Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN)

 - Class of 1907

Page 20 of 462

 

Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 20 of 462
Page 20 of 462



Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 19
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Page 20 text:

latter course was then of a very general nature, but was the be- ginning of the school ' s three great engineering departments. The second president, Abraham C. Shortridge, directed the university for only one year, from 1874 to 1875. It was an eventful year however, and saw the completion of the first six buildings and an addition of two members to the faculty, while the Students increased from one to .sixty-four. Emerson E. White was the next president during whose superintendence of eight years great progress in the systcmiza- tion of courses was realized, possibly because of the introduction (if Military Science the first year of his presidency. This man saw the completion of the main building, extensive additions to library and laboratories, and the building of the Agricultural Hall, now known as the Experiment Station. His faculty in- creased from eight to twenty and the students reached the alarming total of 254. From 1883 to 1900 Purdue was fortunate enough to have one of the strongest men of the age as president, James H. Smart. The growth of the university under the leadership of this man was nothing short of phenomenal. It was during these seventeen years that the school of Pharmacy was estab- lished, the junior preparatory class abolished, shops erected and equipped, schools of Civil and Electrical Engineering estab- lished, the Experiment Station founded with an annual appro- priation of $15,000, and a general permanent appropriation by the Legislature obtained. During this period, too, the first Mechanical Engineering Building and Shops were completed only to be burned to the ground on the eve of dedication. When, at chapel next day, Dr. Smart announced that the building would be immediatelv rebuilt on exactly the same plans as be- fore, people wondered and began to realize that an exceptional man was guiding the destinies of the proud university. Most ably is the work of Dr. Smart being carried on by our president of today. Winthrop E. Stone. Under his direction the strength of the University is growing not only materially and in quantity of students, but, what is more important, in the quality of the graduates. Dr. Stone has seen the erection of the Agricultural Building, Eliza Fowler Hall, the Central Heat- ing Station, the Physics Building, the Civil Building and the latest Chemistry Building. One building, dear to the hearts of us all, is being carefully planned for the best needs of our students and it is voicing the general opinion that no man will work harder for the best possible Memorial Gymnasium than Dr. Stone.

Page 19 text:

■cjei S3S k SS k SSS URDUE UNIVERSITY first became a reality Qp r - M in 18 - tlle - ear in which instruction was first [|3» r V 1qJ5 begun with a faculty of six members, and build- §3 [ £ 3 m S s aggregating the same large total. This fllj L J £$ bumble beginning stands in sharp contrast with sS5 ?3Sg3£3 the strength of the institution today, boasting, as she does, of faculty and assistants numbering 175 and build- ings totalling 25. Twelve years before the first instruction was attempted the university ' s foundation was laid in the Land Grant Act of Congress, passed July 2, 1862. The State of Indi- ana, three years later, obligated itself to establish a university by the acceptance of the gifts and conditions of this act. When the citizens of Tippecanoe County gave the State $230,000 for the project, the Legislature of 1869 located the institution at Lafayette, and in consideration of a donation of $150,000 by John Purdue, his name was given to the embryo institution. From the earliest work rapid expansion has been the watch- word of the growing institution ' s guardians. Buildings were the first requisite and by 1874 Ladies ' Hall, the Dorm. the Chemistry Laboratory, the Military Hall and the old Boiler and Gas House had been erected. Enthusiasm over the work was not allowed to lag, and, on the average, one building was erected each year. Such was the increase in attendance that the faculty members increas ed more rapidly than the buildings, and today the pay roll is a much more serious thing in size than even the fondest hopes of early presidents could picture. The presidents of the university have numbered to the pres- ent time five. The first was Richard Owen, who, during the first two years of the institution ' s existence, guided with great expectation his thimble full of faculty in their administration of three courses — Science, Agriculture and Engineering. The



Page 21 text:

History of the Past Year The history of the past year has been one of steady growth, and general better- ment of the university and university life. Great material progress has been made in advancing Purdue to a rank of the best engineering school in America. Though younger than her great rival institutions, she has outclassed all but two of them, advancing with long and rapid strides, to the latest of which the past year and the graduating class have been generous pa- trons. This uplift of the past year has been evidenced not only in a material way. but in even a greater degree in a moral, intellectual and social way as well. The benefits of life at the university for our successors have been greatly augmented by a year of hard work, successful enter- prise and good fortune, and it is the purpose of this history to record to future generations of proud graduates what the year 1906- ' 07 has contributed to Purdue ' s great name and prestige. It is with great satisfaction that the class of Nineteen Hundred and Seven reviews this, the latest cycle of progress of their greatest love, their Alma Mater. In a confusion as to just what particular thing the honor of having contributed the most to the greatness of Purdue be- longs, we favor tangible things, and, without doubt, the most important addition to the material equipment of the university during the year has been the new Chemistry Building. This new laboratory for the department of Chemistry is rapidly near- ing completion on the west line of the campus. It is one of the largest and most imposing structures on the grounds, and consists of three working floors and an attic. It was erected in accordance with an act of the General Assembly in January. 1905. which appropriated $60,000 for the purpose. The edifice is a compliment to the genius and skill of the designer. The lowest floor includes a very large general chemistry laboratory with windows on three sides, accommodating one hundred and forty students at a time. There is also an equally large laboratory for qualitative analysis, a class room, a supply room and two store rooms on this floor. The first floor contains lecture rooms, organic laboratories, and departmental offices. The second floor provides labora- tories for quantitative analysis and physical chemistry. No expense has been spared through the building in making the equipment perfect and complete, in apparatus, heating, lighting and ventilation. With the completion of the wing of the Electrical Building the work of that department was greatly facilitated and in- creased in import. The addition supplied a new lecture room and extensive additions to the laboratory floor space. This laboratory has been equipped with a Whiting crane, extensive switchboards and various machinery. The test car Louisi-

Suggestions in the Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) collection:

Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905

Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910


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