Phillips Academy - Pot Pourri Yearbook (Andover, MA)
- Class of 1916
Page 1 of 268
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 268 of the 1916 volume:
“
ADVERTISEMENTS TIFFANY xl Co. JEWELERS SILVERSIVIITHS STATIONERS JEWE LRY, WATCHES, RINGS FOBS, EIVIBLEIVI PINS, TROPHIES SILVER CUPS , STATIONERY WITH IYIONOGRAMS IN COLOR, INVITATIONS OF ALL KINDS, DIPLOIVIASJIEDALS AND DIES FOR STANPING SEALS PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO INQUIRIES BY NAIL FIFTH AVENUE sf 3IE'STREET ' NEW YORK ADVERTISEMENTS The Leading Fire Inyneance Company of American AETNA INSURANC CO PA Y INCORPORATED 1819 CHARTER PERPETUAL Cash Capital S 5,000,000.00 Net Surplus , S 6,909,389.89 Cash Assets 22,48l,250.34 Surplus for Policy-Holders 11,909,389.89 Total Liabilities 10,571,860.45 Losses Paid in 95 Years 138,501,3-48.36 WILLIAM B. CLARK, PRESIDENT Vice-Presidents, HENRY E. REES, A. N. WILLIAMS, Secretary, E. J. SLOAN Assistant Secretaries, E. S. ALLEN, GUY E. BEARDSLEY, RALPH B. IVES W. F. WHITTELSEY, Marine Secretary WESTERN BRANCH, 175 IV. Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Ill.-- Thomas E. Gallagher, Gen'l Agentg L. O. Kohtz, Ass't Ge-nil Agent, L. O. Kohtz, Marine Geu'l Agent. PACIFIC BRANCH, 301 California St., San Francisco, Cal.- IV. H. Breeding, General Agent, E. S. Livingston, Ass't Gen'l Agent. , MARINE DEPARTMENT, Chicago, Ill., 175 W. Jackson Boulevard, New York, 63-65 Beaver Streetg Boston, 70 Kilby Street g Philadelphia, 226 Walnut Street, San Francisco, 301 California Street. BROW BROTHERS 81 CO. NEW YORK 60 State Street, Boston PHILADELPHIA LETTERS OF CREDIT In Dollars and Sterling F orezlgn Exchange Investment Seearzkzes BROWN, SHIPLEY Sc CO., LONDON ll ADVERTISEMENTS J. P. MORGAN 85 CO. Wall Street, comer of Broad NEW YORK Drexel 85 Co. W Philadelphia Corner of 5th and Chestnut Streets Morgan, Grenfell 85 Co. London No. 22 Old Broad Street Morgan, Harjes 85 Co. Paris 31 Boulevard Haussmann Securities bought and sold on Commission Foreign Exchange Commercial Credits Cable Transfers Circular Letters for Travelers, available in all parts of the World ADVERTISEMENTS when You Conszder Your Future Conszder the Gzllette PPEARANCES count for a lot these days and lt IS the well groomed man that has the call The fact that so many successful men have adopted the Glllette shave should lnterest you Not that the Glllette alone w111 make a man successful but when t1me counts for so much the efficlency of the G11lette shave appeals to the man lntent on dolng thmgs N 0 stroppmg no honlng and the G1llette shave lS always qulck clean cool velvet smooth G1llette Safety Razors sell from 35 00 to S50 00 and you can always get fresh blades at your dealer s 50 cents and 31 00 the packet GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR COMPANY BOSTON U S A . . . . . A ' u Q 1 0 U , n . . 1 9 . . . . . . . . . ' 9 9 1 9 - . . 9 , . . , . . . i . ADVERTISEMENTS FQ ' tartar i Q- 4 i Q af, M32 'W A 4 ieree-Arrow ears are built for those ll who Want beauty, elegance, refinement, Char- acter ---- these at their maximum. THE PIERCE-ARROW MOTOR CAR COMPANY 1695 Elmwood Avenue Buffalo, New York E V ADVERTISEMENTS CRANE 85 CO. DALTON, MASSACHUSETTS Q MAKERS OF Crar1e's Bank Note Paper For Government Securities and Bank Notes Crane's Bond Paper For Bonds, Stock Certifi- cates, Policies and all Com- mercial Purposes Crane's Parchment Deed Paper A For Valuable Records, Deeds, Wills, Diplomas, etc. ADVERTISEMENTS The Sherman Studio IS THE RIGHT PLACE TO GO FOR Photographs p Pictures of all Phillips Andover groups from '95 to the present year may be had at short notice Main Street Andover ADVERTISEMENTS The Burns Company Importers SPORTING AND MUE T I DRESS FOR EVERY GCCASION Q I, lv 13-15 Main Street, Andover, Mass. TELEPHONE 78 ADVERTISEMENTS 111 The Selection of Good Taste is the The A ci Selection of I7 01267 Candy Kitelaen W gf Chocolates Math Street f 'f':l5 't 'c 55m QIL For Those JAMES M. SALTO Who Discriminate Proprietor F. H. Roberts Co., Boston, Mass. Einmaavfsf- 0 e1f CHC OS E 099 USE L T H NEI f,ebn feDJng itfife ZH! deal ou ig? P 32 50 Tm: PENm'e:afttr1AB1T up THAT LAST5 ALIFETINE ' Your Local Dealer L E Wt C mp y 73 7 3 tg 0 X1 I 05 ml 1 iw ka F1 ,S ' - - . 9 , e lf- . C 14 v Q '. P' E365 A f 1 Q 1- f 1 Q H , 4 Pez ,f if Q . 5 5 X E, EZ , I sf I . gn , ' r V - , S E- t Q 3 n V T5 Fr 3 1 om V . ' ' . . a erman o an , 1 Broadway, New Yor ' - V 47 I I ADVERTISEMENTS eefgfzf INC? 127 TREMONT STREET BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Shiriy N eeleweezr H osiery EXCLUSIVE THREE-PIECE SUITS For Fall For Spring 320.00 315.00 WE INVITE YOUR INSPECTION 127 Tremont St. Boston, U S A ADVERTISEMENTS F618 ROSENBAUN SCI-IDOL NEW HAVEN CONNECTICUT ANNOUNCES After October 1, 1916, the School will be situated at Milford, Connecticut, nine miles from New Haven, where boys will be received any time during the year. Professors B. Wl. Nlclfarland and E. L. Durfee will be permanently identified with the School as the heads of the departments of Science and History, respectively. Professor McFarland was formerly Principal of the New Haven High School and a member of the College Entrance Board. Professor Durfee has been instructor in Yale College since 1903, and a member of the Com- mittee on Admission. Summer Session As heretofore, a complete corps of tutors will beamain- tained in New Haven for those men who are candidates for the Fall examinations. Last year, out of a total of 145 men prepared, none failed to enter. Requests for catalog should be addressed to the School at Q62 York Street, New Haven. Y ADVERTISEMENTS Goods Packed and Shipped Len Boston S T O R A G E One of your College Clubs Cheap and Prompt -your other home W Buchan 81 Francis Blue Signs .' u 12 Main Street, Andover L. C. PRIOR, Managlng Director BRIDE, GRIMES dc CCD. PLUMBING Steam, Water and Gas Piping, Supplies and Tools LAWRENCE, MASS. ADVERTISEMENTS we NJOY the stimulating influence of new clothes. They MA give you fresh interest in life. With new things you Qs work better and play better-undertake your daily tasks with new spirit and greater confidence. New garters add largely to your comfort and contribute much to the personal satisfaction that comes from the knowledge that one is really well dressed. H Bostonsn give more service and more comfort for their cost than any other article you wear. Keep yours fresh and at top-notch efficiency at all times. CS on al' Cl' B 1: G 1: SILK 500. LISLE 250. L ty. 9 i 'v sf ADVERTISEMENTS Qiumplimentarp Students, Clothes WE create styles and make clothes on the premises, particu- larly required by Prep. School young men. This season We offer unusu ally attractive models in Domestic and Foreign Fabrics. Macullar Parker Company 400 WASHINGTON STREET BOSTON Beacon Trust Company 20 Milk Street TWO OFFICES: 3 So. Market Street Capital and Surplus, 31,500,000.00 Deposits - 312,500,000.00 Seth K. Ames Nlelyille L. Cobb Amos S. Crane Frank W. Crocker J. Henry Fletcher oma Walter S. Glidden Charles R. Gow DIRECTORS Robert F. Herrick Henry H. Learnard Donald H. Smith Ira G. Hersey Andrew J. Peters Henry B. Sprague Charles B. Jopp George H. Poor Philip Stockton Edmund S. Kelley Joseph O. Procter, Jr, M. J. Sughrue Th S Lahey John Phillips Reynolds Frank W. Wyman George H. Lawrence Edward A. Rich Henry D. Yerxa OFFICERS . CHARLES B. JOPP, President C. L. BILLMAN, Vice-Pres. 85 Treas. GEORGE H. POOR, Secretary F. B. LAWLER, Vice-Pres. ROBERT G. SHAW, Jr., Asst. Treas. A. S. NELSON, Asst. Treas. INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS 3300 OR OVER xix ADVERTISEMENTS A Quarter Century Record of Success TUTORING THAT WINS Preparation for June and September Entrance Examinations LITTLE I-IALL, CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Experienced Teachers Expert Methods Noteworthy Success Well-equipped Laboratories Fine Dormitories Welcoming Dining Hall Athletic Field Large Boat House Fifty Tennis Courts The instructors, all college graduates, more than half of them graduated with high honors or members of the Phi Beta Kappa, have been long associated together. and have prepared more candidates for Septem- ber college entrance examinations than any other body of teachers. The teaching force includes: Albert E. Benson, Ph.D. Josiah Bridge, Ph.D. Max Benshimol, A.M. J. Clifford Hall, S.B. George N. Henning, A.M. Charles A. Hobbs, A.M. F. Wheeler Loomis, A.M. Percy W. Long, Ph.D William W. Nolen, A.M. Alfred C. Redfield, S.B. Ralph H. Houser, A.M. Char-les M. Underwood, Jr., Ph.D. Hollis Webster, A.M. j. Rowe Webster, A.B. Frank C. Whitmore, Ph.D. THE OLDEST, LARGEST, BEST EQUIPPED NEW ENGLAND TUTORING SCHOOL For particulars, descriptive pamphlet and references, address 46 Little Hall W. NOIEII Cambridge, Mass. TELEPHONE 627 01' 3190 'V up M Alplkb Sailor Suits a Specialty No Agencies Made-to-Order Only I at Peter homson ., -1.: i- 5146: Uliailor To Men, Women and Children IS THE IDEAL WALL FINISH For Schools, Colleges, Churches, Walnut at Street Public Buildings, Homes Hospitals, etc. PHILADELPHIA WASHES AND WEARS -AND.. 16 Colors and White HARRISON Bnos. a. coMPANY 634 Fifth Avenue Paint, Colors, Varnish, White Lead, Etc. Qpp' St' Patricks Cathedral PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO IVIINNEAPOLIS Y' XV ADVERTISEMENTS Are you going to Yale P The thing to do on arrival at Yale is to join , THE YALE Co-OP. Let the Co-Op. be your agent to supply all your student's requirements. It is the recognized headquarters for all Textbooks Student Supplies Fountain Pens, Sporting Goods Flags General Stationery It is at your service without seeking profit THE YALE CO-OP. 102 HIGH STREET Just off Elm Street Opposite White Hall Complimentary Complimentary Complfmgnfayy l XVI ADVERTISEMENTS PHILLIPS ACADEMY ANDOVER MASSACHUSETTS l:'OUNDED at Andover, Mass., 1778, by the gifts of Hon. Samuel Phillips and his uncle, Hon. John Phillips. Others have added to the original foundations by endowments of several kinds, and various scholarships have been established. The total endowment is 5B1,Q6Q,00O. fl Phillips Academy has established very high repute for its broad scholarship, for its elevated ideals, and especially for the practical success which has been obtained by its students. HT In all the leading professions and every useful avenue of endeavor, its alumni are found among leaders. In all the great colleges, and particularly Yale and Harvard, the graduates of this Academy have for years been distinguished for their thoroughness of preparation and suc- cess in their college work. The academy has also done a useful work in the education of boys who have not gone to college. Especially is it distinguished for its American, democratic spirit, the sons of the wealthiest men in the country mingling with boys who are working their way through school. ff The courses of the Academy have thoroughly adjusted and adapted themselves to the highest collegiate requirements. The ability of its faculty, the excellence of its equipment, its library and laboratory facilities, the prestige of honorable history and other advantages and achievements have placed Phillips Academy in the front rank of American schools. FOR FULL PARTICULARS ADDRESS: Alfred E. Stearns, M.A., B.D., Principal, Phillips Academy OiKiNiH 0li0Oi1iIiNlNiO6iQh:4Oi40i00lO6i40iOOi00OilOi9OiO0' HGTEL CUMBERLAND S. W. Corner Broadway at 54th Street New York Y ,S Near 50th Street Subway and 53d Street Elevated Station I and All Surface Lines Broadway Cars from Grand Central Depot pass door. we ?f'?fFy.QEwg- ' KEPT BY A COLLEGE MAN 4 College Men Always Welcome Nl I H , E r Special terms for 1: m pg gil l College Teams and Students ' 'E 5- New, Strictly First-Class and Fireproof I tli glg H A i n Rates Reasonable-552.50 with baths and ,up '15 I ' ,Je f-5 - , T611 minutegerpgaili tgczjofsify Theaters I 'rsilifsfsl Ti lie lg 1 k HARRY P. sT11visoN T formerly with Hotel Imperial 1 e 1 i V' The Cumberland does more College business than , . any other hotel in New York dihi WWWWO:4W. f liO0l'lliNi0iOOl0 xvii ADVERTISEMENTS Are you going to Yale? The thing to do on arrival at Yale is to join . THE YALE CO-0P. Let the Co-Op. be your agent to supply all your student's requirements. It is the recognized headquarters for all Textbooks Student Supplies Fountain Pens, Sporting Goods Flags General Stationery It is at your service without seeking profit THE YALE CO-OP. 102 HIGH STREET Just off Elm Street Opposite White Hall Complimentary Complimentary gC0mp1imemfafy XVI ADVERTISEMENTS PHILLIPS ACADEMY ANDOVER MASSACHUSETTS FOUNDED at Andover, Mass., 1778, by the gifts of Hon. Samuel Phillips and his uncle, Hon. John Phillips. Others have added to the original foundations by endowments of several kinds, and various scholarships have been established. The total endowment is 851,262,000 1l Phillips Academy has established very high repute for its broad scholarship, for its elevated ideals, and especially for the practical success which has been obtained by its students. fl In all the leading professions and every useful avenue of endeavor, its alumni are found among leaders. In all the great colleges, and particularly Yale and Harvard, the graduates of this Academy have for years been distinguished for their thoroughness of preparation and suc- cess in their college work. The academy has also done a useful work in the education of boys who have not gone to college. Especially is it distinguished for its American, democratic spirit, the sons of the wealthiest men in the country mingling with boys who are working their way through school. 1lThe courses of the Academy have thoroughly adjusted and adapted themselves to the highest collegiate requirements. The ability of its faculty, the excellence of its equipment, its library and laboratory facilities, the prestige of honorable history and other advantages and achievements have placed Phillips Academy in the front rank of American schools. FOR FULL PARTICULARS ADDRESS: Alfred E. Stearns, M.A., B.D., Principal, Phillips Academy I-IGTEL CUMBERLAND S. W. Corner Broadway at 54th Street New York ' A ,,A, Near 50th Street Subway and 53d Street Elevated Station I and A11 Surface Lines Broadway Cars from Grand Central Depot pass door. KEPT BY A COLLEGE MAN I -145' I 5-E iii-ir: i n College Men Always Welcome pl H E g g Special terms for I .EE I 5 Colle e Teams and Students llt flfi - HU:- ill ' ii, 'E 5-Z Qi- - ft? New, Strictly First-Class and F ireproof I lb: Ui il! E E Rates Reasonable-32.50 with baths and ,up HE 'S J '-5 1' - , - ,x jf, gFu,!B-412-Q- F Ten mmutes walk to Forty Theaters ilfflrlggf Send for Booklet 'X L N it V HARRY P. sr11vrsoN 1, formerly with Hotel Imperial I + 1 i V' The Cumberland does more College business than , , any other hotel in New York 0i09iCOi0Oi11OOllDiHlOli0Oll0:0IilOlt0OQCOliOOll6iOMiIDi0Qi0 xvii sax .E -A V LM flfgfq my To JOHN LEWIS PHILLIPS, whose nobility of character, steadfast friendship, anol scholarly zeal have been a continual inspiration to his students for nearly a quarter of a century, we dedicate v THE POT POURRI OF 1916 .'Xh.Ixh.'X. ,'Xh.'Xh.'XF.'x. .ldxhillxhgixl 'lx' 'lx' 'JN' 'Vx' TN- nxxhzxi .lxi 'lx' 'IX' .IANA 'IRA .I hexh,-IX. .JNL ZJN. 'Vx' .IXLTXI .JNL -'XL :XL gxhtdx. .lgnglxh-JN. :Xu .lvxhhlxhhxxh llx. .JNL NX. V My K p J J H T A H. G M M MM R O m 6 M DJ Y C H R B 1 M M MA WW 3 , .rv M A U S 9 N ww M S M 1 O A W P R 0 S B D I W ll .X E A L O J X. P my m I M L M M M .HT E O R 0 J I. P GROOM 53.55535 BOSTON X I X e 7 , ' T9 J X X' R by l ml f 1 ' I ' W ' W I in VET' YS . L5 HEFCE? nw '1 ' wl mu w mv ' v ACADEMY PREACHERS 17 ATHLETICS . 159 CLASSES . 97 EDITORIAL QQ FACULTY 8 FORUM . 140 GRINDS . Q09 HISTORICAL 19 INQUIRY . . 144 MISCELLANEOUS . 197 MUSIC.AL ORGANIZATIONS . 121 PHILO . . . 138 PUBLICATIONS . 147' SECRET SOCIETIES Q21 SENIOR MATTER Q3 STATISTICS . 90 TRUSTEES 7 X N AR X xx H 4. ,Q-yo X N ' 4 ' 'Wd XX T . Y. S Q S ar . 79 X . I gs 1 f 5 F f V I F' H N Q1-Y: l A ph 4, E i l l 7 . x - . - T l W, flaws r x I X 3 l a X V il' X ' . . 7 .f 4 I. N K XX. ,L ,f js ,' ' Y A . X , I ., X , Ns January 4 M arch 24 April 4 June 15 June 16 June 17 June 24 June 19-Q4 September 12 September 13 September 14 November Q9 to December 1 December 20 January 4 M arch 30 April 12 June 14 June 15 June Q3 ff flfs 3- Q 46 1 aio 57-ER BEACH 568 Tuesday, 9.45 ann. Friday noon Tuesday, 9.45 a.m. Thursday noon Friday Saturday Saturday Tuesday, 9.00 a.m. 1916 Wedne.sday, 7.45 a.nz.. Thursday, 7' .45 a. rn. Wednescla,y noon to I Friday, 9.45 a.1n. f Wednesday noon Thursday, 9.45 a.nz. Friday noon Thursday, 9.45 ann. Thursday noon Friday Saturday 1917 6 Second term begins Second term ends Third term begins Third term ends for two lower classes Commencement Entrance examinations in Andover, New York City, Chicago, and other cities Third term ends for two upper classes College entrance examinations Chapel, followed by entrance examinations Exercises begin for two lower classes Exercises begin for two upper classes Thanksgiving recess First term ends Second term begins Second term ends Third term begins Third term ends for two lower classes Commencement Third term ends for two upper classes F1-, ' ' tn ll fqq ng I ill I i E- I - - .. I --NA A ll so O ' 5.25.-,i:i:z: Q.-.ig 'fl - I ' I ' All 931353512 3- 3 ' ii 2' gag-L-J ll'- ' 0 Q - 0 - - W -'WEST--5:,,QrEa A f' I 'Dua nf.. 'ln-I-S'6'fx'1. .M ITL. - ffl ffllmllllx Z - 1 .1afa,feaP4e:s,aisi2a' Ill, :I 'I'E'?-I'-.'?f- ri-Tffzl' mS?Lf'fl?15ZW nf2i'f3P1'4Yf' ' A . ', i fly .A , l':QL.ig,llf ! gfq TU EEBKIOQ A ff' - I 19' -6 PRESIDENT ALFRED LAWRENCE RIPLEY, A.M. ANDOVER Elected 190Q CLERK ALFRED ERNEST STEARNS, Lm.D. ANDOVER Elected 1903 TREASURER JAMES COWAN SAWYER, A.B. . ANDOVER Elected 1900 GEORGE BROWN KNAPP, A.M. . BOSTON Elected 1899 JAMES HARDY ROPES, D.D. CAMBRIDGE Elected 1899 CLARENCE MORGAN, A.B. . . . SHELBURNE, VT. Elected 1900 CLIFFORD HERSCHELL MOORE, LITT.D. . CAMBRIDGE Elected 1902 HON. HENRY LEWIS STIMSON, A.M. . NEW YORK CITY . Elected 1905 ELIAS BULLARD BISHOP, A.B. . NEXVTON CENTRE Elected 1907 HON. JOHN ADAMS AIKEN, LL.D. . GREENFIELDA Elected 1908 FRED TOWSLEY MURPHY, M.D. ST. LOUIS, MO. Elected 1908 ' Q JOSEPH PARSONS . . LAKEVILLE, CONN. Elected 1910 FREDERICK GOODRICH CRANE . DALTON Elected 1912 C 7 1111 lllllllllllllllllllml mllllu 11111111l11111111111111110111 ll p H wmgpygggillmu lllllflflllmm 111llllll!lH '11 l'lllllll11W' N111 'i ll I l L l l Hl ll .1ll1lQ H A , h. llllllll U hggllllll it MMM ' E I up I- M I N K otcrgheiba Q W I ioie 7-ALFRED ERNEST STEARNS, A.M., Lrrr.D., PH.D. Principal Phillips Academy 'on Peter Smith Byers Memorial Foundation. Elected, 1903. Instructor and Registrar, 1897-1903. Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, 1890. Collegezr-Amherst, 18911. XII T, AA T Clubs:-Headmasters, Association. New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Former instructor Hill School, Pottstown, Pa., 18941-97. A Publications :-Newspaper and magazine articles. MATTI-IEW SCOBY MCCURDY, A.M. Instructor in M afheniatics. Appointed, 1873. Prepared for college at St. Johnsbury Academy, St. Johnsbury, Vt. College:- Dartmouth, 1873. A K E Publications :-McCi1rd3f's Exercise Book in Algebra. GEORGE THOMAS EATON, A.M. Instructor in Matliernatics. Appointed, 1880, Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, 1873. College:-Amherst, 1878, XII T, CID B K, A A T Instructor Monson Academy, Monson, Mass., 1878-80. Member School Board, Andover, lVIass. President Andover Village Improvement Society. Membei' Board of Trustees, Home for Aged People. Statistical Secretary Phillips Academy Alumni Association. CHARLES EMERsoN STONE, PH.B. Instructor in French. Appointed, 1890. Pre- pared for college in public schools, Spencer, Mass. College 1-Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University, 1889. Book and Snake. Graduate Department, Yale, 1890. Studied in University of Grenoble and University of Paris, 1906-07. 8 lIlllllllllllllll,,. Q lmnmslulrsll wo-r POM Q f2 ...l1llllillllll.., -lmlinlllliilli ?'CHARLES H. FORBES, A.B., A.M. CHon. Brown, 19151 Professor of Latin on John C. Phillips Foundation. Elected, 1891. Prepared for college at University Grammar School, Providence, R. I. College:-Brown, 1890, Berlin, 1897-98, AKE,fIJBK,AAT Acting Principal of Phillips Academy, 1913-14. Meniber of American Philological Association. President of New England Classical Society, 1907-08. Publications:-Harkness and Forbes, Ca-rsaris Gallic 'War, Eight Ora- tions of Cicerof' A School Cicero. 7ARCHIBALD FREEMAN, A.M. Instructor in History. Appointed, 1897. Prepared for college at Cortland, N. Y. College :-Brown, 18893 Cornell, 1890. A K E, F E, CIP B K, A A T I ALLEN ROGERS BENNER, A.B. Professor of Greek. Elected, 1892. Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, 1888. College:-Harvard, 1892. Signet, O K, A T, ii B K, A A T Nlember American Philological Association. Publications :-6'Selections from Homer's Iliadf, Beginner's Greek Bookf, jointly with Professor Smyth. JAMES CHANDLER GRAHAM, B.S. Instructor in Chemistry. Appointed, 1892. Prepared for college at Adelphi Academy, Brooklyn, N. Y. College 1-VVesleyan, 1890. CIP N G Publications :-For American Journal of Science, Artificial Geysersf, Sand Transportation by Rivers. Fellow Am. A. A. Sci., American Chemical Society. BERNARD M. ALLEN, B.A. Instructor in Latin. Appointed, 1893. Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, 1888. College:-Yale, 1892. HID B K Instructor, Siglar's School, Newbury, N. Y., 1892-93. Publications:-Allen and Phillips, Latin Composition, jointly with lVIr. Phillips. - 1 JOHN LEWIS PHILLIPS, A.B. Instructor in Latin. Appointed, 1894. Prepared for college at Haverhill High School, Haverhill, Mass., Brewster Academy, Wolfeboro, N. H. College:-Dartmouth, 1894, University of Gottingen, Ger- many, 1908-09. KKK, Tiger, KID B K, A A T Publications:-Allen and Phillips, Latin Compositionf' jointly with Mr. Allen 5 Collaborator, Bryne,s Syntax of High School Latin? ' 9 IllllllllllIllll,,, ....i11llllilIIlIIll!! ... g 951' P00 Q UI ,... l llllllllllll llllllllllllllf FREDERICK EDYVIN NEWTON. Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed, 1895. Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, ex-1893. College:-Yale, Sheffield Scientific School. E E, A A T CHARLES PEABODY, PH.D. Honorary Director of the Department of American Archaeology. Elected, 1901. WARREN IKING MOOREHEAD, A.M. Lecturer tn Archaeology and Curator of the Museum of American Archazology. Elected, 1901. College :-Denison, ex-1887. Studied at Smithsonian Institute, 1881-91, Dartmouth, 1901. B 9 II Fellow Am. A. A. Sci., Member United States Board of Indian Commissioners g Director of the Board of Indian Rights Association. LESTER EDWARD LYNDE, A.B. Instructor in M athemattcs. Appointed, 1901, Prepared for college at Mt. Hermon School. College :-VVesleyan, 1901. LIP N 9, cr B K, A A T H HORAOE MARTIN POYNTER, A.B. Instructor in Latin. Appointed, 1902. Pre- pared, for college at VVebb School, Bell Buckle, Tenn., and Phillips Academy, 1896. College:-Yale, 1900. 112 B K, A A T Instructor at King's School, Stamford, Conn., 1900-OQ. PIERSON S. PAGE, M.D. Athletic Director and M edtcal Advisor. Appointed, 1909. Prepared for college at VVillia1nsport, Pa., High School. College :-University of New York, International Y. M. C. A. College. ROBERT PORTER IQEEP, A.B. Instructor in German. Appointed, 1903. Prepared for college at Norwich Free Academy, Norwich, Conn., Ludwig-Georg Gym- nasium, Darmstadt, Germany. College:-Yale, 1903. III B K, A A T. Uni- versity of Geneva CSwitzerlandj, Ecole de Vacances, 1903, University of Munich, 1908-09. Member of Modern Language Association of America g New England Modern Language Association. GEORGE VVALKER HINMAN, A.B., A.M. Instructor in Latin. Appointed, 1906. Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, 1894. College:-Harvard, A.B., 1898, A.lVI., 1899. 10 flllllllllllllll... m inimis ... . DOT Sew Q QI . llllllllllllll. llllllllllllilii CECIL IQITTREDGE BANCROFT, AB. Instructor in Latin, Principals Assistant, and Registrar. Appointed, 1906. Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, P. A., 1886, P. S., 1887. College:-Yale. fr: BK, A A fr Instructor and tutor, Yale, 1896-1906. CHARLES A. PARMELEE, A.M. Instructor in French. Appointed, 1906. Prepared for college at Rochelle, Ill. College :-Beloit, 1901, Kenyon, 1903., B 9 H Instructor at Kenyon lVIilitary Academy, Gambier, Ohio, 1901-06, Uni- versity of Paris, 1908-09, Harvard, 1912-13. ARTHUR AVILLIS LEONARD, A.B. Instructor in English. Appointed, 1907. Pre- pared for college at I,eal's School, Plainfield, N. J. College :-Princeton, 1897. Graduate Study, University of Chicago, 1897 and 1900. American Whig Society. Instructor in Greek, Princeton, Assistant in English, the University Extension Department of the University of Chicago, Instructor in English, Academy for Boys, the University of Chicago. Publications:-Stevensonls Inland Village, Travels with a Donkeyf, and Kidnapped,', Irving's Sketchbook.U WALTER HUs'roN LILLARD, AQM. Principalis Assistant, and Instructor in English. Appointed, 1907. Prepared for college at Hyde Park High School, Chicago, Ill. 1' E. College:-Dartmouth, 1905, Oxford, 1909-10. Casque and Gaunt- let, A K E MARKHANI W1NsLoW STACKPOLE, S.T.B. School Minister and Instructor in Eng- lish Bible. Appointed, 1907. Prepared for college at Colgate Academy, Hamilton, N. Y. College :-Colgate, 1895, Harvard, 1896, Andover Seminary, 1901.AKE,1IDBK g GEORGE FRANKLIN FRENCH, A.M. Instructor in Modern Languages. Appointed, 1907. Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, 1897. College :-Dartmouth, A.B., 1901, AM., 1902. KK K, CIJBK Instructor, Plymouth, N. H., High School, 1902-03, Instructor, Stratford, N. H., High School, 1903-06. Studied abroad, 1906-07. ' 'I 1 .QII1llll1llllI!lli,,. ...llllllllllllllllllm Por pow D Q1 ,... l llllllllllllll' 'llillllllllf X,CLAUDE MOORE FUEss, PH.D. Instructor in English. Appointed, 1908. Pre- pared for college at VVaterville High School, VVaterville, N. Y. College:- Amherst, A.B., 1905, Columbia, A.M., 1906, PH.D., 1919. A A iv, CID B K, A A T A Member of Modern Language Association, Boston Authors' Club. Publications:- Byron as a Satirist in Verse 119121, English Narrative Poemsu Q1909j, Selected English Letters Q1913j, Selected Essaysl' 119140, c'Selections for Oral English C1914Q, '4Selected Short Stories C19140, A High School Spelling Bookl' Cwith Mr. Leonard, 19155, and various magazine articles. ' FREDERICK MAX' BOYCE, A.M. Instructor in Physics. Appointed, 1909. Pre- pared for college at East Greenwich Academy, East Greenwich, R. I. College:- Brown, 1909. lib B K, E E, A X A 5 jGUY HEBARD EATON, A.M. Instructor tn Mathematics. Appointed, 1909. Pre- pared for college at Canton, N. Y., High School. College :-St. Lawrence Uni- versity, 1903. CIP B K Previous Schools:-VVest Jersey Military Academy, 1903-04, Principal Lebanon, N. H., Grammar School, 1904-09, Sub-Master, Maynard High School, 1907-08, Principal Medway High School, 1908-09. DoUGLAs CRAXVFORD, A.B., A.M. Instructor in English. Appointed, 1910. Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, 1897-1900. College:-Williams, 1904, 2 -12, A.M., Lake Forest, 1907, A.M., Northwestern University, 1910. Instructor in Chicago Latin School, 1905-06, Lake Forest Academy, 1906- 08, Lake Forest College, 1908-09, Northwestern University, 1910. Publications:-Victor Hugols Les Miserablesi' in the Macmillan Pocket Classics Series. OSWALD TOWER, A.B. Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed, 1910. College:- VVilliams, 1907. Gargoyle, A Z A Instructor in Athletics and Mathematics, Wilbrahain Academy, 1907-10, Vice-Principal, 1909-10. Editor of Spaulding's Collegiate Basketball Guide. FRANK 0,BRIEN, A.B. Instructor in English. Appointed, 1910. Prepared for college at Phillips Academy, 1901-02. College:-Yale. Skull and Bones, A A iv 12 Qlllllllllllllll Illllilllllllll A,. D O T A P O U Q Q I ... l llllllllllll... 5 .lllllllllllif CARL FRIEDRICH PFATTEICHER, A.B., A.M. Instructor in Music and Bible. Ap- pointed, 1912. Prepared for college at Easton High School. College:-Lafay- ette, A.B., 1903, Lutheran Theological Seminary,'1906, Harvard, A.M., 1913. A K E, 119 B K Instructor in Latin, Lafayette, 1906-08, post-graduate Work, Heidelberg and Tubingen, 1908-10, Instructor in German, Lafayette, 1910-11, Harvard, P.G., 1911-13. CLAUDE A. PIFER. Instructor in English. Appointed, 1912. Prepared for college at Paris High School, Paris, Ill. College:-Wabash, A.B., 1907, A.M., 1908, Oxford University, A.B., 1911. B 9 II, 115 B K FREDERIC WILLIAM HEATON STOTT, A.B. Instructor in Public Speaking and Debating. Appointed, 1912. Prepared for college at Stamford High School, Stamford, Conn. College:-Amherst, 1911. WT - HAROLD S. WVILKINS, B.S. A Instructor in Physics anal Chemistry. Appointed, 1913. Prepared for college at Lawrenceville, 1903. College :-Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1907. Assistant in Physics, M. I. T. SAMUEL NEWHALL BAKER, A.B. Instructor in French. Appointed, 19141. Pre- pared for college at Providence, R. I., High School. College:-Brown, A.B. 1905, University of Paris, 1911-12, Columbia, A.M., 19144. N11 T Instructor at Tome School, 1910-11. 3 FREDERICK CURTIS BANGS, A.B. Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed, 1914. Prepared for college at Cortland, N. Y., State Normal School. College:- Yale, A.B., 1913. fl? B K, A EP Instructor public schools of New Haven, Conn., 1914. ALEXANDER BERN BRUCE, A.B. Instructor in Chemistry. Appointed, 1915. Pre- pared for college at Andover. College :-Harvard. fb B K, CID K E VAUGHN S. BLANCHARD, A.B. Instructor in German and Assistant Physical Direc- tor. Appointed, 1915. College:-Bates and Springfield Y. M. C. A. College. Instructor at VVorcester Academy. 13 tiilllllllilillilll ,ll1iililIlIIIi1il.., DOT DOUG Q1 ... illllllliltt. . iillliiiii HARRIS GARY, HUDSON, A.B. Instructor in History. Appointed, 1915. Pre- pared for college at The James 1VIillikin Academy, 1905. College :-The James Nlillikin University, A.B., 1909, Northwestern University, P.G., 1910-11- Oxford University, 1911-144, B.A., 1914. K. Instructor at WVatseka, Ill., High School, 1909-10, Latin and Mathematics' Decatur, Ill., High School, 19141-15, Ancient History and English History. 2 , EDXVIN LATHROP BAKER, A.B., Mus. Bac. Instructor in Modern Languages. Appointed, 1915. Prepared for college at Shady Side Academy, Pittsburgh Pa. College:-Trinity, Sorbonne. KID 1' A, A X P Instructor at Beaver College, Bureau of University Travel, Europe, St. Stephen's College, Ohio Wesleyan University, Pennsylvania State College. 3 14 FACULTY 15 jfuunhers HON. SAMUEL PHILLIPS HON. JOHN PHILLIPS, LL.D. HON. SAMUEL PHILLIPS, JR. U CONSTITUTION AND DEEDS OF TR ST SIGNED BOARD OF TRUSTEES ORGANIZED SCHOOL OPENED FOR INSTRUCTION . . ACT OF INCORPORATION PASSED THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY OPENED SCIENTIFIC DEPARTNIENT OPENED ARCHAEOLOGICAL DEPARTMENT OPENED . . THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY INCORPORATED . . THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY REAL ESTATE PURCHASED Erinnipals ELIPHALET PEARSON, LL.D. . EBENEZER PEMBERTON, LL.D. . MARK NEWMAN, A.M. . . . JOHN ADAMS, LL.D. . OSGOOD JOHNSON, A.M. SAMUEL H. TAYLOR, LL.D. . . FREDERIC W. TILTON, A.M. . . CECIL F. P. BANCROFT, PH.D., LL.D. . ALFRED E, STEARNS, LITT.D. . . 16 . April 21, 1778 . April 28, 1778 . April 30, 1773 October 41, 1780 September 28, 1808 September 927, 1830 . May 1, 1901 . April 16, 1907 July 1, 1908 1778-1786 1786-1793 1795-1810 1810-1833 1833-1837 1838-1871 1871-1873 1873-1901 1903- Qcahszmp Ereanhers, 191521916 REV. MARKHAM W. STACKPOLE, School Minister, Andover. PRINCIPAL ALFRED E. STEARNS, LITT.D., L.H.D., Andover. Eisiting Preachers PRESIDENT CLARENCE A. BARBOUR, D.D. . REV. NEHEMIAH BOYNTON, D.D. . DEAN CHARLES R. BROWN, D.D. . . REV. H. G. BUEHLER, LITT.D. REV. HENRY E. COBB, D.D. . . REV. EDWIN J. VAN ETTEN, D.D. . . PRESIDENT ALBERT PARKER FITCH, D.D. . PROF. HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK, D.D. PRESIDENT WILLIAM G. FROST ' . . REV. FREDERICK J. LIBBY . MR. HUGH A. MORAN ..... MR. DAVID R. PORTER ..... VERY REV. EDMUND S. ROUSMANIERE, D.D. ROBERT E. SPEER, D.D ..... REV. ANSON PHELPS STOKES, D.D. . PROF. HENRY HALLAM TWEEDY 17 Rochester . Brooklyn New Haven, Lakeville, New York, New York, Cambridge, . New York, J 1 N. Y N. Y Conn Conn N. Y N. Y Mass N. Y . Berea, Ky . Exeter, New York, New York, . Boston, New York, New Haven, New Haven, N. H N. Y N. Y Mass N. Y Conn Conn WB meme 1916 Hsimmai .,l llllllllllllll... ....lllllllll!lll!! .,, , DUT DCU D QI .... l lllllllllllll... 5 .,, llllllllllllf 1778 1778 1778 1780 1785 1808 1818 1818 1825 1830 1833 1833-35 1840 1854 1864 1865 1866 1867 1874 1875 1875 1875 1876 1878 1878 1878 1879 1879 1879 1883 1883 April 21. Constitution and Deeds of Trust signed by the Founders, Hon. Samuel Phillips and John Phillips, LL.D. April 28. Board of Trusteesorganized. April 30. School opened for instruction, with thirteen pupils. - October 4. Act of incorporation passed. The second Academy built near the site of the present Administra- tion Building. ' Theological Department opened. January 1. Academy opened. Third Academy, present Dining Hall, built. Philomathean Society founded. Scientific Department founded. Society of Inquiry founded. Commons built. Classical Course changed from two to three years. THE PHILO MIRROR Hrst published. Stone Academy, fourth building, burned. Present Academy built. Draper Prize Competition founded by W. F. Draper. Scientific Course lengthened to three years. Classical Course lengthened from three to four years. Taylor Memorial Library founded. Semi-centennial of Philo celebrated. Cornerstone of new Chapel laid. New Chapel dedicated. A Phillips Academy Centennial celebrated. Alumni Association organized. THE PI-IILLIPIAN first published. Principalship established by Peter Smith, John Smith, and John Byers. Latin Chair founded by John C. Phillips. Joseph Cook Greek Prizes established. Chemical Laboratory built. Semi-centennial of Society of Inquiry. 20 1884 1885 1890 1892 1892 1892 1893 1896 1896 1900 1900 1901 1901 1902 1903 1903 1908 1908 1908 1909 1910 1911 1911 1911 1911 1912 1912 1912 1913 1914 1914 1914 1914 1915 sjiitlzzuuuulu- -nmalnmnllsmu 9,099 Def Dove Q1 099. lllmlnlll lmmllmiii Scientific Course lengthened to four years. THE PHILLIPIAN issued weekly. Running track completed. Forum organized. POT POURRI first published. THE MIRROR changed to literary monthly. Four cottages completed. Robinson Prizes for excellence in debate founded. Gymnasium burned. Bancroft Cottage completed. Seventy-fifth anniversary of Philo. Presentation of Brothers Field. Department of Archaeology opened. Opening of Borden Gymnasium. Archaeology Building completed. One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Anniversary celebrated. Theological Seminary removed to Cambridge. Seventy-fifth Anniversary of Society of Inquiry. Seminary Real Estate purchased. Swimming Pool Fund started. WVilliams Estate purchased. Construction of Day and Bishop Halls. Swimming Pool Fund completed. New Administration Building completed. Swimming Pool completed. Isham Infirmary completed. Phillips Hall remodeled. Adams Hall completed. John Phelps Taylor Hall completed. Construction of Phillips Memorial Entrance. IDayfBequesL Institution of Founders' Day. Bartlet Hall burned. Peabody House completed. Q1 ER .Z- ,- ,Q li 'fr gf W 3. ' , I , s iz?-,ff 'f f is ' ' ., fi I, fda 2. li lvl! li l l a l A 1 so A , l A A A ' !V'l3DlAiL'.n .f1-. .m.ul171'l' 'l I H l I lx X I V 17!1lW . - Q A ' , ' Pig 1 ' H Ubsllnl Dunhill I IH W Il, I v If ld f ZW A Win 1 OTQVBCACIU Qbclbc 191 ' N editing this THE TWENTY-FOURTH ANNUAL POT POURRI and CLASS BOOK, the editors sincerely hope that the ensuing pages may serve to keep fresh in our minds through the years to come the memory of friendships formed, of honors gained, and tasks well done. Above all, may they serve to keep alive in our hearts that same unselish spirit of service to some great ideal which is instilled in us here by our instructors, by the example of nearly one hundred and fifty preceding classes, and by that general atmosphere which sur- rounds all those attending Phillips Academy. We hope that those at whom our grinds are aimed Will take them in good spirit. In closing, We wish to extend Our hearty thanks to those who have helped us in our task of compiling the records of the Class of 1916. 22 W SCHOOL GROUP 1:11:11:11:1111:11:11:1g 1:1 1:1 11 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 11 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:1 1:11:11:11:11:11:11:11:11:1 QLABBIYAL 51 1 1 1 11 DEPARTMENT H 11f1 1 1 U ester B Ehemiglg U IZUl'II11IIliIIZI1ZIlIIIII1IlIZI1IIIIIlIIIII1IIIZIIZIIII1iI IIl1ZI1IIIIIIiIIZIIIIIII1ZIIIIlIUiII11iI1lT1iIIIIIZIJiIIZI SENWWHS IIEII 5 U 'gig m 1:1 1:1 1:1 U L 1s U U 'F U 1 g g 1 ISI gi g 11 IS KSTCVB Xcbfzf A E UUUUUUUHUUUUUUUUUIIUUUIIUIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIII CLASSICAL SENIORS 4 PAUL ABBOTT PAUL 129 E. 70th St., New York City Born June 3, 1898 New York City A Entered Andover 1911 Yale l CP A E District Fire Chief Athletic Council C1915-165 Undergraduate Treasurer 1 Assistant Managing Editor POT POURRI C1915j Secretary of Student Council Lacrosse Team 119141 V Advisory Board Q1915-161 Fall Cheering Staff Q19153 Secretary of Fire Department Grill Committee Phillipian Board C3 yearsj Editor-in-Chief Por POURRI H9161 ' Senior Reception Committee Peabody Assembly Committee Class Day Committee 119161 Spring Cheering Stai H9165 CHARLES REYNOLDS ALLOWAY AL HDUTCH 4192 West End Ave., New York City Born 1898 New York City Entered Andover 1913 Wfiuning Class Track H9155 1 1 DCNALD HATCH ANDREWS DON North Main St., Southington, Conn. Born June 11, 1898 Southington, Conn. 1 Entered Andover 1915 Yale Academic A Glee Club ' or I 24 CLASSICAL SENIORS THOMAS WOODBURY ASHLEY TOM 'roMMY,' 12 Allston Heights, Allston, Mass. Born November 11, 1895 Boston, Mass. Entered Andover 1912 Yale Academic I 411 B X Varsity Football C3 years1 President of Class C1Vinter Term 19141 Captain of Class Baseball CSpring 19131 Student Council C2 years1 Hockey Team Q2 years1 Captain of Hockey Team H9151 Athletic Council Class Viirestling Team Second Baseball Varsity Baseball C19151 125-pound Wrestling Champion C19141 Secretary of Class CWinter Term 19151 WILLIAM SHINDEL BAILEY, JR. nB1LLn Jamestown, New York i BorniOctober Q, 1898 Jamestown, N. Y. Entered Andover 1915 9 Yale Academic WILLIAM HODGKINSON BARBER HBILLYH Boston, Mass. Born May 30, 1898 New Haven, Conn. Entered Andover 1913 Yale KID B X Phillipian Board Class Track Q191411 Tennis Squad C1915-161 Captain VVinning Class Tennis Team C19151 Manager of Lacrosse C19161 Manager Class Soccer Series C19151 Athletic Council C1915-161 25 CLASSICAL SENIORS GORDON BARTLETT Goan Peacedale, Rhode Island Born March 12, 1898 Tottori, Japan Entered Andover 1912 Dartmouth Q Winning Class Track C1915j Choir Glee Club C2 yearsj President Dartmouth Club President Inquiry Track Squad C1916D RICHARD HORACE BASSETT HDICKH HBASS7, ' 41 West St., Northampton, Mass. Born February 21, 1900 Durham, N. C. Entered Andover 19141 Harvard VVinning Class Track Cross Country Squad Secretary Philo H9151 Vice-President Philo C1915j Means Speaker ' Forum Assistant Editor of the Mirror C1914-151 C1915-16D Managing Editor Mirror C1915j resigned GEORGE M. P. BATCIJIELDER Baron X 46 West Greenwood St., Amesbury, Mass. A Born January 20, 1897 Amesbury, Mass. Entered Andover 1912 Harvard 26 CLASSICAL SENIORS CLARK SMITH BEARDSLEE HBEARDSH Newbury, New Hampshire Born May 29, 1898 Windsor, Conn. Entered Andover 1914 Yale LAURENCE WELLMAN BEILENSON BEEL ' l ' 918 Franklin St., Helena, Ark. Born May 31, 1899 Helena, Ark Entered Andover 1914 Harvar President of Philo QWinter 19165 Secretary ,of Philo CFall 1915D Robinson Prize Debater Means Prize Speaker HIRAM BELLIS BLAUVELT HHIU ' 3 Andover Cottage Born October 16, 1897 Oradell, N. Entered Andover 1914 Princeto 1916 Class Wrestling Team C1915j' Glee Club 09161 Captain 1916 Winning Class Second Baseball Team 27 ti J. I1 CLASSICAL SENIORS WILHELMUS BOGART BRYAN, JR. BILL 1330 18th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Born October 9, 1898 Washington, D. C. Entered Andover 1914 Princeton , A I' X Mirror Board C1916j RICHARD S. BUSHNELL HDICKH BUsH,' 265 St. Paul St., Brookline, Mass. Born August 20, 1899 Providence, R. I. Entered Andover 19111 Harvard BERTRAND WILSON COHN HBERTH Brookhaven, Mississippi Born December 28, 1898 Brookhaven, Miss. 1 Entered Andover 1914 Yale 1 1 28 CLASSICAL SENIORS HOMER CONROY 1 BUGs H . 908 St. Marks Ave., Brooklyn, New York ' l Born August 11, 1898 Brooklyn, N. Y. 1 Entered Andover 1913 Yale Academic V A U V Class Basketball Q19161 l Baseball Squad C19161 Track Squad C19161 3 Wlinning Class Football C19151 Dramatic Society C1913-141 Dramatic Society C1915-161 Captain Winning Class Baseball 119151 Class Swimming Team C1915-161 Track Squad CSpring 19161 JOHN CROSBY, JR. cRos 2104 Stevens Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Born July 10, 1898 Minneapolis, Minn. Entered Andover 1914: Yale A 1' X Phillvlpian Board C2 years1 Cross Country Team C19151 Treasurer of Philo Cross Country Squad 119141 ' Wilining Class Track Team MAURICE JOYCE CURRAN UMAURIEH Born July 145, 1896 Andover, Mass. 1 Entered Andover 1912 Harvard A U V Assistant Manager Soccer Q1914-1 i Manager Soccer Q19151 Athletic Council i I Spring Police Force f19161 l 29 , CLASSICAL SENIORS ROBERT ADAMS DENNISON BOB HDENNYH Reading, Mass. Born December 18, 1896 Wakefield, Mass. Entered Andover 1912 Harvard AWinning Class Baseball f1915j Manager Winning Class Soccer H9152 PAUL RICE DOOLIN HTHE DOOLEYH ' 57 Bishop St., St. Albans, Vt. Born July 24, 1897 St. Albans, Vt. Entered Andover 19141 Harvard fID B X Class Football H9141 Debating Team H9151 Winning Class Track C1915D Draper Speaking H9151 Student Council C1915l Winning Class Football C1915D Treasurer of Inquiry Grill Committee C1915-161 Means Speaker H9165 HENRY LEWIS DUDLEY, JR. A DUB A 145 Alta Ave., Park Hill, Yonkers, N. Y. Born August 30, 1898 New York City Entered Andover 1913 Yale Academic Cross' Country Team Q1914-155 Track Squad C1915D Athletic Council Q1916D Winter Track Squad H9161 Captain Cross Country 09151 30 CLASSICAL SENIORS HAROLD WARBURTON ELLIS 311 Main St., Franklin, lVIass. Born August 30, 1897 Franklin, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 Yale GERARD MONTGOMERY ENGLISH JERRYI' 102 Chestnut Ave., Narberth, Pa. Born August Q0, 1897 A New York City Entered Andover 1913 Princeton 415 A 2 Mandolin Club Q3 yearsl Banjo Club C3 yearsj Winning Class Track 119153 Phillipian Board Police Force CSpring 19155 Philo Winter Track Squad Q2 yearsj Secretary of Princeton Club C1915-161 Secretary of Inquiry 09154161 Athletic Council C1915-161 Forum Managervof Tennis Class Historian DAVID ROBERT ENGLUND A' DAVE HENGX' 33 Rockwell Ave., Naugatuck, Conn. Born September 13, 1897 Naugatuck, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 Yale Winning Class Soccer 31 CLASSICAL SENIORS F CHARLES LEWIS FAHERTY CHARLEY 2735 Pine Grove Ave., Chicago, Ill. Q Born August 25, 1897 Chicago, Ill. - Entered Andover 1913 Yale 3 CID A A . Baseball Team CQ yearsj Soccer Squad C1914D . Student Council Advisory Board Athletic Council Captain Baseball Team 09165 Soccer Team C1915j I Peabody Assembly Committee Grill Committee 5 Class Swimming Class Wrestling Captain Class Basketball Fall Cheer-ing Staff Q191 51 Vice-President of School CWinter 19161 Cheering Staff CSpring 19165 Senior Prom. Committee President of School CSp1'ing 1916j ' DONALD FALVEY DON 71 Strathmore Rd., Brookline, Mass. Born February QQ, 1897 Norwich, Conn. Entered Andover 1914 Harvard A I' X Class Baseball Class Cross Country ARTHUR FRANCIS FARLEY A ART 251 Central St., Auburndale, Mass. Born August 16, 1898 Auburndale, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 Yale Academic Class Swimming and Tennis Teams Second Honor Roll QFall Termj 32 CLASSICAL SENIORS i x I i 1 ELISHA BOUDINOT FISHER HBUDU FIsH,' The Mendota Apartments, 'Washingtorn D. C. Born 1898 Vllashington, D. C. Entered Andover 19141 Yale Winning Class Football C1915D Glee Club WILLIAM ARTHUR FLINT nBILLn' . '711 Elm St., New Haven, Conn. Born January 52, 1897 New Haven, Conn. Entered Andover 1913 Yale Glee Club Class Track Rifle Club I Fire Captain FRED THOMAS FLYNN ' FREDH SMILERH 92 Buckingham St., Hartford, Conn. Born October 97, 1896 Hartford, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 Yale KID A A 33 l CLASSICAL SENIORS TAPPAN EUSTIS FRANCIS HFUNNYU NDOCH 5 26 Davis Ave., Brookline, Mass. Born May 13, 1897 Brookline, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 Harvard ' Orchestra Cross Country Squad Track Squad Philo Banjo and Mandolin Clubs CHARLES WHITE GAMBLE 5' CHARLEYH RED A Haverford, Pa. Born November 3, 1898 Bryn Mawr, Pa. Entered Andover 1913 Yale K O A Soccer Team Q2 yearsj Mandolin Club C2 yearsj Banjo Club Phillipian Board Q3 yearsj - Student Council Assistant Manager Track Manager Wrestling Vice-President Yale Club Athletic Council ' Vice-President School CFall Termj Secretary of Class CSpring Termj Chief of Police CSpring Terml WILLIAM BON WILL GELLAT LY 1 BILL ' 197 Park Ave., Orange, N. J. l . . 1 Born June 25, 1896 Phlladelphia, Pa. Entered Andover 1912 Yale ' KP A A - Class Baseball 'Ieain H9135 Wrestling Squad C2 yearsb Soccer Squad CQ yearsj Winning Class Track C1915j 1 Class Football Team 09153 Class Soccer Team Q191Q.j ' Track Squad CWinter Term 1913-149 POT POURRI Board Spring Police Force ,, 34: CLASSICAL SENIORS LEVERETT STONE GLEASON LEv', 125 Vernon St., Newton, Mass. Born February 25, 1898 Winchendon, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 Harvard CADMUS Z. GORDON, JR. .. ZACHH 24 Walnut St., Brookville, Pa. Born November 18, 1897 Pittsbargh, Pa. Entered Andover 1914 . Yale Academic A 1' X Baseball Team H9151 Dramatic Club Q1915-161 Student Council Q1915-161 CHARLES PHILIP GOULD c. P. HJIMMIE,, cHARLEY 66 Church St., Freeport, Long Island Born October 2, 1897 Eureka, Kan. Entered Andover 1913 Yale A U V Class Track QCaptainj VVinning Class Tennis Class Swimming Gym Team Class Cross Country Track Squad Second Track Team 35 CLASSICAL SENIORS ' 1 MAURICE STEPHENSON GOULD A g'MAURIEi, 47 Reid Ave., Port Washington, Long Island Born October 13, 1895 Frankfort, Ind. Entered Andover 1912 Yale Academic A U V President School QWinter 19161 Manager Football Team, Assistant Manager Football Student Council C2 yearsj Grill Committee President Student Council '1915-16D Captain Winning Class Track C1915D, Athletic Council Chairman Peabody Dance Committee Senior Reception Committee Advisory Board President Armstrong League Dramatic Club Vice-President Class CVVinter and Spring 1915D Chief of Police Force CSpring 1915j Swimming Team CQ yearsl Draper Prize Speaker C3 yearsj Secretary and Treasurer of Yale Club C1915D Captain Swimming Team C 19161, resigned Senior Prom. Committee Class Day Committee Head Cheer Leader CSpring 19161 Track Squad CSpring 1916j FREDERICK STANDISI-I GREENE KTOODLESP HFRITZD 60 Crescent St., Middletown, Conn. Born May 2, 1898 Middletown, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 Amherst HOWARD JOSEPH HAMERSHLAG n IZHAMYJ 38 West 69th Street, New York City Born December 23, 1898 New York City Entered Andover 1914 Harvard , 36 CLASSICAL SENIORS RALPH PHILIP HANES CENIG-M 953 West 41th St., Winston-Salem, N.C. Born Feb. 22, 1898 VVinston-Salem, N. C. Entered Andover 1913 Yale K O A Mandolin Club C19135 Phillipian Board C2 years5 Grill Committee Managing Editor of Phfillipian Q1915-165 Junior Prom. Committee Vice-President of Armstrong League Q1915-165 Assistant Manager of Baseball C19155 Manager Baseball C19165 Student Council I 1915-165 President Yale Club Q1915-165 Advisory Board C1915-165 Athletic Council C1915-165 Fall Cheering Staff C19155 Senior Reception Committee Peabody Assembly Committee Senior Prom. Committee Vice-President of School CSpring 19165 Spring Cheering Staff 119165 Class Day Committee Q19165 HENRY CARLETON HARRISON HHENNEYH HHARRYD HEINIE 6 Erwin Park, Montclair, N. J. Born November 12, 1896 Montclair, N. J. Entered Andover 1916 Princeton HAE ' HAROLD PITTS HARROWER ' . LEW Guy Park Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. 1 Born July 28, 1897 Amsterdam, N. Y. Entered Andover 1912 Yale Academic II A E Student Council C19145 Business Manager of Phillipian C1914-155 Phillipian Board C2 years5 Glee Club Q19165 Secretary and Treasurer of Class CFall of 19145 Assistant Manager of Track Q19155 Chairman Junior Prom. Committee C19155 5 Manager of Class Football C19145 Manager of Track C1915-165 E Athletic Advisory Board C1915-165 ' Athletic Council C1915-165 Church Deacon Q1915-165 Leader of Fall Cheering Stad Q19155 President of School CF all of 19155 Chairman Senior Reception Committee Vice-President Student Council C1915-165 Phillips Union Committee C1915-165 Chairman Senior Prom. Class Day Committee Cheering Stai CSpring 19165 I 3 37 . M, CLASSICAL SENIORS 1 DAVID MARSTON HARTLEY UDAVEN 2320 Rucker Ave., Everett, Wash. Born March 19, 1897 Minneapolis, Minn. l Entered Andover 1912 Yale Academic CID A A Class Soccer Q1912-13D Class Vllrestling C1915D Winning Class Football H9151 Captain Class Wrestling 119161 Assistant Manager Soccer C1914j W. H. HAZARD, JR. HHAPH ..BILL,, 46 Broad St., Salamanca, N. Y. Born June 1, 1897 Salamanca, N. Y. Entered Andover 1913 Yale 119 A A Winning Class Baseball Choir C1 yearj Varsity Soccer Glee' Club Class Basketball MARSTON HEARD ll 7 7 726 Chestnut St., Manchester, N. H. Born December 2, 1897 Manchester, N. H. Entered Andover 19142 Harvard fb B X Winning Class Baseball C1915j Winning Class Football C1915j Treasurer Inquiry 38 CLASSICAL SENIORS JAMES SMITH HEMINGWAY, JR. KIJIMSS 325 Temple St., New Haven, Conn. Born July 9, 1899 New Haven, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 Yale K O A VVinning Class Football WALTER HOCHSCHILD UHOCKYM 565 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. Born September 27, 1900 Far Rockaway, N. Y . Entered Andover 1915 Yale Academic JOHN JOSEPH HOGAN, JR. A V JACK Lowell, Mass. Born August 6, 1897 Lowell, Mass. Entered Andoveri1915 Harvard 39 CLASSICAL SENIOTRS , GILBERT HENRY HOOD, JR. GILH 18 VVestWood Rd., Somerville, Mass. Born August 19, 1899 Derry, N. H. Entered Andover 1914 Harvard ' Mandolin Club C1915-161 JOHN GRINNELL WETMORE HUSTED JOHN' ' JOHNNIEU ' 1845 R St. N. WV., Washington, D. C., or 535 South St., Peekskill, N. Y. Born October 8, 1897 Peekskill, N. Y. Entered Andover 1913 Yale II A E Police Force QFall 1915j Assistant Manager of Swimming C1914-15D Athletic Council C1914-161 Secretary and Treasurer of Class 119155 House Captain Fire Department Q1915-165 ROBERT HENRY HYDE V HBOBH 67 East Division St., Chicago, Ill. Q Born August 26, 1897 Dayton, Ohio Entered Andover 1913 VVest Point Secretary of Harvard Club H9161 - Winning Class Soccer 440 1 CLINTON MCCARTHY JONES JoNEs1n,' MAC Hammond, N. Y. Born August 15, 1899 Hammond, N. Y. Entered Andover 19141 Rifle Club THOMAS MIFFLIN JONES, 3D TOM The Lawn Colony, Ontario, Can. Born December 30, 1896 Pittsburgh, Pa. Entered Andover 1915 K O A Second Football Team Hockey Team Winter Track Squad FREDERICK MACDONALD KINGSBURY FRED 180 Court St., Keene, N. H. Born December 4, 1898 Keene, N. H. Entered Andover 19141 Harvard fb B X Swimming Team C2 yearsj Soccer Team Mandolin Club C2 yearsj Banjo Club C2 yearsj Leader of Mandolin Club 119161 , Secretary of Inquiry CSpring of 1916D CLASSICAL SENIORS Harvard Yale 41 1 A 1 I CLASSICAL SENIORS JACK ROSS LAUER 749 Webster Ave., Scranton, Pa. Born January 19, 1899 Scranton, Pa. Entered Andover 1914 Yale Winning Class Soccer H9152 RALPH IRVING LINDSEY In .. UNH Born September 30, 1896 Lynn, Mass. Entered Andover 19141 Harvard Class Football H9151 Track Squad H9161 Winning Class Football C1916j GEORGE LATIMER MCCOOK Pittsburgh, Pa. Entered AndoverZ1915 Yale I K 0 A Football Squad , 42 CLASSICAL SENIOR S HUWARD VANDERLIP MCELDOWNEY MAC .r1Nx', The Beaconsheld, Brookline, Mass. Born August 13, 1898 Chicago, Ill. Entered Andover 1915 Harvard EDWARD SAWYER MCKINSTRY MAC Q70 Paddock St., Watertown, N. Y. Born February 15, 1897 Watertown, N. Y. Entered Andover 1915 Amherst Choir ' Rifle Club JAMES FRANCIS MEAGHER, JR. JIM JUNE HFATN 5012 Drexel Blvd., Chicago, Ill. Born February 16, 1898 Chicago, Ill. Entered Andover 1913 Yale Academic Swimming Team Mandolin:C1ub 43 CLASSICAL SENIORS RAYMOND BARNARD MILES 1 Duke Brooklyn, N. Y. I Entered Andover 1913 Yale l K Class Track A WILLIAM PAGE IVIINER 1 UBILL7, 150 Hillside Ave., Naugatuck, Conn. 1 Born September 28, 1898 Naugatuck, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 Yale Choir ' Glee Club I VVinter Track Squad WILLIAM WEAVER PERRIN BILLS, 1506 East Ferry St., Lafayette, Ind. Born July 18, 1897 Lafayette, Ind. Entered Andover 1913 Amherst I 414 CLASSICAL SENIORS PAUL KOEHLER PHILLIPS PHIL P. K. 21 Lincoln Ave., Amherst, IVIass. Born December 13, 1897 Amherst, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 Amherst Ivinning Class Football Swimming Team JAMES ARLIN POLLOCK I HJIMI' sPiDER,' 217 Bellefontaine St., Pasadena, Cal. Born September 5, 1898 Salt Lake City, Utah Entered Andover 1915 Yale Academic H A E Tennis Squad H9161 Mandolin Club ' Banjo Club GEORGE PHILLIPS REYNOLDS CUPE UFAT,, Canton Ave., Milton, Mass. Born March 23, 1898 Boston, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 Harvard A I' X 45 CLASSICAL SENIORS I l HERBERT GORDON RESENBERG A RED HERB Colonnade Apts., Indianapolis, Ind. Born December 6,1899 Great Barrington, Mass. Entered Andover 1916 Harvard LEWIS HOWARD ROTHCHILD BARoNl' 5244 Fifth Ave., New York , N. Y. 