"^t ■-'yy. ^ 4:f ':^V1 - 5y V . .< . t.; #.' ^^^: *^;1^ >: ■«:' ••-■;,T> ., 'C' O^- . V .0. '=^-/*«.A'^\\\'' <- -^. ^^ <^^ ^ / c"--,^-../'-'-^-'^ *. .-:v^ A^^ C " ^ ^x^^'\. -^^ ^^> <'. ^ •x' '^^^MK- '^.c^' .^^ /f^^ ^i' \^^ S "> 'A \0 "t <- ./ -% c s ft <• ^ ^^ .0^ /. ^t.^ ^^^ ^ ^- ,o-' ^' " ^^ % •^ .0^ ^^. ^ 7,\-^x^' Hamilton College. INAUGURATION •OF- President Stryker, January 17, 1893. THE INAUGURATION OF Melancthon Woolsey Stryker, D. D., LL D. AS THE Ninth President of Hamilton College, IN THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, CLINTON, N. Y. ON Tuesday, January 17, 1893. Published by the Trustees. UTICA, N. Y.: L. C. CHILDS & SON, PRINTERS. 1893. v^>: ^ \% "No GREAT HISTORY OF OUR GOVERNMENT CAN BE WRIT- TEN WHICH DOES NOT MAKE THIS STATE OF NEW YORK ITS CENTRAL POINT. AS THIS TRUTH SHALL BE IMPRESSED UPON OUR PEOPLE, NOT ONLY WILL THE INTEREST IN THE CHARAC- TER OF SAMUEL KIRKLAND INCREASE, BUT THE COLLEGE HE FOUNDED AS A MEANS OF EDUCATION TO THE INDIAN, AS WELL AS THE WHITE MAN, WILL BE REGARDED AS A MEMORIAL OF A RACE WHICH AT ONE TIME HELD DESPOTIC RULE OVER A REGION GREATLY EXCEEDING THE UNITED TERRITORIES OF FRANCE AND BRITAIN. THE RELATIONSHIP OF ITS FOUNDER TO THE LONG LINE OF MISSIONARIES, WHO FOR A CENTURY LABORED WITH SAVAGE TRIBES IN DANGER AND SUFFERING, WILL GIVE TO TliE COLLEGE A SACREDNESS IN ITS RELIGIOUS ASPECT. IT WILL NOT BE MERELY A MEMORIAL OF THE PAST, FOR IT FITTINGLY CROWNS THE RANGE OF HILLS FROM WHICH FLOW THE RIVERS THAT BIND TOGETHER OUR UNION WITH SILVER BANDS. IT OVERLOOKS VALLEYS ONCE TRAVELLED BY ARMIES IN WAR, WHICH ARE THE CHANNELS OF COMMERCE IN PEACE, AND WHICH WILL BE IN THE FUTURE WHAT THEY HAVE BEEN IN THE PAST, THE PATHWAYS OF GREAT EVENTS." HORATIO SEYMOUR. NEW YORK PUBL. LIBR, IN SXCHAN9V. V INTRODUCTORY. AT a special meeting of the trustees of Hamilton Col- lege, held on Thursday, August 25, 1892, Professor North made the report of the Nominating Committee for fill- ing the vacanc}^ created by the death of President Henry Darling. In accordance with the report of this committee, the Rev. Dr. Melancthon Woolsey Stryker, then pastor of the Fourth Presbyterian Church in Chicago, was unani- mously elected as the ninth President of Hamilton College. Dr. Horace B. Silliman, Professor North and Charles L. Stone Esq., were appointed a committee to inform Dr. Stryker of his election. At a subsequent meeting of the trustees, held on Thurs- day, September 15, 1892, Professor North presented Dr. Stryker's acceptance of his election to the presidency. On motion of Dr. Silliman it was unanimously Resolved, That the trustees of Hamilton College welcome most heartily and gratefully Dr. Stryker's acceptance of his election to the presidency, and pledge their hearty and earnest efforts to provide all needed funds for making his administration a brilliant chapter of progress and pros- perity in the history of Hamilton College. The Executive Committee were empowered to make ar- rangements for the inauguration of President Stryker on such day as should be found to be suitable and convenient. Dr. Stryker having resigned the pastorate of the Fourth Presbyterian Church in Chicago, entered upon the duties of the presidency November 10, 1892. The inauguration of President Stryker was