High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 28 text:
“
14 THE ASHBLTRI.-IN better. your confidence in his wise judgment. his executive ability, and his real interest in the true welfare of boys will grow and increase. Mr. Wright is well qualified for the important position he is about to occupy. He has been at Ash- bury for fourteen years and is thoroughly conversant with those of its traditions and methods of administration that have in the past contributed to its success. I-Ie is a man of deep varied Scholarship. By the marked success which his pupils have attained he has proved himself to be an experienced and most capable Teacher, and. added to these qualifications. he takes a keen interest in all the various Sports that are associated with School life. But above and beyond all these accomplishments. Mr. Wright is a man who understands boy-nature, and he will. I know. give himself unsparingly to the bringing out of what is best in those under his care and to the promotion of their true interests. whether physi- cal or mental. I look forward. therefore, with every confidence to the continued success and growth of Ashbury. As long as I live it will be my chief concern in life. and I shall follow its various activities and successes with the keenest interest. A good solid foundation has been laid, upon which I pray there will continue to be built an Institution that more and more will prove a lasting benefit, not only to each pupil who comes under its influence. but also to the Dominion of Canada at large. My parting words to all connected with Ashbury. whether as past or as present pupils are Be loyal to yoursSchool: Play the game in the fullest sense of the term and do your best to advance its true interests. To those boys who have finished their course here and are about to go out into the larger world that lies beyond the confines of School life. I wish every possible prosperity in their various futures. and to those who are remain- ing I extend my sincere and best wishes for a happy and really successful School career: and. when your time comes to leave your old School, may you so have acted that the School is the better for your having passed through it. God be with you all. . MORE HOWLERS liunyan was the inventor of the Nonconforniist religion, and also wrote the l'ilgrini's Chorus. The inflzinnnaliility of the Pope was proclziimecl in the Vatican llc-crc-es. .-Xccounts of tlii- lfcurlal Systc-in: XYilliam the Conqueror was thrown troni his liorsc :incl wounclecl in tlic fcuclal system, and fliml ot it. Flirt- iniprisonc-rl 146 nic-n in the Black Hole of Calcutta, and so lriifl the founrlzition ot our lnflian limpirc. 'l'lit- trzuli' of Spain is small owing In the insolence of the lat-nlrltq U In Ilollzinfl people inzilct- use of writer power to clrivc their ximfl-mills.
”
Page 27 text:
“
THE .-ISHBCRIAN 13 Mr. G. E. Fauquier was unanimously elected as Chairman of the Board of Governors and President of Ashbury. Ashbury is indeed fortunate in having a Board composed of such promin- ent and influential persons. and I should like to publicly thank them all for the keen interest they take in the general welfare of the School and for the sound advice and generous assistance they have given me in its administration. I would like to express the sincere appreciation of myself and of the Board of Governors for the great and practical kindness during many years of Ashbury's past history of Mr. J. B. Fraser. Had it not been for Mr. Fraser's most generous assistance these present School buildings could not have been built: and not only in the original construction of its buildings, but in many another practi- cal manner. Mr. Fraser has proved himself a very real supporter and a true friend of Ashbury College. I should like also to say how much we owe to the generosity of Mrs. W. H. Rowley, the late Colonel J. XV. Woods and to all the many other sup- porters. who from time to time since the foundation of the School have so generously helped us both financially and in many other ways. I want to take this opportunity of stating how much the School and I myself personally owe to my wife. who has been a tower of strength to me dur- ing the last thirty-three years. For nearly twenty years she acted as honorary Housekeeper and managed with great efficiency the domestic side of the School. -and her always wise counsel and her unseliish devotion to the interests of the boys have contributed in no small measure to the success that Ashbury has attained. As is generally known, this is the last Closing at which I shall have the privilege of being with you as Headmaster. It is now almost forty-two years since I founded the School. which is therefore in a very special sense my child . I have watched it grow. often- times amid great difficulties. from a very small beginning into the important Educational Institution that it is to-day. Hundreds of boys have passed through my hands. and I am thankful and proud to state that the very great majority of them have developed into good and useful citizens of our Empire. This fact alone is more than a compensation for the many years I have devoted to my work. As I look back over the past. I am only too conscious that I have made many a mistake and in the words so well known to us I have left undone the things that I ought to have done . but I can honestly say that I have tried to help and to develop along right lines every boy whom I have been privileged to have in my care: and I think I can venture to say that in the great majority of cases the boys themselves have realized and appreciated my efforts for their wel- fare. It is necessarily a great and severe wrench for me to relinquish my post here and to say good-bye to Ashbury, but I have decided that it is best for me to do so. As you know. I had a very serious illness last XVinter. and my Medi- cal Advisers have strongly urged me to lead a life that does not carry with it the constant and heavy responsibilities that are necessarily attached to the work of a Headmaster of a Resident School. I expect in the near future to take up Parish work either in England or in Canada. Vfherever I may be. Ashbury will always have the first place in my affections. It is. however. a great consolation and comfort for me to know that I am leaving my work to be continued by one in whom l have every possible con- fidence. and who will. I feel sure. administer the affairs of the School in an able and successful manner. The new Headmaster. Mr. XVright. is known to most of you. if not personally. at any rate by reputation: and. as you get to know him
”
Page 29 text:
“
THE .JSHBCRIAX 15 During the XYar of American Independence Lord Northcliffe wisely gave the Irish Volunteers Home Rule. Queen Elizabeth rode through Coventry with nothing on. and Raleigh offered her his cloak. Doldrums are Army rations of spirits. The population of London is a bit too thick. Lipton is the capital of Ceylon. Shakespeare wrote the Merry XYidow. -loan of Arc was cannonised by Bernard Shaw. The Minister of Har is the clergyman who preaches to the soldiers in the barracks. Esau was a mighty hunter who wrote fables and sold them for a bottle of potash. An Abstract Noun is the name of something which has no existence. as goodness. Marconi is the stuff out of which you make delicious puddings. A glazier is a man who runs down mountains. A grass widow is the wife of a dead vegetarian. Sub judice is the bench on which the judges sit. Quinine is the bark of a tree. canine is the bark of a dog. A damsel is a small plum. t An optimist is a man who looks after your eyes and a pessimist a man who looks after your feet. A synonym is a word used when you don't know how to spell the one you First thought of. Livingstone went to Africa to be a misery to thc natives. 'Habeas Corpus' was a sign used at the time of the llreat Plague and means 'You may have the bodyf
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.