'Born November 26, 1898 San Francisco, Cal. Entered Andover 1913 C Princeton Class Football Q2 yearsj . Class Wrestling Lacrosse Team Football Team 09155 Wrestling Squad LESTER BEACH SCHEIDE LES i' 1414 Asylum Ave., Hartford, Conn. Born May 25, 1897 San Francisco, Cal. Entered Andover 1913 Yale Glee Club C3 yearsj Por POURRI Artist C3 yearsj Quartet C2 yearsj Art Editor Mirror C2 yearsj Winning Class Soccer H9110 Soccer Team C1916j E Riiie Team Athletic Council Q1916J Manager Musical Clubs H9165 l Student Cormcil C2 yearsj 5 Assistant Manager Swimming Team Q1915j i Manager Swimming Team C1916j . I 46 STEWART AUGUSTUS SEARLE sTEw Q 1917 Logan Ave. So., Minneapolis, Minn. Born August 24, 1897 Duluth, Minn. Entered Andover 1912 Winning Class Swimming Team C19140 Varsity Swimming Team H9151 Captain Varsity Swimming Team 09161 JOHN MCDOWELLQ SHARPE, JACK 315 Lincoln Way East, Chambersburg, Pa. Born March 30, 1898 Chambersburg, Pa. Entered Andover 1913 Princeton H A E A lVIeans Prize Speaker 119161 HAROLD VEDDER SHERMAN HSHERMH 167 Hillside Ave., Lyons Farms, N. J. Born January 19, 1895 Newark, N. J. Entered Andover 1912 Yale Academic Secretary Philo-Forum CWinter:1914l CLASSICAL SENIORS Yale 3D 47 I CLASSICAL SENIORS P ELLIOTT SPEER nELLu Walnut St., Englewood, N. J. Born November 1, 1898 Englewood, N. J. Entered Andover 1913 Princeton 11 A E Philo School Debating Team C1914-165 Forum Debating Team Q1914-16j Phillipian Board C1914-161 Chairman Calendar Board Police Force QF all 19155 Secretary of Inquiry Q1914-15D President of Philo CFall 19155 Draper P1'ize Speaker President Princeton Club Student Council Q1915-161 Athletic Council C1915-161 Manager Gym Team President of Inquiry C1915-161 x CHARLES HENRY SPRAGUE HCHICKM HCHARLIEN ' 33 Walker Road, Swampscott, Mass. Born November 12, 1897 Swampscott, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 Harvard ixiandoiin Club C1915-16D RUFUS LACROIX STEVENS , STEVE H 1 115 Green St., Lynn, Mass. Born May 22, 1897 Lynn, Mass. 1 Entered Andover 19141 Amherst Glee Club C2 yearsj Dramatic Club C1 yearj VVinning Class Soccer Team CFall 1915D , W 48 GUILFORD BRUCE, STUART HBICKD Born January QQ, 1899 Newton Centre, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 ' Harvard LEVI SANDERSON TENNEY, JR. SAMMY H ltlontclair, N. J. Born June 15, 1898 Glen Ridge, N. J. Entered Andover 1915 GARDNER TILTON 1 UGIGU Jie Gmc 1 Elm Ave., Lexington, Blass. Born May 8, 1898 Lexington, lVIass. 1 Entered Andover 1912 Harvard Soccer Squad H9141 Soccer Team C1915j Captain of VViuning Class Swimming Team C1914-J Swimming Team C1915-161 , President of Harvard Club CLASSICAL SENIORS ' Yale 49 E 1 CLASSICAL SENIORS RUSWELL TEUMAN 460 Riverside Drive, New York City Born August 18, 1899 Bayville, Long Island Entered Andover 1912 Q Williams Captain Class Swimming Team H9152 - Swimming Team C1916j Winning Class Soccer Team 419151 KENNETH KNAPP WALKER KEN WALK ' Auburn, N. Y. Born January 26, 1898 Auburn, N. Y. Entered Andover 1914: A Trinity Glee Club ALBERT HASLAM WALSH 4 ,,ALn C 157 Summer Ave., Reading, Mass. Born August 3, 1896 ILaWrence, Mass. Entered Andover 1912 Harvard Clioir Treasurer of Harvard Club Q1915j Glee Club Q3 yearsb Leader Glee Club H9161 Quartet Class VVrestling Team Class Track Team 50 CLASSICAL SENIORS WALTER STEPHEN WHITWORTH ' ' YVHIT 'I ' , 329 Dean St., Wioodstoclz, Ill. Born NIay 14, 1895 Chicago, Ill. Entered Andover 1913 Harvard Pianist of Nlusical Clubs CHARLES WASHINGTON WILLIAMS, JR. 63 South lVIountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Born February 28, 1896 Brooklyn, N. Y. Entered Andover 1914: Yale Academic H A E Class Football Team 119155 Captain Winning Class Football C 19161 Hockey Team 1915j Hockey Squad C1916D Mandolin Club H9151 District Captain of Fire Dept. Winning Class Baseball C1915j ' Captain Salvage Crew of Fire Department ROBERT BYRON WILLIAMSON ., BOB ,, 53 Grove St., Augusta, Me. Born August 923, 1899 Augusta, Me. b Entered Andover 1915 Harvard I 112 B X Secretary Philo CWinter 19162 H Mandolin Club H9165 Means Prize Speaker H9165 ' l 51 l SCIENTIFIC SENIIORS EBEN HAYWARD BAKER H BAKE . 23 South Main St., Milford, Mass. Born October 2, 1896 Milford, Mass. Entered Andover 1914 M. I. T. Class Cross Country 41914.-153 Rifle' Club q191e3 FRANCIS IRVING BALDWIN W HBALDYN Q54 West 7 6th St., New York City .Born October 2, 1897 Greenwich, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 ' Yale Sheffield WALLACE NORTON BARKER Michigan City, Ind. Entered Andover 1915 Yale ' Relay Squad Q1916J 1 I 52 SCIENTIFIC SENIORS JAMES BROWN BLAIR HJIINIH Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. Born May 25, 1897 Pittsburgh, Pa. Entered Andover 1915 Yale K O A Cross Country Team Winter Track Squad PHILIP EVERETT BLANK HPHILU 138 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Born February 10, 1898 Jamestown, N. Y. Entered Andover 1914 Yale Class VVrestling Team. 119155 ' WALDO HAYWARD BROWN HBROWNIE I 58 lVIarshal St., Brookline, Mass. Born June 27, 1896 Salem, lVIass. Entered Andover 1913 NI. I. T. Track Squad Mandolin Club 53 f- SCIENTIFIC SENIORS ALAN W. BURKE NAL!! 40 Pollock Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. Born January 20, 1898 Pittsfield, Mass. I Entered Andover 1915 M. I. T. JOHN PORTER CHARLTON, JR. if JACK35 112 Spring St., Reading, Pa. Born February 922, 1895 Dravosburg, Pa. Entered Andover 1914: Yale Sheffield in A Z ' Football Squad H9141 Relay Squad H9161 Football Team H9151 A Relay Team H9151 Track Team H9151 Secretary and Treasurer of Class QFall1 Captain of Track Team, Student Council - Advisory Board, Athletic Council 1 Acting 419167 AMBROSE HURLBUTT COLEY SIAM-77 ECBROS7 181 Howard Ave., New Haven, Conn. Born October 18, 1897 'New I-Iaven, Conn. Entered Andover 19141 SheHield Scientiic School 54: SCIENTIFIC SENIORS JAMES LINDLEY DEAN i . NJIMN 'AHANSM 4145 South Main St., Harrisonburg, Va. Born January 4, 1897 Harrisonburg, Va. Entered Andover 1915 M. I. T. WILLIAM J UDSON DEAN SCJUD59 ICFRITZ7, 8 Locke St., Andover, Mass. Born July 10, 1898 Pigeon Cove, Mass. Entered Andover 1911 M. I. T. Lacrosse Team H9145 Captain Lacrosse Team C1915-165 CHARLES MILES DRAKE . 1954 Biltmore St., Washingtoli, D. C. Born February 19, 1897 Charleston, S. C. Entered Andover 1911 M. I. T. A T' X Winning Class Soccer H9155 Student Council Manager Winning Class Football Team C1915j . V Treasurer Lawrence Work Chief of Police CFall 1915J Track Squad Q1915-16D Peabody Dance Committee Baseball Squad 119161 Senior Reception Committee Ilfirror Board 55 I , SCIENTIFIC SENIORS GEORGE CHURCH DURANT Great Barrington, Mass. H Born July 20, 1896 Great Barrington, Mass. Entered Andover 1914 Yale Fall Term Track Squad Q1914Q Winter Term Track Squad C1915J ' Mandolin Club H9161 FREEMAN HUNTINGTON DYKE if I 7 Sunset Rock Rd., Andover, Mass. Born November 23, 1897 Germantown, N. Y. Entered Andover 1913 M.VI. T. Class Track Q1914j Class Cross Country H9131 Varsity Cross Country C1915j PAUL KINGSBURY FISCHER '47 Baker St., Saranac Lake, N. Y. Born September 23, 1898 Salt Lake City, Utah Entered Andover 1912 Harvard 1 Lightweight Boxing Championsiiip 119145 5 Captain Winning Class Soccer 119145 Soccer Team C1915j r l W , 56 SCIENTIFIC SENIORS HURXTHAL FIELDIFREASE - HFREEZEN 130 Twelfth st., N. W., Canton, ohio ' Born December 16, 1898 Canton, Ohio Entered Andover 1916 M. I. T. DAVID EDWARD GAGEL DAvE', SWEDEN 77 Bartlet St., Andover, Mass. X Born March 11, 1897 West Haven, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 Shefiield Scientiiic School CLARENCE MAXWELL GARRIGUES HGARRIU 721 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Born September 20, 1897 Plainfield, N. J. Entered Andover 1915 Princeton Dramatic Club Class Basketball 57 1 4 I 1 SCIENTIFIC SENIORS HARRY INWOOD GRANGER HARRY South Weymouth, Mass. Born April 241, 1897 South Weymouth, Mass. Entered Andover 1914 M. I. T. PAUL JONES HARRIMAN UHARRYH 25 VVindsor St., Haverhill, Mass. Born July 8, 1898 Haverhill, Nlass. Entered Andover 1915 Worcester Polytechnic Institute HENRY OSBURNE HAUGHTON - K oz', HHAUGHTH 320 Otsego St., Ilion, N. Y. Born January 17, 1898 Richmond, Va. Entered Andover 1915 Yale Sheffield 58 SCIENTIFIC SENIORS WILLIAM HOLDEN HBILLM HoLnY,' 225 South Main St., Andover, Mass. Born March 9, 1896 Andover, Mass, Entered Andover 1911 QUndecidedj ,Glee Club QQ yearsj Orchestra H9155 Manager Orchestra 119162 Lacrosse C2 yearsj Winning Class Football 09161 ROLAND SANFORD HOTCHKISS HHOTCHH 26 Crescent St., YVaterbury, Conn. Born March 27, 1896 Waterbury, Conn: Entered Andover 1915 Yale Shefheld Winning Class Soccer Team C1915D ALLEN HUBBARD, JR. l CCALIS 11 lVIontvale Crescent, Newton Centre, Mass. Born July 21, 1897 Newton Centre Entered Andover 1913 Yale Sheiiield Hockey Team C1916D Choir 119161 Glee Club H9162 Instructor in Rifle Club I 59. I SCIENTIFIC SENIORS IRVING ZEBRISKE HUMPHREYS HHUMPH 66 Central St., Andover, Mass. Born February 20, 1897 Lawrence, Mass. Entered Andover 19141 V Stevens Institute of Technology SAMUEL J. JONES' SAM 9 Cliff St., Waterbury, Conn. Born 1895 Waterbury, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 ' 1 Yale Sheffield KID A A Track Squad BERTHOLD LEO KATTEN UBERTH Hartford, Conn. ,Born April 15, 1897 I-Iartford, Conn. Entered Andover 1913 Yale Sheffield Dramatic Club Mandolin Club 60 SCIENTIFIC SENIORS EDWARD KEITH GED!! 2415 Independence Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Born December 19, 1895 Kansas City, Mo. Entered Andover 1914 Yale fb A 2 Class Basketball 09165 Varsity Football C1914-155 W'inning Class Track C1915j Varsity Track Squad C1916j Varsity WVrestling Squad 09152 Senior Prom. Committee H9161 Spring Police Force 119161 CLARENCE EDWARD KENNEDY KEN', , 4 East Ave., East VVeymouth, Mass. Born August 7, 1891 East Weymouth, Mass. Entered Andover 1912 Cornell GEORGE ROGER KNIGHT 141 Moraine St., Brockton, Mass. Born June 13, 1897 Brockton, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 M. I. T. Glee Club Choir 61 SCIENTIFIC SENIORS ROBERT COURTNEY LANGDON BoB,' 86 Upton Ave., Providence, R. I. Born August 18, 1897 ' Providence, R. I. Entered Andover 1913 Harvard Secretary, Harvard Club KENNETH T. LAVELLE FLIVVER 1504A West Norwegian St., Pottsville, Pa. Born January 31, 1899 Wissahickon, Phila., Pa. Entered Andover 1915 M. I. T. 3 PHILIP SHERIDAN MASON 8 Williams St., Ayer, Mass. Born February 20, 1893 Groton, Mass. Entered Andover 1914 M. I. T. V 62 SPERRY WADSWORTH MINER MINE ' 11311 Hessler Road, Cleveland, Ohio Born March 16, 1897 Entered Andover 1913 SCIENTIFIC SENIORS 2 I New Haven, Conn. 1 Yale Sheflield II A E Soccer Squad H9141 I Soccer Team H9151 Hockey Manager H9161 1 Assistant Hockey Manager H9151 Athletic Council FRANCIS GREGORY MINOR HFRANK 4:6 Fountain St., New Born June 3, 1896 Entered Andover 1915 Winning Class Football Team , HARRY CAMPBELL PRESTON PREss nAnnY,' 28 Hamilton Terrace, N. W., London, Eng. Born July 29, 1897 Entered Andover 1915 Soccer Squad H9151 Baseball Squad CWinter 19161 ,, Haven, Conn. New Haven, Conn. Yale r Chicago, ru. Yale Banjo Club H915-161 Class Basketball Team 63 l SCIENTIFIC SENIORS l MOTT BENNER ROSS :uoNY,' 1 De Forest Ave., Summit, N. J. A Born May Q, 1896 Morristown, N. J. 1 Entered Andover 1913 M. I. T. Banjo Club C2 yearsj Class Wrestling H9161 ' Lacrosse Team Hockey Squad C2 yearsl Captain of Winning' Class Soccer C1916j ROBERT F. SCHELLING, QD HSHARKU 107 Richmond Ave., Budalo, N. Y. Born June 28, 1898 Buffalo, N. Y. Entered Andover 1915 Yale Sheffield Glee Club ' Choir Class Swimming Team WALTON SMITH BILL 46 Huntington St., New Haven, Conn. l Born June 8, 1896 WVest Haven, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 Yale Sheffield 64 SCIENTIFIC SENIORS WALTON BRONSON SMITH HSMITTY,, Elmwood Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Born December 1, 1898 N augatuck, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 Yale Orchestra ERNEST FARNHAM STOCKWELL sHoRrYl' 9 Kidder Ave., West Somerville, lVIass. Born October 27, 1898 Somerville, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 A Dartmouth CARLET ON HART TALCOTT HBUNKU 1441 Field St., Torrington, Conn. Born May 12, 1898 , Torrington, Conn. Entered Andover 19141 M. I. T. CID A A Glee Club X Winning Class Wrestling Class Track Manager of Basketball Series C1916j 3 65 I . . W, SCIENTIFIC SENIORS ALFRED HENDRICKS TAYLOR GCA-IAM n Ottawa, Ill. Born August 92, 1898 Ottawa, Ill. ' Entered Andover 1915 University of Wisconsin GEORGE E. THOMPSON GEORGE I Unionville, Conn. Born 1896 Entered Andover 1911 A U V - Quai-ten 419143 Student Council C1915D Athletic Council C1915j . Grill Committee C 19155 Fall- Chef-:ring Staff H9151 Class Football C1911j VVinning Class Football Q1912j Soccer Team H9141 Glee Club H9142 Captain Soccer Team C1915j Winning Class Baseball C1915j Manager Musical Clubs 119151 liflanager Gym Team C1916j l 1 A WILLIAM EDWARD TRACY fl BILLY, l 1011 Bellevue Ave., Bristol, Conn. Born April 17, 1896 Bristol, Conn. Entered Andover 1913 Dartmouth Soccer Team Q1915D Wrestling Squad C2 yearsj i Second Baseball Team C1915j 66 SCIENTIFIC SENIORS FRANCIS GERALD WALTHEW BUTTS Q14 Riverside Drive, New York City Born September 21, 1896 Seabright, N. J. Entered Andover 1914 Yale K O A Hockey Team H9151 Second Football Team H9141 Football Team 119151 Secretary and Treasurer of Senior Class fWinter Term 1916 D LOUIS A. WATERS NDAD!! HLOU35 ' 560 Allen St., Syracuse, N. Y. Born 1894 I ' Syracuse, N. Y. Entered Andover 1913 M. I. T. 1 BENNEVILLE DAYTON VVILNIOT HBEEDEEU HDAYTH 1 193 Spring St., Union City, Conn. ' Born July 29, 1898 Union City, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 Yale 'Sheffield y 67 I SCIENTIFIC SENIORS CHARLES OTIS WOOD HCHARLIEI' New York, N. Y. Born New York Entered Andover 1913 Yale ' Track Squad BURNHAM BOWDITCH WOODFORD HBURNIEH ':w0oDY HBURN7, 4:59 Whalley Ave., New Haven, Conn. Born March 19, 1898 New Haven, Conn. Entered Andover 1915 I ' Yale Sheffield K O A Winning Class Football 68 NUM Hwwmmwnnnunfm M m U :U Mm um H 5 NON-RETURNING MIDDLERS RAYMOND FAIRCHILD BEARDSLEY NAP Roxbury, Conn. Born January 13, 1894 Roxbury, Conn. Entered Andover 1912 Harvard Managing Editor of the Mirror CQ yearsj X Means Prize Q2 yearsj Student Council C1915-161 President of Forum C1915-161 RUSSELL BORDEAUX BOBBY HRUSS,, 806 Mth Ave, N., Seattle, Wash. Born November 23, 1895 Shelton, Wash. Entered Andover 1913 Univ. of VVashington if A A Winning Class Wrestling H9151 JOHN EDWARD BRENNAN A JOHNNY W Natick, Mass. Born February 16, 1896 Natick, Mass. Entered Andover 1914- Harvard C11 A A Relay Team H9161 Baseball Team C1915-165 Track Squad C1915-161 70 NON-RETURNING MIDDLERS HOBART CLARK HOBEY 141241 Judson Ave., Evanston, Ill. Born'June 15, 1897 Chicago, Ill. Entered Andover 1915 Princeton Class Swimming Class Football GEORGE ELMENDORF CUOK Brigham Hall, Canandaigua, N. Y. Born March 10, 1898 Rochester, N. Y. 1 Entered Andover 1912 Williams Class Track H9141 Class Swimming Captain Class Cross Country Q1914-D EVERT WENDELL FREEMAN MARCH HFREEU 235 Arlington Ave., Providence, R. I. Born October 19, 1898 Providence, R. 1. A Entered Andover 1914 M. I. T. Clsas Football C1914-151 Rifle Club H191 65 Class VVrestling C1915-165 l 71 NON-RETURNING MIDDLERS CHARLES W. GLEASON CHARLIE 864 Park Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Born December 18, 1894 Brooklyn, N. Y. Entered Andover 1913 Yale Academic CID B X Football Squad H9131 Football Team C1914-15D Captain H9151 Class Basketball H9131 Advisory Board C1915-16D ' President of Class of 1916 CWinter 19151 Junior Prom. Committee C1915-161 Student Council 091445, 1915-161 156-pound VVrestling Champion H9131 President of Society of Inquiry Q1915j Treasurer of Lawrence Fund 119155 Assistant Manager Baseball 09151 Choir C1914-15-161 Athletic Council Q1915-16D Captain Rifle Team C1916D Peabody Assemblies Committee President Class of 1917 fWinter Term 19162 EDWARD FREDERICK HARDEN South Brewer, Maine Born August 11, 1896 Lee, Ilfracombe, Eng. Entered Andover 1915 Harvard Class Soccer Means Prize Speaker Treasurer VVireless Club RAYMOND DANIEL HART HHARTIEU 52 Colonial Ave., Lowell, Mass. Born July 20, 1896 Lowell, Mass. Entered Andover 1915 Harvard W , V 72 NON-RETURNING MIDDLERS CLAYTON LOCKE HAVEY CAKES 43 Mendum St., Roslindale, Boston, Mass. Born July 17, 1897 Roslindale, Mass. 7 Entered Andover 1915 Harvard i I COLLIS HUNTINGTON HOLLADAY CAL HoLLY,' Born February 7, 1898 San Francisco, Cal. Entered Andover 1914 Harvard 1917 Class Wrestling C1915j RICHARD ADAMSON LUMPKIN CCLUMPHJ GEDICKJI 101 Wabash Ave., Mattoon, Ill. Born November 7, 1897 Mattoon, Ill. Entered Andover 1914: Yale Relay Team 09161 Dramatic Club C1916D Assistant Business Manager Mirror C1914-15D Business Manager M irror Q1915-161 73 NON-RETURNING MIDDLERS GEORGE MURDOCK MCCOY MAC HKID7, '77 Bartlet St., Andover, Mass. Born May 6, 1897 Peekskill, N. Y. Entered Andover 1916 Univ. of Wisconsin ORMSBY MACKNIGHT MITCHEL, JR. 'LMACU Born 1897 Montclair, N. J. Entered Andover 1913 Yale Sheflield K O A Hockey Squad H9151 Police Force CSpring 19151 Hockey Team H9161 Assistant Business Manager Phillifoian H9151 Business Manager Phillipian H9161 B. CLARKE MORSE, Jn. ' 1vroRs1E,' Manila, P. I. Born January 20, 1895 Fort Clark, Tex. Entered Andover 1914 M. I. T. Track Squad H915-161 Relay Team H9161 Rifle Club H9161 , 74 NON-RETURNING MIDDLERS ' WILLIAM MERRYMAN PAGE uBILLU UDOCU l Q1 Lawrence Street, Haverhill, Mass. I Born November 15, 1897 Haverhill, Mass. Entered Andover 1914: Yale fb A A Class Football Q2 yearsj DOUGLAS BEAUMON T SAWYER DUG,' South Harwich, Mass. Born August 21, 1897 Easthampton, lVIass. Entered Andover 1916 Amherst BUCKNER PEARSON SHOLL HBUCKU 57 West 45th Street, New York City Born November 5, 1895 New Orleans, La. Entered Andover 19141 Yale Academic Class Cross Country Team H9141 Class Soccer Team C1915j 1 MI NON-RETURNING MIDDLERS 5 JAMES GoRDoN SWIFT .. HMM W 55 Harbison Ave., Hartford, Conn. 1 Born March 25, 1896 Hartford, Conn. 1 Entered Andover 1914 Yale Track Team CQ yearsj Advisory Board C1915-165 Relay Team H9161 Captain of Track 09161, resigned Student Council , ' Athletic Council Glee Club Q1914-155 I Junior Prom. Committee Vice-President of Inquiry C1915-165 Football Squad C1915D President Class QFall 1915D Secretary of Class CSpring 19152 FREDERICK GREGG THOMPSON, JR. TOMMY 825 Charles St., St. Joseph, Mo. Born March 22, 1898 St. Joseph, Mo. Entered Andover 1914 Yale Sheflield Track Squad H9152 Relay Squad C1916j Track Squad H9165 Q HERBERT HAWKES UPTON X UPP1E HHERBH North Reading, lVIass. Born July 3, 1898 North Reading, Mass. 1 Entered Andover 1912 Yale fb B X Class Football 11916, 2 yearsj Winning Class Track Team C1916D I 76 NON-RETURNING MIDDLER S l ADDISON F. VARS ..ADDS,, Born 1896 Entered Andover 1914: , Yale rib A E Police Force CFall 1915l Assistant Manager of Hoekey JOSEPH BERENS WATERS HBERRYU 'fJAsoN', The Biltmore Hotel, New York City Born September 3, 1896 Philadelphia, Fa. Entered Andover 1915 Yale II A E Varsity Football Team Varsity Hockey Team - Baseball Squafl Class Swimming Team ' JAMES M. WEBER HJIMN NWEBU 7217 Euclid Ave., Chicago, lll. Born August 1, 1898 Chicago, Ill. Entered Andover Yale ShefHeld Captain Class Basketball Athletic Council Winner of 1914 Fall Tennis Tournament Singles and Doubles Tennis Team H9155 Class Football 09145 Captain of Tennis Team H9165 77 NON-RETURNING MIDDLERS ROBERT BRADSTREET WHITTIER HWHITH BOB 44 Harley Ave., Everett, Mass. l Born April 27, 1895 Everett, Mass. V Entered Andover 1913 Harvard HENRY MARTIN YOUNG New York, N. Y. Entered Andover 1915 Amherst Cross Country Team 78 Qli55FT3Tow 015132 junior ear HE fall of 1913 marked the entrance, without brass bands or noise of any kind, of the class of 1916. In fact, we were given to understand from the men higher upn that it was our sacred duty to refrain from all unnecessary hubbub, and to keep ourselves in strict seclusion. In spite of our efforts to follow these stern orders and efface ourselves as much as possible, we were the recipients of several thoughtful invitations to parties at which we were the only entertainers. These occasions, however, became scarcer and scarcer, and we were able to claim a few of our rights and stop eating our meals off the mantel- piece. 1 We soon forgot all about our troubles in the joy of seeing Exeter whipped in football for the eighth consecutive time, by the score of '7 to 0. Although 1916 was not represented on the winning team, we cheered as frantically as any one when Stewv Buckle romped across the line for the only touchdown of the game. On the swimming team, which won almost everything during the season, we were represented by Maurice Gould. After a 48 to 418 tie with Exeter in track, we were all looking forward to a vic- tory in baseball, but were doomed to disappointment, as the team went down to defeat by the score of 5 to 4 in a hotly contested game. After one year in Andover we felt like new men. No longer did we slink warily into chapel in fear of being invited to spend the evening away from home, but we walked in with the best of them and looked forward to sending out the invitations ourselves the following year. - C. M. DRAKE. 80 Ciba iiutmzr jtlihhlt East ONSIDERING ourselves as old men in Andover, we began our second year with conidence and hope. The Hrst event of importance took place on October 11, when we honored the founders of our school by the cele- bration of Founders' Dayf, The death of Melville C. Day, which occurred during the first part of the year, brought grief to us all. We shall never forget what he did for the school. All interest was soon centered around football. The team, led by Captain Murray, after a preliminary season full of ups and downs was finally defeated by Exeter on November 7. It was our first defeat in the long period of nine years. Nineteen sixteen was represented by Gould, VVeston, Sanborn and Ashley. The soccer team, led by Tommy Lee,', defeated all comers. The winter term presented new activities. The swimming team was the best Andover has ever seen. Our men went through the season undefeated in a series of meets that were of the greatest interest. During Easter vacation the relay team won the title of 'interscholastic Champions? Hockey practice was delayed on account of poor ice, and later on we were defeated by Exeter in the Boston Arena. Towards the end of the term the Dramatic Club rendered Sowing Wild Oats in the town hall, and, soon after, a joint concert with Exeter was given by the Musical Clubs. We were glad to get back after Easter and enjoy the pleasantest term of the school year. The track team, under Captain Rodman, was defeated by Exeter in the dual meet on Memorial Day, but the team came back victoriously and won the Harvard Interscholastics by outpointing our rivals. With eight veterans back, we all looked for a victory in baseball, but luck was against us. Thus closed a year which ought to be considered one of the most enjoyable and profitable of our whole school course. CHARLES L. FAHERTY. 