Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX)

 - Class of 1923

Page 24 of 308

 

Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 24 of 308
Page 24 of 308



Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 23
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Page 24 text:

upon the Chairman of the Faculty, Rev. John R. Allen, A. B., D. D., the following year. Dr. Allen had come to the University as Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy in 1892 and had filled several positions with great acceptability. Most of the time he had charge of the Woman ' s Building and he added the East wing to that Building besides making other improvements. At the commencement of 1908, Robert S. Hyer, LL. D., was elected Regent. The period of his administration was one of great prosperity in material things in Texas and the University kept pace with the times. The Main Administration Building and Mood Hall were begun and completed. In 1906 the original charter trat had been granted February 6, 1875, was revised so as to merge the tw f o Boards of Control into one Board, the Board of Trustees, and to chang e the title Regent to President. Bishop Ward inspired the Summer School of Theology, which grew to prominence and did much good for Texas Methodism. Dr. John R. Nelson inaugurated the Medical College at Dallas, he also did much towards projecting and completing Mood Hall. Professor R. B. McSwain did much in standardizing the courses of study. An effort was begun in 1910 by Dr. Hyer and others to move Southwestern University from Georgetown, first to Forth Worth and then to Dallas, having failed completely Dr. Hyer resigned at the commence- ment of 1911, and was soon afterwards elected to the Presidency of Southern Methodist University, an institution that grew out of the aggitation to move Southwestern University to Dallas. The Trustees accepted Dr. Heyer ' s resignation in 1911 and at the same meeting elected Dr. C. M. Bishop President. He was a man of rare scholarship, who had filled many places of prominence in the ch urch. He was formally inaugurated December 11, 1911. He soon restored confidence in the permanency of Southwestern University and brought back its old time prosperity. The Science Building was projected and completed under Dr. Bishop and the Endowment Fund was materially added to. Dr. Bishop resigned in 1922 to re-enter the pastorate and the Trustees elected Dr. P. W. Horn President. Dr. Horn will be inaugurated at the coming Jubilee. In this brief history the limits of the paper made it necessary to omit many names of students, faculty and Trustees or Curators who played important parts in the development of the institu- tion. It is hoped that some day a complete history of the University will be written. Page 20

