Hollinger Corp. pH8.5 F52>\i L Naaljmlb, Qlmn. Jffoun&rft IBfifi- ^matpamtth ISBZ. FISK MEMORIAL CHAPEL. Am^rtratt Mtsatnttarg KBBacmtxon, 287 Fourth Avenue, New York, N. Y. /^\^ \^\^ ^ Gitt ^4JI'07 , piSK univ:rrsity aft:^r thirty-nin:^ Y:eARS. BY REV. J. G. MERRILL, D.D., PRESIDENT. Fisk University was founded by the American Missionary Associ- ation in 1866. It was cradled in the army barracks that had been abandoned by the Federal army. It received its name from Gen. Clinton B. Fisk, who, at the time, was stationed at Nashville to close out United States Government af- fairs. At the very first, Chaplain Cravath, who was the President of Fisk for more than twenty-five years, announced that the insti- tution would afford to the colored }^outh all the education they would show themselves able to acquire and make use of. This policy time has amply vindicated. It soon became evident that the institution must find a new and per- manent site. Fort Gillam, in the northwestern part of the city, was the location chosen. It is a com- manding position and with its thirty-five acres of land affords an ideal campus. But how were the buildings to be erected ? Prof. George E. White solved the problem by sending out a company of Jubilee Singers, as he christened them. They sang in all the northern States, in the British Isles, and on the continent of Europe. They were gone seven years and brought back to Fisk $150,000, with which Jubilee Hall was builded, the balance due on the campus was paid, and the institution gained an international reputation. '■■ Since these early days the school has moved forward with an even, constant growth. There are now upon its campus eight substantial, nearly all, commodious buildings. Its property is valued at $350,000. It has an incipient endowment of about $60,000. It catalogues over 500 students, of all grades, from the primary school, which is utilized as a "practice" school for the Normal Department, to the College De- partment, which last year enrolled nearly 100. During its existence Fisk has sent out nearly 500 graduates from its Normal and College Departments. It keeps a close tally of its REV. JAMES G. MERRILL, D.D. President of Fisk University. FISK UNIVERSITY AFTER THIRTY-NINE YEARS. •'--•■^iiiji *^* • JUBILEE HALL. Alumni, and is able to show that its graduates are working along the lines that they have been educated to follow to a larger extent than is true of institutions of like grade, north or south, where the student body is made up of Caucasians. The reason for this is apparent to those who recognize the inevitable working of the law of supply and demand. The vocations for which the Normal and College courses fit are not overcrowded in the case of the colored graduate, the demand for his services is far in excess of the supply, and must be for years to come. The social conditions of the South, separating the Negro from the Caucasian, afford the Negro an opportunity among his own that would have been denied him had he to come in competition with the educated white man. As teacher, doctor, lawyer, dentist, drug- gist, business man, educated farmer and clergyman, he cannot fail to secure a livelihood, and an opportunity to become a leader with large following. To read each year the revised roster of Fisk graduates is ample justification of the far-sighted statesmanship of its founders. The curriculum of Fisk is such that its graduates from the College FISK UNIVERSITY AFTER THIRTY-NINE YEARS. Department are admitted as post-graduates at Yale and Harvard with- out examination, and, in more instances than one, those who have en- tered the professional schools of Harvard and Yale have led their classes. The chief aim at Fisk, however, is not scholarship. Manhood is its goal. Christian men and women are its product. It is the pur- pose of the Faculty to send forth no one who is unworthy of confi- dence or incapacitated to be a leader of those who have never had the opportunities afforded at Fisk. As looking toward this end Fisk University has not to any large extent adopted the elective system. It recognizes the fact that the student body has not the advantage of scholastic training in high grade preparatory schools, and does not come from homes where the THE CLASS OF ig04 AND PROFS. TALLEY AND WATERMAN. parents can decide upon the courses of study best adapted to their sons and daughters. The curriculum is, in the main, prescribed by the Faculty, and is arranged so as to give a well-balanced training such as will afford a secure foundation for professional study, particu- larly for the teacher. Those College students who purpose to become teachers, moreover, have an opportunity in Junior year to take a course in Pedagogy and practice-teaching instead of German. As the years go by the Normal Department is made stronger. It FISK UNIVERSITY AFTER THIRTY-NINE YEARS. now covers five years instead of four, peculiar emphasis having been laid upon the study of English, and each year the examinations in this department are more rigid. Drill under the eye of the principal of the Pedagogical school as- sists the young practice-teacher in handling classes and imparting instruction. Quite naturally, the number of graduates in this department is fewer than when the requirements were less, but the fact that the Negro common school in the South constantly demands a higher .