81 The Tlipper ji-Blihhle ear HE fall of 19111 found us back on the old hill', again ready to do our part in making our third year as big a success as possible. During the summer we had lost a few of our former classmates, but their places were filled by the many new faces, which we heartily welcomed to our midst. The football team, under the leadership of Captain Avery and the manage- ment of VV. C. Chisholm, soon began its preliminary season with a 7 to O victory over Cushing Academy. The rest of the record, however, was not quite so success- ful, and on November 14 we were defeated by Exeter. The score of this game, how- ever, falls far short of telling the true story of the contest, for our men, matched against an overwhelmingly superior aggregation, fought untiringly and proved that the old fighting spirit of Andover is always present, whether it be in defeat or victory. Ashley, Burnham, Conway, Fitzgerald, Gleason, Keith, lVIcManus, Mei'rick, Sanborn, Thomas and Thompson represented 1916 on the team. The soccer team had a very successful season, winning the majority of its games. The members from our . class were Gamble, Huang, Ingram and Thompson. We were represented on the cross-country team by Dudley. Just before the end of the term, on December 8, the interior of Bartlet Hall, one of the oldest buildings on the hill, was destroyed by fire. Fortunately, how- ever, there were no serious accidents, and much of the furniture and other per- sonal property of the occupants was saved by the students. VVork was immedi- ately begun on remodeling the structure, and it was opened for occupancy, bigger and better than ever, a couple of weeks before school closed in the spring. Probably the most important event of the winter term was the defeat which our relay team administered to Exeter at the B. A. A. games on February 6. This started what proved to be one of the most successful track seasons Andover has ever had. We were represented by J. P. Charlton, J r. The hockey team was handicapped by poor ice throughout the season, and, on a rink covered with water, was defeated by Exeter in a hard-fought game. Captain Ashley, Walthew and VVilliams represented our class. Coach Sutherland turned out his usual winning swimming team which went through an undefeated season. Nineteen sixteen was represented by Captain Fitzgerald, Gould, Kingsbury, Mayer, Peters, Searle, Strout and Tilton. 82 Qfllillllllllllllll... -llliillillllllllll 1., Q D C5 T P O U DEQ ...llllllllllllll.., 6 ,.. 'illllllllllllill The lvlusical Clubs gave their usual number of concerts, the hnal one being the combined concert with Exeter on Nlarch 13. Bartlet, Thompson, Scheide, Holden, Walsh, Clark, Kingsbury, English, Williams and Whitworth represented our class. On the night of February 22 we 'gave our annual Promenade in the Borden Gymnasium. The committee consisted of Harrower CChairmanj, Gleason, Weber, Sanborn and Hanes. The Dramatic Club gave a very excellent performance of The Bells' in the Town Hall on March 19. The spring term was greeted with joy, as usual. The track team, under the splendid leadership of Captain Prescott and management of Lennon, entered upon a most successful season. After defeating its rivals during the preliminary season with overwhelming scores, it was victorious over Exeter on May 31 with the score of 54 to 41. The remarkable quality of Sid Peet's charges was shown by the fact that two records were broken and a third equaled at this meet. The baseball team had a fairly successful preliminary season, but was defeated by Exeter on June 5 . Nineteen sixteen was represented by Swan, Ashley, Faherty and Gordon on the team. 1 During the year We won our numerals in soccer, baseball and track. Our attention was now turned toward make-upsw and exams, and, with these over, we left for vacation with only one more year ours at Andover. A ' H. P. HARROWER. 83 The Senior ear S we came back this year, quite naturally our attention was Hrst turned to the football practice on Brothers' Field. There we found Captain Gleason and Mr. Lillard working hard with a great scarcity of AU men and a large amount of green material. The preliminary games seemed promising, but the Exeter aggregation showed us that they were our superiors on the gridiron. That victory was clean cut and well deserved. The soccer team had a very successful season under the leadership of Captain Thompson. On both the football and soccer teams 1916 was well represented and we feel that the loss of the dignified Seniors will be felt next year in these two sports. On the annual Founders, Day in October the Peabody House was dedicated. The Grill was moved from the Archaeology Building to the much more commodious quarters in the basement of the new structure. The Reading Boom also was brought to the first floor of this same building, while the second floor is used for student and faculty meetings. The building has proved to be a great success and promises to bring the students more and more together. VVith winter came the hockey and swimming teams. Both made very credit- able showings. The Combined Musical Clubs gave concerts at Rogers Hall, and at Lawrence, and ended their season with a very successful joint concert with Exeter in the Town Hall. The Junior Prom was certainly a credit to the class of 1917 and we are glad to see that such men will be ready to take our places next fall. The new Peabody House gave the school an excellent chance to hold afternoon dances. Under the management of the Peabody Assembly Committee, dances were held every two weeks during the winter term. Our new baseball and track coaches, Mr. Quinby and Mr. Blanchard, respect- ively, have certainly taken hold of their work in earnest. All during the winter the candidates for both teams have been at work in the gym, and we cannot help feeling that these two sports will have successful seasons in the spring. Both teams are working hard and, although we did not have a football celebration, we are look- ing forward l l. In general, the school spirit has been good this year. The new men have entered into the Andover atmosphere in the proper way, and we feel sure that we have classes below us that will uphold the traditions of the school as they should be upheld. June will see the end of our career at Andover. VVe hope that we have been an Andover class. We glance back on the days spent here with regret that they are past, but we hold our heads high as we look ahead, for we feel that Andover has made us broader and better men, and that the old school has given us a training with which we can meet the hard knocks of the world with a smile and a square jaw. M. S. GOULD. 84 Erahuating Cfxereises Qlilass EBay Speakers CHARLES WV. GAMBLE Prophet PAUL R. DOOLIN Orator GERARD M. ENGLISH Historian RICIIARD H. BASSETT V Poet Cllllasz Bay Qlummittee FREDERICK M. KINGSBURY, Chairman RALPII P. HANES HAROLD P. HARROXVER PAUL ABBOTT NIAURICE S. GOULD Senior iB1fumenaiJe Qiummittee HAROLD P. HARROWER, Chairman EDWARD IQEITH NIAURICE S. GOULD RALPII P. HANES CHARLES L. FAHERTY 85 Qlpba Betta Gtau rlsamma Gligaptzr Ctllbartet Granteh 1907 This Society aims to bestow that recognition on high scholarship in the pre- paratory schools which the Phi Beta Kappa gives to them in the colleges. Election to membership is based on superior scholarship in all the subjects for the Senior year. Members from the Qlllass nf 1915 Lester Hart Larrabee Alexander Morrison Mcllflorran George Peter Murdock Jerome Preston Edward Ellis Scofield Joel Herbert Sharp John Peters Stevens, Jr. Wlilliam VVheelwright Torrey Theodore Ferguson Allen Wfilliam Howard Bovey, Jr. Robert Baker Donworth Gustav Leon Harris Charles Francis Hendrie Wlilliam Alexander Kirkland Donald Wlentworth Kitchin Qhaarh nf. 196525 19144915 The Draper Q11 Robert Tyng Bushnell, Andover Prizes Q21 Spencer Hancock Logan, Chicago, Ill. V The llleans Q11 Kimberly Stuart, Neenah, VVis. Prizes Q21 Robert Tyng Bushnell, Andover The Harvard English Prizes The Robinson Prizes The Cook Prizes The Robert Stevenson German Prize The Corwers Prizes The Dove Prizes The William S. Waclswortli Prize Q31 Raymond Fairchild Beardsley, Roxbury, Conn. Q11 Robert Tyng Bushnell, Andover Q21 George Peter Murdock, Meriden, Conn. Q11 Robert Tyng Bushnell, Andover Q21 Elliott Speer, Englewood, N. J. Q31 Laurence Wlilliam Beilenson, Helena, Ark. Q11 John Peters Stevens, J1'., Plainheld, N. J. Q21 Samuel Sanford Shefheld, Newport, R. I. Q31 George Daniel Flynn, Fall River Donald WVentworth Kitchin, Methuen Honorable llifention Charles Francis Hendrie, Brooklyn, N. Y. Q11 Charles Lloyd Thomas, Fall River Q21 Charles Earle Nichols, Jr., J efferson, N. Y. Q31 Frank Kenneth Hardy, Andover Divided between William Alexander Kirkland, Houston, Texas Frank Dale Warren, Jr., New York, N. Y. George Daniel Flynn, Jr., Fall River Chi-yen Huang, Canton, China 86 f1l.llllllllllIlll,.. 9 ,1.. llllllllllllllllll .., , DOT RCU Q QI .... l llllllllllllll... 6 ,,. 'illllllllllllf The Valpey Classical Prizes The Frederic H ollcins Taylor Prize The Boston Yale Club Cup The American 'C Archaeology Prize The New England Federation of Harvard Clubs Prize The Schioeppe Prizes The John Aiken German Prizes The Fuller Prize The Faculty Prize The Otis Prize The Snell History Prize The Harvard-Andover Scholarships Junior Public Speaking Contest . two cups Cornell Alumni Cup Columbia University Scholarship The ' Butler- Thwing Prize The James Greenleaf Fuller lllernorial Scholarship The P. A. ,94-Harirarxl '98 Scholarship The ' George Laucler Prize The prize for excellence in Chemistry The Andrew Potter Prizes C15 CQD C15 C25 C13 C23 Greek - Clark Smith Beardslee, Newbury, N. H. Honorable Mention William Drew Wlashburn, Minneapolis, Minn Latin - Clark Smith Beardslee, Newbury, N. H. Jack Morris Buts lNright, New York, N. Y. Honorable Mention Donald VVentworth Kitchin, Methuen Edward Ansley Fellowes, Budalo, N. Y. John Crain Kunkel, Harrisburg, Pa. Paul Rice Doolin, St. Albans, Vt. Raymond Fairchild Beardsley, Roxbury, Conn. Charles Francis Hendrie, Brooklyn, N. Y. Donald Vilentworth Kitchin, lvlethuen Charles Francis Hendrie, Brooklyn, N. Y. William Alexander Kirkland, Houston, Texas Donald Wentworth Kitchin, Methuen Diviflczl between George Daniel Flynn, Jr., Fall River Edward Ansley Fellowes, Buialo, N. Y. John Crain Kunkel, Harrisburg, Pa. Jerome Preston, Lexington Paul Rice Doolin, St. Albans, Vt. Van Campen Heilner, Brooklyn, N. Y. Raymond Herbert Hull, New Haven, Conn. Charles Blanchard Beck, Chicago, Ill. Walter Scott Robinson, Colorado Springs, 'Colo. Harold Ballard Wlalker, Ballardvale Clinton McCarthy Jones, Hammond, N. Y. Robert Tyng Bushnell, Andover Hsieh-hai Hsieh, VVusih, China Honorable Mention Paul Rice Doolin, St. Albans, Vt. Hsuing Tsai, Songlin, China Robert Tyng Bushnell, Andover Frederic Boley Schell, Jr., Maplewood, N. Y. 87 Stbularsbip Zlaunurs' 191421915 HONORS OF THE FIRST GRADE Awarded to those who have no grade lower than 82 and a grade of at least 92 in of hours. A SENIORS - VV. H. Bovey, Jr. R. B. Donworth C. F. Hendrie YV. A. Kirkland UPPER BVIIDDLERS - C. S. Beardslee P. R. Doolin H. Fan C. Z. Gordon JUN1oEs - N. T. Lane Awarded to those who SENIORS - T. F. Allen W. H. Bovey, Jr. T. M. Brown R. T. Bushnell R. B. Donworth R. F. Fitch G. L. Harris C. F. Hendrie I. G. Hopkins G. F. Jewett A. Mf. McMQorran UPPER MIDDLERS - E. J. Alexander G. M. P. Batchelder C. S. Beardslee H. B. Blauvelt J. Crosby, Jr. P. R. Doolin F. C. Frost LOWER MIDDLERS - W. Bolton, Jr. J UNIORS - T. H. Boyd half the 2 terms D. W. Kitehin 1 term L. H. Larrabee 2 terms J. Preston 3 terms J. P. Stevens, Jr. YV. YV. Torrey 1 term 1 term H. Hsieh 2 terms C. Huang 1 term C. M. Jones 1 term H. Tsai 1 term HONORS OF THE SECOND GRADE have an average of 85 and no grade lower than 72. ' 3 terms G. P. Murdock 1 term C. E. Nichols 1 term N. K. Pearce 1 term J. Preston -Q terms F. B. Schell, Jr. 1 term E. E. Scofield Q terms H. T. Sears 1 term J. H. Sharp 1 term J. P. Stevens, Jr. 1 term W. W. Torrey 2 terms F. D. 1Varren, Jr. 1 .term C. Z. Gordon 1 term B. E. Hodgson 1 term- H. Hsieh 1 term E. C. Ingram 2 terms C. M. Jones 1 term C. E. Kennedy 1 term J. H. Quiriu 3 terms. A. F. Cohen J. S. Montgomery 1 term 1 term N. T. Lane, Jr. N. Seymour 3 terms 88 number 3 terms 3 terms 1 term 2 terms 1 te1'm 3 terms 1 term 3 terms 3 terms 1 term 2 terms 1 term 1 term 2 terms 2 terms 3 terms 1 te1'm 92 terms 1 term 2 terms 1 term 2 terms I term 92 terms Q terms 1 term 2 terms 2 terms Qiililllllllllllll illllllillllllllli . Por POOH Q Q1 .. llllllllllllll .. .llllllllllllilli Edward Ansley Fellowes Robert Baker Donworth Everett Lafayette Farr Charles Francis Hendrie Charles Francis Hendrie George Henry Heywood Robert Baker Donworth Paul Beecher Farnsworth Paul Beecher Farnsworth Charles Francis Hendrie Donald Wentworth Kitchin George Daniel Flynn, Jr. VVillia1n Alexander Kirkland VVilliam Howard Bovey, Jr. Robert Baker Donworth Lorenzo Hamilton Montville Ellsworth Peek Gustav Leon Harris Donald Wentworth Kitchin Hazen Curtis Pratt Robert Baker Donworth Everett Lafayette Farr Charles Francis Hendrie Robert Baker Donworth Everett Lafayette Farr Charles Francis Hendrie SENIOR HONORS CLASS or 1915 A BIBLE CIIEMIsTRY ENGLISH Lester Hart Larrabee FRENCH, ELEMENTARY Lester Hart Larrabee FRENCH, ADVANCED John Peters Stevens, Jr. GERMAN, ELEMENTARY Jerome Preston GERMAN, ADVANCED GREEK HISTORY Jerome Preston LATIN LATIN COMPOSITION William Alexander Kirkland MECHANICAL DRAWING PHYSICS SOLID GEOMETRY TRIGONOMETRY Joel Herbert Sharp 89 Lester Hart Larrabee Robinson Shepard Alan Nathaniel Stein Dean Kingman YVebster, Jr. Donald Wentworth Kitchin Irving George Hopkins William Alexander Kirkland Donald Wfentwortli Kitchin Lester Hart Larrabee George Peter hiurdock Raymond Winthrop Smith John Peters Stevens, Jr. William Wentworth Torrey VVilliam Alexander Kirkland Frank Dale Wfarren, Jr. Hazen Curtis Pratt Edward Ellis Scofield Robinson Shepard Edward Ellis Scoheld William Wlheelwright Torrey Donald lventworth Kitchin Lester Hart Larrabee Joel Herbert Sharp Lester Hart Larrabee George Clyde McCarten Jerome Preston Gellatly lVI. S. Gould Drake H usted Mitchel Drake M. S. Gould Gleason Ashley Ashley Keith VVilson Abbott Hanes Sherman F aherty Brennan Gamble Ashley Gleason Drake Statistics HANDSOMEST 50 Hanes 1 6 1 1 Faherty 8 5 Harrower 5 NEATEST 32 Harrower 25 1 1 Faherty 1 0 5 Scheide 4 Kingsbury Husted Page Hanes Heard Gellatly BEST MALL-ROUND FELLOW 35 Harrower 23 9 Keith '7 4 Doolin 4 BEST ATHLETE 13 1 Waters 1 1 3 S. Gould A 2 1 BUSIEST 41 Harrower ' 15 10 Charlton 8 8 M. S. Gould 4 MOST MODEST 40 Ashley 23 7 M. S. Gould 6 4 Kingsbury 4 HARDEST TO RATTLE 12 Charlton 12 7 Harrower 6 4 S. Miner 4 90 Faherty English Hanes Charlton Russell Kennedy Speer Waters Keith Gordon English M. S. Gould Conroy Abbott llllllllllllll lllllllllllllllll ..... DOT POUDOQI . l nlllitllnll.. 6 l...f lwmlslaz lt B atcheldefr lValtheW Bassett Drake Gamble Conroy Faherzfy Keith Drake M. S. Goulcl Doolin Faherty M. S. Gould Gleason Faherty M. S. Gould Hanes Charlton Drake Scheide Harrower F aherty Speer Tilton MOST ECCENTRIC 541 Beilenson Q 19 5 Willianis 5 5 Thomas 44 WITTIEST 33 S. Jones 30 7 Bartlett '7 3 Faherty 2 BEST NATURED 141 Gamble 12 1 1 Hazard S 6 S. Miner 6 MOST CAPABLE 30 Harrower ' Q6 1 1 Gleason 7 6 Keith 3 MOST PROMINENT 62 , Harrower 59 8 Hanes 44 1 Drake 1 MOST RESPECTED 46 Harroyver 43 8 Keith 11 2 Kingsbury 2 lVIOST ORIGINAL 311 S. Jones I 18 6 Conroy 6 5 Abbott 5 LEAST APPRECIATED 141 Gamble 1 1 '7 English 6 6 1 Drake 6 91 T. Jones Speer Gordon Kingsbury M. S. Gould Doolin M. S. Gould Conroy Gordon Hanes Abbott Charlton Abbott Doolin Gleason VVilliamson Abbott Gamble Kingsbury Faherty Keith VVaters Ashley Abbott M. S. Gould Gleason H usted J. B. Waters Curran Doolin Batchelder Kennedy Abbott Speer Doolin Hartley Conroy Barber H usted Barber Alloway Speer Thomas Abbott F aherty Doolin Abbott flillllllllllllli Illlllllllllilllll ...,. DCT DCU D QI .... l llllllllllllli.. 5 ..,. lllllllllllllll' Harrower Scheide Drake SPORT Harrison Hanes H. Preston BEST STUDENT Williamson Sharpe Blauvelt MOST USEFUL Harrower Scheide Gleason LAZIEST Rosenbaum Husted ' Beilenson Hanes Gamble Speer Gellatly Harrower Mitchel C. Jones Andrews Gordon M. S. Gould Hanes Gordon Pollock Reynolds Faherty BIGGEST BLUFFER IN CLASSROOM Abbott Hartley Walthew WINDIEST Preston Knight Gordon MOST VERSATILE Scheide Gordon Ashley 92 Conroy S. Miner R. Thompson Walthew Barber Hartley M. S. Gould Harrower Kingsbury Qlfl11llllllllllIlll,,, 9 , . lllllllllllllllll 1,. , D O T P0 U Q Q I llllllllllll... llllillllllli H arrow-er Hanes Seheide Doolin Crosby Sharpe H arrower Hanes Gamble Gellatly Abbott Speer S. Jones Conroy Hartley H usted Faherty Abbott M. S. Gould Faherty Gamble Batchelder Blauvelt Anderson CLASS HUSTLER M. S. Gould V 27 Speer 5 English 2 BRIGHTEST Williamson 24 Gordon 8 Batchelder 2 MOST PROMISING Doolin Q0 Gleason '7 Faherty 3 VAINEST VValthew 32 Gleason 7 Barber 4 GREATEST J OLLIER S. Miner 16 Gleason A 9 Harrower 4 BEST DRESSED . Harrower 31 M. S. Gould 5 Curran Q MOST POPULAR Harrower 46 Keith 6 Abbott 4: GRIN D C. Jones 16 Garrigues 6 Williamson 4 93 Abbott Gleason Sherman C. Jones Hemingway Husted M. S. Gould Vllilliamson Hanes Meagher Knight Drake Abbott R. Thompson Hanes Gellatly Mitchel Gleason English Ashley Doolin Andrews Beilenson COLLEGES CHOSE QQ1l'llllllllllIllll,,. ...lllllllllllllllll A.. L D 0 T P 0 U D Q of ... llllllllllll llllllllllllli H arrower Gleason Charlton Sidewalks N ew Blain Building Greater Endowment Speer Brown Frost Spring Yale Yale Shelield Dartmouth French Geometry Latin American History Chemistry German 455 M. S. Gould 37 Ashley 17 15 Abbott 5 Hanes 3 Q Faherty Q H Gordon 1 Clthutattunal Statistics ANDOVER,S GREATEST NEED 417 New Eligibility Rules 24 Older Bien 13 12 Hockey Rink 5 Golf Course 3 92 Assembly Hall Q Co-operative Store 1 FAVORITE CHAPEL SPEAKER I 65 Stearns 36 Fosdick Q1 8 Boynton 6 Fitch 4 3 Tweedy 3 Barber Q PLEASANTEST TERNI 1 131 Fall 9 Wlinter 41 N BY SENIORS AND NON-RETURNING lVIIDDLERS 60 Harvard 37 M. I. T. 15 9 Princeton 8 Amherst '7 3 Cornell 3 Wlilliarns 2 EASIEST STUDY 51 Archaeology 19 English 15 1 Q Algebra 1 1 Germ an 1 0 '7 Bible '7 Ancient History 6 HARDEST STUDY Q7 English Q3 English History E20 141 Latin 17 Algebra 13 11 Geometry - 11 Greek 6 94 Lynda Stone G. H. Eaton Plzillips Forbes O McCurdy F orbes Freeman Keep Benner Fuess Stearns Forbes Fuess Freeman F orbes E. L. Baker Keep Phillips Crawford Benner S tone Hudson Phillips I IQ DOT IDOODQI 16 fllllllllllllll... ...llllllllllllll ..,n, .... l llllllllllllll' ..... . a,.. lllllllllllil MOST BEST TEACHER Freeman Keep Forbes Fuess Hinman Phillips KINDEST Stone Allen Lynde G. H. Eaton Benner Lillard IVIOST BROAD-MINDED Stearns Fuess Stone Lynde Page Crawford POPULAR OUTSIDE OF CLASSROOM 35' Crawford 27' Forbes Hinman 10 Lillard Blanchard 5 Keep MOST POPULAR IN CLASSROOM Stone G. H. Eaton Crawford MOST POLISHED Eaton Leonard Stearns PLEASANTEST Forbes Fuess Graham EASIEST TO RECITE' TO Parmelee Forbes E. L. Baker 95 Graham Allen McCurdy Phillips Lillard Benner Stone Lynde 'Wilkins McCurdy Allen Benner Poynter Hinman Boyce Parmelee Forbes lVIcCurdy Poynter Hinman French Forbes S. N. Baker Hinman llIcC'n1'fZy Boyce Benner Poynter Freeman Stone Phillips Blanchard Benner Stearns Lynde lllilllllllllllllll lllllllllllll tttre 17931 DOO Q QI r oee llllllllllllw, 6 y.y ol blllllllllil l' MOST DIFFICULT TO RECITE TO 58 Freeman Q5 8 French 7 5 Bangs 4 EASIEST TO BLUFF 71 Hudson 13- 7 Poynter 6 5 Williins 5 HARDEST TO BLUFF 47 Freeman Q9 11 Fuess 9 6 Leonard 5 VVINDIEST 53 ' Page QQ 11 Hudson ' 8 7 Bangs 6 MOST ECCENTRIC 30 E. L. Baker Q3 13 Parmelee 11 6 Leonard 5 NIOST RATTLING Q GQ Hinman 16 11 Keep ' 9 8 Leonard 4 'HANDSOMEST 46 G. H. Eaton 34 13 Forbes 11 4 Stone Q MOST RESPECTED 137 Forbes 4 Q Stone 1 Freeman 1 96 Leonard Keep Newton E. L. Baker Stone Allen Keep Boyce Parmelee Leonard E. L. Baker Poynter Hinman Poynter Newton Boyce French Parmelee Lillard StOt13 F uess Lillard Benner ...... rf rf rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr mm , lasmnsuu W munmxsnmnxmm WI e31crlS CD00 LQ.. ri p 4 . L V. ..4 4 . 4 . iilllikllllliklllllllll Q9ffilZBl?5 jfall Zlierm H. P. HARRONVER, President C. W. GABIBLE, Vice-Presid t J. P. CHARLTON, JR., Secretary and Treasurer winter Germ M. S. GOULD, President C. L. FAHERTY Vice-Presrlcl 15 F. G. XVALTHEVV, Secretary and Treasurer Qpring Germ C. L. FAHERTY, President R. P. HANES, Vice-Presid L C. WV. GAMBLE, Secretary and Treasurer 97 HUlllIllIllllhlhl NAMES Abbott, Paul Alloway, Charles Reynolds Andrews, Donald Hatch Ashley, Thomas 1Voodbury Bailey, Vllilliam Shindel, J1'. Barber, VVilliam Hodgkinson Bartlett, Gordon Bassett, Richard Horace Batchelder, George Merrill Prescott Beardslee, Clark Smith Beilenson, Laurence YVellman Blauvelt, Hiram Bellis Brown, Tom Mitchell Bryan, Wilhelmus Bogart, Jr. Bushnell, Richard Simpson Cohn, Bertrand VVilson Conroy, Homer Crosby, John, Jr. Crossley, J olm Davis Curran, Maurice Joyce Day, Curtis Fisher Dennison, Robert Adams Dodson, Howard Conrad Doolin, Paul Rice Dudley, Henry Lewis, Jr. Ellis, Harold Warburton English, Gerard Montgomery Englund, David Robert Faherty, Charles Lewis Falvey, John Donald Farley, Arthur Francis Fay, Heman Storrs, Jr. Fisher, Elisha Doudinot Flint, William Arthur Flynn, Fred Thomas Francis, Tappan Eustis Gamble, Charles White Gellatly, Vllilliam Bonwill Gleason, Leverett Stone Cllilassinzal Bepartment CLASS I - SENIORS RESIDENCES New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Soutkington, Conn. Allston Jamestown, N. Y. Newton Peace Dale, R. I. Northampton Amesbury Newbury, N. H. Helena, Ark. Oraclell, N. J. Winona, M inn. Waskivzgton, D. C. Brookline Brookhaven, llliss. Brooklyn, N. Y. Dlinneapolis, Minn. Rockville, Conn. Andover Somerville Reading Ringgold, Va. St. Albans, Vt. Yonkers, N. Y. Franklin Narberth, Pa. Naagatuek, Conn. Chicago, Ill. Brookline Auburndale M arlborough Waskiriyton, D. C. New Haven, Conn. H arUord, Conn. Brookline Haverford, Pa. Orange, N. J. Newton 98 RooMs Bartlet 30 Bancroft 6 Adams 2 Phillips 8 Mrs. J. H. Clark'3 Phillips 17 Bancroft 7 Bartlet 14 Bartlet 18 Adams 9 Day 32 Andover 3 Bartlet 10 Bishop 3 Day 17 Mr. Peet's Mr. Allen's Bartlet 12 Mr. hfIcCurdy's Day 29 Bancroft 11 Day 14 Abbot 17 Bartlet 3 Bishop 32 Bishop 9 Bartlet 925 Abbot 6 Bishop 13 Bartlet 29 Adams 17 Farrar 6 Bishop 8 Bishop 5 Eaton 2 Bartlet 13 Bartlet Q6 Bartlet 23 Miss Cheevc-:r's l1lI1lllllllllIllil,., ...llllllillllllllll ..,A DC51' P U Q QI ,.., l llllllllllllll lillllllllllllll NAMES Gordon, Cadmus Zaccheus, Jr. Gould, Charles Philip Gould, Maurice Stephenson Greene, Frederick Standish Hamershlag, Howard Joseph Hanes, Ralph Philip Hardy, Frank Kenneth Harrison, Henry Carleton Harrower, Harold Pitts Hartley, David Marston Hazard, William Henry, Jr. Heard, Marston Hemingway, James Smith, Jr. Hochschild, Walter Hogan, John Joseph, Jr. Hood, Gilbert Henry, Jr. Husted, John Grinnell Wetmore Hyde, Robert Henry Jones, Clinton McCarthy - Jones, Thomas hliiflin, Sd Kingsbury, Frederick Macdonald Krieger, John Francis Lauer, Jack Ross Lindsay, Ralph Irving McCook, George Latimer McEldowney, Howard Vanderlip McKinstry, Edward Lawyer Marsh, Rolph Thayer Martin, William Paul, Jr. Meagher, James Francis, Jr. Miles, Raymond Barnard Miner, William Page Perrin, VVilliarn Weaver Phillips, Paul Koehler Pollock, James Arlin Reynolds, George Phillips Riesenberg, Herbert Gordon Rothchild, Lewis Howard Scheide, Lester Beach Schureman, Charler Arlington, Jr. Searle, Stewart Augustus Sharpe, John McDowell Sherman, Harold Vedder Smith, Norman Ralph Speer, Elliott Sprague, Charles Henry RESIDENCES Brookville, Pa. Freeport, L. I., N. Y. Port Waslzirtgton, L. lllidtlletown, Conn. New York, N. Y. Winston-Salem, N. Andover Dlontclair, N. J. Amsterdam, N. Y. Everett, Wa.9h. Salamanca, N. Y. Manchester, N. H. New Haven, Conn. New York, N. Y. Lowell Somerville Peekshill, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. Hammond, N. Y. Pittsburgh, Pa. Keene, N. H. Brookline Scranton, Pa. Swampscott Pittsburgh, Pa. Brookline Watertown, N. Y. East Orange, N. J. Lake Forest, Ill. Chicago, Ill. Brooklyn, N. Y. N augatuek, Conn. Lafayette, Ind. Amherst Pasadena, Cal. Milton Indianapolis, Ind. New York, N. Y. H artford, Conn. Saybrook, Ill. C. M inneapolis, Minn . Chambersburg, Pa. Hillside, N. J. Chicago, Ill. Englewood, N. J. Swarnpseott 99 I., N. Y. ROOMS Day 35 Draper 1 Bartlet Q0 Bishop 22 Bishop 1 Bartlet 20 West Andover Bishop 11 Bartlet 7 lVIr. Allenls Phillips 12 Bartlet 4 Bartlet 30' Taylor 44 Mrs. Wainwright's: Bishop 2. Mr. Stone's Bartlet 16- Bartlet 17' Mrs. Johnsonis Phillips 11 Bishop 14 Bishop 20 Phillips 19 Mr. Peet's Taylor 20 Taylor 11 Taylor 2 Mrs. Jacksorfs Day 19 Bishop 33 Churchill 5 Miss Cheever's Bishop 9 Taylor 9 Bartlet 12 Tucker 2 Mrs. Vilainwrightis Day 8 Day 36 Bishop 24 Phillips 18 Bancroft 17 lVIr. Newton's Bartlet 2, Bishop 15 Q1121?llll1lllll!ll.,. M lllllllllll A,, , D O Ti B 0 U Q Q .aL lllllllllllll... 