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Page 23 text:
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' orty years of ' T rogress ' ever heard Miss Hopkins tell of students being called home by their parents just before exams because thej were thought to be too difficult for the young ladies, or of alumnje who came for years to the Institute but could never graduate because each year a higher class was added ? It is gratifying to us of today to note that in refusing to lower her standards Agnes Scott has been instrumental in raising the standards of the high schools to conform to her own. Agnes Scott was the first Georgia college to be admitted to the Southern Association of Colleges. The college had no endowment until after the campaign of 1909. The second campaign was held in 1919, and Mr. Orr and Dr. McCain were chiefly responsible for its success. What progress when we note that from the first campaign to the present one we started with no endowment and now seek a million and a half dollars endow- ment! Mr. Orr and Dr. McCain by their whole-hearted interest in the development of Agnes Scott are ably carrying on the trust left them by their predecessors. And in the most ambitious program yet attempted — the third campaign — they are proving their faith in the future of Agnes Scott. No histor ' of the college would be complete without mention of Miss Hopkins, who has served as principal and dean since the Seminary days, and who, remembering the struggles of the typhoid epidemic, or how many times the street-car line has been moved, yet looks forward to the Greater Agnes Scott. The Magna Charta of Agnes Scott has been and still is the Ideal formulated by Dr. Gaines in 1893 as the principle on which the institution was to be founded. Forty years ago this Ideal was conceived as the foundation stone of a great work. Today it is the dominating force under which Agnes Scott moves and has its being. fr '
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Page 22 text:
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' ' orty years of 1?rogress Hopkins as principal and three teachers, a part of White House rented, and five thou- sand dollars subscribed, the Decatur Female Seminary opened with sixty-three pupils, of whom three were boarders. The first years were especially hard, as education for women was viewed with much disfavor in the South at this time. Dr. Gaines, always recognized as the leader, became president of the institution and Col. Scott succeeded him as Chairman of the Board in 1897. Col. Scott, mean- while, had made a gift to the school of the present site and had presented Main Hall fully equipped and ready for occupancy, altogether one of the largest single donations ever made. The name of the school was changed to Agnes Scott Institute, honoring Col. Scott ' s mother, an Irish lady by birth. The Institute in the small suburb of Decatur had a difficult time gaining recognition, and during this trying period Col. Scott aided materially in its survival. The leadership and support of the First Citizen of Atlanta have in great measure made possible the Agnes Scott of today. The Seminary first opened as an elementary and grammar school. Each year after- wards the peculiar process was begun of discontinuing the lowest grade and adding a higher. This was continued until all grammar school work was eliminated and the institution became a college preparatory school. It was during the chairmanship of Mr. Inman that Agnes Scott Institute became Agnes Scott College in 1905.- Prepa- ratory work was continued in the Academy until 19 1 2. Mr. Inman, like Col. Scott, was verv generous and far-sighted and it was due to his influence that the campus was greath ' enlarged by the erection of several new dormitories. There was always a constant struggle on to maintain the high standard of the school when by so doing the chief source of funds was being cut off, for the students were not prepared for the work and very few were even interested in it. Have you f m I
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