University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO)

 - Class of 1939

Page 19 of 390

 

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 19 of 390
Page 19 of 390



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Page 19 text:

president's mansion, and a promise of an annual appropriation thereafter. Expansion and increase continued to characterize University history during the administration of Samuel Spahr Laws 11876-I8895. The College of Engineering became distinct from the College of Ag- riculture in 1878, and the Agricultural Experiment Station appeared on the cam- pus in 1888. Shortly thereafter the fore- runner of the present R. O. T. C. unit, the Missouri State Military School, found its niche in University studies. Laws himself had something of Read's forcefulness and uncompromising will, but he carried it to the unreasonable point of belligerenceg and his consequential unpopularity with the students precipitated an investigation in 1889 which prompted his resignation. The post-war period witnessed a con- siderably increased enrollment, which in 1875 approximated 250 students, a figure which almost trebled the average pre-war attendance. But of especial significance Page 19 . O Major James S. Rollins for several decades ren- dered such invaluable service to the University that shortly after the Civil War the Board of Curators bestowed upon hirn the title, Pater Universitatis Mis- sonriensisf' This painting, by George Caleb Bing- ham, his life-long friend, was destroyed by the jire in 1892. is the fact that some seventy counties were represented, and that students away from the Missouri river valley began to attend. The institution was more than a universityg it was a state university. Of less impor- tance, but perhaps of more interest, was the appearance of two outstanding con- tributions to student life. The first of these was the literary society, chief representative

Page 18 text:

young women had been admitted to the normal department as early as 1869 and did no manner of harm. Segregation and vigilant chaperonage saved the day. Educational processes were not disrupted, and women became indispensable fixtures to University life. O An informal piclnre of the old administration building taken shortly after the new wings were added in 1885, seven years before it was gntled by jire. Almost beyond doubt the greatest serv- ice rendered by Read was his welding a link between university and state legisla- ture which has not since been broken. The fact that curators' warrants went for as little as sixty cents on the dollar was one among many facts which accentuated his fervent appeal for state assistance. In 1867 the University received its first outright appropriation, fI0,000, for rebuilding the



Page 20 text:

of which was the Athenaean, an organi- zation which shaped student opinion and afforded opportunities for forensic practice until its disbandment in 1937. This was practically the only important student ac- tivity until the turn of the century. A new institution appeared about 1870, however, and finally began to challenge the suprem- Ullw -lr v T W --if- 'H i 3 X ff E E UPL E S X E 2 2 2 l . fx E W V Q 3 fg ' X E I - h . 21 Agn K . 2 In 'f f' , - 5 L. f . .-te . X . Y- -- :: j i f fu X 5 x, E L IE 5 cg E , f S P' J ' x it -l ? 4i . - -1... O Federal troops used the academic hall as a prison for four years during the Civil War. Some of the Confederates were ex-students of the University and were able to make their escape through knowledge of the interior layout of the building. acy of the literary society. This, of course, was the Greek-letter fraternity, which was at first a secret, organization. It was these sub-rosa groups which waged constant war- fare for two decades with the Barbs and first agitated the removal of Dr. Laws from the presidency. The earliest groups affiliated nationally with Phi Kappa Psi, Beta Theta Pi, and Phi Delta Theta. On the night of January 9, 1892, the old Academic Hall, which had two new wings not ten years old, went down in flames. This conflagration blighted confidence and aspirations which had taken years to en- gender-but only for a short time, for in spite of the 3lE125,000, 'loss sustained, plans were immediately and enthusiasti- cally cast for recouping the deprivation. Instead of the institution's being closed or transferred to a more prosperous commun- ity, classes continued in public edifices, and a tremendous building program was in- augurated. In three short years almost every building now standing on Francis Quadrangle was erected. The state legis- lature as well as the people of Boone County stood equal to the emergency and began making biennial appropriations of thereto- Page 20

Suggestions in the University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) collection:

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942


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