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Page 27 text:
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a gymnasium, but as it was not equipped, it was never so used. Hence even the old barn- gymnasium of former days offered better facilities than the new building for athletic exercise. The present Room 30 was the original chemical laboratory. At best, it could accommodate but twelve at a time. That argued little faith in the growth of the school. Later, this room has served as a geological museum, a biological laboratory, and now as a recitation room. Room 27, designed for the science lecture and recitation room, had, until a year ago, an inclined door and opera seats, at first with adjustable writing attachment. The room now used as a biolog- ical laboratory was originally designed for a society room for school organizations. The Board of Education purchased from the Adelphic Debating Club the furniture of their room in the old building and placed it in the new club room. Lockers for the various societies were added. Thus no one society could claim the room more than another, but all were entitled to use it. This condition of affairs lasted until 1900, when the club room was stripped of furniture and carpet, and seated as an annex to lower chapel, to relieve the congestion in that room. It was then known as Room K. After the Freshmen were removed to Grammar Schools 2 and 3, Room K was used for recitation purposes. In 1907, it was converted into a biological laboratory, numbered Room 16, as the laboratory in Room 30 had been outgrown. The library was originally in Room 25, with cases on the east and west sides, and a reading table in the center. Room 26 was the museum where the Steele geological collection now in the chapel was kept. Later it was the physics laboratory. Room 29-now the physics laboratory--was the higher mathematics room. The present library was the principal's recitation room and Room 23 was used by the teachers' training class. Indeed, there are few rooms that to-day serve their original purpose. The two chapels were seated with desks facing south, where the rostrum stood. The first year in the new building was marked by the absence of Miss Norman, who spent the year in Europe. During the year '92f'93, Miss Godfrey conducted an informal American Literature Club, one night a week, after school, for the study of some of our national literature for which there was insufficient time in the regular course. It was composed of some of the brightest members of the class of '93, an exceptionally good class. Informal discussions brought out the abilities of some clever students. Stockton's The Lady or the Tiger, in particular, led to eager debate, and some clever skits in verse on the part of Marie Thomas, May Wormley, and Academy of 18,51 1892-'93
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1 889 1890 1891 1891 1892 1892 1892 1892 - mffeexmvex-e4va,y1g 1 - Y administration the entire charge of the celebration was placed in the hands of the Senior Class. The custom still obtains. On the evening of May 17th, the Class of '89 held its Class Day exercises. The pro- gram, consisting of class history, prophecy, and the like, was given in the chapel, the ban uet followed in the Debating Club room. Until 1892,'tl1b same arrangement prevailed, the Ctlass Day being always in May. December 19, 1890, marks the organization of the first chaptered secret society in E. F. A.- Alpha Zeta. This was largely due to the efforts of Fred F. jewett, Leon T. Lewald, Henry B. Van Duzer, and the Gamma Chapter of Binghamtom. Eleven members resigned from the Adelphics to become charter members of the Epsilon chapter of Alpha Zeta. The first year, the society met in the Academy building. During the erection of the new Academy the follow- ing year, clubrooms were secured in the Robinson Building. Now the clubhouse is the former Bryant Hall. May 13, 1891, Elmira College, through its president, Dr. Chas. Van Norden, offered an Elmira College scholarship to the E. F. A. girl that had had the highest rank in scholarship during her course and was prepared to enter college in the fall. This scholarship was to be given each year thereafter. No one was ready to take it that year, as the Academic course was three years and four would be necessary for college preparation. Several members of the Class of '91 took post-graduate work the next year, and Mary Olive Bullard, Valedictorian of '91, was the first to earn this scholarship honor, in '92. Since then, every year this honor has been earned by an Academy girl, the last one being Helen E. Manning, 1908. In the summer of 1891, the Academy building was torn down to make room for a com- modious modern structure. School for the year opened in the old No. 6 School building on Lake Street,'just south of the D.L. QW. tracks. The building was in poor repair and ill-adapted to the use of the school, but the best available. It was overrun with huge rats, bold enough to come out during afternoon recitations and ransack waste baskets standing close by a teacher's desk, to secure food left by students bringing luncheon. School work was of necessity reduced to its lowest terms for lack of conveniences. As many students as possible arranged to have all their recitations in a half day and studied at home. Yet, despite the handicap, fairly credit- able results were obtained. December 29, 1891, the Christmas Reunion was held in the Masonic Temple, --fthe first to be held in any other place than the Academy building. The Senior Class had charge of it and made it a great success. Dancing was introduced as a feature of the evening, since the Masonic rooms offered accomodations. On April 1, 1892, the Adelphia Sorority, the second chaptered society of E., F. A., was formed. Miss Mary 0. Bullard started it at the suggestion of Miss Grace Collin of the Alpha chapter in Ithaca. Miss Collin is a niece of Pres. Collin of the Elmira Board of Education. Elmira, with twelve charter members, became the second or Beta chapter. Meetings were held afternoons after school at the school building until within the past two years. Now the Adelphia girls hold their meetings, quite appropriately, in the Women's Federation Building where they are allowed use of the Director's room. A large number of the E. F. A. faculty are honorary members of the sorority, which is scarcely a secret organization, at least in any objectionable sense of the term. The society has a paper called the Beta Siftings. For several years Beta held a banner given by Ithaca for the best literary work. The Class Day exercises of '92 H a class without a school home were held May 27th at the home of Miss Lena Schornstheimer, a member of the class. It proved a very happy arrangement, and thanks to the hospitality of the Schornstheimers, the occasion lacked none of the