University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN)

 - Class of 1982

Page 22 of 256

 

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1982 Edition, Page 22 of 256
Page 22 of 256



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Page 22 text:

Continued from page 17 Dean Laura Drake Gill of Barnard College, whose efforts to found a women ' s college a few years later would not succeed. In the Semi-Centennial volume there was no hint of the difficulties ahead: by 1909 Vice-Chancellor Benja- min Wiggins was dead, law and medical departments closed, the March-December academic calendar aban- doned, and the chapel would wait for another 50 years for completion. George R. Fairbanks had completed his His- tory of the University of the South before his death in 1906, but Arthur Howard Noll was still at work on his Alumni Directory. The 75th Anniversary in 1932 found the University having survived World War I and the earlier part of the Great Depression. An expansion of dormitories had brought most students from private homes into college housing, with the erection of Cannon, Johnson, Elliott, Tuckaway and a new Hoffman. Carnegie had been the only substantial addition to academic buildings. Thomas Frank Gailor made the historical address at the 75th An- niversary observance. As Chaplain, Vice-Chancellor and Chancellor he had lived through most of Sewanee ' s histo- ry as an operating institution. Moultri Guerry published Men who Made Sewanee, and four ladies collected materi- al for the book now called Purple Sewanee, priceless in its firstperson accounts. The Centennial began July 4, 1957, with a return to Lookout Mountain with the flagstaff carried there 100 years before. The House of Bishops met in All Saints ' before it was closed for addition of tower and carillon, narthex, and St. Augustine ' s Chapel ' s wing. Bishop Frank A. Juhan portrayed Bishop Leonidas Polk in the Centen- nial pageant on Hardee Field, produced by Miss Charlotte Gailor. The Centennial closed with a service in Lambeth Palace Chapel, London, for the award of an honorary degree to the Archbishop of Canterbury. Building on a decade of stabilization of the University by Vice-Chancel- lor Alex Guerry, in spite of World War II, the University was in the midst of its greatest period of physical expan- sion. In the Vice-Chancellorship of Edward McGrady were built Hunter, Juhan, Benedict, Gorgas, Cravens, Hamilton, Woods, duPont, both Clevelands, and Courts and Trezevant, situated to be the site of a second college. Walsh and St. Luke ' s were rebuilt, and the lakes con- structed. Centennial publications includ ed as Alumni Di- rectory, Registrar ' s Report, and Reconstruction at Sewanee, a history from 1857 to 1872. The 125th Anniversary finds significant changes: ad- mission of women, 1969, the Academy merged with St. Andrew ' s School and moved off the Domain, 1981, an off- campus extension, Education for Ministry, and the Cen- tury II fund, five times larger than any fund raising goal undertaken. The 125th observance began with the opening of the Easter Semester 1982 and continues throughout the calendar year with a reflective theme, Towards a New Vision of Liberal Education in a Christian Context, and a distinctly academic flavor of faculty symposia, lectures and seminars. Will Sewanee ever be the University of the South? Not yet, but as William Porcher DuBose said at the Semi- Centennial: Sewanee is ever to herself and to her own the great university, not of the actual visible to others, but of the conception and t he idea which is her own real. It is this spirit that Sewanee must not lose as it goes forward toward the Sesquicentennial in 2007. Elizabeth N. Chitty 18 INTRODUCTION

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- SP 4 Anniversaries Remembered Every quarter of a century the University of the South makes a special effort to commemorate its founding, cele- brate its continued existence, publish historical works and look toward its future. The Semi-Centennial in 1907, the 75th in 1932, the Centennial in 1957-58, and the 125th all date from the founding in 1857. When the University was 25 years old in 1882, its very survival was a miracle. No celebration was noted in the Proceedings of the trustees or in Fairbanks ' History. The University survived the Civil War, loss of endowment, and the death of three Chancellors before it opened in 1868, but its existence was precarious through the 1870 ' s. The outlook became more hopeful in 1879 when the Reverend Telfair Hodgson, already dean of the Seminary, became Vice-Chancellor. In the 14 years between the opening with nine students and four professors, and 1882, the College had enrolled 744 students, the Grammar School 750, and the Seminary 50. Seventy degrees had been awarded in the College, 26 each in arts letters and in science, 7 in civil engineering, with 11 M.A. ' s. The Seminary had granted one B.D. degree and two degrees of Graduate in Divinity. Building in stone had begun with Hodgson and St. Luke ' s Halls. Traditions still cherished had begun, including the honor code and the Order of Gownsmen. The Semi-Centennial in 1907 was an occasion for great rejoicing. The medical school, begun in 1892, had awarded over 500 degrees, the law school (1893) nearly 40. Enroll- ment in the College had not increased significantly; 102 in 1882, 124 in 1907; while the Seminary enrollment ha d grown from 19 to 31. Thompson, Walsh, Convocation and Quintard Halls and Breslin Tower were in use. All Saints ' Chapel was under construction. St. Luke ' s Chapel was completed that year. The Sewanee Review was in its 15th year. The Commencement Week celebration included a service at the Cornerstone site in Louisiana Circle and a procession exceeding in grandeur anything ever seen at Sewanee. One of 18 honorary degrees went to Continued on page 18 INTRODUCTION 17



Page 23 text:

- m AND ALL MY LIFE, V r Sfr w INTRODUCTION 19

Suggestions in the University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) collection:

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 1

1980

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

1983

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

1984

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

1985


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