5 ,4,. lllllllllllllli NAMES Stevens, Rufus La Croix Stuart, Guilford Bruce Tenney, Levi Sanderson, J r. Thomas, Paul Kendricken Tilton, Gardner Truman, Roswell Wlalker, Kenneth Knapp Wlalsh, Albert Haslarn YVashburn, Wlilliani Drew, J r. Welle1', Albert Otto VVhitWorth, YValter Stephen YVillia1ns, Charles 'Washington, Jr. Vllilliamson, Robert Byron RESIDENCES Lynn Newton Centre Blontclair, N. J. Peoria, Ill. Lexington New York, N. Y. Auburn, N. Y. Reading ' DI'inneapoli.s', Ilfinn. Lawrence Woodstock, Ill. Morztclair, N. J. Augusta, Me. 100- Rooms Bancroft 16 Eaton 6 Mr. Peet's 'Miss HeWin's Bartlet 11 Bishop 35 Andover 6 Draper 3 Bartlet 12 Bancroft '7 Phillips 10 Bishop 12 Abbot 15 NAMES ' Baker, Eben Hayward Baldwin, Francis Irving Blair, James Brown Blank, Philip Everett Boyd, Russell Henry Brown, YValdo Hayward Burk, Alan Wlollison Carter, James Rose Clark, Arthur Dimoek Coley, Ambrose Hurlbutt Dean, James Lindley Dean, Wlilliam Judson Drake, Charles Miles Durant, George Church Dyke, Freeman Huntington Fischer, Paul Kingsbury F rease, Hurxthal Field Gagel, David Edward Garrigues, Clarence Maxwell Granger, Harry Inwood Harriman, Paul Jones Haughton, ,Henry Osburne Holden, Wlilliam Hotchkiss, Roland Sanford Hubbard, Allen, Jr. Humphreys, Irving Zebriske Jones, Samuel Joseph Katten, Berthold Leo Keith, Edward Kermedy, Clarence Edward Knight, George Roger Langdon, Robert Courtney Lavelle, Kenneth Thomas Mason, Philip Sheridan Matthews, Medwin Miner, Sperry Wladsworth Murphy, Leo Hayes Murphy, Thomas Francis Qnientifir CLASS A apartment - SENIORS RESIDENCES .Zlf'llf07'!l New Y orh, N. Y. Pittsburgh, Pa. Glen Ridge, N. J. New Haven, Conn. Brookline Pittjicld Andover New H aven, Conn. New Haven, Conn. Harrisonburg, Va. Andover Waslztrzgtorl, D. C. Great Barrington Andover Saranac Lahe, N. Y. Canton, Ohio West Haven, Conn. Plainfield, N. J. South Weymouth Haverhill Ilion, N . Y. Andover Waterhu1'y, Conn. Newton Centre Andover Wfaterbury, Conn. Harzforcl, Conn. Kansas City, M 0. East Weymouth Brockton Providence, R. I . Pottsville, Pa. Ayer Andover New Haven, Conn. North Andover North Andover 101 ROOMS Day 16 Bishop 36 Nlrs. J ohnsonls Bartlet E28 Adams 16 Bartlet 13 Taylor 13 High Plain Rd. Bishop 4 Phillips 1 8 Locke St. 8 Locke St. Phillips 4 lVIr. Allen's Ballardvale Rd. Bartlet 1 Phillips 1 Mr. Lillard's Day Q Clement 10 Bishop Q3 Taylor 7 225 South Main St. A Bishop 8 Day 6 66 Central St. Churchill 5 Abbot 13 Bancroft 10 Bancroft 17 Adams 5 Taylor '19 Mrs. WVainwright's Mr. Lillard's Shawsheen Rd. Phillips 6 North Andover North Andover Q1llllllllllllllll,.. ...lllllllllllllli ..,A, D O T P O U Q Q I ,... lllllllllllllll lilllllllllllll NAMES Osgood, William Coit Ross, Mott Benner Rounds, George Clarke Schelling, Robert Frederick, 2d Smith, YValton Smith, Walton Bronson .......Stockwell, Ernest Farnham Talcott, Carleton Hart Taylor, Alfred Hendricks Thompson, George Edward Tracy, William Edward Walthew, Francis Gerald Waters, Louis Addison Wilmot, Benneville Dayton Wood, Charles Otis Woodford, Burnham Bowditch RESIDENCES N orwich, Conn. lllorristown, N. J . Bujalo, N. Y. Bugfalo, N. Y. New Haven, Conn. N augatuelc, Conn. Somerville Torrington, Conn. Ottawa, Ill. Unionville, Corm. Bristol, Conn. New Yorlc, N. Y. Syracuse, N. Y. Union City, Conn New York, N. Y. New Haven, Conn 102 ROOMS Bishop 10 Day 14 Mrs. Jacksonls Miss Cheever's Tucker 4 Abbot 6 Mr. Crawfo1'd's Bishop 29 Taylor 23 Day 3 Draper 5 Day 33 Day 13 Abbot 4 Abbot 14 Abbot 16 Sm I Hlllllllm T I H mlflllllllllmiillll mlmlllllmm' I HHIlIHHH iW I 1 JSR Mmrmnnlmmmuvmmuuu IW mm ,mm mmlmm mmmmm mfmllmrffzlmmmmzmmmmm H f mmmmm mmmmm mu - 4, esta' B. Xmmumc ff! ILQQLF5 Bffiuzrs ' jfall Germ JGSWIFTP dt RFSHEDDENV P ui VS D ROBINSON, Secretary and T Winter Zltzrm C.W.GLEASoNP dt PHCR V P dt D C. DINES, Secretary and T Spring illizrm W. W. RUSSELL P det D C DINES V P cl t R F S DDEN, Secretary a d T 103 Qilassinal apartment NAMES Adams, Elbridge, 2d Atwater, David Hay Barker, Wlallace Norton Barnes, Aldrich Bramhall ' Beardslee, Martin Buell Beardsly, Raymond Fairchild Beer, Ethan Allen Blodget, Thurston Pond ' Bolton, William, Jr. Boltwoocl, Chester Guild Borg, 1VIyron Irving, Jr. Bradley, Charles Harvey, Jr. Brayton, Flint Brennan, John Edward Brown, Robert Alexander, Jr. Clark, Alfred Marling Cohen, Alvin Frederick Cook, George Elmendorf Cooley, Harlan Wooster Davis Paul Howard Crane, , Arthur Paul Dean, Fred Russell Eugene, J Dines, Donald Corprew Dines, Eugene Tooley Dowd, Frank Harrison Dresser, George Eaton Eaton, James Henry Evers, Leslie i . Farrell, Albert Horace Fish, Charles Vedder Flynn, Thomas Lawrence Gleason, Charles VVilfred Hapgood, Powers Hart, Raymond Daniel I-Iatheway, Curtis Rose, Jr. Helliwell, Charles Harold Hirsch, Sumner Alwyn Holladay, Collis Huntington Hord, Stephen Young I'. CLASS II -UPPER MIDDLERS RESIDENCES Williamstown New York, N. Y. Dlichigan City, I nd. Wellesley Hills N ewbury, N. H. Roasbury, Conn. Hibbing, Dfinn. Bucksport, Die. Troy, N. Y. Grand Rapicls, Blick. New York, N. Y. Dubuque, Iowa Fall River Natick St. Joseph, lilo. East Orange, N. J. Summerville, S. C. Caizanclaigaa, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. Nlontelair, N. J. 17Vaterbury, Conn. Dorchester Denver, Colo. Denver, Colo. llladison, Conn. Clzicopce Lawrence Melrose Highlands Brookline Boston Fall River Brooklyn, N. Y. Indianapolis, Incl. Lowell Litchfield, Conn. Rural Valley, Pa. Cumberlancl, Blcl. San Francisco, Cal. Terre H ante, I nd . 104 ROOMS 1VIr. A. G. Clark's Adams 19 Day 20 . Taylor 21 Adams 9 Clement 12 Day 15 Taylor 10 Mr. hIcCurdy,s Eaton 3 I Taylor 4: Bishop 14 Phillips 21 Day 28 Adams 23 Mr. Stone's Abbot 7 . Bartlet 1 Pemberton 6 Mrs. J. H. Clark's Bishop Q1 Clement 2 Day' 21 Mr. Johnson's Andover 2 Taylor 12 Taylor 22 Day S25 1VIr. Newton's Draper 2 Bishop 6 Phillips 8 Pemberton 5 Mrs. YVainWright's Bishop 33 Draper 1 Bartlet Q4 Phillips 13 Bartlet 20 flllllllllllll lllllllllllllllll . D01 Dow Q QI . llllllllllll . .lllll11u:::1i NAMES Horgan, Harry Redmond Humphrey, Herbert, Jr. Irwin, Samuel Browning Joyce, Thomas Haskins King, Edward MacDonald Knox, WVilliam Boardman Lloyd, Humphrey Lumpkin, Richard Adamson Lunt, Alison Storer lVIcLanahan, Duer lVIiller, Robert Murdoch Montgomery, James Stephens lVIoore, William Randolph Morrison, Theodore Crane O'Connell, Thomas Ward Page, Vllilliam Merryman Piazza, Anthony Andrew Pickering, James Sayre Richards, Edgar Ott Richardson, Hazen Mills Ripley, Davis Nicholes Rutherford, Douglas Ryder, Daniel Franklin Sawyer, Douglas Beaumont Seelye, Julius Franklin Shedden, Robert Fitch Sholl, Buckner Pearson Smith, Waltoii Hall Stevens, Robert Ten Broeck Stohn, Cark Frederick Story, Charles Dare Stout, William VVilson Thompson, Ruland Tison, Alexander, Jr. Ufford, Henry Mandeville VVarren, Robert Hall Wlatkins, Vllilliam Benson Westerman, Isadore Lewis Wetherbee, George Brown 1Vhite,' Robert 'Wesley VVhittier, Robert Bradstreet VVilson, Herman Chambers Young, Henry Martin RESIDENCES N ewport, R. I. lllarbleheacl Lanrlsclowne, Pa. Pasaclena, Cal. Plainfield, N. J. Andover Riflgewoofl, N. J. lllatoon, Ill. Portland, Dle. W ashi-ngton, D. C. Plainjielcl, N. J. Trenton, N. J. lfobile, Ala. B-rachforcl East H arqford, Conn. Haverhill Lawrence East Orange, N. J. Easton, Pa. Dfiflflleto n Newton Centre Vernon, N. J. Bellows Falls, Vt. South Harwich North Conway, N. H Brookline New Y orlc, N. Y. Kansas City, DIO. Plainfelcl, N. J. Roslinclale New York, N. Y. llfenomonie, Wis. Brooklyn, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Elmira, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. l7Vinona, Minn. Stoughton Bath, life. Brady, T eras Everett Asheville, N. C. New York, N. Y. 105 Rooms hflr. Blanchard's Bishop 2 Farrar 6 Bartlet 3 Bartlet 29 Andover 5 Adams 11 Day 35 Bartlet 10 Phillips 2 Phillips '7 Andover 9 Bancroft 5 Abbot 15 Mrs. VVainwrightls Day 10 Taylor 24 Draper 6 Eaton 4 Bartlet 17 Pemberton 3 Taylor 23 Pease House 9 Bishop 6 Bishop 22 Phillips 12 Nliss Cheever's Day 21 Bartlet 15 Day 24 Bancroft 7 Mrs. J acksonls ' Day 4 Phillips 9 Clement 1 Mr. Lillard's Draper 3 Lawrence Phillips 15 Bancroft 11 Pemberton 2 Phillips 17 Miss Hewin's ii -Q .3741 bnientifit Eepartment NAMES Allen, George Wlashington Anderson, Oscar Frederick Bailey, Clayton Eddy, Jr. Bartholomew, Charles Fayette Bates, Chester Alley Blodget, George Laurance Bordeaux, Russell Burns, Dalton Francis Carpenter, Lansing Taylor Charlton-, John Porter, Jr. Christie, James Peters Clark, Hobart Coburn, Daniel Erwin Cole, Hobart Fairchild Dyer, James Edward Freeman, Evert Wendell Frost, Fred Clague Goldsmith, Richard Hunt Gaffron, Carl VVilliam Gould, Sidney Graves, VVallace Potter Harden, Edward Frederick Harvey, Alexander Duer , 1 Q,...Howe, Richard Withington Hunter, Harold Frierson Ivins, Charles Fox ' Kennedy, Robert Lind, Muir Whillas Linderman, VVatts Francis McCoy, George Murdock Meyer, William Henry Mills, Rodney Halstead Minor, Francis Gregory Mitchell, Ormsby MacKnight, Jr. Moore, Robert Huse Morse, Benjamin Clarke, Jr. Munger, Raymond Bowen Nusbaum, Edward Albert Pinkham, Daniel Rogers CLASS B -UPPER MIDDLERS RESIDENCES Saranac Lake, N. F oresteille, Conn. Jamestown, N. Y. W'est Newton Providence, R. I . Buclcspori, Me. Seattle, Wa.sli. Chicago, Ill. Wilkes Barre, Pa. Reading, Pa. Andover Evanston, Ill. Indianapolis, Ind. Bridgeport, Conn. Rurrtford, Me. Providence, R. I. Fall River New York, N. Y. St. Louis, Itlo. Philadelphia, Pa. West Newton South Brewer, Me. Illerrick, L. I., N. Y. Cohasset Brookline Plainjield, N. J. Lawrence Detroit, Mich. Oswego, N. Y. Peekslcill, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. New Haven, Conn. Westville, Conn. .Montelairg N. J. Newton Highlands Manila, P. I. Waterbury, Conn. New York, N. Y. Lynn 106 Rooivis Adams 3 Draper 5 Phillips 2 Farrar 4 Mr. Crawford's Taylor 10 Bishop 10 Miss Cheever's Bishop 35 . ,Phillips 6 62 Elm St. , Day 2 Day 26 Clement 13 Day 28 Day 2 Bishop 27 Bancroft 6 Tucker 3 Bartlet 20 Draper 6 Mrs. Vilainwrightis Andover 1 Pemberton 5 Bishop 18 Bartlet 27 Taylor 3 Taylor 15 Adams 6 Mr. Lillard's Clement 7 Bartlet 8 Farrar 4 Day 33 Bancroft 9 Day 16 Bishop 21 Mr. Crawford's Adams Q ' 'ii'l '02 'FH-'Q 'gpg A ..,..f- I4, 1- , , f T7 ,4 i shy' lL QfI12'llll1llllI!llI.,. .lllllllillllll . . D 0 T D0 U Q Q I ... llllllllllll illlllllllllllli NAMES Preston, Harry Campbell Preston, Roger Reid, Frederick Lockwood Robinson, Wlilliam Dean Rosenbaum, Joseph, Qd Rowe, Roger Mayharn Russell, Aubrey Harold Russell, William Watson Sanford, Harold Edwin Sawyer, Anson Earl Smith, Howard Caswell Smithwick, Reginald Hammerick Stearns, Howard Bucknell Stefiian, Edwin Theodore Stephenson, Preston Tapley Stockder, Hervey Love Swift, James Gordon Thompson, Frederick Gregg, Jr. Thurlow, Paul Emery Townley, Donald Case . Upton, Herbert Hawkes Vars, Addison Foster Waetjen, Alexander Henry 'Wanamaker, Percy VVest0n Waters, Joseph Berens VVeber, James Moss M Wilde, Roger Conant Wilder, Jones Warren WVinters, Adolphus Henry 1Vright, Jack Morris Buts RESIDENCES London, Englanrl Lexington New Canaan, Conn. Detroit, Blick. Chicago, Ill. New Haven, Conn. . Oak Hill, N. B., Canada Oak Hill, N. B., Canada Un'l0m ille, Conn. Dorchester Swampscott Lexington Proo-iclence, R. I. El Paso, T ex. Lynn Meriden, Conn. Hartford, Conn. St. Joseph, 1110. ,Melrose New York, N. Y. North Reading Biqfalo, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Melrose Highlands New York, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. Winclzester New York, N. Y. Holyoke New York, N. Y. 107 RooMs Bishop 10 Taylor 17 Farrar 3 Bartlet S Day 12 Tucker 44 Miss Hinchcliffe's hfliss Hinchcliffe's Abbot 15 :Mix Newton's Phillips 19 lVIr. Crawf0rd's Adams 15 Bancroft 15 Bancroft 4 Bancroft 16 Bartlet Q Adams 11 Miss Cheever's Bancroft 12 lVIr. Peet's Mrs. J ackson's Pease House 12 Day 3 Miss Cheeverls Day Q1 Bancroft 5 Day 5 Bishop 28 Phillips 14 , s . HHIHIII ' IHHlHIllHlIIJlHl Se llIHl1iHIt!mIl!Im is We IIIIIIIIHIHIHIIII H1 X XX f f5mcmB3mcibm ff X Q5 ' ',l FJ.: - mmmmmmm N mmmm mmmm Ffmlmfflmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmm I ' mmmm mmm tmmmmmmmmmmJ ,ee my 3.915 Gffiners jfall Germ ' J. H. FIELD, JR., President J. K. CONVERSE, Vice-P1-est YV. P. SHURTLEFF, Secretary and T reasurer wtntzr Germ J. K. CONVERSE, President C. D. VVALKER, Vice-Presid t E. S. ENGLISH, Secretaryuarzd Treasurer Qpring Germ C. D. VVALKER, President H. M. PHILLIPS, Vice-Presid t E. S. ENGLISH, Secretary and Treasurer 108 fllllaseiral Eepartmmt NAMES Alexander, John, Jr. Archer, Charles Stanley Bennett, James Galbraith Bowers, James Peter Boyle, Playford Brieken, Carl Ernest Briggs, Ferris Baldwin Cameron, Donald Kenzie Campopiano, William Coffin, Earl Lovell Coggeshall, John Converse, John Kendrick Cushing, lVIilton Whitney Cushman, Wlilliam Michael DeCamp, James hlilton Dickinson, Porter Stevens Dole, Charles Minot Dow, James Kimball Edwards, Jonathan YValter E iglish, Eugene Schuyler Eeeney, Byron Joseph Fullerton, George Jackson, Jr Frenkel, Sidney Adolph Goodwin, Henry Nlurray Greene, David Lyman Hatch, David Phillips, Jr. Heilner, Van Campen Hibbard, Robert Sargent Hill, Herbert Wells Houseman, Maurice Henry Jones, Sewell Arthur Kibbe, Evan Adams Knowles, Arthur Lane, Nathaniel Tyler Lee, Schuyler Leith, Eaton Liddle, Eugene Mark Lord, Philip Barker Lunt, Thomas Egery CLASS III-LOWER MIDDLERS RESIDENCES Aurora, Ill. H olyieood, Ireland Minneapolis, M inn. Chicago, Ill. Uniontown, Pa. Shelbyville, Ky. Brooklyn, N. Y. Andover Lawrence New Bedford New York, N. Y. Andover Fifohburg Clieiiy Chase, DI d. Ci7LCi'lL7Lll'f'i, Ohio Lunenburg A ndover North Andover New York, N. Y. Narberlh, Pa. Andover Dlinneapolis, rllinn. El Paso, Tex. Porz'lan,d, Ille. Upper Blonzfelei-r, N. J. Gojstown, N. H. Spring Lake. N. J. Pitzfsheld A ndorer Grand Rapids, hlieh. Andover Ufiliclieszfer Pawtucket, R. I. St. Louis, BIO. Philadelphia, Pa. Lancaster, N. H. Canfield, Ohio Lawrence Rochester, N. Y. 109 ROOMS Williams Hall Tucker 5 Adams 13 Pease House 9 Day 31 Williams Hall Pease House 12 30 Salem St. Lawrence Taylor 6 Adams 18 Bishop Q7 Adams 8 Stuart House Day Q7 Adams 15 341 Phillips St. North Andover Bartlet Q6 Bartlet 25 Holt St. Bishop 26 Adams 7 Taylor 2 Adams QQ Andover 2 Andover 4 Phillips 3 5Q.Salem St. Mr. McCurdy's 5G High Street Clement 11 Bancroft 2 Adams 8 W'oods 8 Adams 10 Mrs. J. H. Clarkis Lawrence Andover 6 Q1II1Zllll1llllIilil,,. lllllllllllllll ..,,. Por Dow DQ .lillllllllllli 'llll!iIII1lll11. NAMES McColley, Earl Stanley MacDonald, Lowell McKinstry, Willard Lawyer lway, Ernest Nugent hfleagher, Richard Hayes Nlinor, Frederic Wlakeiield Moorehead, Singleton Peabody Netcher, Irving Neville, Louis Gregg, Jr. Otis, Stuart Huntington Parshley, John Edward Perry, Joseph Cunha Peters, Edward Wlells Phillips, John Manning Randolph, Robert Montgomery Rock, Edwin Lloyd Rosenberg, Emanuel Jerome Rowen, Paul Robert Sawyer, George F frost Seymour, Leonard North Shafer, Lester Paul Shurtleff, William Porter Smith, Charles Hartwell Smith, Frederick Merwin, Jr. Smith, George Van Siclen Stearns, Philip lVIorris Stevenson, Vllilliam Edwards Stover, Elmer Francis Sturgis, VValter Horatio, Jr. Taylor, William Henry, Jr. Thornton, George Abram Tierney, Richard William, Jr. Townsend, Frederic de Peyster, Jr. Trott, Emery Johnstone Weber, Harold Irving Wilson, Phillips Elder York, Barney Hamlin Zork, Luis Rns1DnNCEs Lawrence Bar H arbor, Dle. Ufatertown, N. Y. Denver, Colo. Chicago, Ill. Upper Dlontclair, N. J. Andover Chicago, Ill. Wellesley Hills Chicago, Ill. West Medford New Bedford Haverhill Anclo-ver Rahway, N. J. Mount Vernon, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Brighton Andover Elgin, N eb. Altoona, Pa. Lancaster, N. H. Kalispell, Mont. South Hadley Falls Richmond Hill, L. I., N. Y. Andover Princeton, N. J. Wellesley Hills Hull New York, N. Y. Bedford, Incl. Fall River Cooperstown, N. Y. Andover Zanesville, Ohio Everett Clevelancl, Ohio El Paso, Tex. 110 Rooms Lawrence Day 11 Taylor 11 Williams Hall Williams Hall '71 Main St. Hidden Field Adams 24 Pemberton 3 Taylor 9 Mr. Blanchard's Bishop 24 Stuart House 53 Phillips St. Pemberton 6 Bishop 23 Bancroft 15 Mr. Blanchard's , 210 Main St. ,Adams 1 Miss Ellis's Bancroft 3 Bishop Q5 Adams 17 Dr. Stearns' 41 School St. Bartlet 2 Day Q8 Bartlet 9 lilr. Lillard's Bishop 34 Taylor 18 Bartlet 18 929 Morton St. Churchill 3 Phillips 9 Day 23 Phillips 13 Scientifin Eeparltment NAMES Abercrombie, Laurence Allen Addis, Emerson l'Vesley, Jr. AHdG1'SOH, Paul Nathaniel Babcock, Harold Kenneth Bailey, James Stanton Baker, Leland Dyer Barnard, Foster Carnes Barnes, Richard Diman Beach, George Ross, 2d Beebe, Laurence Wloodrufl -Bergstrom, Phillips Barnard Bettcher, George Dwight Bixby, Wingate Bogert, Albert Curtis Bowen, Edward Kidder Boyd, Thomas Hutcheson Brown, Daniel Fisher Buck, Robert Leonard Buckley, Harold Robert Bullitt, Henry McDowell Burnham, Clark James, Jr. Case, Cligord Harold Chase, Abbott Cheney, Stanley Morse Craft, Henry, Jr. Devlin, Jones Francis, Jr. Dickinson, Frederick Augustus Doron, Joseph William, Jr. Drake, John Burroughs, Jr. Germer, Edward Gilliland, Wlalter Francis Gray, VVilliam, Jr. Hauff, John Augustus, Jr. Havey, Clayton Locke Henderson, Walter Reed Herring, James Bush Higley, Walter Maydole Hines, Ralph John Horton, Franklyn Hancock CLASS C - LOWER MIDDLERS RESIDENCES Lawrence Brewster, N. Y. Jamestown, N. Y. Wellesley Oraclell, N. J. Provincetown Anzlover Plymouth Ballston Spa, N. Y. Salem, Conn. Anflover New H aeen, Conn. H aeerhill Oraclell, N. J. Newton Centre Brdfalo, N. Y. St. Louis, 1110. Reading Springfield Big Stone Gap, Va Berkeley, Cal. Bristol, Conn. A nclover S outhbridge Nlemphis, Ten n. Salem Newark, N. J. H amilton, Ohio Chicago, Ill. Erie, Pa. Norwood Amesbury New Haven, Conn. Roslinclale Rural Valley, Pa. Ottawa, Ill. Norwich, N. Y. Evanston, Ill. N orlh Leominster 111 Rooms Lawrence Day 1 Taylor Q5 Miss Carter's Adams 4 Abbot 5 12 High St. Adams 16 Bishop 11 Bancroft 11 8 Punchard Ave. Abbot 11 Adams 23 Churchill 2 Bartlet 19 Taylor Q6 Churchill 2 Bishop 31 Eaton 2 Mrs. J. H. Clark's Taylor 16 Tucker 3 94 Summer St. Bartlet 19 Adams 12 Pease House 10 Tucker 3 Bancroft IQ Phillips QQ J Mrs. Jackson's M1'. Peet's Farrar 5 Bancroft 3 Day 929 Draper 2 Bartlet 9 Taylor 25 Mr. Stonc's Day 18 l llllllllllllll IlllliIIllllll!,. D 0 T D 0 U D Q I ...lllllllllllllll... ...tlllllllllllillf NAMES Huke, Earl Robinson Hull, Edward Seabrook Hull, Raymond Herbert Ingraliam, James Frederick, 3d Loeb, Freeman Ernest McCoubrie, Robert James, Jr. McCrin1mon, Frederick Donald MacDonald, Howard Brenton McKee, Henry Stewart, Jr. McLean, Andrus Belfry, Jr. Martin, Lawrence Stutson lVIeridith, Julian Francis, Jr. Northbridge, George TVillard Noyes, Howard Holton Peckham, YVilliam Harold Phillips, Harry Moore Raybaud, Eduardo, Jr. Roberson, William Carter Robinson, Nathaniel Oliver Scheide, Edward Cutter Schuttler, Peter, Jr. Sharp, Edward Leslie Shipowitz, Hyman Smith, Donald Stuart Smith, James Alexander, Jr. Symmes, Chandler VVhiting Talmage, Frank Mathias Van Orden, William Wendel Vea, Norman Dahl Walch, Donald Elbra Walker, Charles Douglas West, Paul Edward Willoughby, Edwards Brownheld Wilson, John Chapman Wolfe, Dudley Francis RESIDENCES Torrington, Conn. Philadelphia, Pa. New Haven, Conn. Peabody New Orleans, La. Ando-ver Butte, lllont. Yonkers, N. Y. Los Angeles, Cal. Mansfield, Ohio Melrose Bzqfalo, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Kenwood, N. Y. Mizldletown, R. I . New York, N. Y. Buenos Aires, Argentina New York, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. HarU'orcl, Conn. Chicago, Ill. Chicago, Ill. New York, N. Y. Rochester, N. Y. Chambersburg, Pa. Winclzester Great Barrington Catskill, N. Y. Canal Dover, Ohio Proviclenee, R. I . Duluth, Minn. New York, N. Y. Brady, Tex. Trenton, N. J. Omaha, N eb. 112 ROOMS Bancroft 18 Taylor 18 Bancroft Q Day 4 Mr. Newtonss 25 Phillips St. Day 24 Bishop 17 Andover 9 Phillips 22 Eaton 5 Mrs. Jackson's Taylor 5 Abbot 4 Tucker 1 Bartlet 7 VVoods '7 Eaton 6 Taylor 1 Day 8 Eaton 1 Bishop 29 Miss Hinchcliffe's Day 27 Adams Q3 Bishop 4 Clement 9 Stuart House Eaton 5 Bishop 19 Day Q3 Bancroft 18 Churchill 3 Adams Q1 Phillips 11 Hmmm lm m m mmmmmmmmmmmm I l Q I mmmlmlllllllm Hlllllllllllllllllml mm mm mmmmmmmmmmmmkm A , mmmmmmmmml m m mm mm mmmm mlm mmmm Wmmmmmmmm ffl mmmmm mmmm mmm.mmmmmmm X If m mmmimmcmm X -I 19916 J GOWANS, Po-esident C. BURR, cwffirers Spring Germ G. D. B JR., Secretary and Treasurer 113 RADEN, Vice-Presid t NAMES Akerley, Elmer Charles Allen, Norman Towne Avery, Daniel Dudley Barrett, Thomas Francis Benton, Josiah Holt Blodgett, VVCl1lZVV01'l'.l1 Putnam Braden, George Dewey Briggs, Thomas Rensselaer Brusie, Oliver Eugene Burr, Calvin, Jr. Cadenas, Emilio Carden, Blythe Lynet Clement, Franklin Groves Cushing, Joseph Daggett, Horner Mears Darling, Albert Ellsworth Day, Huntington Townsend DeLuca, Theodore Deware, Karl Albert Deware, Robert Edward Dodson, Curtis Harvie Donnelly, Eugene Russell Doyle, Milton Dorland DuHy, Edward Stephen Field, John Howe, Jr. Fletcher, Frederick VVells Fletcher, Morton Wloodbury Fuller, Charles Pelham Greenough Gale, George Ellsworth, Jr. Gates, William Herbert, Jr. Gilmore, Robert Downs Gowans, John Graham, Lorillard Adams Granger, Frederick Gordon Hale, Edward Rice Hall, William Augustus Hayden, George Tynan Hess, John Sullivan Hibbert, Samuel Qilassical CLASS IV apartment - J UNIORS RESIDENCES Reading Andover Aurora, N. Y. New Ha-ven, Conn. Belmont West Newton Washington, Pa. Johnstown, N. Y. South Blanehester, Conn Auburn, N. Y. Havana, Cuba New York, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. Fitchburg New Haven, Conn. Anclouer Dongan Hills, N. Y. Andover East Pepperell East Pepperell Danville, Va. East Pepperell Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Lawrence Bufalo, N. Y. Shelburne, Vt. Andover While Plains, N. Y. Dorchester Centre Worcester Wellesley Hills Bujalo, N. Y. H aeerhill South Weymouth Castine, Me. H lValcefielcl Birmingham, Ala. Cobourg, Ont., Canada Andover 1141 Rooms Abbot 5 1 Union St. Adams 3 Abbot 9 YVilliams Hall WVilliams Hall Bancroft 7 Day 34 Pease House 10 Dr. Stearns' Mr. Newtonis Andover 1 W'oods 6 'Williams Hall Eaton 2 6 Highland Rd. Clement 6 Day 9 Pease House 9 Pease House 9 Abbot 18 Pease House 11 Bartlet '7 Abbot 9 Bishop 16 Williams Hall 41 Salem St. Williams Hall Pease House 9 Pemberton 1 Wloods 6 Bancroft 10 Bishop 27 Adams 22 Bishop Q8 Taylor 16 Mr. Peet's Churchill 6 80 High St. ,Qlllllllllllllllll llllllllIllllll. . . F1500 QPU I .... l lllllllllllllll... 6 .,. ' illlllllllll NAMES Higgins, Loring Abbott Hillman, Edward, Jr. Hill, Edward Fiske Holden, Timothy English Houghton, John Wlilliam, Jr. Huie, Quong Pock Israel, Arthur, Jr. Jones, Beebe Jones, Charles Henry, Jr. Kurth, Wlilliam VVaters Leong, Goon Daugh Lewis, Joseph Hamilton McClurchy, Robert Tibbetts hfIcConnell, Archibald Campbell hIcKee, Donald Hay lWcLaughlin, John Dwyer, Jr. McMahon, Horace Ford Mchoney, Charles Daniel lVIay, William Edward Mayers, Bertram Francis , Meckel, Chester Toussy Miller, Donald Beclell Morris, Gordon Boardman Mowry, Harold Mitchell Nelson, Richard Robinson Nicholson, lYilliam Donald Orton, Herald Douglas Pennock, Earle Tirrell Perez, Frank, Jr. Pfaffmann, Karl Slade Poole, Robert Tompson Quealy, Mahlon Kemmerer Richmond, Ernest Dalton, Jr. Ross, John Branson Rubsamen, VValter Hans Russell, Clinton Francis Saborio, Carlos, Jr. Sanchez, Carlos Manuel Scott, Wlalter David Selden, Edward Gillette Serven, James Edsall Shoff, Charles Lee Smith, Hamilton Keith Smith, Wlalter Joseph Spencer, Hugh Harding Spencer, Wlesley Gaflield RESIDENCES Andover Chicago, Ill. Evanston, Ill. Danvzflle, Ill. Olean, N. Y. Butte, Blunt. Charleston, S. C. Jamestown., N. Y. W eslon Lawrence Portland, Ore. Pitfwelrl Portland, lllc. Northampton Los Angeles, Cal. llffst Roarbury New York, N. Y. Lawrence Denver, Colo. Lawrence, L. I., N. Y Clzjcago, Ill. Pittsfield Blount Vernon, N. Y. Sterling, Conn. Fl. Scott, Kan. Leaflrille, Colo. Rochester, N. Y. South Braintree Andover Quincy Dancers Ke-rnmerer, Wyo. Reading St. Joseph, rllo. Murray Hill, N. J. Dulutlzv, .Minn San J csc, Costa. Rica Santa Lucia, Cuba Mount Vernon, N. H. Andover Pearl River, N. H. Tarentzmz, Pa. Webster Kalispell, Blont. Andover Anclover 115 ROOMS 15 Chestnut St- Yvilliams Hall Mr. Stone,s Adams 920 Mrs. H. Clarkls Clement 4 Abbot 7 Nlrs. J. H. Clark's Williams Hall Lawrence Pease House 14 Phillips 20 Abbot 16 Wlilliams Hall lVilliams Hall Tucker 1 Dr. Stearns, Churchill 4 Vllilliams Hall Farrar 5 Mr. Peet's Taylor Q7 Mrs. J ackson's Taylor 14 lXLL1's. J. H. Clarkls Pemberton 1 Taylor 3 Bancroft 9 Jenkins Rd. Adams Q1 Pease House 11 Mfr. Crawfordls Abbot 11 Mfr. Lillard's lVIrs. VVainwrigl1t's Mr. Stone's Tucker 5 Pease House 14 Pemberton Q Adams 14 Williams Hall Taylor 28 Woods 5 96 Central St. 96 Central St. iliifllllllllllllil... ...lllllllllllllllll .,, , D C5 T P 0 U D Q I ,..lllllllllllllll... 6 ,,. 'lllll!ll!l!lllf NAMES Stevens, George Elmer Stilwell, Neil Conwell Taylor, Duncan Cady Tebbetts, Theodore Torrey, Bruce Knox Tuggle, Thomas Lohman Varrell, Harry Rothwell Wasserman, Howard Weatlierley, Vaughan John Websterg Clarence Lindley Websteif George Willard, Jr. Webster, Walter Neal Wells, Harold Marsden Whipp, Harold Burton White, Kenneth Golcler Wicker, Walter Charles VVickes, Thomas Nelson Wight, Ira Edward, Jr. Witmer, Joseph Petterson Wood, Stacy Campion Zebert, Frank William RESIDENCES. New York, N. Y. Anderson, Ind. Plainfield, N. J. Lynn Andover Tallapoosa, Ga. Cambridge Philadelphia, Pa. Brookline Walccjield Walccfielcl Lawrence Roslinolale Fall River Upper Blonzfclair, N. J. Chicago, Ill. Chicago, Ill. Sl. Louis, lilo. Los Angeles, Cal. Chicago, Ill. Ufest Lynn 116 ROOMS Mr. McCurdy's Williams Hall WVilliams Hall Wlilliams Hall 4 Florence St. Bancroft 4 WVilliarns Hall VVilliams Hall VVillia1ns Hall VVilliams Hall Williams Hall Lawrence Taylor 2-1 Day 3 Adams 10 Eaton 1 Mr. Peetas Clement 3 Miss Cheever's Phillips Q0 36 Salem St. CLASSICAL DEPARTMENT : flilassificatinn Class I - Seniors . . 98 Class II - Upper 1VIiddlers . . 82 Class III - Lower Middlers , . 76 Class IV - Juniors SCIENTIFIC DEPARTMENT 1 Class A - Seniors . . 107 1 363 . 55 Class B - Upper lVIiddlers . 68 Class C - Lower Middlers . 74 - 197 560 imprzsentatmun Massachusetts . . 188 North Carolina . Q New York . 94 South Carolina . Q Connecticut 51 Washington . Q New Jersey . 34 Arkansas . 1 Illinois . 34 Georgia 1 Pennsylvania 26 Iowa . 1 Maine . 11 Kansas . 1 Minnesota . 10 Kentucky . 1 Missouri . . 9 Louisiana . 1 New Hampshire . 9 Mississippi . 1 Rhode Island . 9 Oregon . 1 Indiana . 8 Tennessee . 1 Ohio . 8 VVisconsin . 1 California . 7 Wyoming . 1 Colorado . . 5 Argentina . 1 Texas . . . 5 Canada , 3 District of Columbia . 4 Costa Rica . 1 Michigan . . 4 Cuba . . 2 Montana 4 England . 1 Virginia 4 Ireland . . 1 Vermont 3 Philippine Islands 1 Alabama Q -- Maryland . Q Total . 560 Nebraska . Q 117 7' .' gy-1' 4 f .1:5I,'f1f' A -, if , v'fk4r' -f'w: 2' 'dj-'Eff-1 -Ffa: - - 'Eaif' X4 TF, f 1.3 5, f , L fag ' P ' 'Qu 6 ',-'UI' f':'2f .-Y . u rin flq 15 ,SF Q' F. ' , ..'