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Page 16 text:
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I ...A- '+Tdl..! - was that the blank he filled in with the name Tryon University. Reverend Tryon in- sisted that it be called after the eminent scholar, Judge Baylor. Each of these men was seeking to get the school named for the other. lor each declared that he it as not worthy of the honor. The controversy of avoiding honor was prolonged until it was agreed by the Board to name the school Baylor University, until some definite settlement could be reached. The definite settlement was never made and Reverend Tryon was all the more pleased. Though the school was not named for him, it will not detract from his fame as one of the pioneer educators of Texas. The Charter was applied lor and issued by the llepublic of Texas, February first, 1845. Ltater in the year. the ltepublic became a state, and it is interesting to note that the year saw the birth of this powerful state, likewise saw the creation ot a university whose influence has spread further than even the limits of the great state. Independence made the largest subscription oiler and this together with the tact that it was already an intellectual center, determined its choice as the location. The following are some ot' the subscription otlers and tell their own story of how anxious the citizens were to be near an educatiolial insti- intien. one bale of cotton: one con and calf: one section ol lziutl, one yoke of oxen: twenty days' hauling. ur Henry L. Graves, a graduate of the University oi North Carolina, was elected first President of Baylor ttnversity and seried until 1851. Baylor had a modest Uwgllllllllg, when it opened its first session with twenty-four pupils and Professor H. F. Gillette as the only teacher. ine sessions were held in a frame building already on the -. - ground until 1549 when a two-story stone structure was trected. After an efficient Presidency. Ur. Graves resign- - eu in 1551, and the young zealot, llufus C. Burleson was N-1 .t....... - elected President. Dr. Burleson was educated at Nashville University, but when he chose his field for work. the mind of the young scholar turned to Texas, the place of untold possibilities. Alter a day of prayer, he wrote in his diary, This day 1 have solemnly consecrated iuy life to Texas -and it was no idle statement for his later years proved not only his consecration, but even self-sacrifice to the welfare of his chosen state. Hereafter the attendance increased so that a second building in the form of an octagon was added, built from money derived from the sale of the presidents own property. With this addition, there were two chief buildings about one thousand yards apart, one being for the women and the other for the men. lt is said that when the girls' dormitory was finished, the boys carried their benches across a little decline to the new building and thereafter the branch was called the Jordan, After serving as president for ten years at Independence, and getting the insti- tution well on its feet. Dr. Burleson resigned the presidency of the institution and came to Waco, where in 1881, he organized the Waco University. The two Baptist institu- tions represented two different denominational factions, which were to continue in par- tial disharmony in educational lilies until the merging of the Baylor of Independence and Waco University to form the great Baylor L'niversity of Waco in 1886. Succeeding to the presidency at lndependenct was Reverend William Carey Crane, D. D.. L. L. D., who for twenty-two years saw the university prosper and develop. After the death of Dr. Crane, Dr. lleddin Andrews succeeded to the presidents chair and served faithfully until the consolidation in 1886 of the two instistutions to form the present llaylor. When the merger was effected, Dr. Burleson was again made president, which position he held until he retired as President Emeritus , Since then, --.NX several changes have occurred until now bv the labors of AQXRTF 5. x the past and through the nntiring zeal of the present Pres- 5 STY4 ident, Dr. S. P. llrooks, Baylor stands today as an insti- -I 1'Ex4y ,U o QFQQ 1 'en 4'. 4H X 1 x '0 i ,I ..... ,M 7- 'Q' I x fr' ,X ' J K' I -, 9 5 5: , 1 0 I f E'-1 5 Q E ' t Ir rw 1 o A '-'P .- 1 0, 'f 1 Q 9 , K , 1 Kx o 1 u , ,' BT it - i 41' E a ,- 'A '- s M 5 in 0 N i K gb i 'wx-.-s.-+-' t ' 3 o 'c if -. lution of unnieasured power and influence. A comparison of the first catalogue telling of the opening of the Univer- sity with twenty-four students and one teacher, with a oi-v catalogue of today would show an academic and medical sf NY' -B 6' sr is 6 department having together over one thousand students, CL and ovcr fifty teachers. We believe with one of Baylor's own sons, the eminent Dr. George W. Truett: Her past x 1356 furnishes a record that. for daring faith, inspiring example and courageous achievements. can not be excelled if equal led by any other American institution of learning. K Kxxs ,. . ,.. . -, . 0 12 B na fil .1 4 I Q ,I 5 la if lf tt 11 ti IZ ff' J ll if Wifi ts I t t t t t tt.. 9 . I I 3, Pi tl ti' lf 'vt if .L V 'A s . if tg' f it u i
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Page 15 text:
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i v I' ff e.ouNv-UP f? .Ai 4 v. r-?-- --f--f- ' 1 3 E I2 Ii : at J ,U 1 f w -F L1 'J 7 4 I P r 71 I 'l V m '1 I I 1 '1 I r il 'J ,ig J 1 I , I 4 , I I 4 J . 1 li U 0 if x X W -zr'rv.:':.'1.-' or ai' independence
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Page 17 text:
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, I., li 7.- Y rs, LI V4 .ull-51 A, .....l -,--- ...--e -.- w - - if . . , , I ta-te, . . ,t ,W i -A Y NW'U.'?. '- .. t U l .. T .,,..,-,..-.--5, t P-.. NM' 1? ' 4ii 3: -reg, . time -.'-T. -4- .L -'N' s if Q 'tie -- Q... ., --f-e i ,, 1 - ,M , B. 1 1 'V 11 '--' Q -Q. if -' at ,. . s -ffw ff ew . 4. ., M2 . s N- - '1 L,-4-we-.W is 'gifttit :lTtitmQ,i15tllllHW . -A at f .1 .a:4 J 1: azz . -. -Wy sp: .Me -H41 if'-l e 5 . ' v 4 115-Wri '- 1 , -1-ev gg f , 'V -- it .,.Y ' - The Home of the University My little Wahoo maid.-while I sing this serenade, The stars that watch o'er you Heflect a heart that is tender and true Meet me at Proctor Spring, I will have the Wedding ring- My love can not he stayed. Little Wahoo Maid. ..,,,,,.,..,,..,.,u 5. 1 ffj ff ' Y f'ff'- 0 4 f , f n 4 -Evans. N their search for a choice spot on which to place their wigwants, the Hneeo Indians selected the Big Spring on the Brazos River as a favorable situation. lt is said that they had a superstitious veneration for this Spring. believing so long as they drank of its waters that their tribe would tlourish and not become extinct. Now al- though these Indian warriors have all gone to their Happy Hunting Grounds, their landmarks stand here forever as living memories to their keen foresight and selection. First of all. the name of the fearless Indians will never be forgotten, for when the white settlers came to give the Indian village by the Spring on the Brazos a name. they wisely chose the tribal name. Hneco. believing that they who first discovered the charms of the place, were enti- tled to have their name perpetuated. Now the fame of Hueco has spread many leagues. One can hardly speak the name of Waco, tthe original spelling of Hueco J has been Anglisized into Waco J Without memories of the prowess of the aborigines filling one with admiration. The story of Lover's Leap has added charm to the country around the city nestled in the valley of the Brazos and Bosque Rivers, and as such its legend deserves a hear- ing. When the buffalo still roamed over the prairies covered with his own favorite an . ' l 13
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