year 18 10. A man of great means and ability, and a Scotsman, with those qualities of perseverance, courage and personal integrity which have ever characterized his race, he readily acquired a position of prominence and influence in the land of his adoption. Robert Alston Hamilton, the son, inherited his father ' s ability and personal qualities and rose to even greater prominence in his native .state. He, in early life, married Miss Sarah Caroline Alexander, of Mecklenburg County, ' irginia. The second son of this union, Alexander Hamilton, the subject of this sketch, unites therefo re the maternal and paternal names. Alexander Hamilton was three years of age when his father moved from Granville County to Raleigh to accept the presidency of the Raleigh and Gaston Railroad Company. After two or three years of successful administration Mr. Hamilton resigned and moved to Petersburg, Va. Here the family has since resided, and here the primary education of its .sons was conducted. In October, 1864, Petersburg being in a state of siege, Alexander was sent to the Belmont School in North Carolina, Mr. Ralph Graves, principal. Here he remained for several years prosecuting the academic courses which in later j ' ears formed the foundation on which his collegiate instruction was based. Returning to Peters- burg after the close of hostilities he spent one j ear at the Universitj- School, W. Gordon McCabe, head-master. In September, 1868, Mr. Hamilton enlisted at the ' V ' irginia Military Insti- tute, entering the third cla.ss. In July following, he was made second sergeant of D company and further promoted in the middle of his second class year to sergeant-major. In July, 1870, he was made adjutant of the corps, an ofSce

Page 12 text:

he continued to hold until graduated in July, 1871. These promotions were unusually rapid and would, under any conditions, constitute a high testimonial to the character and worth of the recipient. In Mr. Hamilton ' s case the testi- monial was unusually high. He was a member of the largest class that ever entered the Institute and a member of the largest corps in its history. In this corps were men who had served through years of the Civil War, and some who had been officers in the armies of the South, yet from so large a number, the majority of whom were his seniors, Mr. Hamilton, a third class plebe just nine- teen j-ears of age, was selected by his superior officers to fill one of the most important and honorable positions within the reach of the cadet. To be adjutant and command the corps of cadets on parade occasions is ever a laudable ambition of the 5 ' oung cadet. To have been adjutant and to have commanded such a corps as that of ' yo- ' yi, ought to be, and doubtless is, one of the cherished recollec- tions of the subject of this sketch. Mr. Hamilton ' s academic record is no less felicitous. While maintaining a creditable standing in all the departments of .study that formed the strict curri- culum of his day it was in the classical, philosophical and literary branches that he excelled. In Latin, Moral Philosophy and English Literature he stood first in a class that eventualh ' graduated forty-five of its members. Immediatelj ' after graduation in the summer of 1871 on the joint recom- mendation of Colonel J. T. L. Preston, Professor of Latin, and Colonel ( now General ) Scott Shipp, Commandant of Cadets, he was appointed assistant pro- fessor of Latin and Tactics. At this time he was just twentj ' years of age. For two years he held this position, discharging his duties with credit to himself and to the entire satisfaction of the governing authorities of the school. In 1872, whilst discharging his duties as assistant professor, he entered the law school of Washington and Lee University, presided over at that time by Judge John A ' . Brockenbrough and the Hon. John Randolph Tuckir. He successfully accomplished the entire course of study in one j-ear. The writer has often heard Mr. Tucker speak of Mr. Hamilton ' s success as a student of the law, and of the generous emulation for the highest distinction in the class that existed between C. A. Graves, now a distinguished professor of law in the University of Mrginia, and himself. Both have since been eminently successful in their specialties — Professor Graves as a teacher and expounder of legal theories — Mr. Hamilton as a general practicioner and legal adviser. In the line of his profession Mr. Hamilton ' s career has been one of contin- uous advance. After one year ' s practice in Richmond, A ' irginia, he returned to Petersburg, his old home, and formed a partnership with Alexander Dounan

Suggestions in the Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA) collection:

Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

1899

Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

1900

Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

1901

Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

1903

Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

Virginia Military Institute - Bomb Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905


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