solemnized on Tuesday afternoon, January 17, 1893, ii^ the Presby- 4 HAMILTON COLLEGE. terian Church in Clinton, before a very large audience of alumni, students, citizens and guests. The following was the ORDRR or EXERCISES, The Rev. Chancellor A. J. UPSON, D. D., LL.D., Presiding, I. Music, - - By Rath's Utica Orchestra. II. Reading of the Scriptures, By the Rev. Professor J. Arthur Jones. III. Opening Address, - By the Rev. Chancellor Upson, IV. Prayer, - By the Rev. George B. Spalding, D. D, V. Music, - - By Rath's Utica Orchestra. VI. Address of Induction, with Presentation of the College Charter and Seal, By the Hon. Theodore M. Pomeroy, A. M. VII. Inaugural Discourse, By the Rev. President M. Woolsey Stryker, D. D., LL.D. VIII. Hymn of Welcome, Led by Chorus of Undergradutes. IX. Addresses of Fellowship, By Trustee Charles A. Hawley, A. M., Rev. Professor Arthur S. Hoyt, A. M., and Mr. Charlls R. LaRue, of the Senior Class. X. Announcements, - - By President Stryker. XI. College Song, - By Undergraduates of the College. XII. Ken's Doxology, in Long Metre. XIIL The Benediction, - By President Stryker. XIV. Music, - - By Rath's Utica Orchestra, INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT STRYKER. HYA\N or WELCOA\E. Tune — Ward. With grace to choose the Bible's creed, And follow it in word and deed, .Straight on thro good report and ill, God bless our Mother on the Hill. II. To be a shield when armies fail, A beacon light when storms assail, Thro days of darkness hoping still, God help our Mother on the Hill. III. With sons devout, in battle brave To serve the Church, our land to save, With ranks that wait their Leader's will, God bless our Mother on the Hill. IV. Then welcome friends with helping hands. And welcome lore from distant lands ; Thrice welcome Leader, toil and drill. With Blessed Mother on the Hill. O HAMILTON COLLEGE. GUESTS or THE OCCASION. THE following is an attempted list of alumni and friends of the college whose presence added greatly to the inter- est of the occasion: Dr. M. M. Bagg, '36, Yale, Utica; Prof. Edward North, '41, College Hill ; Hon. Theodore M. Pomeroy, '42, Auburn ; Rev. Chancellor A. J. Upson, '43^ Glens Falls ; Rev. Dr. David A. Holbrook, '44, Sing Sing • Arnon G. Williams, '45, Westmoreland ; Publius V. Rogers, '46, Utica ; Dr. Horace B. Silliman, '47, Un. , Cohoes ; Benjamin B. Snow, '50, Auburn ; Rev. Dr. T, B. Hudson, '51, Clinton; Hon. Abram B. Weaver, '51,. Deerfield ; Charles C. Kingsley, '52, Utica; Hon. Millton H. Merwin, '52, Utica; Rev. E. P. Powell, '53, College Hill; Rev. Dwight Scovel, '54, Clinton ; WilKam M. White, '54, Utica; Seymour Scott, '55, Oneonta ; Rev. Dr. Oren Root, '56, College Hill ; Rev. Dr. George B. Spalding, '56, Union, Vt., Syracuse ; Dr. A. N. Brock- way, '57, New York ; Thomas D. Catlin, '57, Ottawa, 111.; Rev. Albert R. Warner, Norwich ; Charles A. Hawley, '59, Seneca Falls ; Rev. Samuel Miller, '60, Deansville ; Rev. S. D. Westfall, '60, Redwood Falls, Minn. ; John N. Beach, '61, New York City; Horace P. Bigelow, '61, Waterville ; Aaron M. Woodhull, '61, St. Louis, Mo.; Rev. Henry M. Dodd, '63, Augusta ; Charles M. Everett, '63, Clinton ; Hon. Elihu Root, '64, New York City ; Rev- Dana W. Bigelow, '65, Utica ; Rev. Dr. Luther A. Os- trander, '65, Lyons ; Rev. Prof. A. G. Hopkins, '66, Clin- ton ; Rev. Dr. Wallace B. Lucas, '66, Meridian ; Gen. Charles H. Smyth, Clinton ; Gen. Charles W. Darling,, Utica ; Rev. Dr. Charles E. Babcock, '6'] , Vernon ; Charles G. Egert, '68, Ogdensburgh ; Seabury S. Gould, '68, Seneca Falls ; Hon. John D. Henderson, '6'^, Herki- mer ; Daniel Finn, '6^,, Middletown ; Rev. J. Wilford Jacks, '68, Romulus ; Charles H. Sedgwick, '6Z, Syracuse ; Rev. Dr. Lewis R. Foote, '69, Brooklyn ; Charles H, INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT STRYKER. 7 Searle, '69, Utica ; Thomas A. Abbott, '70, St. Paul, Minn. ; Rev. Charles E. Allison, '70* Yonkers ; Frederick H. Gouge, '70* Utica ; George C. Horton, '70, Utica ; Rev. Mr. Robert L. Bachman, '71, Utica; Benjamin Rhodes, '71, Niagara Falls; Charles L. Stone, 'yi, Syracuse ; Rev. Dr. V/iUiam R. Terrett, '71, Will., Clinton; Prof. Asa G. Benedict, '72, Chnton ; Prof. H. C. G. Brandt, '72, Col- lege Hill ; Rev. Prof. Arthur S. Hoyt, '72, Auburn ; Prof. Brainard G. Smith, '72, Ithaca ; Charles H. Stanton, '72, Norwich ; Rev. Cornelius S. Storritts, '72, Rondout ; Rev. Dr. M. Woolsey Stryker, '72, College Hill ; Prof. Arthur M. Wright, '72, Waterville ; Hon. R. C. Briggs, '73, Rome; Rev. Prof. J. Arthur Jones, '73» Hamilton ; Edward D. Mathews, '73, Utica; John W. O'Brien, '73' Auburn; Rev. Eben B. Cobb, '75, Elizabeth, N. J.; Rev. William H. Allbright, ''/6, Dorchester, Mass. ; Sidney W. Petrie, '^6, Buffalo; Prof. George Griffith, 'jy, Utica; Hon. James S. Sherman, 'y^, Utica; Rev. Theodore H. Allen, '79^ Mendota, 111.; George E. Dunham, '79, Utica; Dr. F. H. Peck, '79> Clinton; William M. Griffith, '80, Utica; Rev. Silas E. Persons, '81, Cazenovia; Prof. Clinton Scollard, '81, Clinton; Fred M. Calder, '82, Utica; F. DeWolf Smyth, '82, Clinton; Rev. George K. Eraser, '83, Oneida Castle; Rev. John C. Mead, '83, Clyde; JohnD. Gary, '84, Richfield Springs; Prof. Edward Fitch, '^6, College Hill; John R. Myers, 'Sy, New York; Rev. Charles H. Walker, '^y, Chittenango; Charles B. Rogers, '87, Utica; Frank B. McLean, '88, So. Columbia; Rev. Walter Mitchell, '88, Verona; Warren D. More, '88, Auburn Theological Semi- nary; Albert R. Kessinger, '88, Rome; William M. Collier, '87, Auburn; Rev. Prof. Wilham H. Squires, '88, College Hill; Prof. Melvin U. Dodge, '90, College Hill; Joseph D. Ibbotson, Jr., Union Seminary, New York; Prof. Charles H. Smyth, Jr., Ph. D., '88 Cohimb., Clinton; Alfred A. Moore, '90, College Hill; Prof. Delos DeWolf Smyth, '90, Clinton; Thomas L. Coventry, '91, Utica; George H. Feltus, '91, Auburn Theological Seminary; James W. Fowler, '91, Watkins; Thomas E. Hayden, '91, Clinton.; 8 HAMILTON COLLEGE. Charles A. Miller, '91, Clinton; Henry P. Osborne, '91, Clinton; D. Barton Case, '92, Verona; Walter S. Couper, '92, College Hill; Harvey H. Fay, '92, Potsdam; Orville T. Fletcher, '92, Union Theological Seminary; Charles T. Ives, '92, Clinton; John P. Martin, '92, Watertown; Wil- liam P. Shepard, '92, College Hill; George F. Wood, '92, Union Theological Seminary; Hon. Thomas E. Kin- ney, Utica; Dr. Louis A. Tourtellot, Utica; Robert S. Williams, Utica; Rev. Dr. James S. Riggs, '74, Prin., Auburn; Rev. C. S. Richardson, Hob., Little Falls; Rev. Horace H. Allen, '57, Roch., Holland