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Page 19 text:
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wc .fy 5:5 '31 wg- -'f Q' 1:9 vig -19 Q: vp- tv qi 11.--9 gf :V--'y vgf 1 gp Q' gw wg -ca Q: :7 --qv q:,:::,:0 oil- 'go Q' fr jv Q'-:,-,W wt- I :ry Q'---7 W v'-Lf: :I wg-.fy v'--.-wg:-13:7 vu-1-fy '- 'a W :g-W W-11:1 sy, sms,-,sy .sg---sa sa.-.sm so--+4 -,wa -,-sa 44.44 sf- iv-1 V vow 1-ww-,,-V-. W----v W-:: N -'sf .V 4- V 0006004060906009006000OOQQOOOOOOOOOOOQ 01:18.29-.Q.h,1.S.0.f18.6.-I-18.6.-MHZ:-.-.Q.Z...S.Q.-CS M2 VIS. n. -.S 4f:1.f.Q.Z. .1.S.h, ..Q.h. .S.Z. ' .S 0A .-Aiwa .Q.ZZ-:-.Q,01.'.1S Z. 7-.S,Z.- ARM...N.Z:-118.02.71Q.42..S.h.-HS Za .QA PROP. GEORGE L. WESTGATE. BY PROP. WM. NORTH R1cE. EORGE LEWIS WESTGATE was born in Fall River, Mass., April 12, 1844. He was graduated in the Class of 1865, Wesleyan University. After G graduation, two years were spent in the study of theology in Union Theological Seminary. The next thirteen years were given to the work of the pastorate, in the Providence, New York East, and New England Conferences of the Methodist Episcopal Church. In 1880 he was elected Professor of His- tory and Political Economy in Wesleyan University. He died june 28th, 1885. Such is the brief reco-rd in Outline of a life which was felt by many as a profound influence for good, and whose memory is an inspiration. In his student life, Prof. Westgate distinguished himself by his extraor- dinarily high scholarship. His scholarship was almost uniformly high in a number of departments, indicating apparently great general ability rather than marked genius in any one direction. If, however, the studies of the College course be roughly divided into the two groups of the sciences and the hu- manities, he certainly attained a higher degree of proiiciency in the latter than in the former. He was distinguished in College as a Writer and speaker no less than as a scholar. The essays and orations of his student days were characterized by the same clearness and vigor of thought, and perspicuity and severe precision of language, which marked the work of his later years. But his classmates love to remember him for the moral traits which impressed them even more than his intellectual ability. His was eminently that manly type of character which is based on love of truth and devotion to duty. To say that no competition or rivalry could lead him to dishon- orable courses is an understatement which would do him injustice. He seemed to live above the atmosphere in which temptations to dishonorable conduct have their being. He was a Christian when he came to College, and his years of student life were marked by a beautiful growth in the graces of Christian character. There was at first something of the hauteur and C135 Q , O .wN.,.Zy.,.wN.,..,4s..,,0y.,.ZF..,9s.,.,0y. .Z8,...Ws...Wx...WN. .,w.,..Z3.,.,08,.,,Wv..,ZN,,.,4y.aws. .WA O Q Q , 4 I. V .vw V 1 W sf sg- sf V V, v v V V .vu V- -V -V-1-v'-sf--wwf V ' W' 'V' V'-'V W .K 1 , , , iw wg Q hy W3 Q Q Z5 Q3 Qs of-Q my are ages asap! , -:-.sm 4 mo.. .oo.'..+4. -1s4g'v.sa.'uso.-...+a. .so..,.sn.. Ao. ..Qo..f.mo.f .coax-.oa.'.-.,AM-...ea.. .on...so..- AM- .-Aa. AW. neo, ' 0 Q O . '