- If: ,TS Vrutld - ffff 2753 fins i .' -Eff 2 f .i i 'J'- ifjiz . ffl ? i2a:g 1' ASE --sf, 3 N: JL! -. x fl' 'Jf ' Qin ': Ain EFI-. 4, f1QiFE5 -1 2.5.25 I -1 '. fi '-'- ek. A r P ff , I N151- '2f?2:2 55 'E -'fun .,-,,.. . - ez., .V - .f a , - 'LDS - 'gg ,. 1,11-nj, .'--V 5' ,ii 1 :-,. ' .:+ 'i ffl ....4- .-3 . ,T . , :U-r '? :--. .,-in 9 Q -1: ?'-. T .L ., -25234321 '- in , F ii T 5 -. Q., K3 ffjigi 25. .,fE5:.E s V71- ' ff' 'i 14mg .22-1 . , ' V AVI :- r 1. ...E .... wx.: i 'QC' , rw-.F -1' L 1 -'-an :il-EL ,- .4 - QPEQE - J.-F-- 5 . , -n-HL. P ,. few .' - , -13--1-Z ' pl?-F 1 - ' 2 - E' 1.-.. - M L. - . - 1, Y . !P.:l V3 T '1 f' i 1 . lg-. '1,:13I:'g.' 'J' .', :f.iZ, 5 2 -I-A -'- .- 1 I ,rv-iii f '11-' 3, ' , f ,'i'v 1 aL X -5,2 1: uf,.' 5 1-L., ':-27,1 1 ' -fi-Q' ,.+ 4 ,, gr- f-rf 4- Q - L'iiTN gLlGlBH.lTY LIST 531252 - eres-s4ev-1k:if!- 6' T . 'WWHW fl M Awvm h 11011 ' I LMVJANES U -HOCHSCHILD fg , Ha' TCHELDLR I,-: JHP A lla! 7 U ' yZ1Y7liQNfW N f - , :,V Aw M J x - f K 1:25 I. .I- f R iii 35 1 - .ix A IM' Vg' , '. 142 1 X Milam! M V i1n!M.l.w D. q, ll 2- , A QN X, Q P-E' 'LNJWWE f'5'g,fd,',ffw,qLH ,N 'limi Uwmxllff I X '-Z.-fI'f'f' n'11 H WL , 1 P, 3 X-991'-1' -ksfijffhwk 4!.-f'jfQ'jz?i Rj' , N ' fbi A mfm, ,V Sf, 'fmff ' .TfIkf i1fii2sQ1mhb'925 W 'i W y 1152 5 i3'if' f Wu, 4 1lgif.5,2':iT51f EH 1.f,ya.i,1-gi Wig- Q u WE? , ' f?.:X '- l'F,' ,' i' f 1 A,:f':5 ,fi 'Y 1, ' 51151 -X QW X ' We ' f A I i 2'fz:fM357W?4:!U!EWirff W -I N ' lil' f' f':fLxi--N 'V f I! ,5145'-'f' '-I' W9m'21f'lfi'.7 Mf1y-' M:-fit' 15224: X M'-:1:i2:f'. -N N XX Wg .'-' msd ' 1 ffmngnm XJ Q O W 5 M N 11916 O rgmximoma W ff X K X U f X fy! 1 K xx if fy if ff? Z?- xx IPL! XXX . , ff?-. 12 ., X- ! 4 Q, fe- 41 ' ge ' 70, Q9 E 'A t. ,, ' 03 f X ' X ff 4 Z - y x- N f . f,.,, ,fiff - NX X Z 1 ' X Q -' , X -N A U WJ ff fl xx . , X X, ffm. ff C , Eva I X! X' fxwggx N. Ill, W 1 .YUBKIZIEEZEQPH X ff Gooo me c.w.L.5 V K J Q ' X ami: 'Rm K wi D lx ANDOVER r-wusncm. 'I 'E NE' A Tk -.X ewes f , , X Xib f fvf X .X X xx- A 1, , . Y My I If X , - XX - ,,f ,if hf xx X I , ' ! Af' 1 N Q H- fxff f fy fQ , ' f x 1- X F' 5 1 ' f' f 1 ' KWH YM S- 1 4 ff 'NW ' 'lf 5 5Qsg+ 22:5 ,ff f ' X . 's:?.s:g- :r?f - kg' - is-9 J , : 5: X f, ' xxx if-ab.,-f EJ-f 'i ff i Jlilusirals HE Hrst concert by the Combined Musical Clubs was given at Rogers Hall on Saturday, December 44. A selection rendered by the combined Mandolin Clubs of Rogers Hall and Phillips Academy was both a sur- prise and a pleasant feature of the concert. A supper, followed by a dance, concluded the eveningis entertaimnent. On January 29, in reciprocation for the cordial entertainment which has always been accorded the Andover Nlusical Clubs by the girls of Rogers Hall, a reception was held in the Peabody House. Dancing during the afternoon was followed by a supper at which an orchestra composed of members of the clubs played. The danc- ing was resumed until eight olclock, when the Rogers Hall girls returned to Lowell in the car. 1 A concert was given on February 241 at the Young NIen's Christian Association Building in Lawrence, where the clubs were most heartily welcomed. The Mlandolin Club took part in an entertainment at St. NIicl1ael's Hall, Lawrence, on Nfarch 5, and proved to be one of the most successful features of the evening. . The Ninth Annual Andover-Exeter Concert was held in Andover on Saturday evening, lVIarch 11, at the Town Hall. An innovation in the form of a number rendered by the combined Nlandolin Clubs of Exeter and Andover, together with the excellent quality of all the clubs, caused the concert to be received with greater enthusiasm than ever before. 122 nlllllllllllllll Illllllllllllilll ... . DOT Dow Q Q . ...l1llllllIl1ll.,, ... lululallllazzii Qniznhenfltxzter Qtumhineh Qliuncert 1. GTO EXeter - Garey EXETER COMBINED CLUBS Q. Tarantella Napolitana Anton Hyner, Op. 46 EXETER ORCHESTRA 3. Lady Dainty Odell ANDOVER NIANDOLIN CLUB 45. The Sword of Ferrara V Bfullm-d EXETER GLEE CLUB 5. That Banjo Rag Weidt ANDOVER BANJO CLUB 6. The Bloom Is on the Rye Bishop EXETER QUARTET 7. Auf Wiedersehn Romberg ANDOVER GLEE CLUB 8. Overture, Light Cavalry Supp? x QNIANDOLIN CLUB 9. The Stars and Stripes Forever Sousa COMBINED ANDOVER AND EXETER BTANDOLIN CLUBS 10. A Basket Of Chestnuts Parke EXETER GLEE CLUB 11. Somewhere a Voice Is Calling Tate ' ANDOVER QUARTET 12. The Swan Saint-Sams EXETER MANDOLIN ,CLUB 13. Bend Low, O Dusky Night I Unclerhill ' ANDOVER GLEE CLUB 14. Dance of the Gnomes Carroll EXETER ORCHESTRA 15. Wedding of the Winds Hall ANDOVER BKIANDOLIN CLUB 16. Old P. A. Fletcher ANDOVER COMBINED CLUBS The Glee Club also sang at the Annual Banquet of the Boston Alumni Associa tion On April 17, where it was received with enthusiasm. Owing to the excellent spirit shown by the members Of the Combined Mlusical Clubs during the somewhat tedious irst part of the year of preparation, the season has been unusually successful. X 123 L. B. SCHEIDE K. WALKER B. SCHEIDE HUBBARD, JR. O. HAUGHTON S. STEVENS H. WALSH H. ANDREWS H. DOWD MN E3 ,first Qlennrs' J. S. MONTGOMERY'- L. A. ABERCROMBIE Qernnh Qiznnrs W. P. MINER H. P. HARROWER E. B. FISHER Earitunrs . A. W. BURKE G. R. KNIGHT C. H. BRADLEY 1555525 G. R. BARTLETT G. 'E. DRESSER Quartet L. B. SCHEIDE A. H. WALSH 124 F. H. W. H. C. H. H. B. W. E. P. K. H. B. H. E. DOWD HAZARD TALCOTT BLAUVELT STEVENSON THOMAS WHIPP LIVERSIDGE HUBBARD WHIPP THOMAS BLAUVELT FISHER IVIINER HAUGHTON TALCOTT HARROXVER BURKE ANDREWS KNIGHT LIVERSIDGE STEVENSON DRESSER MONTGOMERY VVALKER Down SCHEIDE 'WALSH STEVENS ABERCROMBIE GLEE CLUB 125 H. B. MACDONALD H. W. F. M. ICINGSBURY M. B. Ross E. C. SCI-IEIDE A iganjurines C. R. HATHEWA1' COOLEY A. D. Zganju iflilanhulinsz J. F. MEAGHER, JR Secunh iganjwf Guitars G. M. ENGLISH Zlliraps' T. E. FRANCIS 126 M JM M6 C. W. GAMBLE CLARK ' J. A. POLLOCK H. O. HAUGHTON N. T. LANE HAUGHTON KINGSBURY POLLOCK FRANCIS SCHEIDE LANE ENGLISH COOLEY HATHEWAY CLARK GAMBLE MACDON1XLD BANJO CLUB 197 . I J :smash alxfabf K ILS-D115 F. M. KINGSBURY C. H. SPRAGUE H. B. MACDONALD B. S. KATTEN J. A. POLLOCK D. F. BROWN G. M. ENGLISH Jflute R. D. BARNES il HL ' Jfirst illilanhnlins J. F. MEAGHER, JR. A. D. CLARK C. R. HATHEWAY becnnh allilanhnlins W. D. BROWN G. E. DURANT W. F. BIXBY Guitars N. T. LANE Traps T. E. FRANCIS 128 H. HOOD W. GAMBLE H. HELLIWELL C. VVILSON . N. WILLIAMSON W. IRWIN C. SCHEIDE 1Biann S. WHITWVORTH BROWN IRNVIN WILLIAMSON FRANCIS HOOD WILSON KATTEN BARNES SCHEIDE POLLOCK SPRAGUE WHITWORTH LANE BIXBY BROWN ENGLISH ' HELLIWVELL CLARK MACD ONALD KINGSBURY GAMBLR HATRRWAY MANDOLIN CLUB 129 Down SCHEIDE I LIVERSIDGE WALSH QUARTET 1 30 WALSH CLARK SCHEIDE KINGSBURY OFFICERS OF MUSICAL CLUBS 131 leahers aah if-Blanagers 1877 G. A. Tyzzer 1878-79 S. M. Gordon LEADERS Mr. Chandler . . G. B. Hollister S. E. Farwell . A. E. Addis . N. P. CoBin . N. P. Coffin . T. F. Russell , I. G. lfVeston . H. W. Brown . H. VV. Brown . H. VV. Nlitchell . Rossiter Howard . Rossiter Howard . G. E. Leonard . H. P. Dyer . R. A. Bliss . R. A. Bliss , J. R. Russell . H. N. Humphries . J. 114. Howard L. G. Hall . H. J. lVIacKay R. Stiles . K. Reynolds . Q. Reynolds . N. Williams . A. L. 1Villiarns H. S. Royce . H. S. Royce . G. R. VVest . A. H. Walsh . LEADERS F. K. Hollister . F. K. Hollister . H. G. Sanford F. WV. Howard . F. YV. Howard . V. 11-1. Tyler . T. H. Spence . Else Cllluh 1881 C1 A.Jones 1882 W. G. Schaafiiee 1V.1ANAGERS 1887- . . . 1888- 1889- 1890- 1891- 1892- . 1892-93 . 1893-94 . 1894-95 1895-96 . 1895-96 . 1896-97 . 1897-98 , 1898-99 . 1899-00 . 1900-01 . 1901-02 . 1902-03 . 1903-04 . 1904-05 1905-06 . 1906-07 . 1007-08 . 1908-09 . 1909-10 . 1910-11 , 1911-12 . 1912-18 . 1913-14 . 1914-15 . 1915-16 . Banya Cliluh ' BIANAGERS 1888-89 1889-90 1890-91 1891-92 . 1892-93 . 1893-94 . 1894-95 . 132 1885 WT. B. Seguer 1886 G. Thwing J. T. Carr J. T. Carr . A. E. Addis . R. VV. Holmes . B. WV. Stover . C. A. Crawford . YV. J. Lapham . G. C. Schrieber . C. P. Dodge . H. W. Mitchell . A. J. Baker . P. J. lVIorgan . A. M. Taylor . D. Howard VV. B. Jordan, Jr. . L. F. Bissell . L. J. Perrin . N. Paschal . J. C. Thornton . E. L. F outs . E. I. Eldredge A. Wi. Lancashire A. VV. Lancashire . N. C. Palmer . N. C. Palmer , B. A. Tompkins . . R. Keeline' . L. K. Duby . R. F. Daley . G. R. VVest , L. B. Scheide . L. G. Fisher . 111. E. Stone . J. S. Elliott . G. J. Docker Qlllllllllllllll Illlllllllllllllll ,..,, D C5 T P 0 U Q Q I . . llllllllllllll ... 9 , ,. 1 llllllllllllllf LEADERS R. P. Tyler . . 1895-96 E. H. Clark . . 1896-97 J. F. Janes . 1897-98 S. H. lwoseley, 2d . 1898-99 S. H. Moseley, 2d . 1899-00 H. Brufl' . 1900-01 H. YV. Paine . 1901-02 E. B. Chapin . 1902-03 VV. B. Binnian 1903-04 D. S. Phelps . 1904-05 L. 1111. Chapin . 1905-06 R. B. Kissam . 1906-07 R. B. Kissam . 1907-08 S. Partridge . 1908-09 H. C. Black . 1909-10 F. J. Manning 1910 F. J. Manning 1911- R. J. Powell . 1912- R. H. Wells . 1913- J. P. Stevens . 1914- A. D. Clark . LEADERS F. VV. Howard 1915- jllilantmlin 1892- M. T. Clark . 1893-941 A. VV. Davis . 1894- S. F. Shattuck . G. ll. White . 1895 1896 -97 J. VV. Burdick 1897- A. J. BruH . 1898- F. Squier, Jr. . J. Farson, Jr. . 1899 1900 F. H. Gordan . 1901-02 E. C. Boynton 1902-03 T. C. Gorrlan 1903- E. L. Fonts . 1904- P. 117. Blake . 1905- H. H. Kissam . 1906 H. S. Day . 1907- J. R. Shuman . 1908- B. H. Fonda . 1909- A. M. Miller . 1910-11 A. E. Sharp . 1911-12 A. E. Sharp . 1912-13 L. K. Moorehead 1913- A. V. Heely . 1914-15 F. Mi. Kingsbury 1915- 133 Gliluh NIANAGERS BTANAGERS . L. Mitchell . L. E. Fulton . A. M. Taylor . T. Howard W. B. Jordan, Jr. . L. F. Bissell . L. J. Perrin . N. Paschal . J. C. Thornton . E. L. Fouts . E. I. Eldredge A. VV. Lancashire A. VV. Lancashire . N. C. Palmer . N. C. Palmer . B. A. Tompkins . . R. Keeline . L. K. Duby . R. F. Daley . G. R. West . L. B. Scheide . M. E. Stone . J. E. Elliott . G. P. Docker . L. Mitchell . L. E. Fulton . A. M. Taylor . T. Howard YV. B. Jordan, Jr. . L. F. Bissell . L. J. Perrin . N. Paschal . J. C. Thornton . E. L. Fouts . E. I. Elbriflge A. WV. Lancashire A. WV. Lancashire . N. C. Palmer . N. C. Palmer . B. A. Tompkins . . R. Keeline . L. K. Duby . R. F. Daley . G. R. West . L. B. Scheide QZZVXEZTIZIZ B, 'J 33232 W- HOLDEN, Manager V. C. HEILNER, Leader jfirst 9ilJIil15 F. BRIGGS MINER CEEBIIU W. E. STEVENSON Qllnrmzts W. B. SMITH jflutz R. D. BARNES Traps T. E. FRANCIS 134 E. H. STOHN Bass W. HOLDEN 3Bianu W. S. WHITWORTH BARNES SMITH HOLDEN STEVENSON BRIGGS HEILNER MINER ORCHESTRA 135 1' ff5 fN 9 e YXOL QTY 4 A. ABERCROMBIE S. MONTGOMERY E. STEVENS P. SHAFER V. YVELLER S. BEARDSLEE S. PICKERING T. STEVENS R. IQNIGHT C. HEILNER ERYB. Chclde .1916 jfir5t i!1Zznnr5 F. H. DOWD K. K. VVALKER Senunh QEznur5 VV. P. MINER H. HUBBARD W. B. BRYAN VV. GALE Jfir5t 33515525 R. H. GOLDSMITH J. VV. VVILDER W. E. STEVENSON Qzcunh 33115555 D. H. ANDREXVS R. H. NIASON 136 H ER C. W. GLE.ASON C. M. DOLE E. O. RICHARDS W. W. STOUT E. L. NICZKINSTRY H. E. LIVERSIDGE R. F. SCHELLING G. A. THORNTON G. BARTLETT H. B. WHIPP LITEDDD 11 '11111' ,. WP' I X1 1 - 11 l . it -1 X Y 3 jhlql xo ,. 1,1 1,1 1 131. v 5,---11, Q I 1 111 11 -1',f'1. 1171 , 12' fx' -. 2111 .- A- ,, 1-11 ' fu '- H1111 1W11m' 1 ' z um ,M - 1 ,1 1 .iJ ? 1 1'fJf41f f ''E' W' ff?z?2f'p,f-' f ,f-'N,1J 1 'r,f' '01 ' -1:11, ' 1 '11 1 1 'f' . 4, ,l'..,, '1' -4:1 f,1w f'l-''5'1!fI-,':g',f1:nG,':1' 1 . 1x ' 0 X 'f1ff'5f'111111-4i16'7'1f?f'1111f 51,5f1-111112414459ff-.-f-ff. 1115-11 if 1 1,1 115' .. ..-, 0,1 -. ,, .,1,.,,, l,., .., fl . 0 y,,11111,,HmN 1, A ,11 ,1 - --'1m11'111 '1 111111'111?y y J 1 'W ' 1 1 1'-.W NS 11 1 1'ff?',f1i.1?1'!'fHi5?1il!:11' 1' , , U 11 ful! 1 1X -. 111111 1 11 '1,'1,'1f111 -g1I ?:f16 1'H1l 1 1 1' -.4 111 1 W1 11 K R 1-Lf Wifi'1i'f:1f1111e1.?!S A 1 1'WW11'11 1 1:11191f1F1f:11'115'1111121151 M-11'1,11 111111 M sg' 'x11'11V ':' - 11155-'W11'1'1!11i2231-'A 1 ' 1 1 111 1, 1 1111 111 12532, f 11111f1!2!'51,,:4gi5151g:'1jf1!, 1111 W ','11'1, N 1 511- 41 1 1'1 .1 1 1f121i!zf11':-:fE1:1:'111211 11 1 11' 111 11' 11111113 J I Y 11M X' 'Nw 1I11H11 ,fx .. ' 1, '1'-121'iI:,f1'14.510 1 '1 '11 1 '1 1 fx A . ' M1 1 1 1:15211:11:f1:E!?511::F5121' W11111 11 1 ' 11 ' W'171f Q N NX 1 11111 1 'Mix'Z'f?1i2i?I:!E.54f??g' I , 11 M 1 11 :1 911,111 11 wif f1 11 1 1 1 1 1 v 1 1 W1 Q ff 1 111111111111rh'Q1-1111,1 1 '1 1 111 'W 11 1 fL1 J f w11.1f'..'Ti'11f1'11' 111 1 1 1 'lv la R 1 MM- 11,1 M 1 1 V, 1 M1 1 11 1,1 1 Q35'i, 55 f'?f ,evf 11 1 1 11 31 W 1 1 1 W- 1 1 1 . AKMW XXIILXHJMIML11 1 ff? ! In ENB. nhcibc E. SPEER, President - PHILO Q9fftmzrs jfall Germ R. H. BASSETT, Vice-President L. VV. BEILENSON, President L. W. BEILENSON, Secretary J. CROSBY, Treasurer Winter Germ R. F. BEARDSLEY, Vice-President R. B. WILLIAMSON, President R. B. WILLIAMSON, Secretary D. C. TOWNLEY, Treasurer Spring Ulerm D. C. TOWNLEY, Vice-President W. B. KNOX, Secretary C. Z. GORDON, Treasurer 138 jllklemhers uf iBIJiIu 19154916 N. Barker H. Bassett YV. Beilenson F. Beardsley R. Briggs F. Cohen E. Cook A VV. Cooley Crosby R. Doolin S. Fay Z. Gordon D. Harvey D. P. Hatch A. Hirsch H. Hull H. Hyde Knowles B. Knox H. VV. lVIcEldowney S. lVIartin M. lVIiller A. Piazza R. T. Poole 139 R. J. H E. W. R D C R B. H C Preston Rosenbaum Shipowitz Speer G. Spencer VV. Tierney C. Townley P. VVaetzeu B. Wlilliamson D. Wilrnot C. Wilson O. Wood lf?- J 1916 QBEHUZYE, 19154916 RAYMOND FAIVRCHILD BEARDSLEY, President MR. DOUGLAS CRAVVFORD, Leader HONORARY 1916 H. WINTHROP PIERCE ROBERT W. MORSE E. LATHROP BAKER 140 Q M Members uf forum, 19154916 Paul Abbott Richard H. Bassett Laurence VV. Beilensonx Raymond F. Beardsley Wilhelmus B. Bryan, Jr. F. Harrison Dowd Gerard M. English Heman S. Fay, Jr. Paul K. Fischer Robert H. Hyde Arthur Knowles VVilliam B. Knox 141 Duer Macluanahan Henry S. McKee, Jr. Edgar O. Richards Joseph Rosenbaum, Qd George F. Sawyer William E. Stevenson KNOX BEILENSON WILMOT GREENE PIAZZA BRYAN DE LUCA PHILO-SCHOOL DEBATING TEAMS 142 SAVVYER HARDEN VVILLIAMSON MCELDOWNEY SHARPE DOOLIN BASSETT BEILENSON MEANS PRIZE SPEAKERS 143 x v v4v f' 3 -:Ji wnwlvfm 5 WIHPW 1 5 uk ! A f'371 1pH5lf WM.f H lv! f 'JWlmIW :Nlfmu ' 4 v , P- .W Mm 1 A igiiiilw P :.n:nw151: .. I -qu Q ' il Wm! IW-1 ' ,a!., ,rf ,L 1 f ,,1, ,LLL g.. 1 5 f, 1,, h f,,,1gg1Q ' ' i f - 3- 5- ' ' ' Q- gh- gf-ge QA Rfebgfw as 11 10! ggif' P 'Nam Yum, lfsafi' 1 'iff' E , --' ' 9 X Q It B' 5How. , 1' .aw 4. vw ww IS?g lQo,W-Znem' I ' XMI , V' Vf' H 1 at FAX ,X 10.55. I4 M b wr m-rwmn evm cu: 13231 , Qmwg'l?f'2,.N,::f fi 5'-I NM, 1 ,, X A pq:-,. 1 I-1 Y 4ExsEE',vyl rf - ---CF . --7 ':? 7I . B ,' 23.14. X N , 14,3 U1 + fm N , c!44lf - - Jf 7'-A-r-'ir ::IA.4f4y.S f, 1, --s S? -512 1' 1' - ' 3-nr - .:' , , A . - : I f L:.3. 1.1, V, I' r:, iwfjfx ' :x:!.fM1,u . n V q 4 . W X , zz.. Z' ' QSTQYE Q ew e 5 1916 omg OF mumrg Sucietp uf Zinquirp HE Society of Inquiry has throughout the school year aimed to establish and strengthen ideals of Christianity in the hearts and minds of the students here at Andover. It has tried to enlarge their outlook on the ' different phases of the Christian life in our own country, as well as on those which exist in the mission fields throughout the world. Inquiry has adopted various methods for carrying out this purpose. One meeting a month has been devoted to the students for the discussion of conditions of life existing here at school. The results of this scheme, in most instances, have been very gratifying. The remaining-meetings were addressed by members of the faculty, by men from other schools and colleges, by missionaries and by ministers, all of whom talked very interestingly of their experiences in the various branches of work to which they have devoted themselves. Under the auspices of the Society of Inquiry the work among the foreigners in Lawrence was continued. VVith Mr. Quinby at its head, this activity has been car- ried on with exceptionally good results. During the winter the Bible Study Groups were again organized and were very well attended throughout the term, in spite of the fact that attendance was not compulsory. This year ive groups were led by members of the faculty, and two by students. Andover was well represented at the Northfield Student Conference by a group of twenty-one men, and the largest preparatory school delegation. The influ- ence of Northfield has been keenly felt in the Christian activities that the Society of Inquiry has attempted to carry out during the school year. The delegation was composed of: F. Kingsbury, A. Clark, C. W. Gleason, P. R. Doolin, M. Heard, Lu, W. Russell, D. P. Hatch, A. Coley, E. Speer, R. F. Shedden, T. Kingsbury, Touey, R. Crumb, A. Davidson, R. T. Sears, Allen, R. Bushnell, W. C. Chisholm, D. Randall, VVarren, Garrigues. It is hoped by all those interested in Inquiry that the Christian life and all things that emanate from it may have been brought more nearly home to the students, and that some practical good may have been accomplished through the various branches of work carried on by the society. G. M. E. 145 6, . SHAL , W3 QS E M. I ww 07 4 'fling - ' MM is ug, H gli ,Q , N , 1541 HH , jg : Pl' 6 'Wil f Siam HM Sw W Wil xg xXQjJJj XS ix-1? X 533.651 xi 2,3 lla R0 'U 3 literary HE fall of191Q saw the entrance into Phillips Academy of the Class of 1916. It seems that each member of it had resolved deep down in his heart to have absolutely nothing to do with the literary activities of the school. To this resolution the Class of 1916 strictly adhered dur- ing the Junior year, and as a result was not represented in any literary activity. The class returned in 1913, however, with the memory of this resolution almost wiped out, and during the ensuing school year several members succeeded in at- taining many positions of honor. Lester Scheide was an Art Editor of the Po'r POURRI. On the Plzillipian Board Paul Abbott and Hollis Alden were the repre- sentatives. Homer Conroy was on the Dramatic Club, and Elliott Speer was on the Debating Team. Now that some of the members of the class had ventured into the limelight, others became more bold, and so, during the school year 19111-1915, every literary board could boast of having added the name of at least one member of the Class of 1916 to its number. H. P. Harrower was Business Manager of the Plzillipian, and Paul Abbott, Hollis Alden, Ralph Hanes, Charlie Gamble, Elliott Speer and John Crosby were on the Board. Raymond Beardsley was Nlanaging Editor of the llfiwofr, and Richard Bassett and Lester Scheide were on the Board. In the Dramatic Club 1916 was represented by three of its members: Cadmus Gordon, Maurice Gould and Rufus Stevens. Two of the five men composing the POT POURRI Board were also of the Class of 1916: Paul Abbott, Assistant lVIanaging Editor, and Lester Scheide again an Art Editor. Paul Doolin was on the Debating Team, which defeated Exeter, and Raymond Beardsley won one of the lVIeans prizes. For every class, the Senior year is the most propitious, and the Class of 1916 was no exception to that rule. Paul Abbott was Managing Editor of the Por POURRL and Lester Scheide was Art Editor. The Phillipian Board was almost wholly made up of Seniors: Ralph Hanes was Managing Editor, 0. MI. Mitchel was Business lVIanagerg and Paul Abbott, Charlie Gamble, Elliott Speer, John Crosby, Gerard English, H. P. Harrower and William Barber were on the Board. Richard Bassett, who won first place, Paul Doolin, who was second, Lawrence Beilenson who was third, and John Sharpe, Edward Harden, Robert VVilliamson and Harold McEldowney competed for the Means prize. On the Dramatic Club 1916 was represented by Clarence Garrigues, Berthold Katten, Homer Conroy, Cadmus Gordon and Hiram Blauvelt. Raymond Beardsley was lVIanaging Editor of the M irror and Richard Bassett, Lester Scheide and Charles Drake were on the Board. From these statistics it may be readily seen that the Class of 1916 has been remarkably active in the literary interests of the school, and that it has left behind a record of which both the school and the class may well be proud. RALPH P. HANES. 149 2 ON lla Mr Managing QEh1tnr ' Business Manager RALPH P HANES O. MAC. MITCHEL ,Qssnciats C!EiJiturs JOHN CROSBY, JR. CHARLES W. GAMBLE GERARD M. ENGLISH WILLIAM H. BARBER 150 FLINT BRAYTON ALEXANDER D. HARVEY DUER MCLAN.AHAN CHARLES H. BRADLEY JAMES A. SMITH BARBER BRAYTON BRADLEY ENGLISH HARVEY SMITH ABBOTT GAMBLE CROSBY ADAMS HARROXVER COOLEY HANES MXTCHEL MCLANAHAN PHILLIPIAN BOARD 1 51 ANDUVER ,ff ,f lsx 5. Xheide 1916 Xl' Dlanaging Editor Business M anager RAYMOND F. BEARDSLEY, 1916 RICHARD A. LUMPKIN, 1917 - Associate Editors RICHARD H. BASSRTT, 1916 FRANK H. DOWD, 1917 HERIAN S. FAY, JR., 1916 , WILHELMUS B. BRYAN, 1916 Art Editor LESTER B. SCHEIDE, 1916 152 -1-i.-....1-1-1- SCHEIDE BRYAN DRAKE I Down LUMPKIN BASSETT BEARDSLEY MIRROR BOARD 153 Q . A Y 1 .Milf , Qs 'rug 5 . I - ff ' tl Wu ' g ' 1 ' KSICTBQBQUEIBC 1916 PAUL ABBOTT Managing Editor ELBRIDGE ADAMS Business lVIanager 1112132 Baath EDWARD MACDONALD KING Assistant Business Manager CHARLES HARVEY BRADLEY, Jr. Assistant Mana ing Editor fl LESTER BEACH SCIIEIDE WILLIAM BONWILL GELLATLY 154 Artists SCHEIDE KING GELLATLY BRADLEY ABBOTT ADAMS POT POURRI BOARD 155 MANAGING F. S. Beach . F. J. Phelps . F. J. Phelps . R. 'Trowbridge J. D. Symonds P. 1. 1fVells . E. J. Phelps . C. S. Thompson Pdbe . S. Knight . W. Phelan H. C. Emerson W. H. King . . J. Hall . . E. L. Watson 'CFI G. B. Hollister J. VV. Lund . FMD . W. Hollister .L. Vlfeeks . . H. M. Langdon H. M. Langdon A. E. Addis . R. VV. Holmes C. H. Richardson J. Taylor, Jr. . G. S. McLaren, Jr G. S. McLaren, Jr VV. T. B. Williams J. B. VVOolsey . H. B. Bale . L. E. Fulton . VV. E. Day . F. A. Lucas . H. Drummond F. H. Day D . Lee J. Perrin . R. VV. Fernald T. A. Cushman L. Hartridge . A. F. Kitchel . F. P. Ferguson J. L. Malcolm J. C. Thomas W. J. Bass . J. T. Ogden . P. F. Stewart . W. H. Smith . R. S. Cook . N. Boynton, Jr. A. V. Heely . R. P. Hanes . ZIEIJB ibijillipiatt Managing QETJitnr5 anh Zgusinzsss Managers EDITORS YEARS 1877-78 . 1878-79 1879-80 1880-81 1880-81 1881-82 . 1881-82 . 1882-83 . 1883-84 . 1883-84 . 1884-85 . 1884-85 . 1884-85 1885-86 . 1885-86 1885-86 1886-87 . 1886-87 1886-87 . 1887-88 . 1887-88 1888-89 1889-90 . 1890-91 . 1890-91 1891-92 . 1892-93 . 1893-94 . 1893-94 . 1896-97 . 1897-98 . 1898-99 . 1899-00 . 1900-01 . 1901-02 . 1902-03 . 1903-04 . 1904-05 . 1904-05 1905-06 . 1906-07 V . 1907-08 . 1907-08 . 1909-10 . 1910-11 . 1911-12 . 1912-13 . 1913-14 . 1914-15 . , 1915-16 . 156 Busmnss MANAGERS . C. 114. Sheldon . S. C. Patterson G. R. Carpenter . E. H. Babbitt . D. W. Phelan . W. B. Segur . W. B. Segur J. W. Lund J. B. Lund . A. L. C. . E. C. Bartlett . E. C. Bartlett . A. F.. Addis R. R. Atha . J. B. Neale . YV. P. Parker O. 114. Clark . R. R. Wfhiting A. H. Richardson . C. H. Schvveppe R. W. Moorehead . C. Garrison . M. VVishard . S. H. Carter . H. B. Perrin . L. G. Weaver . L. Kennedy . F. A. Bates . A. F. Nlarsh . S. H. Tolles . E. W. Freeman . D. G. Raymond . W. VV. Butts . E. O. Silver . J. E. Woolley . E. A. Henn . H. P. Harrower . O. M. Mitchel MANAGING EDITORS . . . A. C. Mack . L. E. Guillow . F. S. Porter . F. S. Porter . E. L. Lawrence R. Howard . L. H. Arnold, Jr. F-W E. Solomon . . J. Dryer . Ulbe ut uurri Managing Qlihitnrs anh Business Managers XIEARS BUSINESS NIANAGERS 1892-93 . . . . P. R. Lester 1893-94 . . . W. H. Hanscom . 1894-95 . . G. M. Chadwell . 1895-96 . . G. M. Chadwell . . 1896-97 . . . 1897-98 . . . 1898-99 . . 1899-00 . . . 1900-01 . L. B. Kilpatrick . . 1901-02 . P. R. Reed . . 1902-03 . F. J. Curtis . . 1903-04 . J. M. Howard . 1904-05 . E. P. Ferguson . 1905-06 . N. H. Foster . . 1906-07 . R. Stiles . . 1907-08 . R. 111. Burch . . . 1908-09 . C. WV. Arnold, Jr. . 1909-10 . C. R. Lord . . 1910-11 . H. H. Nute . . 1911-162 . E. L. Davis . . 1912-13 . N. B. Paradise . 1913-14 . W. A. Kirkland . . 1914-15 . P. Abbott . . 1915-16 MANAGING EDITORS W. H. Wadhams N. A. Smythe . VV. NI. Gardner Donald Gordon G. B. Ellis . Ray Morris . J. F. Ferry J. R. Irvine .- E. W. Baker . R. J. Dodd C. T. Ryder . W. Richardson W. M. Ford . 111. O. Frost . J. C. Thomas, Jr. . J. Sawyer . G. A. VVilson . R. K. Fessenden R. G. Hay . J. lvl. McHatton D. G. Poor . VV. Kahler . R. F. Beardsley R. F. Beardsley Ulbe irrur Managing Guitars anti Business Managers . Theo F ickie . Keith Smith . F. E. Solomon . R. P. Shenck . H. J. Mullen . P. L. Reed . P. L. Reed H. A. Wfeatherbee . A. N. Dewey . L. C. Goodhue H. Hodenpyl, Jr. . A. P. Foss . R. E. Litchfield . G. G. Jones A. H. Schoelkopf . W. E. Higgins . K. Woolley . L. B. Powers R. F. Biakepeace . E. Adams, 2d YEJKRS BUSINESS MANAGERS . . . . 1891-92 . . . . G. H. RICLCHHHII . . 1892-93 . . G. H. McLennan . . 1893-94 . . . C. Grilk S. L. Fuller . . 1894-95 . . W. T. Laing . 1895-96 . . H. J. Colburn . 1896-97 . J. H. A. Symonds . 1897-98 . . P. Nl. Nash . 1898-99 . . K. D. Clark . 1899-00 . . F. L. Collins . 1900-01 . VV. J. Colby . 1901-02 . . I. H. Gallyon . 190Q-03 . . J. G. Fuller . 1903-04 . G. D. Kittredge . . 1905-06 . . J. B. Wallace . 1906-07 . . E. A. Stevens . 1907-08 . . N. C. Palmer . 1908-09 . . J. T. Ogden . . 1909-10 . . R. 1fVainwright . 1910-11 . . R. Newcomb . . 1911-12 . . C. F. LaTour . 1912-13 . P. L. Hunt . 1913-14 . . L. D. Smith . . 1914-15 . . W. Williams . . 1915-16 . , R. A. Lumpkin 157 CHARLES W. GLEASON MAURICE S. GOULD ARTHUR P. DAVIS J. BERENS WATERS SIDNEY GOULD EDWARD KEITH CHESTER G. BOLTWOOD CHARLES L. FAHERTY JOHN E. BRENNAN JOHN P. CHARLTON, JR. ff it jfunthall HERMAN C. WILSON DUDLEY F. VVOLFE WILLIAM W. RUSSELL AUBREY H. RUSSELL ROGER M. ROWE LEWIS H. ROTHCHILD Easzhall THOMAS W. ASHLEY HERMAN C. WILSON Track AUBREY H. RUSSELL 158 FRANK M. TALMAGE THOMAS W. ASHLEY JOHN P. CHARLTON, JR. FRANCIS G. WALTHEW ELMER F. STOVER JAMES E. DYER PERCY W. WANAMAKER CADMUS Z. GORDON, JR. PAUL H. CRANE - JAMES G. SWIFT Eff? ATLMETHES J .gi I x f 0 .. 