Patent; Rev. A. G. Markham, Oriskany Falls; Rev. W. Courtland Robinson, Prin., Clinton; Thomas H. Stryker, Hob. '68, Rome; Rev. Israel N. Terry, Amh. '71, New Hartford; Prof. George C. Sawyer, '55, Harv., Utica; John E. Myer, '6"], Will., Cana- stota; William Schachtel, Utica; Rev. W. B. Randolph, Clinton; Rev. Clarence H. Beebe, Port Byron; Dr. H. R. Hughes, Clinton; William S. Taylor, Utica; Rev. P. D. Cowan, Canastota; Dr. Conway A. Frost, Clinton; Rev. George Hardy, Sauquoit; Rev. J. S. Fitschen, jr., Water- ville; William W. Wotherspoon, New York; Henry M. Haw- ley, Utica; Thomas E. McEntee, Clarks Mills; J. J.Hanchett, Deansville; A. C. Miller, Oneida, Knox Co., Ill; Henry H. Miller, Clinton; Seth K. Blair, Clinton; T. J. Bannigan, Utica; J. J. Bassett, Leyden; T. T. Thompson, Clinton; G. MacKissam, New York; C. L. Florsheim, Shreveport, La.; Howard Cornell, East Palmyra; Consider G. Mitchell, Utica. From the class of '93: Harry C. Allen, Springwater ; James A. Ayres, Catskill ; Carroll B. Bacon, Leyden ; Joseph R. Baker, New Hart- ford ; John J. Bradley, Watertown ; Thomas C. Brockway, Clinton ; Matthew G. Buckner, Nashville, Tenn. ; Daniel W. Burke, Oxford ; Starr Cadwallader, Utica ; John G. Campbell, Clinton ; William F. Canough, Sandy Creek ; George R. Douglass, Raymondville ; Allan F. Emery, Mexico ; Thomas B. Finch, Cortland ; Charles R. La Rue, INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT STRYKER. 9 Little Falls ; Nathaniel McGiffin, Clinton ; Frank C. McMaster, Cherry Valley ; William E. Mott, Clinton ; George N. Popoff, Bansko, Macedonia ; George H. Post, Clinton ; Frederick H. Ralsten, Lowville ; Luther N. Steele, East Bloomfield ; Earle E. Woolworth, Clinton ; Alexander Wouters Clinton. From the class of '94: Edwin C. Baker, New Hartford; John N. Beach, Jr., Brooklyn ; Theodore F. Collier, Clinton ; Warren H. Everett, Penn. ; Lewis N. Foote, Brooklyn ; Cornelius J. Gibson, Clinton ; Fraud C. Goulding, Fredonia ; Warren P. Hunt, Knoxboro ; Charles E. Keck, College Hill ; David H. McMaster, Cherry Valley ; Thomas J. Mangon, Bing- hamton ; Willis N. Mills, Chicago, 111. ; James A. Minor, Deposit ; Daniel H. H. Naylor, Pulaski ; David H. New- land, Camden ; Leroy F. Ostrander, Lyons ; Arthur M. Payne, Croton ; David L. Roberts, Port Leyden ; Oren Root, Jr., College Hill; James B. Sanford, Penn Yan ; Nicholas Schmeckenbecher, Yonkers ; Aaron C. Stuart, South Howard ; Ralph W. Vincent, Verona ; John J. Ward, College Hill ; George A. Watrous, Binghamton. From the class of '95 : William A. Aiken, Auburn ; Burton M. Balch, Utica ; Herbert R. Bates, Auburn ; Ely Buell, Rochester ; Her- bert R. Burgess, Auburn ; Frank A. Burrows, Boonville ; Thomas G. Bush, Pompey ; Wallace C. Butler, Jr., St. Louis, Mo. ; James W. Carmalt, Clinton ; William W. Chambers, Utica; George Clark, jr. , Ensenora ; Frederick J. DeLaFleur, Adams ; Roy B. Dudley, Augusta ; Sehvyn C. Edgar, jr., St. Louis, Mo.; John G. Everett, Clinton ; Orlando E. Ferry, Clinton ; James H. Foster, Verona ; Joseph I. France, Canandaigua ; George H. Geer, Seneca Falls ; Charles A. Green, Dallas, Texas ; Isaac J. Green- wood, jr., New York ; Fred E. Kessinger, Rome; Willard G. Loomis, Oxford; Jay H. MacConnell, Cranford, N. J.; Friend H. Miller, Bath; Horace