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 13 text:
“
A Rare Day in une T VVAS a rare day in june. Groups of descendants of settlers from Old Virginia and the Carolinas were assembled in the shady nooks of a public square. Some of them were lillkillg, others pitching horseshoes and playing checkers. No finer Anglo- Saxon stock ever settled and prospered than these cultured few of that inland town. No railroad disturbed their customs or their sleep. The o11ly route of travel leading out was a11 old, well-worn turnpike, but not milllj' had traveled tl1at to the big outside where tl1e wild geese stay. They had lived among themselves and k11ew everybody from Barren river to Bear VVallow, so when a tall, virile young man appeared among them, conversation lagged and the games grew less tense. Ambition, necessity and the self-confidence of the stranger, and thc educational needs of Glasgow, Kentucky, had brought him there to establish a school. Soon the more important of the several groups were listening to the animated plans of A. VV. Mell that rare june day in 1874. He wanted only a little, but he wanted that little very much and he got it. He had three or four dollars and borrowed a few more. He found an old abandoned structure. Then and there started the Southern Normal School and Business College with only dreams and schemes for its foundation and its future. It was an exemplification of Mark Hopkins on one end of a log and a boy on the other except a good, fresh log would have been more inviting than the uncomforta- ble building. Then and there education was on a11 elective and selective basis with no thought of democratizing it. Such 11eeds! Such students! Such a teacher! These three remarkable factors produced transcendent results. In ten years a larger environment was imperative. Glas- gow failed to furnish it. Bowling Green did. So ill 1884, the faculty and student-body came to the Park City and found adequate shelter in a' building on College street. Mell and VVilliams were the proprietors. The reputation of the aggressive institution spread to Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Texas, Louisiana and Arkan- sas. Faculty, courses and student-body grew in size and importance. Some of those educated here in tl1at early day were Peterman, the authorg McQuistian, the surgeon, Black, the lawyer, Norris, the governor, Hull, the' Congressman, Alexander, the teacher. But the two leaders sur- rendered their charge. lt became weak and straggling, as forlorn as the nest from whence the birds have departed. A worn building, an exhausted treasury Qthere never was onej, a di- minishing reputation-simply a shadow of former days. A marvelous thing occurred. Rather a marvelous man appeared. He came not as a prophet from another land, not even as a stranger with a stranger's power to impress, but he came from down the river, Illl ilOlll'lS journey or so. He came in a slow wagon, unheralded and unsung. But he came a11d he stayed and his coming marked an epoch in the life of Bowling Green and the educational history of the South. It was in 1892 when 27-year-old, moneyless H. I-I. Cherry started with the shadow of what had been a school, and in 1893 the second great money panic of the United States blighted the plans of men, great and small. The Bowling Green Business College and Literary Institute was a11 actuality in spite of panic, poverty or pessimism. Low spirit became high, proud spiritg poverty was not embarrassing, for all were poor together. In- spiring leadership and teachers who knew their work and loved it, and students who worked until one and two o'clock in the morning to ac last retire and dream the answer, all drew more stu- dents from North and South. YVhen the rooms were bursting with numbers, fire destroyed the main building and the stu- dents were assembled in the four corners of the city where vacant rooms might be had. Through weeks of deepest discouragement that ever passed over an institution, plans were made for ex- pansion and the building was restored and other buildings erected. Disaster became a blessing. Attendance surpassed former years. The Southern Normal School and Bowling Green Business University became the name of the two institutions under one management. Halls and rooms were crowded and another golden period was on. In 1906 there were occasional discussions about the establishment of training schools for Ken- tucky teachers. Interest grew. The General Assembly provided for two such institutions, one at I2
”
Page 12 text:
“
THE COLLEGE
”
Page 14 text:
“
W'5fOK - 5 - '3i0i4 , H014 XO 9lC.fDiOHT1'lIIX0lCIff '- '.IDlOIl ' Bowling Green and one at Richmond. The Southern Normal School became tl1e State Normal School, now VVestern Kentucky Teachers College, and the Business University was purchased by J. S. Dickey, VV. S. Ashby and J. I.. Ilarman and moved to the McCormick Building. At six o'elock on tl1e morning of July 5, 1911, fire swept a square of the city and the Business Univer- sity was in its path. At nine olclock a. m., the students were assembled for chapel in the College Street building where the institution has been ever since. Then started another period of expansion and improvement. Every forward step was re- warded by larger attendance and greater demand for its graduates. The VVorld VVar filled the institution with students, more of them young ladies than usual, and following the war still more room was necessary. The Teacher Training Course, introduced almost accidentally, became so generally recognized-through tl1e states so rapidly making tl1e teaching of business a part of their high school work-that this pioneering in the field of education grew to be recognized from every quarter of tl1e United States. Accreditment was a necessity and private business colleges had never enjoyed sucl1 a recogni- tion. The lfniversitv of Kentucky was called into conference. Result: Junior College in the field of business. The State institution seemed pleased with the experiment and four years later suggested that the Business University try for Senior College standing. It tried. It succeeded. By this a chapter was started in the history of education in America. ln 1921 Mr. Dickey passed away. Ilis going took one of tl1e most virile, brilliant and radiantly charming men Kentucky ever possessed. As evidence of his high worth and tl1e esteem in which he was held, there stands at his grave Il handsome granite stone bearing the following inscription: An educator forty-three years. At his death President of tl1e Bowling Green Business University. . A courageous, humorous man of mature scholarship, rare personality and cl1arm- ing graces, a popular public speaker, a successful school proprietor, a virile citi- zen, a Christian leader and teacher who reproduced himself many times in tl1e lives of the tl1ousands who sat at his feet. lirected by his grateful students wl1o revere his memory and treasure l1is example. J. Murray Hill, a young man of force and worth, came into the management. It was a rare day in June, 1874. Tl1is is a rare day in june, 1929. Fifty-five years l1ave passed. VVith their passing has gone only one of the leading, active spirits of the Business Uni- versity. The tall, vital young stranger of the June day of '74, is yet tall and vital, but not so l' ' B l' Creen. On that Glasgow day long ago was started something the t 'H young. lIe ivesin ow ing 1 spiritual value of which cannot be measured by research and survey. From that 'exemplx ea- tion of Mark I-Iopkins on one end of a log a11d a boy on the other, has grown VVestern Ken- tucky Teachers College with an annual enrolltnent of four thousand students, with Dr. Cherry still at its head. Three squares removed, in the heart of the residential section of beautiful Bowling Gt'een, is the Business University and College of Commerce with its fifteen hundred students annually from all the states and a few foreign countries, with its accreditment and far-fiung reputation for training for the office, the counting room and the classroom, and back of it, to add to its prestige. give encouragement to its advances, send it students and engage its output are hundreds of America's most prominent business men and scholars, who proudly proclaim tl1eir allegiance to the institution that gave them technical training, inspiration and stronger character. Ashby, Harman and Hill, with hopeful ambition, are still leading on. In the life of the Business University, it is still a rare day in June. F3 XOR KOH 'i liOK ,,, .XO Ok i?l0K HOF HOK
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.