Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA)

 - Class of 1911

Page 17 of 238

 

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 17 of 238
Page 17 of 238



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Page 17 text:

than by his sympathetic interest, to uphold and advance their fortunes, and, with a well- placed emphasis, he has all along stressed their value and importance as Hampden- Sidncp publications. ls it not unusually appropriate, then, that on the dedicatory page of the present volume of the KALEIDOSCOPE should appear the name of one who has done so much for the success of past issues, and who stands ever ready to give freely of his time and of his labors to each succeeding year's staff? Moreover, it is desirable that a place of permanent record should be given in the annals of the Institution to the name of one who, both by ancestry and birth, as well as by association and training, carries, in his person, so many of the traditions of the College, and who, in his unremitting study of its past, displays an intensity of in- terest and a beauty of devotion that are equalled only by the accuracy and range of his knowledge upon all matters touching the College and the community,-for, as said of him in a recent issue of the Magazine, perhaps no other man living knows as much about the history of Hampden-Sidney and Prince Edward County. Early transplanted to Hampden-Sidney, and brought up from very infancy in this spot of so many fine associa- tions and of such splendid inspiration, educated within these College walls,-nay, more. a grandson of the Rev. M. P. Atkinson, D. D., for years an honored and distinguished President of the College,-Dr. Morrison is, by every consideration, as he is every whit, a son of the College, and it is no wonder he has so well fixed in his nature the distinctive elements of Hampden-Sidney tradition, sentiment, and culture. Thus singularly and fortunately ordered in his birth and bringing up, he may surely be regarded as the heir of the Hampden-Sidney ages, and into his keeping have been committed very largely the College archives of a hundred and thirty-five years past,-a trust to which he has proved himself loyally true and abundantly equal. The Staff, then, not only has done a fitting and an appropriate act in thus honoring Dr. Morrison, but has rendered the College a real service in placing upon record some account of an alumnus, whose merits, for their own sake, may well be written in the College annals, and whose name, for all it represents, cannot afford to be omitted from any register of Hampden-Sidney's notable and illustri- ous sons. Born in Selma, Alabama, July l lth, IS76, the son of the Rev. Alfred and Mrs. Portia Lee Morrison, Dr. Morrison came, in early infancy, to Hampden-Sidney, and here he has spent the greater part of his life. He entered Hampden-Sidney College in the fall of l89l and graduated four years later with the degree of A. B. The session of l895-6 he spent as a graduate student in the department of Modern Languages at the University of Virginia: during the session of 1896-7 he taught at Locust Dale Academy, Madison County, Va., again, in i897-8, he became a student of the University of Virginia, this time doing graduate work in the school of Latin: and then during the session of l898-9 he was an Instructor in the Baylor's University School, Chattanooga, Tenn. ln the fall of l899 he entered the Johns Hopkins University as a student of the Romance Lane guages, and received the degree of Ph. D. from that lnstitution in l902. His work ll