S. Owen, Clinton; Samuel 10 HAMILTON COLLEGE. G. Palmer, PennYan; William E. Pettit, Wilson; Anthony N. Petersen, Utica ; Arthur D. Scovel, Clinton; John B. Seymour, New Berne, N. C. ; George E. Stone, Mexico; Benjamin H. Thorp, Gilbertsville; Clarence S. Wright, Otego. From the Class of '96: Alexander Ahson Jr., Seattle, Wash.; Joseph B. Ast- wood. West Warwick, Bermuda; Plorace G. Atwater, Norfolk; Edward S. Babcock, Camden ; Carl A. Baptist, Fredonia; Hiram D. Bacon, Pultney; George A. Bates, Phelps; Hoffman T. Baumgarten, Hornellsville; Isaac L. Best, Broadalbin; Horace H. Bogue, Avon; Frank T. Budd, Equinunk, Pa.; Henry J. Cookinham Jr., Utica; George W. Elkins, Mexico; Thomas U. Chesebrough, Syracuse; Zelotus W. Commerford, Boonyille; Burr G. Eells, Walton; Wallace H. Emery, Mexico; John A. Fer- guson, Canandaigua; William E. Hewitt, Syracuse; Frank W. Holmes, Dugway; Frank P. Knowlton, Holland Patent; Louis K. R. Laird, Auburn; George L. Lerch, , Geneva; Edward McMallery, Franklin; William. F. Moore, Saratoga Springs; Alexander J. Ostrander, Lyons; Richard Owen, Utica; Charles W. Rice, Hall's Corners; Jacob S. Sies- beck, Mexico; Byron B. Taggart, Watertovv^n; Seneca C- Taylor, St. Louis, Mo; Seth N. Thomas, Moravia; Neile F. Towneer, Washington, D. C. ; Frank E. Van Wie, Howard; Harry B. Ward, Buffalo; Frederick P. Warfield, Canandaigua; Arthur Warner, Richmondville; Gardner W. Wood, Maine. The following additional guests were registered for the evening banquet in Utica: Talcott H. Camp, Trustee, Watertown ; Arnon G. Williams, '45, Westmoreland ; John M. Butler, '48, Utica;, Charles C. Kellogg, '49, Utica; Rev. Dr. C. T. Olmsted, Utica; Hon. Charles E. Fitch, Rochester; Milton H. Northrup, '60, Syracuse; Hon. Myron A. McKee, '62, Rich- field Springs; Hon. Willard A. Cobb, '64, Lockport; Haines INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT STRYKER. II D. Cunningham, '66, Albany; John H. Cunningham, '66, Utica; Judge Pardon C. Williams, Watertown; Prof. William L. Downing, '69, Utica; Rev. Charles H. VanWie, '74, Melrose; Emmett J. Ball, '/S. Utica; Dr. G. Alder Blumer, Utica; Dr. F. F. Laird, '77» Utica; Hon. James S. Sherman, 'yS, Utica; Theodore L. Cross, '81, Utica; Edmund J. Wager, '85, Utica; C. C. Benedict, Fulton; Otto A. Meyer, Utica; Dr. Smith Baker, Utica; C. S. Symonds, Utica. ANNOUNCEMENTS BY PRESIDENT STRYKER. After the addresses. President Stryker conferred the fol- lowing degrees, in accordance with a vote of the Trustees, at a meeting held just before the inauguration exercises: . A. B. EX GRATIA. William Augustus Hubbard, jr., class of 1872, Rochester. Frank S. Weigley, Class of 1875, Chicago, 111. Dr. Sewell Aldrich Brooks, Class of 1884, Strykersville. A. M. IN COURSE. Rev. Frederick Perkins, Class of 1889, Ulster, Pa. A. M. HONORARY. Henry William King,. Chicago, 111. John Newton Beach, Brooklyn. D. D. HONORARY. Rev. Professor Arthur Stephen Hoyt, Class of 1872^ Auburn Theological Seminary. L. H. D. HONORARY. Rev. Dr. Kinsley Twining, Morristown, N. J. LL. D. HONORARY. Hon. Theodore Medad Pomeroy, Class of 1842, Auburn. President Stryker further announced : I. That Gen. Charles H. Smyth, of Clinton, had b^en elected to a seat in the Board of Trustees. 