'aim-1 J' ?1 fn, . ., .N , 1 ff 1 f W 'WV j 'Ik WY Qi, ,N je -4 9 Y f ,, . 3 X 010 4! sg? I' 0 , ,L , 7 'f ZZ ff 5 f' 44 1 Mi - 7? . 'Q-14-'W ig 1 I,,2f,. 35. off Q. 7-fQj5gf5g:71 f.,:15g15.:pg' .1 ml , ,. . vw-Lp ,.. N K, X ,M XX N NnP ' F,- ' m :N 'i' 12: 9-17 i,2Q? 6i!f J . 5 .1,.L . SDH 159 Qthletins VERY school in its athletics has its periods of successes and its periods of defeats. The class which goes through school during the slumping period is unfortunate, but, even if its share be defeat, it is not disgraced unless it allows its spirit, fight and determination to decline in the same proportion. We entered Andover in the fall of 1912, and saw Captain Gault,s team defeat Exeter in the ninth straight football victory over our rivals from New Hampshire. Budde alone was from 1916. A mild winter did away with hockey, while basket- ball was abolished. The swimming team, with M. S. Gould as our only representa- tive, had a fine record with Jimmyv Gould as captain. Spring brought us our first two bitter disappointments. Jack Wiley's baseball team was defeated by Exeter 5 to 4, while the track team, with '4Stew Crary as captain, tied Exeter 48 to 48. During our Junior Middle year the bottom seemed to drop right out of ath- letics. The first crash came with the 59 to 0 defeat of Captain Murray's team in football at the hands of Exeter. Budde, Weston, Ashley, Callahan and Gould were our class's quota. The hockey team, under the leadership of Bob Paradise, was defeated in the first game ever played between the schools in that sport 4 to 1. We were represented by Ashley and Bruch. lVith 'gBabe Allen as captain, the swimming team was very successful, the relay team incidentally establishing a world's record. Hopkins and Fitzgerald were men from 1916. During the winter term a wrestling team was organized, and Mac Baldridge as captain led his team through a series of successful meets. Kennedy was our only representative. But the successes of the two minor teams were but flashes in the pan. In the spring Captain Rodman's track team was defeated 59 to 37 by Exeter. On this team we had Sid Gould and Swift. Captain Swett's baseball team also bowed to defeat, the score being 7 to 0. Faherty was the sole member from 1916. We were at least doing better. The opening event of our Middle year was not auspicious. Captain Avery's team lost in football to Exeter 78 to 7. Ashley, Merrick, McManus, Fitzgerald, Gleason, Burnham, Keith, Sanborn, Thomas, Thompson and Gould were from the class of 1916. But again the swimming team proved the break in the cloudy sky, having a brilliant season. Besides Captain Fitzgerald, 1916 had Peters, Searle, 160 QI'f3llllllllll!ll,.. ...llllllilllllll , bbw Q ..llIlllilIllllll... , fllllillliliilli Tilton, F. Kingsbury, Stout, M. S. Gould and Mayer on the team. The hockey season was short on account of the lack of ice, but the Exeter game was played, in which affair we lost 5 to 0. Ashley, of 1916, was captain. In addition, we had Walthew and VVilliams. For the first time in five years a relay was held between Exeter and Andover, resulting in a thrilling victory for our team. Charlton was our man. The wrestling team, with Captain Basso of 1916 at the helm, did fairly well. Thomas and Krieger also represented us. The track meet with Exeter was a record breaker. Conident of victory, Exeter went down to defeat 54 to 41. Captain Prescott broke the record for the QQO, Rodman the 120-yard, high hurdle record. On the team we had Bowman, Charlton and Swift. In our final contest for the year with Exeter, that of baseball, we threw chance after chance away and lost 10 to 3. Three men from 1916 were on the team: Ashley, Faherty and Gordon. The year closed with 1916 doing more than her share. Then after the summer vacation we returned for our Senior year, our last year. To make it the best ever, we were determined. The football team lost 37 to 7. Ashley, Keith, Charlton, Walthew, Rothchild and Wanamaker were 1916's representatives. The swimming team, although doing quite well, did not come up to past seasons' records. Captain Searle, Kingsbury, M. S. Gould and Tilton were from the Senior class. The hockey team lost to Exeter 3 to 0 in a hard-fought game. We had Hubbard, Jones and Mitchell on it. Bill Russellis wrestling team did fairly well. The relay team lost to Exeter. The track and baseball teams just now are problematical. Now is hardly the time to look back over our shoulders, for the race is yet to be won and we are coming into the home stretch, but we may be permitted to risk it. Numerous victories have not been ours, but we know that it will not be long now before the pendulum swings back and we take the lead again, for it is the steady, swinging stride and fighting spirit which win over the sporadic spirit. We are satisfied, for we have done our best and left Andover in a condition ripe for pending victory. CHARLES W. GLEASON 161 CHARLES W. GLEASON, Captain MAURICE S. GOULD, M JOSEPH B. WATERS, Left End All anagcr The Uleam CHARLES W. GLEASON, Left Tackle WILLIAM W. RUSSELL, Left Gaard FRANK M. TALMAGE, Center DUDLEY F. VVOLFE, Right Guard AUBREY H. RUSSELL, Center EDWARD KEITH, Right Tackle N ARTHUR P. DAVIS, Right End THOMAS W. ASHLEY, Quarterback ROGER M. ROWE, Left HGUCGCR JOHN P. CHARLTON, Right Halfbaclc HERMAN C. WILSON, Left Tackle PERCY W. VVANAMAKER, Left H abfbaclc FRANCIS G. WALTHEW, Right Habfback LENVIS H. ROTHCHILD, Right Guard W. H. LILLARD, Coach JAMES E. DYER, Left Habvbaclc ELMER F. STOVER, Fullback CHESTER G. BOLTNVOOD, Left Tackle 162 DYER WANAMAKER ROWE TALMAGE A. RUSSELL WILSON ROTHCHILD BOLTWOOD WATERS GOULD CMgr.j CHARLTON DAVIS WALTHEW STOVER KEITH W. RUSSELL GLEASON CCapt.j ASHLEY WOLFE FOOTBALL TEAM, 1915 163 O. D. Thompson G. F. Blivie . J. W. Howard S. K. Bremner . F. S. Mills . D. E. Knowlton W. Odlin . W. Odlin . J. Dennison . P. T. Haskell . C. D. Bliss . L. V. Bliss . F. DeP. Townsend W. P. Hopkins W. P. Hopkins J. O. Rogers . C. E. Durand . G. L. Young . J. Barker . G. P. Elliot . E. L. Holt . R. T. Davis . J. A. Collins . R. P. Kinney . J. M. Cates . J. S. Hurnbird E. I. Thornpson H. H. Hobbs . F. J. Daly . H. N. Merritt . F. W. Coates . F. R. Large . D. T. Rogers . C. E. Van Brocklin J. W. Gault . W. J. Murray . F. B. Avery . C. VV. Gleason Jfuuthall Teams 1873 F. M. Eaton 1876 F. Parsons P. T. Nickerson . . . 1879 Captains anh Managers 1880 . . 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 164 . 1877 . 1878 E. B. Downing . B. F. Pratt C. F. Emerson . F. F. Merrill W. D. Sawyer . J. Crosby . D. Churchill J. C. Dupont . E. R. Bishop . J. C. Sawyer . L. VV. Smith . L. W. Smith . E. Sawyer . O. M. Clark G. R. Widdicomb F. T. Crawford W. T. Townsend . VV. E. Day R. W. Moorehead F. A. Goodhue L. H. Arnold, Jr. . E. White W. VV. Grant . S. Hodge 'H. H. Ramsey E. W. Smith M. L. Rafferty G. A. Shannon L. F. Burdett . C. Martin N. F. Thompson D. A. Warner D. R. Hanna, Jr. . L. K. Duby YV. C. Chisholm . M. S. Gould 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 jfunthall Quotes fnr'1915 Andover, 13 Cushing Academy, 0 Andover, 0 Harvard F reshman, 7 Andover 0 Dartmouth Freshman, 26 Andover, 3 Yale Freshman, Q7 Andover, 0 WVorcester, 14 Andover, 7 Exeter, 37 Andover, Q3 Opponents, 111 Qnhuh er: :cater jfuuthall bunnies A. E. 0 0 1897 22 0 1898 0 18 1899 8 8 1900 6 0 1901 12 0 1902 17 6 1903 11 8 1904 No game 1905 0 26 1906 4 44 1907 10 0 1908 No game 1909 16 0 1910 26 10 1911 18 28 1912 10 26 1913 No game 1914 No game 1915 28 0 Andover, 392 Exeter, 448 Games Won, 18 Games Lost, 12 Games Tied, 4 5 HORD DRESSER ATYVATER MUNGER BEEBE JONES AVERY ADAMS THOMPSON THURLOW CRANE CCapt.j HORTON MEYERS SECOND FOOTBALL TEAM 166 MINER HEMINGYVAY HOLDEN DRAKE CMgr.j CONROY LINDSEY PHILLIPS - WOODFORD HARTLEY DooLIN WILLIAMS CCapt.D FISHER HEARD 1916 CLASS FOOTBALL 167 'Q' gs .Y . ml, -x 1 X X '31 if 5 T la . -. . , , g , f M ' 5: Fi' . A P , ..- -24 Q,Q,, --if'--2:42 1,114 C. A. BUTTERFIELD, Captain G. R. WEST, Manager The T. W. ASHLEY, Short Stop J. C. BRENNAN, Third Base Team C. A. BUTTERFIELD, Pitcher P. H. C. L. FAHERTY, Center Field E. Z. GORDON, Right Field CRANE, Left Field VV. CHISHOLM, Second Base H. B. DOYLE, First Base T. F. SHEEHAN, Catcher C. P. SWAN, Second Base H. C. VVILSON, Right Field 168 WEST CMgr.j CRANE WILSON GORDON SVVAN ASHLEY BRENNAN CHISHOLM FAHERTY BUTTERFIELD CCapt.D DOYLE SH1-:EHAN BASEBALL TEAM, 1915 169 W. H. Moody . VV. J. Cravens CFalD O. D. Thompson . O. D. Thompson . O. D. Thompson . C. Q. Webster CFalD C. S. Howard . H. E. Knowlton . H. E. Knowlton . E. H. Brainard . A. E. Stearns . A. E. Stearns . F. Rustin . . F. T. Murphy . F. T. lVIurphy . G. C. Greenway . P. T. Drew . . R. 114. Barton . I. J. French . L. D. VVaddell . L. G. Saunders . B. VVinslow . . VV. C. Matthews . F. 0'Brien . . C. Huiskamp . C. C. Clough . C. C. Clough . B. E. Reilly . B. E. Reilly . J. A. Reilly . L. F. Burdett . E. U. Burdett . J. S. Reilly . . E. W. Mahan . J. S. Wiley . . F. S. Swett . . C. A. Butterfield . C. L. Faherty . Andover 1 Andover 6 Andover 7 Andover 5 Andover 10 Baseball Grams . 1871 . 1871 . 1873 . 1874 . 1875 1875 1876 H. F. Noyes . . T. T. Thurston C. S. Gardner F. VV. Rogers G. H. Strong . W. H. Halbert F. B. Stewart WV. M. Vinton . . 1885 Glaptains anh Managers 1886 1887 . 1888 . 1889 . 1890 . 1891 . 1892 . 1893 . 1894 . 1895 . 1896 . 1897 . 1898 . 1899 . 1900 . 1901 . 1902 . 1903 . 1904 . 1905 . 1906 . 1907 . 1908 . 1909 . 1910 . 1911 . 1912 . 1913 . 1914 . 1915 1916 Scores for 1915 New Hampton High 2 Princeton 1918 Harvard 2d Pilgrims Harvard 1918 1 0 1 4 170 Andover 3 Andover 6 Andover 1 Andover 7 Andover 2 . . 1877 . 1878 . 1879 . 1880 1881 . 1882 . 1883 . F. A. Shedield . E. C. Bartlett . D. Churchill A. E. Addis YV. B. Stover . F. E. Wleyerhauser, Jr. W. O. Cox, Jr. . . O. Preston . H. E. Marshall .i . C. B. Gould . A. A. Thomas T. C. Schreiber . T. H. Nevin . C. D. Rafferty . C. Coonley . H. S. Knox . J. Liggett . C. B. Stuart B. H. Sullivan . A. Y. Bartholomew . H. P. Greenough . G. F. Richmond, Jr. C. W. Hamilton . R. M. Thompson . Kenneth Douglas C. M. Marshall . J. D. M. Hamilton, Jr. E. J. Winters . G. R. West R. P. Hanes Dartmouth Fresh 1 Hotchkiss 2 Worcester 4 Cushing 2 Exeter 10 1878 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 Qlnhuherzfllixzter Baseball mths A. E 1 1897 10 1898 10 1899 9 1900 13 1901 5 1901 16 1901 13 1902 1 1903 6 1904 Q2 1905 6 1906 Q 1907 No game 1908 7 1909 10 1910 No game 1911 Pio ganue 1912 T50 ganue 1913 Pio garne 1914 Q 1915 Andover, 223 runs Exeter, 167 runs Games won by Exeter, 14 Games won by kndox er 22 F1NISH OF' RACE 172 BASEBALL SQUAD, 1916 TRACK TEAM SQUAD, 1916 .-Z: L L. T. PRESCOTT, Captafzfu F. S. LENNQN, Manager The Ulizam G. C. AMES, Pole Vault C. B. BECK, 41,0-yd. Dash D. C. BURRILL, 100 yds., 220 yds. L. W. BOWMAN, Shot Put J. A. DREW, 100 yds. R. L. IRELAND, 4.40-yd. Dash G. C. MCCARTEN, Mile L. T. PRESCOTT, Q20-yd. Broad and High Jumps W. P. RODMAN, 120-yd. Hurdles, Q20-yd. Hurdles G. H. RUSSELL, Pole Vault D. B. SIMONSON, 120-yd. Hurdles, Q20-yd. Hurdles J. G. SWIFT, 4.40 yds., 880 yds. G. H. WINTERS, Hammer Throw 1741 LENNON CMg-r.D AMES BOWMAN IRELAND RUSSELL PEET QTrainerj DREW MCCARTEN SIMONSON BECK WINTERS SWIFT PRESCOTT CCapt.j RODLIAN BURRILL ' TRACK TEAM, 1915 175 jielh ants Trunk ANDOVER vs. EXETER TRACK MEET Andover 54 Exeter 41 Andover, May 31, 1915 19. 21. Becurhs 100 YARDS DASH - 10 seconds VV. A. Schick, Jr., '01, P. A. Campus, June 2, 1900. Cyril Sumner, '03, P. A. Campus, May 30, 1903. A. Y. Bartholomew, '07, P.'A. Campus, 1906. D. F. Burrill, '16, P. A. Campus, 1915. 220 YARDS DASH - 21 1-5 seconds WV. A. Schick, Jr., '01, Soldiers' Field, June 10, 1900. 120 YARDS HIGH HURDLES - 15 4-5 seconds T. C. Rodman, '15, P. A. Campus, 1915. 220 YARDS Low HURDLES - 25 3-5 seconds S. W. R. Eames, '10, Yale Field, 1909. R. C. Martin, '11, Phillips Exeter Campus, 1910. C. Rodman, '15, P. A. Campus, May 30, 1913. 440 YARDS RUN- 51 seconds W. A. Schick, Jr., '01, P. A. Campus, June 2, 1900. 880 YARDS RUN- 2.02 1-5 A. 0. Barker, '13, P. A. Campus, May '30, 1913. MILE RUN - 4.32 2-5 VV. T. Laing, '95, Holmes Field, June 9, 1894. 16-LB. SHOT PUT - 41 ft. 2 in. H. F. Andrus, '06, Stadium, June 2, 1906. 12-LB. SHOT PUT - 46 ft. 9 in. R. P. Kinney, '02, Soldiers' Field, 1902. 12-LB. HAMMER THROXV - 163 ft. 4 1-2 in. H. F. Andrus, '06, Stadium, June 2, 1906. RUNNING BROAD JUMP - 23 ft. 3 3-4 in. L. T. Prescott, '15, Phillips Exeter Campus, May 30, 1914. RUNNING HIGH JUMP - 5 ft. 9 1-2 in. J. Hasbrouck, '03, J. W. Marshall, '04. L. T. Prescott, '15, P. A. Campus, 1915. POLE VAULT - 11 ft. 5 1-2 in. D. MacMurray, '10, Yale Field. 176 jllllllllllllllll .lllllIi!IllIIll!!.., DOT P00 QW ,,.. l llllllllllllk., lllllllllllllli Cliaptains ante managers CAPTAINS YEARS MANAGERS WV. P. Lapham . . 1893 VV. T. Laing . . 1894 . J. O. Rodgers W. T. Laing . . 1895 . F. S. Porter A. H. Hine . . . 1895 . VV. C. Ridgeway R. P. Tyler . . . 1896 . . J. C. Greenway A. P. Richardson . . 1897 . . J. L. Mills C. H. Schweppe . . 1898 . Keith Smith C. N. Kimball . . 1899 . J. M. Dreisbach D. G. Crawford . . 1900 . J. H. Womelsdorf W. A. Schick, Jr. . 1901 . . F. S. Bailey J. M. Cates . . 1902 . . K. P. Grant C. Sumner . . . 1903 . . I H. Crammer J. W. Marshall . . 1904 . . W. C. Lowe E. 1. Thompson . . . 1905 . . T. A. Cushman A. Y. Bartholomew . . 1906 . L. M. Chapin J. R. Kilpatrick . . 1907 . . R. T. Fisher D. Knox . . . 1908 . . S. H. Brooks R. G. Hopwood . . 1909 . . 0. H. Sheldon S. VV. R. Eames . . 1910 . . H. D. Swihart R. C. Martin . . 1911 . . H. D. Swihart A. B. Tilton . . 1912 . . M. R. Braun P. S. Crary . . 1913 . . J. H. Dillon C. Rodman . . 1914 . J. E. Woolley L. T. Prescott . . 1915 . F. S. Lennon l- . 1916 . H. P. Harrower Qnhnher-QExete1f Qantas A. E. A. E. 1889 6 3 1903 58 1-3 37 2-3 1891 46 44 1904 32 1-3 63 1-3 1892 No meet 1905 No meet 1893 No meet 1906 47 49 1894 No meet 1907 56 5-6 39 1-6 1895 No meet 1908 38 58 1896 No meet 1909 49 47 1897 66 1-2 37 1-2 1910 41 5-6 54 1-6 1898 37 59 1911 37 58 1899 34 1-2 69 1-2 1912 25 71 1900 46 1-2 57 1-2 1913 48 48 1901 44 67 1914 37 59 1902 53 57 1915 54 41 Meets won by Exeter, 12 Meets won by Andover, 7 Andover, 921 5-6 Exeter, 1044 1-6 177 LENNON QMgr.J CHARLTON SIMONSON PEET QTrainerj WINTERS SWIFT PRESCOTT, CCapt.D RODMAN BURRILL HARVARD INTERSCHOLASTIC CHAMPIONS, 1915 178 BLAIR YOUNG MONTGOMERY DUDLEY CROSBY CROSS COUNTRY TEAM 179 MDG? PAUL. H. CRANE, Captain PAUL H. CRANE, Left Wing PERCY W. WANA NEW SPERRY W. MINER, Manager ' The Team MAKER, Rover JOHN GOWANS, Center THOMAS M. JONES, Left Wing PAUL E. THURLOW, Cover Point GEORGE W. ALLEN, Right Wing Z CHESTER G. BOLTVVOOD, Goa ORMSBY M. I 180 M TCHEL, Right Wing ALLEN HUBBARD, Point 1VIINERfNIgT.D VVATERS HUBBARD BOLTVVOOD THURLOVV JONES MITCHEL GOXVANS CRANE QCapt.j VVANAMAKER ALLEN HOCKEY TEAM, 1915 181 SMU? G. E. THOMPSON, Captain , GER M. J. CURRAN, Manager The Exam J. R. CARTER, Left Fullback D. E. COBURN, Outside Left C. L. FAHERTY, Inside Left P. K. FISCHER, Center C. W. GAMBLE, Outside Right M. Mmmws, Lefi Hab'back S. W. MINER, Goal ' L. B. SCHEIDE, Goal W. H. HAZARD, Inside Right F. M. KINGSBURY, Outside Right W. SMITH, Center Habfback G. E. THOMPSON, Right Fullbaclc G. TILTON, Right H abfback W. E. TRACY, Right Fullback 182 Q MINER CARTER HAZARD FISCHER TRACY CURRAN QMgr.j MATTHEWS SCHEIDE SMITH TILTON FAHERTY COBURN THOMPSON GAMBLE KINGSBURY SOCCER TEAM, 1915 183 SWUM WWE STEWART A. SEARLE, Captain LESTER B. SCHEIDE, Manager WILLIAM BOLTON, JR., Q20 yds. HAROLD R. BUCKLEY, 50 yds. PAUL H. CRANE, Fancy Dive FREDERICK PM. KINGSBURY, A Fancy Dive RICHARD H. ME.AGHER, Plunge PAUL K. PHILLIPS, 100 yds. STEWART A. SEARLE, 220 yds. GARDNER TILTON, 50 yds. ROSWELL TRUMAN, 100 yds. STACY C. WOOD, Relay Relay Team PHILLIPS TILTON WOOD BUCKLEY 184 SOUTHERLAND W oon TRUMAN BOLTON SCIIEIDE NIEAGHER PHILLIPS CRANE BUCKLEY SEARLE KINGSBURY TILTON SWIMMING TEAM 185 '16 T 1:1-1.325 QQEJEQ. V ' 1. . K -:n !::' ., 'SF . YE ' ' EY 553' 1325: LE- fra? ' fa-ffrf ., :-::v. '75 -ff .: :I 21 51-E'- -l.'w .ii ' A SYDNEY THAYER, JR., Captain WARD N. BOYLSTON, Manager , The , Qieam WILLIAM J. HAMMERSLOUGH SPENCER H. LOGAN JOHN C. KUNKEL JAMES M. WEBER SYDNEY THAYER, JR. 186 BOYLSTON CMg1-.D KUNKEL WEBER THAYER CC'apt.j LOGAN HAMMERSLOUGH ' CHAMPION TENNIS TEAM, 1915 187 WUEES TLUNE W. W. RUSSELL, Captain C. W. GAMBLE, M The ,Team D. C. TOWNLEY, 115 lbs. J. B. HERRING, 125 lbs. C. D. WALKER, 11,5 lbs. C. E. KENNEDY, 155 lbs. W. D. SCOTT, 135 lbs. anager F. H. HORTON, 145 lbs. W. W. RUSSELL, Heavyweight 188 HoR'roN HERRING GAMBLE CManagerj SCOTT TOWNLEY KENNEDY RUSSELL XVALKER WRESTLING TEAM, 1916 189 IEWMNZLX WIN L. ROCK, Captain ELLIOTT SPEER, M The Uleam H. I. GRANGER H. FREASE E. L. ROCK G. V. SMITH R. M. MILLER H. R. VARRELL SHIUIM anager R. H. MOORE R. C. WILDE X MILLER FREASE SPEER QMgr.j VARRELL GRANGER VVILDE ROCK CCapt.D MOORE SMITH GYM TEAM 191 BISHOP, Goal W. J. DEAN, Point MGLRHQDSSE VV. J. DEAN, Captain 013132 Zltzam BURNHAM, Cover Point ROTHCHILD, First Defence MURDOCK, Center FITCH, Third Attack FITTS, Second Defence HOLDEN, Third Defence BREWSTER, First Attack CORSE, Outside Home 'R0ss, Second Attack BRAYTON, Inside Home 192 BRAYTON CORSE FITTS ROTHCHILD FITCH BREWSTER BURNHAM Ross HOLDEN - DEAN CCapt.j MURDOCK BISHOP LACROSSE TEAM, 1915 193 HANES FAHERTY HARROWER SWIFT GLEASON PECK DR. PAGE ABBOTT GOULD ATHLETIC ADVISORY BOARD 194 1896- 1897- 1898- 1899- -1991 1900 1,897 1898 1899 1900 1901-1902 1902-1903 1903-1904 1904-1905 1905-1906 1906-1907 1907-1908 1908-1909 1909-1910 1910-1911 1911-1912 1912- 1913- 1914- 1915- 1913 1914 1915 1916 Zflflnhergrahuate Qlireasurers 195 . ALLEN H. RICHARDSON . IIUGH SATTERLEE . . ALAN FOX EMERmmJVV.BAKER . J. E. CRIPPEN . M. B. GURLEY E. BARTON CHAPIN JAMES C. THORNTON , WORTH HOWVARD IIAROLD CROSS . SHERWOOD DAY ROBERT A. GARDNER . JAMES A. REILLY OGILVIE H. SHELDON REGINALD T. RIPLEY . CLYDE T. TIMBIE . IQNTGHT VVOOLLEY . JACK S. RAYMOND NORTHAM L. WRIGHT . PAUL ABBOTT SENIOR FENCE AND CHAPEL 196 Stuhent Clinunnil RTAURICE S. GOULD, President HAROLD P. HABBOWER, Vice-President T. W. ASHLEY C. M. DRAKE S. Y. HORD J. H. FIELD, Jr. PAUL ABBOTT, Secretary and Treasurer Captain of Football Team, 1915 C. W. GLEASON Captain of Baseball Team C. L. FAIIERTY Captain of Track Team A. H. RUSSELL Society of Inquiry W. W. RUSSELL Undergraduate Treasurer P. ABBOTT Phillipian R. P. HANES Forum R. F. BEARDSLEY Philo E. SPEER M usical Clubs L. B. SCHEIDE First Honor Roll P. R. DOOLIN Second Honor Roll C. Z. GORDON, JR. 1916 - M. S. GOULD 1917 P. H. CRANE E. ADAMS, QD 1918 198 H. P. HARROWER C. W. GAMBLE R. F. SHEDDEN H. M. PHILLIPS RUSSELL HORD SHEDDEN GAMBLE n SPEED DOOLIN ASHLEY PHILLIPS THOMPSON FIELD ADAMS CRANE GLEASON GORDON BEARDSLEY SXVIFT HANDS HARROWER GOULD ABBOTT FAHERTY STUDENT COUNCIL 199 f N ' lx - A 1 -gw-1. 5. K X J MQW A' fly , I Wt 4 il A A A ' I A' lgwx m Sl N, ax! A I W Q! 35- f IV A V 5, ELLIOTT SPEER EDXVARD VVILLIAM KEITH B. GELLATLY JJ, ff- yxef ff,ff Q NX , EQ '-'IZ Ns, X445 ff., -SZREQ M3115 R If ' x X - 1. ,I -fa-tx, 553' If. +I r ,S , X f',f5aa'3i?,5VN-'wi . 1' 1 'A 1 px ' mff'??'gf?Z24ff' '-ff' J' 'mf ' 5- 'l'iTb.'f' il '-,,X,' -A-. Qlffrqfx -X 1- ..--AZ! . -wh' .T . ., . A 4j6: J, x4f-:Q .. -Q1 . 'iz A , A ., cs cm ' Beach A' Bshewe IQLO jfall Germ CHARLES BI. DRAKE, Chiqf 7 JOHN G. W. HUSTED ADDISON F. XARS Qpring Germ Chief CHARLES W. GTKNIBLE, NIAURICE J CARLETON 200 . CURRAN H. TAXLCOTT HUSTED VARS TALCOTT KEITH DRAKE CC1LiBf J SPEER GELLATLY GAMBIJE CURRAN FALL POLICE FORCE SPRING POLICE FORCE TQABWNWA T TP f e A fm gf 15 R JYJQLM 016104 EITPYEEIVQ I fall illierm HAROLD P. HARROWER, Leader S PAUL ABBOTT CHARLES L. FAHERTY :RALPH P. HANE GEORGE E. THOMPSON Qpring Term MAURICE S. GOULD, Leader PAUL ABBOTT HAROLD P. HARROWER RALPH P. HANES CHARLES W. GLEASON CHARLES L. FAHERTY 202 A 1 HANES THOIVIPSON FAHERTY ABBOTT GLEASON ABBOTT HARROWER FAHERTY HARROWER GOULD HANES FALL CHEERING STAFF SPRING CHEERING STAFF X FAHERTY KEITH ' SXVIFT SHEDDEN HANES HARROWVER GOULD GLEASON HORD ADAMS SENIOR PROM COMMITTEE JUNIOR PROM COMMITTEE ABBOTT DRAKE HARROWER GOULD HANES HARROWER GOULD HANES KINGSBURY ABBOTT SENIOR RECEPTION COMMITTEE CLASS DAY COMMITTEE HARROWVER DRAKE FAHERTY HANES GOULD ' ABBOTT GLEASON PEABODY DANCE COMMITTEE 206 ADAMS SPEER MCLANAHAN CALENDAR BOARD 207 iirif A 4 .' 8 . Wdf.. . A-a, xN' our Qhelrlc , 1916 N ng Q l-. 4+ afe tvjlg. f ,b was W . M 'im Illll'llf .' 'lllllllllmvlllllllllll 'lllllllliiivwlllllllwh !lllllI,,+ lllll 1llll,A3HI ill l ill Bill llclO3lll3 Ghz Bacant Int K A Musical Comedy in Three Triremesx D 33 I - 'il-'hm B3 ,hy A -f i ', l 1 . ' l f. I ,ei . , S ' H . 'i X. 1 ' A 1 as it 41. ' A . - ' f -' 1 -- L- -fa. ...-.. - ...., .- -..ff A' ff' 1 H -fx ' . rr- : -M--W ---..-...q.:....,,..,,,, ,. . f .fV5,,. X ' '-Q 1 QI 7-N Qi' ' ig: it W ' 0 W xml , 1 -ij ' .L in ne- 1' ,rum I ' ' 1 , '. - +2540 .liwlllifll L ki. Riel. uiiim. IRQ. hr . .hvfil BY H. I. Bnow AND H. 0. Bo STAGED BY Gosn THE CAST PERCIVAL PASHPONVDER, of the West L. 1. M. E. S. Keith JAPONETTE DE HOBOKEN, leading lady Dorothy H ard CU'r'rEnTHRo'rE D,AMMITALL, dusky villain Hatha Field SADIE SOAKEM, his accomplice C'onnie7' Hanes GENEVIEVE GOOLASCH, millionaire's daughter Dorothy Gleason CORDELIA CABLE, jealous blonde Frankie Gellatly FATIMA, Queen of the Harem Katherinel' Drahe IMA MORMON, the Girl from Utah llIarion Scheide ISAY NIXONIT, anti-suffragist Edith Gould PRZEMYSL S'rsHUrsH1NsKY, bomb warfer Dud WoUe KNOCKOUT Dnorrs, brutal thug Billy Barber SLICKERN BEETS, Weehawken detectivess Helen Gamble PONY BALLET Irene,' H arrower K l' Kingsbury llIiriarn English Augusta Blair Lucy,l Preston Chicken Crane THE CHORUS, May Speer it As no one on this Board or in School, as far as we Ceditorially speakingj could discover, felt able to follow the precepts of Professor Baker of Harvard suiciently to write the play Which, as one, would naturally suppose would follow the above program, we are forced to submit a list of those whom We think should be given honorable mention for a year of faithful service to the gentler sex. 208 A MVSMDHOUS rw TuJ IEmF.j X f NX l X Q Xb.: LAX ,ff Q51 N AE! SvNw3wwm 'Mb L N Wx' x' V , - In Q if W - I Ll, x -2 WMMW N qwj W7 aww. - sgfgxyjg Qkx . W NJ 2- 9 'XM ' J, X -8 1 Q ' x ., .A...,, .....A 5 lx ,Q ,b.i. N v I X 5 Y i KTUB. cbcidz Q 3 1916 fg QQlf2T5lI14i!llIllll,.. ...umusuxumu . DOT' PGH D QI . I illlmtlllmi... ...liklllllllllliilli Hgnphuhp wuulh Zlaahe 1313112 lit A one-Word musical comedy in two acts CAST She .... ...................,................. I MA NOTHER He .... ............. .................,..,.. G . VVHATA HUsK FAMOUS PALM OLIVE BEAUTY CHORUS ACT I Scene: A lonely spot at Palm Beach. Time: 3.30 on a hot May day. Chorus, clad in purple and gold bathing suits, sing: NDoWn Among the Sheitering Palms. SHE C 'way out in the brinyD: Help! HE Qon the beachj: IVhat? Help!,' VVho? lVIe!', VVhy? Drowning! U Rea1ly? CChorus sings gems from Nobody HO1HG.,,D Quick!' CReally rousedjz HCO1'IliI1gl7, ' I Chorus of palm trees sings: Mother, May I Go in to SWim?,' He rushes into the surf and breasts the waves swimmingly. HE: C0ming.,' She can't, much to her own mcrtijication, get in the last word and goes down for the third time. His powerful Australian crawl brings him quickly to the spot where she went down. A cake of 99-3545 pure M shows him the place, and, while a bulrush whistles ,Way Down Under the Seaf' he dives, grasps her gently but firmly by the hair, and tows her ashore. He stands looking anxiously at her. The curtain falls as a chorus of Carnegie Medals sings: A Man Is a Hero? ACT II Scene: Same. A Time: Three minutes later. HE Qaccompanied by chorus dressed as beach chairsj sings: Out of a City of Six IVIiliion People, Why did you Pick on Me? 210 Qlllllllllllllllll lllllllllllll , Dei Dfw Q Q1 ,, llllllllll . , 6 i,i.f l11sn1ull1:::11 She .shows signs of l Une, and opens her eyes. SHE Cwith a gaspjz Oh!,' HE: Better?U Oh!,' Wlhiskey? UNO! Well?,' You- Yes Saved- 0h!,' Unsistentlyj : Mef, Clllodestlyl : Anybody-, fS0uUullyj : 'gVV0nde1'ful ! U VVould- 3' Brave! CNot to be dauntedl: Have-U z'Heroic! - He gives up and looks at her steadily. The result is poor for his peace of-mind. In short, he falls hard. HE Cagainj: Anybody-H SHE Qwith an air offinalityj: No!,' He walks down the beach' singing, Fm Simply Crazy Over Youf' She gives a sly beam of satisfaction and waits. He comes back, sits down near her, and takes her hand. - HE lcourageouslyb : Mar1'y? H SHE Cwith a quick breathl: 'cVVhat?' CMore coiwageonslyj: Me.', Of course, if the truth were known, this is why she inhaled so inuch water, but she puts him of. Wait!,' CShe ponders deeplyl. ' HE sings: It is an Awful Thing To Not Know Wlhere You Aref' HE lmost courageouslyj: VVell?,' SHE Cyieldinglyj: c'Yes.,' He opens up parasol which is conveniently near and puts it in place. CYou've seen the picturesj Chorus of Sand Dunes sings: A Little Bit of Heavenf' CURTAIN' 21 1 ixfzuzullamlllmm slunmnxumu ... . PQI DOH Q Q .,.1tllll1llllll1:,.. 