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Dr. Alfred J. Morrison A presiding officer, on one occasion, introducing a distinguished representative of a certain university, said, This university never sends out any bad men and never keeps any. Naturally every institution takes pride in the attainments and distinction of her sons, and doubtless all send out their good men. The alumni are the real index of what a college stands for and does: and, if this standard of estimate be adopted, Hampden- Sidney will not only not suffer by comparison, but may even afford to be proud of the good name her sons have carried for her to the world. It is a popular and well-attested verdict that Hampden-Sidney graduates make good teachers, good lawyers, doctors, preachers, and good men in the various activities of business life. Not only so, but from the great universities, where accuracy of scholarship and thoroughness of attainment are the requisites, comes the word that the sound and careful training of Hampden-Sidney men. admitted to the advanced courses of instruction, is always recognized and becomes at once an asset to the credit of the men themselves and the institution they represent. Surely, then, it is praiseworthy and significant that the sons of Hampden-Sidney are always able to secure for themselves at least a fair degree of success in the world of business, and often- times to win the enviable badge of scholarship in the realm of letters. It is not improper, therefore-much less is it boastful-that the students of Hampden-Sidney, through the medium of their annual publication, the KALEIDOSCOPE, should talce occasion, from time to time, to voice their feelings of admiration for the high standard of excellence the old College has always set and successfully maintained for herself and her sons, and particularly now is it befitting, as that sentiment finds its expression in the dedication of their present volume to one whose name stands for scholarly ideals and recognized literary attainments, to an alumnus of the College who has contributed no mean part to the reputation of his Alma Mater in the realm of letters and learning,-to one who needs no introduction here, Dr. Alfred Morrison. Not only thus is a praiseworthy sentiment happily expressed and a well-deserved compliment gracefully paid, but in this act of the KALEIDOSCOPE Staff may be dis- cerned a laudable desire, on the part of the student body generally, to record their appre- ciation of the many and valuable services rendered them by one who has proved himself the best friend the literay publications at Hampden-Sidney have ever had. His interest in the success of the Magazine and the KALEIDOSCOPE has always been warm and unfailing, and many a time he has come to the rescue when these publications needed just such a true and helpful friend. As, in a larger way, Dr. Morrison may aptly be characterized as a product and an exponent of Hampden-Sidney scholarship and culture, so too, in a special sense. he may be regarded as truly representative of her best literary traditions and impulses. Himself, in his student days, closely identified with both Magazine and KALEIDOSCOPE, he has ever since sought, no less by his generous assistance I0



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during his residence there was of a high order and, in recognition of his ability and promise as a scholar. he was appointed to a University Fellowship in his third year!-a coveted and distinguished honor. With the scholar's bent of mind and an intense love of letters, he has ever since been engaged in literary pursuits, whether in the exacting sphere of the class-room or in the more congenial field of research and investigation. For more than a year he held the important position as manuscript reader for the well-known Publishing House of Henry Holt Bt Co.-a position requiring great accuracy and breadth of knowledge as well as a sound and discriminating literary judgment, qualities possessed by Dr. Morrison in an eminent degree. During the session of IQO6-7 he filled the Chair of Latin and German at Hampden-Sidney and thus became further identified with his Alma Mater, of which he might almost be permitted to say, Cuius pars magna ful. Since that time he has devoted himself largely to historical studies and investigation, being especially interested in the past of Hampden-Sidney and Prince Edward County. In this work he has rendered both the College and the County invaluable service, having already done much toward collecting and preserving various documents and archives of great antiquity and rare interest locally. A genuine lover of books, he is never more at home than when in their company, and here it may be said that the College Library is under special obligations to him for the substantial assistance he has recently given in the matter of re-classifying its contents and for his many helpful suggestions looking to its better equipment and further development. In addition to a ready and intimate acquaintance with the library in all its details, he possesses a knowledge of the books themselves that is well-nigh encyclopedic. He can trace, with accuracy and ease, the checkered career of every volume of peculiar local interest there, and he handles these dusty tomes of ancient lore with a tenderness and devotion that only an ideal worship- per of the Hampden-Sidney past and a true lover of the priceless legacies of antiquity could evince. Nor does his zeal stop with the reading and studying of what others have written, for he has himself done important work in the field of authorship and in the future other contributions to the stream of literature will doubtless How from his scholarly pen. Besides a large number of newspaper articles and contributions to such magazines as the William and Mary Quarterly and the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, he has recently edited, with an Introduction and Notes, The Travels of John Davis in The United States during the Years I 798-l80Z 3 and there will shortly appear from the press another important work of his editorship, being a translation, in two volumes, from the German of Dr. Johann David Schoepf,-also a book of early American travels and ex- plorations. And now that he has already gathered so much valuable material bearing upon the wonderful past of Hampden-Sidney, it is to be hoped that in time he may be per- mitted to embody the results of these tireless and splendid labors in a much needed history I2

Suggestions in the Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) collection:

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914


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