TABLE OF CONTENTS


Descriptive Summary

Historical Note

Collection Overview

Restrictions

Online Catalog Headings

Administrative Information

Detailed Description of the Collection

Guide to the Alumni Council Collection of Recollections, 1939 - 1946


Special Collections and Archives
Olin Library
Wesleyan University
252 Church Street
Middletown, CT 06457 USA
(860) 685-3864
(860) 685-2661
Email: sca@wesleyan.edu
URL: http://www.wesleyan.edu/libr/schome/

Descriptive Summary

Repository Special Collections & Archives, Wesleyan University
Creator Wesleyan University (Middletown, Conn.)
Title Alumni Council Collection of Recollections,
Dates 1939 - 1946
Linear Feet 0.5
Archival Boxes 1
Abstract After the Wesleyan centennial celebration in 1931, a few alumni began documenting their memories of Wesleyan. In 1939, the Alumni Council set up a Committee on the Collection of Recollections, which canvassed alumni for memories of faculty and anecdotes about Wesleyan history.
This collection contains anecdotes written by Wesleyan alumni from the classes of 1859 to 1936. Major topics include their experiences with former Wesleyan professors, pranks performed with their classmates, the burning of North College in 1906, and the arrival of women on campus in 1872.
Call Number 1000-84
Location For current information on the location of these materials, please consult Special Collections & Archives staff.
Language of Material Material in English

Historical Note

After the Wesleyan centennial celebration in 1931, a few alumni began documenting their memories of Wesleyan. In 1939, the Alumni Council set up a Committee on the Collection of Recollections, which canvassed alumni for memories of faculty and anecdotes about Wesleyan history. These were to be preserved in the archives and were considered for publication in the Alumnus. After receipt and consideration they were sent to Olin Library.

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Collection Overview

This collection contains anecdotes written by Wesleyan alumni from the classes of 1859 to 1936. Major topics include their experiences with former Wesleyan professors, pranks performed with their classmates, the burning of North College in 1906, and the arrival of women on campus in 1872. Some sample reminscences:

Herbert L. Connelly, class of 1909: The frequenters of the front porches of Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Delta Phi, Eclectic, and Psi Upsilon after many and sundry observations during a period extending over month and even years finally came to the brilliant conclusion that Professor Armstrong, while en route from his home to Fisk Hall, had developed a custom, either consciously or unconsciously, of telegraphing to the world his plans of the ensuing class session. It was all a question of what clothes and decorations the Professor had on as he passed these hot beds of research. Hundreds of observations had proved to these young savants beyond all peradventure of a doubt that "Army's" plan to give a lecture or hold a recitation were indicated as follows:

Dark Coat, lights trousers, and jewelry across the vest = Lecture

Light Coat, dark trousers, and no jewelry across the vest = Recitation

The students planned accordingly.

M. Eugene Culver, class of 1875: I do not wish to close these rambling recollections without speaking of the first girls who came to college. My class of '75, of course, entered in 1871, but in 1872 the first co-eds were entered in college. There were four of them: Jennie Larned, Phebe Almeda Stone, Hannah Ada Taylor and Angie Villette Warren. I used to feel sorry for them because they could not join any of the fraternities, and have the pleasure that the rest of us enjoyed. They roomed somewhere on William Street and used to go parading up the College walks to recitations two by two. All I could thing of was the old song about Noah building an ark and "put in the animals two by two, the elephant and the kangaroo." They were good scholars, all of them. Jennie Larned, the youngest girl, from Tennessee, who used to wear her hair flowing down her back in very luxuriant style, reminded me of a Shetland pony with his mane hanging down. As I recall it, she came nearest to having the highest marks of anybody in the class, but I believe that George Coleman exceeded her by a small margin. All of the other girls made Phi Beta Kappa, and Phebe Stone got first grade, the same as Jennie Larned. Co-education was not popular with our class. Some of the boys were very outspoken with reference to it; but one of them, Leonard L Beeman, married Phebe Almeda Stone. He afterwards became a minister and went to Vermont. It was currently reported that, if he was indisposed when Sunday came, Phebe Almeda went into the pulpit and preached for him.

