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Page 16 text:
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14151936 BARNARD BgRggIC 71st Regiment. He afterwards be- came First Lieutenant, and then later as Captain he led his Com- pany through the Santiago Cam- paign of the Spanish American War in 1898. Upon his return he was presented with a testimonial sword at a gathering of friends and patrons of the school. In his pre- sentation speech, Hon. Seth Low, President of Columbia University, reminded Captain Hazen that in volunteering in the service of his country as he did, he could not have taught American youth a finer lesson in good citizenship. During his course at Columbia College and Columbia Iaw School, lie spent the long summer vacations with the Central Railroad of New jersey, one summer as ticket agent at the Broad Street Station in Newark, the second summer in handling baggage at the foot of Liberty St., New York, and the other summers in the offices of the General Passenger Agent. The job seemed to be waiting for him each summer and all the time he was learning the railroad business. After graduating from College in 1883, he had become interested in a small school for boys in Harlem, the Harlem Collegiate Institute, and had devoted the morning hours to teaching for three years. As of 1886 your correspondent, after examining the contents of the old trunk and after peering deeply into the crystal, would have found it rather difficult to determine just what William Livingston Hazen was going to do as a life work. The grocery business he had definitely put aside. Was it to be Railroad Business, Teaching or the Law? While he was making final arrangements to begin the practice of law the question was actually settled by the parents of the boys whom he had been teaching for the past three years. They felt that his real held was Education. They urged him to continue and he consented. So in 1886 the Barnard School was established by him at 117 and 119 West 125th St., New York. It started off with the blessing of Dr. Fredk. A. P. Barnard at that time President of Columbia College by genercusly allowing the use of his name as the name of the school. Since then he has devoted all this thought and energy to the enterprise along with its affiliates, the Girls School and the two summer camps. The story of Barnard is in part tl'e loyalty, zeal and friendship of alumni patrons and students, along with teachers and associates. But chiefly is it the figure, boy and man, of William Livingston Hazen and his humane contribution to the gentlemanly, virile training cf those wlio have sat at his feet these fifty years. At the Columbia Commencement in 1933 he was honored by his Alma Mater with the award of its Service Medal, his citation reading William Livingston
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Page 15 text:
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Tl-lEl936BARNARDl3RlC -LIQXKQ, afternoons in the grocery business, At the end of the four years he was ranked among the first of ltis class entitling him to the Phi Beta Kappa Key. In the trunk we nnd the original manuscript in his own hand of The Development of the Monroe Doctrine, the subject assigned to the Senior Class in 1883 in the competition for the Chanler Historical Prize. We also find in the trunk a faded envelope which had been pre- sented to him at the Columbia Commencement in 1883 from the hands of Dr. Ii. A, P, Barnard, containing the prize in the form of a check for 360, on which was written I gave the money to my father to lielp along the grocery business, It needed it badly. In 1885 he entered the Columbia Law School attending the afternoon session. Before graduating in 1885 he had been admitted to the New York State Bar, having served his clerkship in tlie law offices of Judge liullerton, 18 Exchange Place, New York City. The next five years in the life of Wm. I.. Hazen must have been busy ones as evidenced by the programs, medals, badges and newspaper clippings that we find in this old trunk we have spoken aliout. He had joined the Fraternity of Phi Gamma Delta while in college and during this period of five years he had bcccme lfdifor-in-Chief of the fraternity paper, the Phi Gamma Delta Quarterly, and also National President of the Iiraternity. For fifty years he has kept in close touch with the E Columbia Chapter and as a result in close touch with Columbia affairs. In connection with his law studies and with the expectation of prac- ticing law he had become interested in politics in Newark. We find in the old trunk a badge marked President of the Iiirst Presidential Voters, 1884.8 From a newspaper clipping we find that Wm. I.. Hazen as President of the club had escorted Theodore Roosevelt from New York and had introduced him as the principal speaker in one of the mass meetings the Ifirst Presi- dential Voters gave in the Blaine Campaign. We also find a badge marked 1'Secretary of the New jersey Republican League, 1888. Wm. L. Hazen as Secrctary had been instrumental in forming tlte league covering the whole state and in arranging for a bis! Convention at Asbury Park in the I-Iarrison Campaign of 1888. In 1884 he joined the Seventh Regiment of New York and after serving his time of enlistment re- ceived a commission as second lieutenant in Company B of the
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Page 17 text:
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Tl-lEl936BARNARDBRIC ee 'fir' f 4 - eewafaeee elee fi Hazen, '83 C, '85 L, member of that class which now celebrates its fiftieth anniversary and who has been for that entire half century Head of the Barnard School for Boys, the relation between which and Columbia has been close and fortunate. Manhattan College in the same year recognized his achievements with the award of LL.D. The citation read The degree of Doctor of Laws is conferred upon a distinguished graduate of Columbia University, a man who for fifty years in the educa- tional field has wielded a wonderful influence for good, and has endeared himself through the successful administration of the Barnard Schcol for Boys. And now your correspondent wishes to say that the little trunk has yielded its cherished clippings and pamphlets. Many spaces have been left to be filled only with the assistance of one who has guided and inspired Barnard men, Dr. Wm. Livingston Hazen. Dr. Hazen's Grandchildren, Betsy, Meredith, and Billy.
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