pleasurable features of former Class Days. The Reunion, on June 24th, was again held in the Masonic Temple. The program was an interesting one, the cream of the entertainment being the address of the Hon. J. Sloat Fassett. No one realized that this, the thirtieth anniversary of the first Reunion, would be the last june Reunion, but had it been forseen, nothing better than Mr. Fassett's speech could have been planned for a grand finale. The new building was not opened with formal cermonies. Indeed it was hardly ready for occupancy when the first day of the fall term arrived. The opening week of school was cold and rainy, and as the heating apparatus had not yet been installed and the plaster was none too dry, the temperature of the bui ding reminded one of a vault. Nearly the entire school took severe colds. The building as compared with the former one, seemed to cover a large area, yet, as it had but two stories to the other's three, it was not so much larger as it seemed. Prin. Lovell had urged making more extensive accomodations, but was told that they seemed to be enclosing all out doors, as it was. Yet in four years the school had out grown the building. Architecturally the structure would have been improved by a third storyg but so much travel up and down stairs had been an objection to the three-story plan of the old building, so this was made two. The desirability of an assembly room on the third fioor where the entire school might congregate at times, seems not to have appealed to the authorities in charge of the construction, yet the lack of such a room has been a distinct drawback to school manage- ment and school spirit. As the building is still standing, no detailed description of it will be necessary, yet it may not be amiss to speak of some rooms that have since been turned from their originalpur- pose. The room used as a chemical laboratory until the fire of April 24, 1909, was built for
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1893 1894 1895 1895 1896 1896 1896 5 f john Ford Tremain. Chas. Alonzo Simmons and Thomas F. Fennell were shining lights in the discussions. All these have since made good the promise of their school days. . The first Class Day in the new building was celebrated Tuesday of Commencement week, instead of in May, as previously. E. F. A. Class Days have never been, as in colleges, open-air celebrations, and until 1903 were held in the evening. The one of 1893 took place in the new club room, the only one to be held there in its entirety. The tables for the banquet that followed the literary program were spread in the gymnasium across the hall, and carried in when needed. In '94, the Class Day exercises were held in the parlors of the Rathbun, the banquet following in the hotel dining room. Thereafter until 1903, the Class Day was observed at the Rathbun or the Langwell, either Tuesday or Thursday evening of Commencement week. To this rule, there was one exception, as the Class of '98 held their Class Day at Industrial Hall. With the graduation of the Class of '95, Prin. Lovell severed his connection with the Academy to take up the practice of law in this city. His administration was characterized by four things: the adoption of the Regents' standard for graduationg the erection of the new building, the introduction of the Rugby game in football, and the raising of the requirements for teachers to the standard of a college education. Although the law had always been Mr. Lovell's choice of a profession, he has never regretted the years of service he gave to the Academy. Her interests are still dear to him, and any teacher or student of E. F. A., past or present, has but to mention a service he could do, to meet with instant and hearty response. CHAPTER VIII. PRIN. EVANS'S ADMINISTRATION, 1895-1900. Mr. Charles W. Evans of the Olean High School succeeded Mr. Lovell as principal. Mr. Evans was a man of quiet manners, but of strong personality. He co-operated very fully with his faculty, placing great confidence in his teachers' judgment regard- ing individual students that came within the circle of their personal influence. With the beginning of 1895, the department of elocution was added to the curriculum. From earli- est days, there had been rhetorical exercises, at first with no drill except for Commencement, later with the drill of the English teacher, but there had been no attempt to have class instruction in elocution. This was now added, with Miss Mary K. Smith as instructor. She also ably assisted Miss Godfrey with the Freshman English. Lincoln's birthday, February 12th, was observed for the first time as a holiday in E. F. A. in 1896. On the fourteenth of February, the faculty enter- tained the school societies at a valentine party in the Club-room. Each society had already that school year entertained the faculty. Miss Godfrey of the faculty was dressed to represent the Queen of Hearts, and Henry B. Reynolds, a Freshman, represented Cupid. Each guest provided at least one original, hand-decorated valentine for some other guest. The occasion was a very pleasant one. In the fall of 1896, a new four-year course of study was adopted and started. The course has continued to be four years to the present time. During the summer, the seats in the two chapels had been changed to face east, where the rostrum was now placed. It gave the rooms a very different look. The library was equip- ped with all the leading magazines for the reading table. This table, a long one of quartered oak, had been the gift of the Adelphic Debating Club. The magazines were furnished fpartly bythe societies and partly by voluntary contributions from otherstudents. This provision orthe reading table continued about three years. As the library books were in open cases at that time, bank railing with a gate in the center was placed in front of the cases. A student acting as assistant librarian spent his study periods in the library, getting books from the shelves, as needed, and having supervision of the reading table. The registration in chemistry was 100 in 1896. That necessitated a larger laboratory than one accommodating twelve at a time. The gymnasium therefore was converted into a chemical laboratory with accommodations for twenty-eight at once. This room, well equipped, was opened in November. Miss Herrick had charge of the chemistry and physics departments and inspired unusually good work. Many fine machines were constructed by the physics students, the handiwork of Augustus Alba, Albert McHenry, and Walter Ford, nephew of Dr. Ford of Elmira College, being especially noteworthy. Walter Ford constructed a rheostat that reflected great credit upon his skill. Other machines that might be mentioned are a steam engine, an electric motor, a commutator, and an electroscope.
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