Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA)

 - Class of 1897

Page 17 of 204

 

Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 17 of 204
Page 17 of 204



Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

9 George H. kite, S. B., . . Professor of Civil Engineering. Professor White is one of the four members of the Faculty who graduated from Worcester Tech. He engaged in civil engineering work, in 1869, for Mr. W. P. Granger, then of Worcester, who subsequently was appointed chief engineer of the Hoosac Tunnel. Later, Professor White went with him to New York State, where he was engaged on the Adirondack Railroad. He then returned to Worces¬ ter, and entered Tech in advanced standing with the Class of ’73. He left in 1872, however, and engaged in engineering work in Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and Minnesota. Returning to Tech, in 1875, he took up the Senior studies with ’76, being at the same time tutor in field practice. He graduated in 1876, and then returned to Minnesota, where he engaged in railroad work until 1884, when he was appointed Professor of Civil Engineering at the W. P. I. Professor White is a very thorough instructor. Levi L. Conant, Ph.D., . . Associate Professor of Mathematics. Professor Conant graduated from Dartmouth with the Class of ’79. The following year he taught at Cottage City. The next three years he spent in High School work at Mankato, Minn., and Elkhart, Ind. For four years he was Superintendent of Schools in Deadwood and Rapid City, S. D., and for three years was Professor of Mathematics in the State School of Mines in South Dakota. He then came East, and took post-graduate work at Clark University during 1890 and 1891. Professor Conant received the degree of A. M. from Dartmouth, in 1887, and the degree of Ph.D. from Syracuse University, in 1892. He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a member of the New York Mathematical Society. Pro¬ fessor Conant has always taken an active interest in athletics, and during training or contest, he is sure to be seen, giving advice, or shouting encouragement to the athletes. George H. Hayne.s, Ph.D., Professor of History and Economics. Dr. Haynes is another Amherst alumnus, receiving his diploma with the Class of 1887. From Amherst he came to Tech, and taught here from 1887 to 1890. He then took a course at Johns Hopkins, where he received his degree of Ph.D., in 1893. Returning, he was tendered the chair of History and Economics, in which capacity we had the pleasure of knowing him. Dr. Haynes has contrib¬ uted many valuable articles to the scientific journals on topics in American history and politics. We did not espec¬ ially admire studying “ Bryce,” but aside from that, enjoyed our course with him.

Page 16 text:

s Alonzo S. Kimlall, Ph.D., . . . Professor of Physics. U. Waldo Cutler, S. B., Professor Kimball graduated from Amherst College with the Class of 1866. After leaving college he taught Mathematics in the Webster High School for four years, and in the Worcester Highland Military Academy for one year. In 1871 he entered Worcester Free Institute, as Tech was then called, as an instructor in Mathematics, In the following year he was promoted to the position of Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering. At the end of our Junior Year, however, he resigned the depart¬ ment of Electrical Engineering, and now devotes all his time to the improvement of the course in Physics. Professor Kimball is a trustee of Mount Holyoke Col¬ lege, where he frequently delivers lectures. As a lecturer he made himself very popular with the class. He has the faculty of making his statements well understood, and is another one who thoroughly enjoys telling a good joke. Professor of Modern Ivangu.ages. Professor Cutler is an alumnus of the W. P. L, having graduated in 1874. His first position as a teacher was at Brimfield, Mass., where he taught in the Hitch¬ cock High School. He next went to Holliston, where he introduced Drawing into the public schools. In 1877 he came to Tech as Assistant Professor of Modern Languages, and two years later, received leave of absence for a course of study in Germany. With the exception of one year, which he spent at Johns Hopkins University, he has been here ever since. Leonard P. Kinnicutt, S. D., . . . Professor of Chemistry. Dr. Kinnicutt graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1875. He went abroad and studied for two years at the University of Heidelberg, there coming in contact with such men as Bunsen and Heirmath. He studied further in Organic Chemistry at Bonn University. After his return to the United States he studied at the Johns Hopkins University, and later went to Cambridge to become private assistant to Dr, Gibbs. He was granted the degree of S. D. by Harvard in 1881. He came to the Tech in 1883 as Assistant Professor of Chemistry, and in 1885 was made Professor. The Chemists have seen a good deal of the Doctor, but to most of us he is remembered chiefly by the course of lectures he delivered us during our Freshman Year.



Page 18 text:

10 Wal ' ier L. Jennin(;s, Ph.I),, . . Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Dr. Jennings is a graduate of Harvard, having received his A, B. in 1889. He then took three years of graduate work, also at Harvard, and received his Ph.D. in 1892. Following this, he studied at Berlin and Heidel¬ berg for two years and, returning to this country, he came to the Tech as a member of the Faculty. We were under Dr. Jennings’s care during two courses, one in Mineralogy and one in Metallurgy, and the Doctor was a general favorite. Zelotes W. Coombs, A. M., . Assistant Professor of Modern Languages. Professor Coombs is another son of Amherst, having graduated from that college a year after Dr. Haynes, in 1888. After graduation, he taught one year at Brooklyn Tech. He then went to the University of Virginia, both as a student and an instructor. From there he came to Tech in 1890, filling the position of President’s Clerk and instructor in the languages. In 1894 he went abroad for a year’s study at the University of Berlin, and upon his return was made Assistant Professor of Modern Lan¬ guages, which position he now holds. Professor Coombs has always taken an active interest in the w ' elfare of the various student organizations, and doubtless owes his popularity to this fact. His speech before the entire student body in the interests of the Athletic Association, during our Junior Year, stands, we believe, without a parallel in Tech history, both as an example of oratory and because of the happy financial result. Sidney A. Reeve, M. E., Adjunct Professor of Steam and Hydraulic Phigineering. Professor Reeve graduated from the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University in 1887, and in 1889 received the degree of M. E. He went to New York and was connected for a short time with Westinghouse, Church, Kerr ; Co., as a member of their corps of engineers. Later, he was called to a position on the editorial staff of the Progressive - gz’, a paper devoted to the gas industry. He came to ' I ' ech a year and a half ago, and has conducted our courses in Steam and Hydraulics. Professor Reeve was chosen most popidar professor by the Class of ' 97. He has been for some months working on the design and construction of a new gas engine, which is to be a radical departure from any existing type. We wish him the best of success in this enter¬ prise.

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