Nelson C. Hubbard, class of 1892: Anyone who was in college when Woodrow Wilson was there will remember his interest in the football team and his habit of carrying a wrapped umbrella which he used as a cane. In those days sparring ability served linesmen in good stead, and we were not always able to measure up to the quality with which our much larger opponents would be equipped. Those were the days, by the way, when signals were given, not in numbers but in phrases, and when one of our most energetic and efficient rushers, on receiving the ball, would automatically stop, throw his cap on the ground, and then proceed bareheaded on his diligent way. The first time I ever saw Woodrow to know him was at a football game, when he was excitedly marching up and down opposite the line-up, and when his uncapped fellow was slugged and knocked flat, he completely lost his temper, flourished his umbrella-cane in the air, and loudly yelled, "Kill him! Kill him!" I remembered this a good many years later when he was scheduled to address the New York Wesleyan alumni group on "Peace" or some such matter, and I planned to attend and confront him with his record, but was unable to go.

Collection Arrangement

Materials are arranged alphabetically according to last name of the alumni.

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Restrictions

Access Restrictions

No restrictions.

Copyright Notice

Copyright for Official University records is held by Wesleyan University; all other copyright is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.

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Online Catalog Headings

These and related materials may be found under the following headings in online catalogs.

Coeducation--Connecticut--Middletown.
Wesleyan University (Middletown, Conn.)--Alumni and alumnae.
Wesleyan University (Middletown, Conn.)--Buildings.
Wesleyan University (Middletown, Conn.)--Faculty.
Wesleyan University (Middletown, Conn.)--History.
Wesleyan University (Middletown, Conn.)--Students.

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Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

[Identification of item], Alumni Council Collection of Recollections, Collection #1000-84, Special Collections & Archives, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT, USA.

Acquisitions Information

Transferred from the Alumni Council between 1939 and 1946.

Processing Information

Processed by Anna Martin, March 2009

Encoded by Valerie Gillispie, March 2009

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Detailed Description of the Collection

Students are listed along with their year of graduation. An "n" before the year indicates that the student did not graduate.
Box Folder
1 1 General file
Alumni and topic index, letters of receipt, and original petition.
2 Two unidentified submissions, classes of 1901 and early 1890s
3 Adams, Charles Collard, 1859
4 Barton, Arthur Willis, n1902
6 Bennett, Sanford T., 1910
5 Blaine, Edward L., 1886
7 Blichfeldt, Emil H., 1909
8 Buschek, Hermannus Augustus, 1901
9 Butler, Charles E., 1922
10 Chase, O.H., 1908
11 Chasey, Joseph W., 1907
12 Clarke, John S., 1907
13 Coffin, Seward V., 1889
14 Connelly, Herbert L, 1909
15 Crooks, Thomas R., 1889
16 Culver, M Eugene, 1875
17 Douglas, Edward C., Middletown resident
18 Field, Edwin A, 1907
19 Frost, Philip, 1902
20 Galloway, Franklin A., 1892
21 Gardiner, George W., 1889
22 Goodrich, Charles G., 1893
23 Gray, Edward, 1908
24 Hartman, Lee F., 1901
25 Heermans, Harry C., 1875
26 Henshaw, John R., n1890
27 Hubbard, Nelson C., 1892
28 Leffingwell, Alsop, 1880
29 Lewis, Carroll H., n1917
30 Martin, William Wallace, 1874
31 Matton, Wilbur R., 1899
32 McConaughy, James L. Jr., 1936
33 Miller, Floyd J., 1907
34 Noble, Francis O., 1917
35 Opdyke, George H., 1890
36 Paine, John Gregg, 1909
37 Partch, Arthur W., 1889
38 Price, Carl F., 1902
39 Pruden, A. Sears, 1914
40 Richards, Theodore, 1888
41 Robins, Joshua L., 1906
42 Saxe, Alfred J., n1894
43 Selden, Leonard J., 1908
44 Shelden, Warren F., 1899
45 Smith, Clarence R., 1899
46 Stevenson, Jesse F., 1885
47 Storrs, Carlos H., 1887
48 Sutherland, Arthur E., 1885
49 Trundle, Henry C., 1921
50 Upham, Francis B., 1885
51 Van Denburg, Joseph K., 1895
52 White, Henry Aldebert, 1904
53 Wilding, Clinton F., 1909
54 Woodruff, Wesley E., 1887