University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA)

 - Class of 1904

Page 17 of 244

 

University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 17 of 244
Page 17 of 244



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Page 17 text:

MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE world and is consulted on subjects in his line by the leading specialists all over the United States and Canada. He is State Park Commis- sioner and holds several positions in the American Park and Outdoor Art Association, as well as in other associations for the advancement of park work. Dr. Edward W. Allen, ' 85, Vice-Director of the Office of Experiment Stations, Washington, D. C, is one of our alumni who is well known all over the United States, at least among experiment station workers; Charles S. Plum, ' 82, Director of the experiment station of Purdue University; Wheeler, ' 87, Director of the Rhode Island Experi- ment Station; Hills, ' 81, Director of the Vermont Experiment Station; Lindsey, ' 83, Chemist at the Hatch Station at Amherst and others. William H. Bowker, ' 71, President of the Bowker Fertilizer Company, has revolutionized the fertilizer business. He is known the world over. Among our prominent journalists, Herbert Myrick, ' 82, stands at the head as an editor of agricultural papers and magazines. He is also a publisher and author. Daniel G. Hitchcock is editor and proprietor of the Warren Herald. Among the prominent florists, are E. D. Shaw, ' 72, and W. R. Pierson, ' 01, Cromwell, Conn., who with his father has the largest floral establishment in New England. We have no space even to mention the names of the successful civil engineers, chemists, druggists, mechanics, electricians, dentists, teachers and superintendents, traveling men, ministers, business men, manu- facturers, seedmen, farmers and market gardeners, stock raisers, creamery managers, gardeners, horticulturalists, landscape architects and gardeners, book keepers and farm superintendents. Even a brief account of them all would fill a volume. In fact, the scope of the work that is being done by our alumni is equal to that of any other college, even though older, and each alumnus who has gone out from the college is, in his sphere, to a greater or less extent, a center and an advertise- ment for the Massachusetts Agricultural College. This fact among our alumni can be shown no better than by the statement that, out of thir-

Page 16 text:

THE INDEX: VOL. XXX I V As professors and instructors, we have such men as Prof. Washburn, ' 78, formerly President of the Rhode Island Agricultural College ; Prof. Charles S. Phelps, for merly at Storrs, Conn., who is widely known throughout the state, especially among grangers; Prof. Horace E. Stockbridge, ' 7S, Professor of Agriculture in Florida; David P. Tenhal- low, ' 73, Professor of Botany and Vegetable Pathology at McGill University in ' Montreal ; Green, ' 79, Professor of Horticulture in the University of Minnesota; Chapin, ' 81, Professor of Biology in an Ohio University; Taft, ' 82, Professor in a college in Michigan, and Stone, ' 82, now President of Purdue University. Among our more recent graduates, E. A. White, ' 95, at the Con- necticut Agricultural College ; and R. D. Hemenway, ' 95, Director of the School of Horticulture, of Hartford, Conn., Avhich, according to the officials at Washington, has the largest and most systematically con- ducted system of school gardens in the United States, may be mentioned, and there are to be added to this list the names of Wellington, ' 73 ; Brooks, ' 75 ; Paige, ' 82 ; Stone, ' S6 ; Cooley, ' 88 ; Smith, ' 94 and Howard, ' 94, who are all now members of the Faculty of their Alma Mater. In veterinary science, we have such men as Frederick M. Osgood, ' 78, Professor and Surgeon at Harvard Veterinary School, and Charles H. Higgins, ' 94, Pathologist to the Dominion of Canada. In entomology, Charles P. Lounsbury, ' 94, who is Government Entomologist at the Cape of Good Hope, Africa; A. H. Kirkland, ' 94, Entomologist of the Bowker Fertilizer Co. ; Burges, ' 95, Assistant State Entomologist in Illinois; Harold Frost, ' 95, who is widely known as an expert in Entomology and tree pruning, and many others. In practical life, G. A. Parker, ' 7( ' ), Superintendent of Keney Park, Hartford, Conn., stands preeminently above all others in the United States as landscape gardener and park superintendent. He has not only the- best collection of park reports in the country, but has what is unquestionably the most extensive and best arranged special library of this class in the world. He constantly receives letters from all over the



Page 18 text:

THE LXDEX: VOL. XXXIV teen or lourteen hundred alumni and former students, there has but about one really turned out badly. Certainly few institutions in the country have as enviable a record. Students and alumni alike, each of us has reason to feel proud of the showing which our alumni are mak- ing in the world. The alumni of an institution and their work must show to the world the value of that institution. The positions that our menareholdin ' o and their influence in nearly every state in the country, in our possessions and in Mexico, Brazil, India, Turkey, and japan should be a means of inspiring undergraduates and of helping them to appreciate the broad educational advantages at the college. The alumni are showing to the public that the old idea, which some had, that an agri- cultural college taught one simply how to hoe, plow and rake, is certainly a mistaken one, and that men i-eceive a broad fundamental knowledge which is a foundation upon which they can build many different kinds of employment. With a broad and substantial foundation, there is little danger of being wrecked by the severest cyclone, although some injury may be done. No one realizes, better than the alumni themselves, the value of the fundamental training at their Alma Mater; and no body of alumni of any institution in the world, of the size and age of our institu- tion, is more loyal than the graduates of the Massachusetts Agricultural College. H. D. Hemenwav, ' !)o. Editor ' s Note In regard to the preceding it is only fair t(5 state that the editor was able to give Mr. Hemenway a very short lime in which to complete the article. In that time — it was only a week, and Mr. Hemenway was more than usually confined by his own work — it was of course impossible for him to get together all the data that he should have had. If theie- fore, the names of men in some particular locality seem to occupy

Suggestions in the University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA) collection:

University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

1901

University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

1902

University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

1903

University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905

University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907


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