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Page 18 text:
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.rs 1 , , yx. .qw WQMWQ .,,. 0 Q. WWMWQ ..., 0 W,.,0v.,,.,Q.,..qv.,.,.9Q .,.. 0 QWWA. , . . . ,, X. ., .. ,, V ., ,. . v ., X., -, X- 1, N- ff R-,W vb--,w 1v':-'xv 'vw- N' - . 1-.,,. ,-,,, f ,. ,R A A A A M A A Q Q Mg , , .,, QU, by Qgwy .by .www sW,Sh,,Sk,,sh.sW,.sZ,,,,m kffv Xoeovo+fxfxfe,Roxf Rf., xf fx, . ,. - -. . . ,. ' WS W9 'WS RS is ZS' ZS Z5 09' If af 'Of' of Q 3- 3 Q- M 'Q'2..,.eM:.,RM..gW2..1s9,.,1:.oh.+,Qm1.em.,.Q,4,...em.,.Rm,.sm-,.e0,Q.s.0:-...Q,a..-19.441-IR0.-.-.s.w..1Q,a,-.R ESQ sh . ..+h..,s'z...+M. ',s.m.4v.ap-..L+ uma m...s.h...R 0. .N.A..,R ,MN ,,... . ALFRED CHARLES TRUE, M. A., INSTRUCTOR IN GREEK AND LATIN. ' 120 Hzlgfh Si. MORRISZBARKER CRAWFORD, M. A.. Foss PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS. f2I 0. HJ 101 Hzfh SLI WALTER BRADFORD BARROVVS, B. S., CURATOR OF THE IVIUSEUINI. fljf. 82 Churnl Sf. ABRAM WINEGARDNER HARRIS, M. A., INSTRUCTOR IN I-IIs'roRv AND POLITICAL ECONOMY. fs 5. an 82 charm Sf. WILLIS KIMBALL STETSON, III. A., LIBRARIAN. fLI'b7'lZ7'j', 21 IV. C. . ELMER TRUESDELL MERRILL, B. A., TUTOR IN LATIN. 18 N. C. HERBERT WILLIAM CONN, PH. D., INSTRUCTOR IN BIOLOGY. C46 N. CJ 120 High St. , ELIAS HERSHEY SNEATH, B. D., INSTRUCTDR IN MENTAL PHILOSOPHY. 106 Iizgyh St. HENRY SEELEY NVHITE, B. A., TUTOR IN MATHEMATICS AND REGISTRAR. 22 N. C. ELBERT VVILLIAM ROCKWOOD, B. S., ASSISTANT IN CHEMISTRY. 75 Hzlgk St. I 1 ' I . . , , FREDERICK SHENSTONE WOODS, B. A., ASSISTANT IN PI-Ivsxcs. . el 17 0. H. 4 C125 Qg1:Z9yY:':f?QTf'WyS2g 'w5'-:-:ws:.:'Ww,:.vWQ--,.Wx,...y.v.,,.,,,,...,, ,.,,, , , , , 5- rg? QQ 2 Q 4 by :' wg: Q-5:1 - Q 'A Q., fy 5w3 ffwy wy' 745' -Wx-vw R- -Z Q- -Z Q-.:WN,.., Q...,.,...W,...,, V .,,.,..,,, ,.,.,,,Q W ,. ., W .7 v,,,,q,Q.,,0 w,.,.,,.N.,.:.,, . X ' '- If -A A - 1, -.x 1. 1.1.x ls-.x A xx 1. .6 1.- xx lf. Avo. LA4. UGG. .60. ANA, .641 .'S0..I,b0,:. xbblvi-2150. Ri I1 I Z
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Page 20 text:
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9 , r' ., .. ., . - -z-: If-vw-N1-V4fp-QQ:-:fav1-wo's--:-:W -W N-1-:we 9 , , ,.,,, vw, .. , ..,., c...,, N- --1 X-' ff X- ws ws. we as vs, .vw ds.: WW. Vi- -Q fd- 9--. ,O .. O O 6 -, X---., i--- X--,--, ---, - --, 1-J X fs as .fx A - A fs, . , , . Q .. Q 9 l v X, Vx, ,.v. X .W ,.c,,, X-,,,,.X,,.,.c, 3' S Q ey hy Z3 ' Zf Z3 ay Z3 Z5 Z3 05 S Q 'L sh Q' gy wg- gy gy,-,.Qy,r.',,sM,...s 0, :-.Q 0.--me 4,-mo: Neo:-2-A -as4:-:-:-gsm:-ma.-:-:-is .., ., tw -N, 1 . - Z. .sh .sw 'sm .sn .Aa so, .sm so, so, so, so. sm .sn sh . . ,X , . 1 , . i l R A in 1 i ,. 1 l i 1 l' 1 il i .I 1 , l 1, . i ,IQ ,N 1 .Tlx , ?.g..,.u: ,0 :ef X-1 exclusiveness natural to men of high sense of honor and conscious intellect- ual power, by which his associates felt themselves repelled. But, as the years passed on, he grew in gentleness and sympathy. In Freshman year he was admired, in Senior year he was loved. As a minister of the gospel, he was remarkable for his conscientious fidelity to every department of his work. Some men are simply preachers, others are pastors, others are ecclesiastical organizers. Westgate was all of these. He left