Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL)

 - Class of 1935

Page 11 of 226

 

Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 11 of 226
Page 11 of 226



Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 10
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Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 12
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Page 11 text:

• - • ♦ I JOSHUA HOLLINGSWORTH First President At Leesburg t « • 4

Page 10 text:

BC3C3E3B5: The Story of Southern College i ' age ! A report to the conference in December, 1886, showed that the Leesburg school had lour teachers and fifty -eight pupils. Land and buildings were valued at $12,000. HOLLINGSWORTH ELECTED Joshua Hollingsworth, first official president of The Florida Conference College, was elected by the trustees on June 1, 1887, and he served two years, illness forcing him to resign. He was born near Galloway, a small community in Polk County, Florida, June 13, 1858, a son of S. T. and Sarah Pearce Hollingsworth. He attended public school at Galloway, and later studied under a private instructor at Dade City. He received his college training at Emory College, and was graduated in 1885. He taught a year in a public school in Mis- souri, after which he began his two-year adminis- tration at Leesburg. He died August 11, 1889, at Lithia Springs, Georgia, and was buried at Oxford, Georgia. Miss Stella Henderson and Miss Nannie B. Gaines were elected assistants to President Hollingsworth, and Miss Fannie Harrington was elected music teacher. President Hollingsworth had complete charge of the boarding department, assuming all financial obligations and paying insurance on the buildings and furniture. Each student in the academic department was charged a tuition fee of $45 a year. The fee in the college department was $50. Fifteen dollars a month was charged for board. Each boarding student was required to furnish one pair of sheets, one pair of pillow cases, two blankets and several towels. Campus regulations were drafted by a committee of trustees composed of Rev. C. A. Saunders, Rev. T. W. Tomkies and Rev. Thurlow Bishop. The distinction made between men and women students at that time is interestingly indicated in a provision as set forth in the minutes of the trustees: The regular course of study for this institution (shall) embrace English, mathematics, sciences, Latin and Greek and one of the modern languages for males, and some for females, with the exception of Greek. COMMENCEMENT PLANS MADE Plans for commencement exercises were made June 2, 1887, and these were made by the trustees, instead of the president. The program included a sermon on the Sunday morning preceding com- mencement day — the minister to be selected by the faculty — an afternoon concert of sacred songs under the leadership of the music teacher, and a sermon at night for ministerial students, the speaker to be selected by the facultv. It was Ordered that on Monday of commence- ment week at 9 a. m., there shall be declamations from ten voting men or boys selected by the faculty on trial declamations. Monday night shall be set apart for a sermon to young ladies by someone selected by the faculty. Tuesday morning at 9 a. m., readings by ten young girls selected by faculty on trial readings. Tuesday afternoon, awarding of prizes and address by some person selected by faculty, fol- lowed by musical concert under direction of the principal of the department. Tuesday night, literary address, speaker to be selected by the faculty. Wednesday morning at 9 a. m., original essays by six voting men and six young ladies, young men to speak, young ladies to read their essays. Essay- ists to be selected by faculty on highest standings in class. Free tuition for one year in the college depart- ment was voted to the student in the academic department making the highest grades during his final year of preparatory work, and free tuition for the four-year course was voted to young men studying for the ministry. Students in the aca- demic department were not permitted to advance to a higher grade if their deportment fell below sixty-five, and students in the college department were required to make at least seventy in deport- ment in order to advance to another grade. In December, 1887, at the annual Methodist con- ference held in Leesburg, H. H. Kennedy, chairman of the board of education, reported as follows: Our own Florida Conference High School and College, Leesburg, Florida, is yet an infant, and is the child of many prayers and of fond and sanguine hope. It demands special recognition and interest, as designed to meet an imperative demand of our work, affording a golden opportunity for the pro- motion of Christian education in our state. It has a facultv of four faithful and competent teachers and seventy-five scholars, and its property is esti- mated to be worth $13,000. It is well patronized in the community, but only to a limited extent abroad. The prospect was encouraging for the present session until the yellow fever panic came upon us. The time has come when prompt, de- cisive, effective action must be taken to put it upon its proper footing as a conference college in fact as in name. The Florida Conference cannot afford to have it wear the name without its measuring up to it in its work. The fault is ours. Our preachers and people must realize the situation and take hold of this enterprise. It must be pressed. The active effort of every preacher, and every member and every friend of the church is needed. The present liabilities of the institution amount to $1,800, and there are assets in notes and land amounting to about $] ,300 outside of the value of property used) no part of which is available now. There is pressing need of financial aid. Your committee recommend : That a collection be taken during this session of the Conference to meet this need. That the insti- tution be called The Florida Conference College. That the Bishop be requested to appoint Rev. T. W. Moore as agent to travel through the conference -••• ' ♦•♦••■♦ ' ♦ % ' •



Page 12 text:

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Suggestions in the Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) collection:

Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Florida Southern College - Interlachen Yearbook (Lakeland, FL) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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