Commumcatioit Jfrom tfje Clasisi of 1881 THE College was at its nadir in 1881. No less than five men — Clark, Flint, Stoekbridge, Chadbourne and Greenough — served as presidents during five years 1879-1883. The faculty could be numbered on the fingers of one ' s hands, the student body, on the fingers of eight pairs of hands. The State gave it a mere $10,000 a year, the Federal Government nothing. Governor Thomas Talbot tried to close its doors or, as an alternative, to turn it over to Amherst College — anything to get rid of it. Its constituency, the farmers, scoffed at book farming and there were none so poor as to do it reverence. The stork was just about to bring the newly born Experiment Station. The very word extension, as applied to agriculture, had not been coined. The physical plant included two dormitories; a barn-like wooden structure in which was a bleak room used for miscellaneous purposes, including compulsory chapel exercises, as well as mathe- matics and chemistry classrooms and laboratores, gymnasium, drill-hall and armory — a veritable blunderbus of a building; an uninviting hash house; barns; a botanic museum; and greenhouses. The farmlands were still in part untamed. The writer grabbed many alder roots with his classmates, doing unpaid student labor of an educational character. However, the instructional staff was a good one and, with limited resources, it wrought out of somewhat unpromising material a product of which Alma Mater need not be ashamed. At least one great captain of industry, three or more uni- versity and college presidents, four or more experiment station directors and deans of agriculture and kindred subjects are numbered among the graduates of that day. Eighty-one salutes thirty-one and bids it Godspeed! J. L. Hills, Sec, Class ' 81
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