his Churches stronger and better than he found them-more thoroughly furnished for Christian living and for church Work. As a preacher, he was simple, practical, instructive. He avoided the fanciful and the spec- ulative, and held the attention of his heaters to those great truths which are the basis of right living. He lacked, indeed, the luxuriance of imagination and the warmth of feeling which are essential elements of the highest grade of genuine eloquenceg and he was above the conceits and tricks of spurious oratory. But he was a preacher whose exposition of Scripture was always clear and scholarly, whose thought was always manly and vigorous, and whose style was always dignified, elegant, and impressive. The years of his professorship in Wesleyan University, though the resist- less progress of fatal disease made them years of most pathetic disappoint- ment, were yet years of most brilliant success. It was evident from the beginning that Professor Westgate had found his true calling. His clearness of thought and expression made him a remark- ably nne lecturer. His enthusiasm for truth, and for truth in the concrete forms of human life, gave an intense vitality to his discussions alike of the history of the past and of the social problems of the present. His depart- ment rapidly became one of the most popular in the College. His elective classes were thronged with earnest students. Manifestly, also, if life and strength had continued, his reputation was destined to extend beyond the body of students whom he immediately addressed. The fruit of some of his pro- found and earnest study would doubtless soon have appeared in contributions of solid and permanent value to the literature of his department. Prof. Westgate's services to the College were by no means confined to the work done in his own lecture-room. His deep interest in the Institution, his broad and liberal appreciation of all departments of educational work, and his remarkable soundness of judgment, made him a most influential and use- ful counselor in the general administration of the College. But, when he came to Middletown in 1880, the hand of death was already upon him. And those years of growing success in his work were years of gradually but steadily increasing weakness. The most vivid recollection of Prof. Westgate in the minds of his colleagues and his students is that of the heroic patience with which he did his work in the last year of his life. The CI-0 ,,,,,,, ,, t J,w',1bdii'.Q4i1i1SOLz, , i lil 1 ll 1 il l , , Q fgrz.-1,Wy-'i'oy-uve.we-we was Wa- .WW ., ,, ,, X, ,, X. ., . , . , , ,V , ,A-.fs fx ,fy as as vw--,vt-WX.,f, tal., N. . ,,., . ., V... X.,,, .,,, . ., ..., 0 0 0 Q 0 sov4s4s4vvv00QQ, sfsfxovfvfxa soscfsfss-,sf .+4,r,.s.o:i-:sac-4Q4-I-N4mfv--Q--9 Q 'O 10 4 'Q T-' Q -Q 48' 05x03 03 vjis-Z3 ZQ'2s we'-9SfZS'WS'Z'S'-WS' M M.. ,,..4..,. ,..,. ,vit ,,. 3. , I ' - V. -. .-: ,- .. -, '. N X 1 X f .x f sauna .,s,a,..,s.a.,.s.a,..s.0,,,,,s,a,,,N,Z,,. V. V-. V' V.,-N, .-.- -H0 +1 0--:RQ Q-.M-O,-:vz-:--0----. Q:-:Z we .A .h,.CA.a1.,A. ff. .-CA. ff. . .A . A.-.',Q.M.-.-.Q.h.'. .Q,Za-.S.6.':.0.Z.f.-.Q.M3-.-.lb.41.-.'.Q!1.'.'.S.Z.-.-lQ.4
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