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An increase of students marked the opening of the third session, Monday, October 4, 1875. At the beginning of this session Prof. S. G. Sanders, A. M., in charge of the Chair of Modern Languages, was added to the Faculty, and he became a great accession both to the local church and to the University. He is second only to Dr. Mood in the excellence and importance of the service he gave Southwestern in its early days. He served the University some sixteen years. He died while filling the Chair of Ancient Languages, September 30, 1892. Rev. N. T. Burks, A. M., also came to the University in September, 1875. He was Professor of Mathematics. He served until January, 1879, when he was succeeded by C. C. Cody, A. M. The first class to graduate was at the commencement of 1876. Four young men, James Camp- bell, B. Douglas Dashiel, Alfred S. John, and George H. Stovall were awarded the Bachelor of Arts Degree. Rev. I. G. John, D. D., preached the commencement sermon to a large congrega- tion. In 1876 the I. and G. N. railroad extended its line to Austin going through Round Rock, ten miles form Georgetown. This made the University more accessible to the outside world. It was two years later that a group of Georgetown citizens, with home capital, built the tap Hne to Round Rock. It was in the fall of 1876 that Bishop D. S. Doggett presided over the Texas conferences. The representatives on the Board of Curators was increased from one to five mem- bers for each conference. The Bishop attended the commencement of 1877 and presided over the Board of Curators. His presence was notable because of counsel he gave and his great dis- course preached to a crowded house July 8, 1877. From the beginning of operations at Georgetown there was a growing demand for the ad- mission of young ladies to the classes of the University, but because there were Methodist Female Colleges in the State Dr. Mood had refused admission to all applicants. But the demand growing more insistant the Curators authorized the Faculty to open a Young Ladies Department. The basement of the Presbyterian Church was temporarily secured, and the Faculty advertised that the session beginning September 9, 1878, young ladies would be admitted on the same conditions as young men, but taught in separate classes and separate buildings. A temporary building for young ladies was erected the next year. The first class to graduate young ladies was at the com- mencement of 1879, when Misses Kittie Mood and Mary Steele received the M. L. degree. The M. L. degree, which was an accommodated degree, was conferred on young ladies for about four years, and afterwards discontinued. At the commencement of 1883, Misses L. B. Henderson, Virginia Mosely, and Mrs. Anna M. Richardson (nee) Mathis graduated with B. S. degree. In 1887 Mrs. Willie Ford (nee) Sampey received the A. M. degree. She was the first woman to receive that degree from Southwestern. At the Northwest Texas Annual conference held at Georgetown in 1883, under an earnest appeal by Dr. R. A. Young of Nashville, Tennessee, assisted by the Financial Agent, Dr. H. A. Bourland, the start was made for securing money for erecting the Woman ' s Building. On this occasion above $35,000 were subscribed which afterwards increased. The Snyder Brothers, Dudley, John and Thomas, gave $21,000 of this amount. The subscriptions were slow in materializ- ing. At the next session of the Northwest Texas conference, held at Waco in November, 1884, Dr. F. A. Mood, after addressing the conference in behalf of Christian Education and Southwestern University, retired to his room to breathe his last. His body was buried at Georgetown. In June, 1885, Rev. J. W. Heidt, D. D., of Georgia was elected Regent. The University continued to make progress under his administration. In 1886 Mrs. Giddings of Brenham gave $3,000 to erect a Helping Hall where young men needing help might secure lodging free and board at cost. Mrs. Giddings afterwards added a dining room to the Hall system and the conferences supplemented its capacity by building five cottages at a cost of $550 each. The Woman ' s Building was finished under Dr. Heidt ' s administration. In the fall of 1889 Dr. Heidt resigned and the duties of the Regent devolved upon the Vice-Regent, Rev. J. H. McLean, D. D., until June, 1891, when he was elected Regent. For six years Dr. McLean guided the affairs of the University with great success. His name is closely connected with the University almost from the beginning. He has faithfully served the institution as Curator, Financial Agent, Professor, Vice- Regent and Regent until June, 1897, when he resigned to resume pastoral work in the North Texas Conference As the Board of Curators did not elect Dr. McLean ' s successor in 1887 the duties of RegentleTl Page 19



Page 25 text:

Pageantry in Southwestern University And pomp, and feast, and revelry With mask and antique pageantry, Such sights as youthful poets dream, On summer eves by haunted stream. — Milton. In Spirit of Southwestern, given in honor of the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the college, Southwestern University presents its ninth pageant. The initial pageant in the form of a May Fete was produced in 1915 under the able management of Miss Laura Kuykendall, Dean of Women, and Miss Etelka Evans, Dean of the Department of Music, and formed the occasion for the homecoming of many former students. Each succeeding pageant has been produced on an increasingly elaborate scale by the directors of the first pageant who have also been the moving spirits of all the succeeding ones. The number of returning students has increased each year, until, in 1923, the Golden Jubilee pageant marks the climax of the greatest homecoming in the history of Southwestern. Former pageants have taken place in May and have been celebrated with festivities lasting for two days. The chief features have been the Queen ' s banquet on the first evening, the hanging of May baskets in the early morning, a ball game, and the pageant itself in the late afternoon. Each year the pageant has been appropriate to the spirit of the time, as the World War pageant, the Victory pageant, and the Homecoming pageant in 1923. Southwestern University was the first school in Texas to take up pageantry from an educational standpoint. The public schools of the State have been in- vited from year to year to send representatives, and large numbers have re- sponded. Thus the pageantry of Southwestern has become so widely known that graduates and former students of Southwestern have been called upon to direct pageants in many public schools of the state. In this manner a closer contact has been established between the college and the public schools of Texas and the sphere of the influence of Southwestern is steadily increasing. Nine years of systematic training culminate in Spirit of Southwestern the Golden Jubilee pageant of 1923, which Southwestern University presents in honor of its semi-centennial celebration. Page 21

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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