12 HAMILTON COLLEGE. II. That a graduate of the college, living in New York city, had made a gift of $i,ooo for rebuilding the chapel spire. III. That Frank S. Weigley, of Chicago, had given $i,ooo for the care and improvement of the college campus. IV. That the follovv^ing resolutions had been adopted Jby the Trustees : "In view of the conclusion of the services of Prof. Edward North, L. H. D. , as acting President of Hamilton College for the period from April 21, 1891, to Novenber, 1892, the trustees would record their respectful gratitude for these services and their appreciation of that modesty, courtesy and ardor, which in this as in all other relations have endeared Prof. North to his associates and indebted to him both this corporation and his ever widening circle of friends. ''And further remembering that the coming commence- ment will mark the complete 50th year of Dr. North's service in the faculty and desiring to recognize so excep- tional a term of faithful and fruitful toil, we do hereby ap- point Messrs. Pomeroy, Joseph R. Hawley, Cochran, Brockway and Stone, to be a committee of five to deter- mine in what most suitable way the friends of Dr. North and of Hamilton College should punctuate and memorize this jubilee. We request this committee to consider whether it might not be a suitable and timely memorial of this period to found an Edward North chair of Greek, to yield an income of $2, 500 annually. But whatever may be the conclusion of this committee, we request them to re- port not only an end, but also ways and means, and to re- port at the next regular meeting of this board. " V. The trustees having heard the statement from Prof. Clinton Scollard, expressing his preference for the single de- partment of English Literature, and the further generous con- sent of Mr. Charles C. Kingsley that, upon certain condi- tions, the title of the chair of rhetoric and elocution may be changed to bear the name of Dr. Upson, further INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT STRYKER. 13- Resolved, I. That Prof. Clinton Scollard be and hereby is appointed Professor of Enghsh Literature at the salary which he is now receiving. 2. That we do hereby erect the Upson Chair of Rhetoric and Oratory, defining its full endowment to be $50,000. 3. That as a beginning toward this sum we do hereby in lieu of the $18,000 once paid in toward the Kingsley professorship instruct our treasurer to set apart to the Upson chair $1 5,000 from the Fayerweather funds. 4. That we gratefully recognize the kindness of those who by their explicit guarantees enable us at once to call an occupant to the said Upson chair. 5. That we authorize the President to present to all proper persons the claims of the Upson chair to secure subscriptions for the same. 6. That we do hereby call Prof. Brainard G. Smith, now professor in Cornell University, to become the Pro- fessor of Rhetoric and Oratory in Hamilton College, his work to begin September i, 1893, and his salary to be $2, 500 per year. There were present at the above named meeting of the Trustees, Messrs. Kingsley, Rogers, Mollison, North, C. Hawley, Hudson, Brockway, Pomeroy, Stone, Catlin, Dunham, Tompkins, White, Stryker. Having been held by storm-bound trains, there arrived later and in time for the public exercises. Trustees