6 ., llllxrlllaxzii HARROWER IQINGSBII RY HANES FAHERVIXY GOULD SCHEIDE CHARLTON GLEASON CLASSICAL STUDENT: Did'your watch stop going when it fell on the side- walk? ,' the PHYSICS STUDENT: Of course it did! Did you think it would go through?,' STUDENT: What sent poor Jack to an insane asylum? BILL: A train of thought passed through his brain and wrecked it. FIELD Cafter having run over clog when in Cadillacj: Madam, I will replace animal. IRATE LADY: Sir, you flatter yourself. SEPTEMBER 17 AT 7.45 PREP.: Why is this bell ringing?,' A YVELLER: Can't you see, it is because I'm pulling the rope? ON THE SEVEN-OF CAR STUDENT: Can,t you go any faster than this? CONDUCTOR: ':Yes, but I have to stay with my car. MR. BOYCE: About how mueh water would an ordinary boiler hold? i' BRAYTON: Oh, just enough to fill it. IN THE GRILL JIM: How old is that lamp, Jack? I JACK: Oh, about three years. JIM: Turn it down, it is too young to smokef' MR. GRAHAM: 'SI-Iow was iron discoveredim HEMINGWAY: I heard some one say that they smelt it. 212 Qiilllllllllllllll illlllillllllilll ,, Dov POUQEQ lllaltllllll. , Hilllllillllliilf AT THE THEATERS Midnight Frolic I' Great Lover 'l . Stop! Look! Listen! Around the Map' . Hit-The-Trail-Holliday U Melody of Youthl' . VVatch Your Step Nobody Home . Only Girlu . . Made in American Robinson Crusoe, Jr. Russian Ballet . King of Nowhere K'Salvation Nellu . Justice . Under Fire 'i Under Cover . Fair and Warmer Within the Lawn . . Hip, Hip, Hooray Slander . . Ci cc CG CG CK H C6 66 if CC CC C5 MR. KEEP: Smith, translate. SMITH: Ach Gott - Good Heavensf, . Senior Prom Bill,, Gellatly . . Preston . Cross Country . GleasonC?j . Betcher and Bixby . . Seven Cuts . Charlie Williams . At the Prom . Karl PfajmannC?j . Batchelaler . Gym Class . Bill Barber . P. K. Thomas . Eligibility RulesC?j The Rifle Range . Out after Eight . Spring Term Smoking on the Senior Fence . . . . Of Pro. . . . . P. A. P. MR. KEEP: Well, Smith, don't get so angry. I have to call on you occasion- allyf, MR. PIFER: The slang that the students, use gets my goat. FIELD: Do you really believe that ignorance is bliss? H GOWANS: Oh, I don't knowg still you seem to be happyf' - ?: You didnlt tell that secret I told you last night, did you? ELLIOTT: Why, no. You see I didn't know it was a secret. GOULD: I see you are raising a moustache. KEITH: Yes Is it becoming? GOULD: It might be coming, but it ain,t there yet. 213 QT 'llllllllllll .lllllllllllllllll ryur DOT DOH Q Q ullllllllllll... 6 yiyy lmimlrnlaiiii 1!ll .. .... . HANES: VVhy don't they make dyes in A1nerica?,' PROFESSOR FORBES: Because the industry was killed. 'I MR. STONE: HI wish you would prepare your lessonsf' VVOODFORD Creadingj: La caleche, rasfmt les tas de pasteques comme les bouleis dans les pews d,artiIle1'ie -f' DIR. STONE: Ah, signs of preparedness. FISCHER Caftev' a cliscussion 'of the German system of educazfionj: 6' lVIr. Forbes, how long would it take to go through nine years at a gymnasium? H CLARK: What would they do if they caught you Smoking dorm? HUSTED: Give you a bluff demeritf' SLIMPKIN! I hear your daughter fainted at her wedding with the other dayf, SLUMPKIN: Y es, she took the count!H ASHLEY CPIARLTON GOIJLD HARROWER VARS GAMBLE CURRAN GLEASON F AH ERTY KEITH HANES - ENGLISH KINGSBURY GELLATLY ELDERLY LADY: ML Searle, where did you learn to swim?,, SEARLE: 'gWhy, I was a trafic cop in Venicef' Q14 a cubeb in the that nobleman Q1f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,.. .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ..,A, DCT POU Q Q1 ,.. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!... 6 !!!!!!!!!!!! PAGE: Where is the fire?,' BOYLE: At Frye Villagef' PAGE: VVhere? At the range? MR. S. N. BAKER Ctrcmslatingbz Comprenez-lvozfs moi? Do you appre D!! hend me. MR. HUDSON: Where did the barbaric hordes come from?', HARROWER: Terre Haute. , ' MR. GRAHANIZ Gentlemen, if there is any air in this jar when I light it It will blow us through the roof. NOW if you will all gather around me so as to follow me more closely, I will light it. BIXBY: I have Seven cuts. GAMBLE: You had better see a doctor. M FIRST STUDE: g'DOes Mr. Bangs shoOt?,' SECOND STUDE: No, but he makes reportsf' MR. HUDSON: 'WVarren, you may leave the room. H VVARREN: I cOuldn't very Well take it with me. 'i GARRIGUES BATCHELDER DOOLIN C. M. JONES? ANDRENVS WILLIAMSON MR. KEEP: Scheide, translate!H - SOHEIDE: fiber, Papa, wie kann ich flas?,' GLEASON Cat the Grilljz Whats this match in m WATERS: That,s to make the bread light. i' 215 y bread for? ,QQI2Z'lllIll!llI!lll,. i llllllillllllllll ,,,,, D O T D 0 U Q Q I ...llllllllllllll 'lllllllllllllf ' ' STRAY BULLETS Let's talk graves, Worms, and epitaphs . . Exceedingly Well read . . . . After the rating The Mirror I Would 'twere bedtime, and all Well . . . All Clarlc He reads much .... . . Beardsley Their candles are all out ..... At 9.30 in Williams Hall Indeed, my lord, it is a most absolute and excellent horse . . An Interlinear It will discourse most eloquent music . . 0 good, gray head which all men know . I End the medicine worse than the malady . . . The Choir . Mr. M CC urdy . At the Infirmary I am tied to the stake, and I must stand the course Can we ever have too much of a good thing? There is another and better World . . Be ye all of one mind? .... It,s most enough to make a deacon swear Fill all thy bones with aches . . We Would, and We could not . . . Our thoughts on English History . . . U The Proms . College . At Philo . E+ on exams. . In gym class . , Pass the rating Vile have some salt of our youth in us . . . . . 1919 Seven hundred pounds and possibilities are good gifts . Addis He is of a very melancholy disposition . . . Page One pinch, a hungry, lean-faced villain, a mere anatomy . . k. Wobfe 0, with what authority and show of truth, can cunning sin cover itself withal . A lion among ladies is a most dreadful thing What fools these mortals be! . . . VVith bag and baggage . . . Base is the slave that pays . . . He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh . A slumber did my spirit, steal . . . Consider it not so deeply 0 goodly is our heritage! . VVhat bloody man is that? . . Q16 Explaining cons. . . Elliott Speer . Cross-country runners . . . J une Q4 Swimming pool pledges . . The Faculty . In Sunday Chapel . Batchelder All Andover men . Meredith giiilmuulmuu luumlllm o Dfw Q ..lllIllllIllllll... , .ll1!11l1l1a:11i We were dreaniers, dreaming greatly .... Before the rating Hear, is our speech so crude? . . . . At Philo Is it possible, my lord? . . Clear of cons. How silent is this town . . After eight o'cloclcC?j I know his gait . . . Batolzelder Soft! Who comes here? . Mr. Bangs Tush, never tell me .... .... B arber His worthiness doth challenge much respect Gould, H arrower, H anes, etc. Is this a holiday? ..... . Founders' Day Thirty singing seernen . . . The Choir GLEASON: Gee, but Iid like to be a census. WOLFE: Why? GLEASON: It embraces forty-eight million women. SID. GOULD Ccliscussvlng the football teamj: You know young Barber? VVell, he is going to be our best man before longf' SHE: Oh, Sidney, what a nice way to propose to me! GELLATLY: I see the English have captured fifty cannon at the Dardanellesf, S. JONES! Turkish Trophies, eh? CHOIR ASPIRANT: Fm never happy unless I'm breaking into song, ', MR. PFATTEICHER Qafter the trialj : Why don't you get the key and you won't need to break in. H MR. POYNTER: Charlton, how long did you spend on this lesson? U CHARLTON: About two hours, railroad time. MR. POYNTER: What do you mean by railroad time? ', CHARLTON: Including stops and delays? WOLFE: 6'Doctor, may I be excused from cross-country today? I have a stomach achef' DR. PAGE! How did you get it?l' WOLFE: By accident? Q17 fllllll1lllll.,. rllllllillllllllll ...,, DUT DCU Q QI .... l llllllllllllll... .,4lllll!lllllllf AT ABBOT 1-XCADEMY TEACHER: UI canlt imagine anything worse than a man Without a countryf, FAIR LISTENER: Oh, I can. A country Without a manf' ' HTTSTED POLLOCK JONES DRAKE' PRESTON HARRISON In the fall: 'cSchool meeting for old men Onlyf' Exit Mr. hTcCurdy. NIR. BENNER: What is that awful riot in the next room? ' GAMBLE: Oh, that isnlt a riot. It is just Nlr. Hudsonis Ancient History classf, DR. FUESS: g'Gould, correct this sentence: 'It seemed like he had buried his religion in the grave of his wife., U GOULD Cafter long pausebz 'clt seemed like he had buried his religion in his wifeis gravef' PROFESSOR FORBES! S'In India the fakirs anoint themselves with a kind of oil which enables them to put their hands in fire without injuryf' HAPGOOD: VVhe1'e do you get that stuff? lNIR. BOYCE: What would be the difference between Caruso'S singing this note and my singing it? D BATCHELDER: 6820007 IN BISHOP HALL eDoes the second student flatter himself P FIRST STUDENT Qreads-from Geometry bookbz The proof is left to the student. SECOND STUDENT: There you go making me do all the work againf, 218 not filllllllllllllll lllllllllllllll! , DOT EROUQPI , . l 1lllllllllll.,, 6 yyyi llnmllllziii CRANE WATERS ' IQEITH ASHLEY FAHERTY CHARLTON W. RUSSELL GLEASON MR. HUDSON: What are the characteristics Of the climate Of Greece? HORD: No, never. CROSBY: HOW do you like my army shoes ADAMS! Immense.,, D99 C AT FLANDERS STUDENT: Hey, Charley, you've got your finger in the milk! CHARLEY: Oh, that's all right, it isn't hotf, PREP.: Does this car go by Bishop Hall?,' CONDUCTOR: NO, you idiot, it goes by electricity. NICLANAHAN Cto Mr. Lyndej: Can I be justly blamed for something I have dOne?,' MR. LYNDE: Of course not. NICLANAHANZ Well, I haven't done my geometry for todayf' 219 cljillllllllllllll I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!. . DCU Q QI .... l llllllllllllll... 5 .., ' llllllllllllll ADDITIONS TO AMERICA,S HALL OF FAME AYDEEZE and Gentilmun! Owing to the war in Europe and the high price of shoes and buttermilk in Siam, we are able to exhibit to the vulgar multitude this unrivaled aggregation of Hora and fauna. QHush! Flora has skipped to Boston, so we can only show the faunaj This way please! Passing by the Father of His Country, Abraham Lincoln, as well as Messers Daniels and Bryan, we now have on our right, playfully disporting himself in joyous mood, Hendrick U the baby elephant, the pet of all the children. Harrowed by Hords,' of gnats, he Gambles,' in the Waters of his pool. His favorite food is Salome Meatf' a taste he acquired in Greece. It is perfectly obvious, is it not, that this is the Vespertilfio Noctuula, who flits about at night nipping the unwary? There, little girl, donit cry!- the sweet and mellow notes of our tin-lunged calliope, played by the master hand of the great composer! As a youth he trained choirs and choral societies and gave lessons on the harmonica. On our left we have the lofty geeraffe, presented by the Governor's daughter. His favorite amusement is a weekly peregrination to Boston land returnl. The tall and willowy geeraffe is the special favori-te of the laydeeze. And now, splashing in the champagne, you see Father !Eneas the manatee, a gregarious aquatic mammal of the order S irenia, subsisting solely on algae and such other littoral vegetation as is to be found in Virgil's Eneidf, Here we have, stretched out all doubled up on the floor of his cage, Alexis the feerocious VVolfei' donated by the Russian Czar and the Duchess of Omaha. Next to onions, his favorite fruit is a tasty bite of Gleason. He once ate Charleton whole. V Stand back, Laydeeze! This is M ephitis M ephitica. It is a nocturnal carniv- orous mammal which is especially fond of poultry. In the pursuit of young roosters it has been known to penetrate locked and bolted doors - hence the name Houdini,,' the joy of those who go out at night. Hold your hats, Gents! Here comes 'the famous pacing ostrich Batchf' This bird has swallowed the dictionary, knows the classics by heart, and dines with great gusto on Latin constructions. And now we have, barking silently, 4'Bugs,', the Mexican Hairless Pot-hound, slim pickings for the flea, to be sure. This bounding bow-wow has his faults. He canit be broken of chasing the chickens. Well anyway, you have no complaint, this came free with the rest of the book, except for a slight charge for the privilege of meeting Messers Daniels and Bryan in the first instalment. 220 FLM -ai' 1 f w wi f wif I ygg? v'M wwf fffr GQX In , I WIN hug XQNAXS-,Nw .- S. ,V xx N JN 4 'V ' X H 541123 I X N ' ' 'Wifi if Xxggwf wAN . wb, , 0: Iqfrh, 'M, fn A 'T +4 M , W, ' Z1 if-Q ll Z!W1g CLAYTON EDDY BAILEY, JR. JAMES BROWN BLAIR CALVIN BURR, JR. CHARLES MINOT DOLE EUGENE SCITIUYLER ENGLISH CHARLES WHITE GAMBLE SIDNEY GOULD RALPII PHILIP HANES aw-:A f. ,W 4 ,K f ff 'J Y',I-fw'1I'.'XQ'1h X S fffwwmwmkk, J- W Ax- Y fyf I N XV I ,QI , JAMES SMITH HEMINGWAY, JR. THOMAS MIFFLIN JONES, 3D SCHUYLER 'LEE DUER MCLANAHAN ORMSBY NIACKNIGHT MITCHEIJ STUART HUNTINGTON OTIS ROBERT FITCH SHEDDEN JAMES ALEXANDER SMITH, JR. FRANCIS GERALD WALTHEW BURNHAM BOWDITCH VVOODFOR Q22 D 223 , , fM'iI9',Q 0 9, W 'QI GEN X QQ ESS, 129 vw. fu. 'A+'-37 QRS 1:1511 if f . .,,,4- 'FI ' 'ng 'fx nf- ' ,- . 'ei 3: J L., - -Eli N ' ' P-.v m ' ,V eg I , :K ',z'-Aff f f A ' - Yr if.. T7 522 I ., I , ' 15573-1' X ., 4 .Rai .33-:' Y ' ' AM ' ,, . QI. j4Q,,M:.f..9 ' .Aim-nf I .rea--E g , QlqAf,.x ,, : ' '.v v.' WITH' - nf-.1'1lR1',1 , Q Q' 1125? , , A A, ak ' if Pi' - . , H' I Zfff-. ig' 'f ra :AA , , it ' J! 'PW ' A ' A HNUIII , ' ' f ,gif 1 ,,. QHOMER CONROY JOHN KENDRICK CONVERSE MAURICE JOYCE CURRAN DONALD CORPRENV DINES JOHN BURROUGHS DRAKE, JR. CHARLES PHILIP GOULD MAURICE STEPHENSON GOULD STEPHEN YOUNG HORD 224 FREDERICK DONALD MCCRIMMON LOUIS GREGG NEVILLE WILLIAM DEAN ROBINSON DONALD STUART SMITH GEORGE EDWARD THOMPSON RULAND THOMPSON CHARLES DOUGLAS WALKER 225 ' -'iif 5 f ff. '71 ' EL Vi'-iL?iif?ff - D L ITA 3? A Q I ,Af , ,IAQ SL N f, ' , A , .5 W, l X, ,A I -Y H 59 - A-A ,if Ig CR I E5 21 R5 A E E A 1 DANIEL DUDLEY AVERY HAROLD ROBERT BUOKLEI' ALFRED MARLING CLARK PAUL HOWARD CRANE HAROLD PITTS HARROWER HENRY CARLETON HARRISON JOHN GRINNELL WETMORE HUSTED SPERRY VVADSVVORTH NIINER 226 HARRY' MOORE PHILLIPS JAMES ARLIN POLLOCK JOHN MODOWELL SHARPE, 3D ELLIOTT SPEER WILLIAM EDVVARDS STEVENSON PAUL EMERY THURLOXN' JOSEPH BERENS WATERS CHARLES VVASIIINGTON VVILLIAMS, JR ,,. Nj 1 '.,f . -1 .V f4. .,.,x ,V ,1 Q u Q:e ,,f. - E Mix X V 1 Z i I 3 Z Q27 .1 ' , , .f.W,f.z,,i I. if - ' 'Qi ,Q lf' QM -2 - ,,.,,,f . M W - A-A mam! :- - I :.- , ,iffi??'5 ' ' ' ,I ff Y' 'I 'B .-,Y - .Ms - ' I I L, f 6 N 1 oM? 4'1f,2A:.-I ,- W-vi , ' 3 -I V. mf' . M21 1 - my A ,I -ALA .,.f A V' , wyugfif , 2 9 f Z o as 'Y .. ELA f - - - 7-.-1.. 'iff 1 1- , Y , A w.. 99 W 0 I. A ,f ZA!! , ,C ' . 135 THOMAS VVOODBURY ASHLEY WILLIAM HODCKINSON BARBER CHESTER GUILD BOLTWOOD GEORGE DAVEX' BRADEN PAUL RICE DOOLIN CHARLES VVILFRED GLEASON lVIARSTON HEARD JAMES FREDERICK INGRAHAM FREDERICK NIACDONALD KINGSBURY LAWRENCE STUTSON MARTIN 228 4 , ,f 2-A : ' 9Qfvf',.4Q 1 Y fp- ' CHEST-ER T OUSSY MECKEL AUBREY HAROLD RUSSELL WILLIAM WATSON RUSSELL HONVARD CASWELL SMITH ELMER FRANCIS STOVER HERBEIQT HANVKES UPTON THOMAS NELSON VVICKS ROBERT BYRON WILLIAMSON HERMAN CHAMBERS WILSON DUDLEY FRANCIS VVOLFE 229 R ,I .,.,A xx Qu! .firfak -XNIQIXI .. EN ,if 'mf H34 XH1 NN , ' I M ' I 49,5 U J I . Tf. 54-I ft ' 7' ' A QCA xiii? .- A - , A -rs,-.Ax - as-7, . KI A - fsfax- ' t A-1, V A I ,nm A , Q ,Lf ,R M Jw, x it 511:35 V , 1 I ,- - I- 1 U : -,1-.-' , C K' ii, -5 1.7 ,..V -. ISAYT - 4-fwgfb' 'P 'ff' W-AAf,f3E5x,N QRS C3513-gs:i.sI K J A- fx ' ' WL REA, RP PAUL ABBOTT JOHN GOVVANS DAVID HAY ATNV.ATER EDWARD KEITH CHARLES HARVEY BRADLEY XVILLIAM PAUL MARTIN JOHN PORTER CHARLTON, JR. GEORGE CLARK ROUNDS GERARD MONTGONIERY ENGLISH JVILLIAM PORTER SHURTLEFF JOHN HOWE FIELD, JR. C ADDISON FOSTER VARS ROBERT HALL WARREN 230 j , X ,, X 'nk Q N FIOQ 'Ly f 009 al , Wm, B Sr ' mn H 4? Hug, I r ,f I 6 , A W2 -X 5' 1 ' I A54 'w i U . ,ISI 56. 'i 0 i f - QQ I ag .A 7 - if. ff: A52 5.41313 1573115. 14 '- ' ,M ,J . ,. .i k . V , ,:2j'V is Q, , I 211 , A :I f ..:',1 'A4j QV? ' E' if-P A , V. 1, --A, 4-,. , Q1 e I .A ,, ,mxif I ,w iq-I. lEn,w1 15:1i', M24 wr 1e1ff'2E-I-i- '- HW - Q if.: Hlmfivilfg ' -:af I-I Sa: H wgilizg -I I I ' E332 , 7 551 A, If 4' P7 ' F ies,-5 , 'ifjaaff' A, --11,4 'IL' -, R A -I if Q Y. 3--'L ' J' T553 1 RUSSELL BORDEAUX VVILLIAM HENRY HAZARD, JR JOHN EDNVARD BRENNAN DANIEL FISHER BROVVN ARTHUR PAUL DAVIS CHARLES LEWIS FAHERTY FRED THOMAS FLYNN WILLIAM BONVVILL GELLATLX' DAVID MARSTON HARTLEY RALPH JOHN HINES SAMUEL JOSEPH JONES RAYMOND BOXVEN JVIUNGER WILLIAM MERRYMAN PAGE PETER SCHUTTLER, JR. CARLETON HART TALCOTT PAUL EDWARD WEST 233 'A f I W A ufwdwkaw , I. , , iii? QS SWR PA Qi uflvvpb Q i ,tv , J fffga S1 ,f f? ELBRIDGE ADAMS, QD W ILHELMUS BOGART BRYAN, JR. JOHN CROSBY, JR. I WILLIAM MICHAEL CUSHMAN CHARLES MILES DRAKE JOHN DONALD FALVEY CADMUS ZACCHEUS GORDON, JR. ROBERT SARGENT HIBBARD SAMUEL BROWNING IRNVIN THOMAS :HASKINS JOYCE EZDXVARD MCDONALD KING GEORGE PHILLIPS REYNOLDS WILLIAM CARTER ROBERSON FREDERICK MERNVIN SMITH, JR ROBERT TEN BROECK STEVENS L .via mf' - -qS hi - L' -,- 'x x-:,:.,, 1- N.- . A wi Q 1 X M W M, AQ iii ' is gh. , F312 Mk N A LL .bf iv if as h F 2 E, A, A 5 Xlfc H S4616 'ZA-1,-563 X gt Y l fzedgi? N1-x X in wa wi' 1 'QM Mig ! N TWV KM SF rv V -V' I H-!.f,,gg,, f wrmfwiz, 'Jw 4- 1-1. ge... dsiemgwr qvfgm 'SPV' 1-new -1 xx Q- f 5-'fFi.g.'QE' u A , - Ky - ,vi i 'J Nm', -I3 fr 5 , - - ,HA E- Y .il . .- VS Av, ,.. ,Qi ,fl Hn A1 , za isis ,J lyixqtk 3 sag--SLM' . 1 W -W 'f ,fly 2' jx Mug f -., -52? Y, X 5 Kp' I 1'wI 1 :-if 3 'h'-'x ig' N 'r 1 . npr Q 'qi ,, Q' :w i 1 N1 . I xy Mg 5 1 2 -9. X 'W' .4 13 :,- 4 I ',l:- mi- A E , V - vc N' V' ' N 4-S W X ' 5 W M7 'W wi ', f H - M 'Ef r.Q2H.-AQ' f .-+' , -:, . f -1 -H A 'Q-. -- New T :Nf?gZ'4'7:' 1 Y' 'V-ef f- fs,-'H' if .T -' r -S+, EJ' , Er: im fa.'5l'? ? F EN-'U--Es. Aff ' X- X .- .l,- ,z E'?. -I - 'xl 'TT.'3NC, 5 -A 1111- ..w , 4,5 .f ' 'i 'L? ' ' '.' ' 1'1-- zz' S-.1ae, + '?:Ei-421' 4 I A rv, -- -E.:-:Q-,V .sg N wr, . -. ..v.- -?f..'--- , ffm? J--H wa BEACH' Sc:-mimi ADVERTISEMENTS 'ESTABLISHED 1818 4060 X 1 ff-TA. Yfffii 1 R 1 enilrfnenla ffgnrnizihing nuns, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET New yqnxf I S! I l l l ,'- Tvzvi f j Ylill l l lg' i .1 1, lift ll-' 1 T 941,25 fx E N E lf f BRGGKS 3 hil l flluill' I ONLY A BROTHERS' l 5 STEP FROM New Building Grand Central, Telephone .,1f Subway, and ' ' ,ET . 3 H U s f EQQI --ve lle' t 'T -.:-,-.----'- V ,JL . P. Everything for Men's and Boys' Wear in Town and Country ' Suits and Overcoats Ready Made or to Measure All Garments for Walking, Riding, Driving, Shooting, Golfing Tennis and Polo Nlotor Clothing, Liveries and Furs English and Domestic Hats Shirts, Cravats, Collars, Pajamas, Undgrwear, Hsaiery and Gloves Shoes for Dress, Street or porting ear Imported Hand Bags, Suit Cases, Portmanteaux, Trunks, etc. Many useful Silver and Leather Novelties BOSTON BRANCH Send for Illuflrated Catalogue NEwpQRT BRANCH 149 TREMONT STREET 220 BELLEVUE AVENUE Q37 ADVERTISEMENTS E. W. PITMAN COMPANY GENERAL CONTRACTORS BUILDING CONSTRUCTION LAWRENCE, MAss. Collins andsFairbanks Co. Young Men's I-Iats Young Men's Caps Imported Cloth Coats Buckskin Sport Jackets Tweed Golf Coats 383 WASHINGTON STREET BOSTON, MASS. 8 ADVERTISEMENTS , Q V - N DE PINNA ' fs w 5' A NEW YoRK Outfitters to College Men Sack and Norfolk Suits Clothes for Evening Wear Top Coats Norfolk Golf Jackets Tennis Trousers Sport Clothes I-Iats, Shoes English Haberdashery Fifth Avenue at 50th Street Write for our Spring and Summer Booklet on Sport Apparel page Mrs. M. E. Dalton Catering Co. L O W E L L Ghz 51-Blstrnpulitan MASSACHUSETTS Home-made Food, Soda Ice Cream, Candy Si CATERING Fora ALL OCCASIONS 42 Main Street, Andover 239 ADVERTISEMENTS 3. THE COLLEGE MAN'S PEN Because it meets the exacting requirements of college work. Easy For Sale at College Bookstores and by Druggis! rs Everywhere lo fill-no inl-xy pen encl to umcrew. 5, jeweler: and I HKARNAKH WILTON CARPETS ' AND RUGS .Hmerica's Finest Products fl In our KARNAK ', Wilton a new standard of excellence and value has been established. The extraordinary durability and luxurious appearance of this splendid Weave are not equalled by any other Floor Covering of this kind made in America. 1l The carpets are made 27 and 36 in. Wide, plain and Hgured effects. The rugs are made in all regular sizes. fl In the Persian design the exquisitely soft colors of rare oriental weaves have been simulated with remarkable fidelity. Obtainable through any dealer- 240 opley Square Hotel Boston, Mass. Corner Huntington Avenue Exeter and Blagden Streets 050 Headquarters for Andover Students when in Boston occ John Howard Lacy, Prop, ADVERTISEMENTS f Drawing Inks Eternal Writing Ink Engrossing Ink 0 0 Q Taurine Mucilage Photo Mounter Paste Drawing Board Paste Liquid Paste Office Paste L Vegetable Glue, etc. ARE THE FINEST AND BEST GOODS OF THEIR KIND Emancipate yourself from the use of corrosive and ill-smelling inks and adhesives and adopt the Higgins Inks and Adhesives. They will be a revelation to you, they are so sweet, clean, Well put up, and withal so efficient. PECIAL departments cle- votecl to the needs of every member of the family. The women's and misses, cZcparinwn.ts - au- thoritative in correct styles and every requisite of attire. The clzilclre-nfs and misses, dc- purtmenfs to supply every need of the growing child from 3 years to 17 - with exceptionally complete lines for the a.Wkivzu'd ages around 13, 14 and 15 years. The boys, tIepari'mer1t.s', zi highly specialized service for outfitting boys up to 39 chest 1neasu1'emen'ts. Everything from shoes, clothes, huts and haberclashery. And, of course, the ULTZIIPUZY-llll Bazaar for outfitting babies and ' 'J p to 3 years of ave. AT little childien u ' GE-N-ERALL Y You never pay more at Best? CHAS. M. HIGGINS 8: CO. 'M Q QE Manufacturers l - f '-fg' 271 NINTH STREET, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Flffh Awmffv af 35m Sffvfl Branches: CHICAGO LONDON NW Yofff 't I i A i.ii . 1 3 I - ' Pe . A - - I - --,y t f i .. GHSSROHQQ .-f'fva. 0S.19!' - I lm '4 , A .fe-it .THLETIC , . . Qgffh- -gg, IN 5g5T0N,U,5,p, 5231 wm11rlGTor4 Y Curtlj Lswdbaf-5-'When a fellow loves ii a girl that's his business X X, When a girl loves a fellow that's her business . f f BUT- When your shoes need tapping tllafg M Y' BUSINESS THE CURTIS SHOE SHOP 67 Park Street Call 43.1 07' wrzte ADVERTISEMENTS The Bay Tree Hewins 8: Hollis Gift Shop jmeflg, jurnmsbmng Quotes Goldsmith-Clark Co. I Andover, Massachusetts 4 Hamilton Place Boston Eslalzlishca' 1890 Jacobs and Jacobs illiailurs New Haven, Conn Herbert F. Chase Fine Athletic Goods KODAKS PHOTO SUPPLIES OUTFITTERS FOR ALL PHILLIPS ACADEMY TEAMS Andover, Massachusetts Telephone Conneclion ADVERTISEMENTS f I Nl f I I You will soon be buying Q an Automobile Do you know that Leather Finished Cloth, known as Artificial Leather, has one hundred pounds higher breaking strength per square inch than Split Leather and that both have the same finish? Remember O'BANNON ARTIFICIAL LEATHER is the leading brand in the upholstering of automobiles O'BANNON CORPORATION BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Richard D. Kimball CO. Shattuck at Jones HEATING, VENTILATING INCORPORATED AND ELECTRICAL W ENGINEERS for Ph'lli A dover Academy Grlotgri Sdlhool S I-I Williams College OF ALL KINDS Colgate University Bowdoin College Middlebury College George Peabody College and many othenf -- 6 Beacon Street- Boston, Mass. 128 Faneuil Market 15 West 38th Street, New York, N.Y. BOSIZOII, Mass. 243 ADVERTISEMENTS COMPLIMENTS The Staelenty' Hana' Laanelry H. C. Wilson W. H. Meyer P1'op1'ieto7'.f C. A. HILL Sc CO. QE I sz rt r i n al Qlluntrantulfs We make a Specialty of Student Lamps and Electrical S up plies 40 MAIN STREET ANDOVER Telephone 344-W Chas. Rolainovitz BOO TS, SHOES a n cl R UBBERS Shoe Shining F ine Parlor Repairing HA ND-SEWED TAPS A SPECIALT Y Post Office Avenue Andover, Massachusetts 2 J. H. PLAYDON . jlnrist Ro5e5, Carnations, Violets and Cltrysantltenifanis our Specialties Members of Florist Telegraph Delivery Asso- l ciation, and we can assure you prompt de ivery ll d f H ' d t ' on a or ers o owers intruste o us, in any part of the United States and Canada. Greenhouses Store Frye Village Arco Building Telephone 71 Telephone 70 ANDOVER, MASS. ADVERTISEMENTS PBTYOIHZQCI Bhd RCCOlTlh1Ql'ldCCl by ' Compliments of Andover Graduates Thomas Guerrera TlweArH1ur Rosenberg Co. I rw 1014- CHAPEL STREET g NEW HAVEN CONNECTICUT NINE MAIN STREET Makers of Smarl' Clothes SPECIAL ACCOUNT BOOKS FOR COLLEGE AND HIGH SCHOOL ACTIVITIES College Annual College Monthly Account Books High School Year Book 32,00 to 35,00 High School Monthly ' THOMAS GROOM 8: CO. Inc. 105 STATE STREET BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 245 ADVERTISEMENTS 0 1 -L LN. - Tia J . i .' fff' W.. H :J 'r J n W, -2 b Q. 'SV' 'Q Bffsiii I : A af N. ggi., :M ' ,441 39. ,A -et , E, fha- im. f' '- 1 - . ,,j1gSL.:.Z.g.gg . - ,I .F I' A ' 'T Y in - Q' Hit Q Q 52.553 f-gf S .5 3 E Em 315.51553 if Q '.Z35gsf.HEEQ S3 ,....:--:: -v',. .1 ESMIQEIQQQ S N- .mb WI: 12:26 4' . ' NZ25'W5S9N'Zgf3X , Q, umm mm ' , , , ' lllllllll Ilu tau v I, ' ' 'u, 5 Lxlth ' V,-I ' r as Ii,-, , ,g X ii, 's . it V -1 NK W 'V V1 ' - L1 QSW W .,. x, Ii W F flu . W 1, I ! I 5 f A ip! N It ' f I in ,Q x X it ' X I 1 ' ,I ,uf iwabgxx M' i 3 Q A f . . 1' :I ' , s- ' .' f Q y. 5 0 f . 45 Qu xi 5, x . Q ,,,4 f. wp ff ,I - 1 In I L-gal I' I fs fwy., fffyqk W . . ,-4 X 4. K . V 1 iv ' ' Qiyift 4' if f -iw X - ' i f i X? 9 1 f 4 ff in -W P I f Z52yYg7?EiE5i 1f ji! 2 I , f,'f,j.LE5 91f.g1io A M V ,E f 'D kg 'Y f nl, , .4 ' ' K 1 .115 Wiggins 53 ' Kwamffq ig? it S53 4 ! - fm-cf JH 2 ' W' ,V E542 ' ,.. ,, . . ' if 1' ' 5 l VsSQ 4'BF,if5 I 'px u WE My I Q gif . A . .5 I I 3 f 'W la l ii ,I Sf ,N ' 1 iff i 4 - 1 ,N X 'vt If Boyle W ' '1 Q- .. 2 K 'I f P' X .n fx E it W' . . H32 Q A 0-1 ' ef X' .. 1 A fo H - 1 x 1 4 ' , V n wx 45N iii 7 U 1 H ,NWI I vt jmumz. 1 '- XQ' Z Q X 1, X 1 4 A M Nwwuww I , x 'v f fx? f' x 4 , N QA 'X S 'f is Q Z f S 3 I ,Ar I rl' ' hill' 'X Sw X 3 Z N TW S ' 0'- to uv X idx M. X X W I Q Illlu. W X ws X , ' :Il N Nz' ,-' s Q 4 i 9 1 1 '- .. V ,... ..f The Blackstone Chicago The most-talked-of and the best-thought-of hotel in the United States. Special attention given to Andover men. TI-IE DRAKE HOTEL COMPANY OWNERS AND MANAGERS TRACY C. DRAKE JOHN B. DRAKE President P. A. '93, Vice-President ADVERTISEMENTS THOMAS GROOIVI 8 CO. l CCLLEGE ANN UALS COMPLETE EN GRAVIN G PRINTING BINDING BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Q47
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.