High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 22 text:
“
20 THE SPECTATOR Plans have been made to hold swimming classes in the evening for the town folks. Let us hope that in the pleasure and enjoyment we get from these additions, we will not forget our regular studies, which in the long run, mean more to us and the standard of our school than athletics. Just a word of thanks to all the friends of our school, who did their part, in helping to bring this wonderful work about. Let us hope that they themselves will get the benefit as well as the students of Vander-grift High School. —Catherine Gregg, ’24. AMERICA’S FIRST COLLEGES w w iARVARD, the oldest institution for £ 1 higher education in America, was founded sixteen years after the landing of the Pilgrims. From the earliest days to the present time it has secured a leadership among educational institutions in the United States. It was the first to allow the changes of education, the most important of these being the elective system (This system allows the student to select his own studies). From this institution three of our most important and popular presidents have graduated, John Adams, John Quincy Adams, and Theodore Roosevelt. Not only men in the political field have graduated from here; but men of literature also. The name Harvard was given to the institution in honor of a Puritan who had died and left his fortune and his small library amounting to 250 books in general, to the institution. Princeton University is located in Princeton, New Jersey. This institution was founded by the Presbyterians of New York as a college of New Jersey. This university consists of three different departments, the academic, science, and the graduate department. It was the first American college to make provisions regarding chemistry and was among the first to recognize the elective system. It is also to be praised as a college where some of the founders and builders of the nations were at one time registered among the student body. Yale University is situated in New Haven, Connecticut. It was founded by ten ministers. It was later named Yale in honor of a son of one of the founders of New Haven. This institution is recognized as a school of several different departments such as the graduate, arts, science, academic, theology, philosophy, law, and medicine departments. It is also noted for its valuable library consisting of about 600,000 volumes. One thing significant regarding this insti- tution is the forest school, which was founded in 1900 by Mr. and Mrs. Pinchot and sons. Graduates of this school are given a special degree of master of forestry. Columbia University is one of the oldest and most important institutions in the United States. This university is situated in New York overlooking the Hudson river. In 1754 a charter was granted by King George II and the college was called Kings. Later some years after the close of the Revolutionary war the school was called Columbia. Some of the most important departments are the professional schools, the college of physicians and surgeons, the schools of mining engineering, chemistry and teachers. Women are admitted as professional students to the teachers college and to the college of pharmacy. William and Mary College is situated at Williamsburg, Virginia and is one of the oldest institutions of higher education for men in the United States. The charter was granted in 1693 by William and Mary of England. It is supported by the state of Virginia and during the Revolutionary war it was given up by the students as a barrack for soldiers. From here, three of our presidents have graduated and a host of other prominent men such as army officers, senators, governors, and ministers. Vassar College is located near Poughkeepsie, New York. It was the generosity of Matthew Vassar who donated 200 acres with $800,000 for the founding of a college for women. It is one of the oldest and foremost of American colleges. The campus is on a hill near the Hudson. Many of the large buildings are gifts of the alumnae and the trustees. Mrs. Fredrick F'rris Thompson donated a library consisting of 9,000 volumes as a memorial for her husband who had served as a trustee for many years. Vassar has a faculty of 145 and the student registration is 1,100. —Dorothy Lauffer, :24.
”
Page 21 text:
“
“DREAMS COME TRUE” ERHAPS many of our imaginative scholars have idly dreamed of V. H. S. with a wonderful auditorium, and a very modern gymnasium, but have they let their dreams go so far as to imagine a swimming pool ? Somehow, in the past, we have gotten along without these modern equipments of every school, but can we say our school was up to the standard? In some things, “Yes”; in others, “No”. How can any school keep its athletics up to the standard without a place for practice ? Our basket ball activity has been of the average but this year the boys have entered upon the season with a vim and determination to win, which, although it should not be unusual, may be given credit to our new gymnasium and its effect upon them. As yet the girls have not practiced for basket ball, but they have organized and expect to start practicing in the near future. More than likely they will be urged on by the same spirit as the boys. So far no plan for daily practice in the gym has been made, but this will probably come, after the biuldings are entirely completed. Without our auditorium we students of V. H. S. have missed some of the most interesting and beneficial times of our school days. W'e have missed the early fellowship of a daily chapel exercise which almost every other school enjoys. Previously in Vandergrift, we have lacked what might be termed a center of all things, which our auditorium will now supply. All kinds of entertainment can be held here and meetings of all sorts, religious or educational. Lecture courses can be given which heretofore, we have not had because we did not have a convenient place for the holding of such things. Now this will be changed and I’m sure not only the students, but the citizens of Vandergrift will receive the benefit of the auditorium. The auditorium has a very large stage and a seating capacity of about seventeen hundred. The swimming pool seems to incite more interest among the students than any of the other attractions probably because it is new, for not every school can boast of a swimming pool. The people of the town will get the benefit of this addition as well as the others.
”
Page 23 text:
“
THE SPECTATOR 21 GETTYSBURG HEROINES 'XE cannot read of the history of the Battle of Gettysburg without feeling a thrill of admiration for the women who so courageously served and even gave their lives for their country. One incident which is related concerns a woman named Annie Etheridge, just out of her teens, who volunteered as a daughter of a regiment in the Army of the Potomac. She served four years and was presented with a badge by her state, for her devotion to the wounded at Gettysburg. Though not called upon to fight, Annie had spirit enough to make a battle heroine. At Gettysburg she went to the outposts with the skirmishers and was ordered back. On her way back she discovered a line of low trenches, where the enemy lay concealed, so turning her face to the front she called “Boys do your duty, and whip those fellows!” A hearty cheer was the response and a volley was poured into the hidden trenches. Annie was hit in the hand, her horse was wounded, and her skirt was riddled. She performed deeds of daring in bringing wounded from the field under fire, turning a retreating party of soldiers face about by offering to lead them. On the battle field she toiled under the scorching sun and the pouring rains with no thought but for those who were suffering and dying all around her. The story of pretty Jennie Wade is a very romantic and sad one. To Corporal Johnson Skelly, she was the ideal—the girl he left behind him. It was her picture and her letters that cheered him during long and weary days at the front and then he was wounded and for lack of medical attention, life fled. Mercifully Jennie did not hear of her lover’s death for she herself was to be sorely tried. The stork that cares for neither war nor peace had visited the home of her sister, and in order that the baby have attention, and the mother be made comfortable, Jennie and her mother had gone to the little red house that lay in the path of the invading enemy. When the lead begun to fly, Jennie was placidly baking. While the battle waged fiercer the girl went on kneading dough, undismayed by her obvious danger. But finally a bullet found its way into Jennie’s kitchen and with a convulsive cry she clasped her hands to her breast and fell. But perhaps after all it was a friendly bullet that kept her frorp learning that her sweetheart had found a friendless grave only a few days before. Annie Roberts is but another example of indomitable courage. Young, gentle, affectionate Annie, hearing that the regiment in which her brother and husband were enrolled, scarcely existed except for its dying and its dead, unhesitatingly set out for the fateful scene. Reaching it she trod the blood soaked fields searching among the prostrate bodies for her loved ones. From hospital to hospital, and trench to trench amid rain and mud she trudged on day after day. Did Annie Roberts succeed? She found her noble gray-haired brother with a leg torn off and at length she heard from her brave husband who was a wounded prisoner at Libby. These are but typical of many cases of bravery and devotion, but they all point to one fact, that these women loved their country and their flag and were ready and willing, if necessary, to give their lives for her. Pauline Bolar, ’24. THE LIBERTY BELL VERY person in this broad land is proud of the old Liberty Bell. It is a sacred and silent witness now of the great deeds of long ago. November 1st, 1751, the superintendents of the old Statehouse in Philadelphia, wrote to London and asked for a good bell of about 2000 pounds weight. The bell came in August, 1752. When it was hung and tried for the sound, it was cracked by a stroke of the clapper, witnout any violence whatever. The bell was re-cast in Philadelphia, but it made such a poor sound that it was again broken up and re-cast. This time it was satisfactory. On July 8th, 1776, this bell became famous. On that day the Statehouse yard was crowded with eager patriots. They had
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.