Root, Silliman and Spalding. Mr. Charles H. Smyth being present took his new seat with the Trustees. ADDRESS OF THE REV. ANSON J. UPSON, D. D. , LL. D. , CHANCELLOR OF THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK. GRADUATES and friends of Hamilton College. We are happy, thrice happy, to greet each other and all assembled here on this auspicious occasion. Many of us have struggled thro the snows of winter to reach this valley of peace. Yet our hearts are warm with undiminished and increasing affection for our dear ' ' mother on the hill. " God bless her ! We have come to this hallowed spot to remember ; we have come to see again in our mind's eye ' ' old familiar faces " no longer on earth. We have come to remember the revered teachers and dear college friends whom we shall love forever in the endless life. We have come hither also with undiminished and in- creasing loyalty, to express as best we may our confidence in these living teachers, many of whom have given the best years of their life to perhaps the best work in the world. We have come hither to congratulate sincerely every one of these faithful instructors, believing that the work of in- struction and training was never done better than now. As graduates and friends of the college, knowing somewhat the condition of things, we have come hither also to pre- sent our most respectful and grateful salutations to our Board of Trust — a board sometimes misunderstood, thoughtlessly, unreasonably criticised. Why ? Because, forsooth, it can- not and therefore does not create something out of nothing, and rear somehow upon yonder hill the palace of Aladdin, without Aladdin's lamp or ring to rub. We indulge in no such unreasonable fault-finding. We ask permission to assure these honored gentlemen of our respect and confi- dence, and to thank them heartily for their faithful, self- sacrificing, long-suffering service. And our gratitude shall, if possible, find expression in something more substantial INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT STRYKER. I 5 than words only. Not many of our graduates are over- burdened with gold, yet many of us shake hands every week with some millionaire who does not know what to do with his money. Some one of us certainly shakes hands each week with some rich man who dreads to be forgotten when he is dead and is willing to secure remembrance by his benefactions. From past experience, our faithful Board of Trust has a right to believe that the unexpected will happen. Let them thank God and take courage. And, my dear brethren of the alumni, we greet each other to-day. It is our "thanksgiving." Ours is one of the smaller colleges, but in the simple and impressive words of Daniel Webster, in his memorable plea before the Supreme Court of the United States, for his own Dart- mouth, ' ' Ours is a small college, but there are those who love her. " We are a small family. Perhaps we are all the more proud of the family because it is so small. Certainly we do not believe that size is the measure of power. Every short man among us is ready to affirm that Julius Caesar and Napoleon, ' ' the little corporal, " exemplify the contrary. Even the higher critics do not yet deny that St. Paul was low in stature, very diminutive. We are but a little army. