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 30 text:
“
neccessary rest, the College is always on his mind and heart. This is sufficient of itself, without labored explanation, to account for his success and the success of the College. It may be added that, he has been able to surround himself with a Board of Trustees and Faculty of like mind. It is well to note also, that President King not only considers his work as important as the active Christian Ministry, but a part of the work of the active Christian Ministry. He never admits that he is not in the regular work. And thus in harmony with this idea, he never loses sight of the moral and spiritual welfare of the students under his care. He has always and constantly, both by public appeal and personal approaches, urged upon all, the religion which he has himself enjoyed. Having been himself born into the Methodist church, having been converted at the age of ten years, he has remained true to all the usages, institutions, and doctrines of the church. While not indiffer- ent to any plan of improvement, and keenly alive to whatever presents manifest advantages, he maintains through alla wise conservatism, preferriiig rather to bear the ills we have, than fly to others thatlwe know not of. A ' While never wavering in his attachment to Cornell College, President King has been in active sympathy with the Public Schools and general educational interests of the state. He has been Pres- ident of the State Teachers' Association, and has served for years on its most important committees. In the National Association he is honored with membership in the Educational Council. Thus, although retiring and modest, and unassuming, both in deportment and in character, the labors of PresidentiKing have not been confined exclusively to the College over which he presides. He was first elected to the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1876, and is again a member of that body the present year. Here, as elsewhere he is not one of the most con- spicuous in keeping himself before the public eye, but is always one of the most active, efficient, and successful in practical labors. When he feels called upon to speak, he is listened to with the closest attention and with marked effect, wdaether in the Councils of the Church, or the State. He has been frequently invited to preach or lecture on special occasions, has read papers before various educational and ecclesiastical conventions, and has delivered addresses at a number of differ- ent colleges. These, as well as his Baccalaureate discourses, have been marked by a depth of thought and scholarly finish to which few men attain. He has written not a little for the periodicals of the day, but generally anonymously. He has traveled over nearly all portions of the United States, and is unusually well informedaon the resources of the country and the character of its public men. Contrary to a somewhat prevalent opinion,
”
Page 29 text:
“
BIOGRAPHIES. REV. WILLIAM FLETCHER KING, D. D., LL. D., President of Cornell College, Mount Vernon, Iowa, was born near Zanesville, Ohio, December 2oth, 1830. His parents, James J. King, and Mariam Coffman King, were industrious, intelligent, religious, and, if we may judge by heredi- ty, of remarkable force of character. Both were of old Virginian families, and both lived to an advanced age, the father departing in the eighty-sixth, and the mother in the eighty-eighth year of life. I Dr. King is the oldest of three brothers, all of whom are graduates of the Ohio Wesleyan Uni- versity. His brother, Isaac Fenton King, is a Presiding Elder in the Ohio Conference of the Meth- odist Episcopal Church, and twice a member of the General Conference. His brother, I-ohn Wes- ley King, is a successful lawyer at Zanesville, Ohio. 1 On the completion of his college course, in 1857, W. F. King was elected to a tutorship in the Ohio Wesleyan University. He remained there till 1862. The Faculty with whom he had been associated expressed great appreciation of his usefulness and success as a teacher. f In 1862 he resigned, with the intention of spending some time in European travel and study. Providence had other work for him to do. . He was elected to the Chair of Ancient Languages in Cornell College, Mount Vernon, Iowa, having been recommended for that place by Drs. f afterwards Bishopsj Thompson and Clark. The place ,came uusought, but, after a family consultation, was accepted. Thus he came to Iowa in 1862, and has become a part of the educational history of the state. Near the close of that college year, President Fellows died, leaving a memory still fragrant with the aroma of purity and goodness. Professor King was placed in charge of the College as acting Presi- dent, and entered upon the discharge of that duty in the summer of 1863. In 1865 he was formal- ly elected President of the College, and has remained in that relation to the present. In length of service in the same college he outranks all other Presidents of Methodist Colleges now living in the United. States. To detail the -work of President King in the educational field, would outrun the limits of this paper. It includes over a quarter of a century of toil and care. Even when taking a vacation for
”
Page 31 text:
“
that a man's effecftive pulpit power begins to wane at fifty years of age, it has been remarked by Dr. King's friends that his ability as an effective public speaker, has very materially increased since he has reached the age of fifty years. Thus it may be seen that a great purpose, worthily assumed and unflinchingly followed, is a perennial fountain of mental and moral vigor. In r87o, President King received frpm the Illinois Wesleyan University, the degree of Doctor of Divinity. In 1887 he received from his Alma Mater, the Ohio Wesleyan University the degree of Doctor of Laws. The latter degree was also conferred at the same time by the State University of Iowa. t While Dr. King has thus been honored, both at home and abroad, it is worthy not only of in- cidental mention, but of constant iteration, that he has never used his position as a vantage ground to bring any promotion or honor to himself. He has not looked beyond his allotted duties in anti- cipation of reaching any higher place. Doubtless he has wisely thought that there is no higher place and no larger work. Be this as it may, he has never wavered in his evident purpose to build up and endow a successful christian college. To this one end he has devoted all his energies with a con- stancy that has never wavered, and a vigilance thatihas never slept. Withal he does not hold the position which he occupies either for the honor or the emoluments connected therewith. Certainly not for the emoluments of the office, for he serves the, Church and the State at a less compensation than any other man is known to do in a position of equal import- ance and dignity. He has never made his own compensation a matter of stipulation, and, whenever the affairs of the' College have been such as to demand retrenchment anywhere, the President is always the first to propose that his own inadequate salary shall be diminished, and diminished in greater ratio than that of any one else. And just as certainly, while he appreciates the honor of holding the headship of a prosperous college, he does not hold it for that honor alone. First, in 1873, and since that on several occasions, he has felt that he might lay down his work and formally tendered his resignation to the Board of Trustees. just as often his resignation has been unanimously declined. Thus he continues with us unto this day in simple obedience to his Lord's command, Occupy till I come. The History of his life is in a great measure the history of Cornell College, and is it not all written in the hearts of the hundreds of alumni who have been trained for honor and usefulness, and who have already, even at this early day, attained by scores and hundreds to positions of fair eminence in church and in state, from the Atlantic seaboard to the Golden Gate? Is it not ! I-
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.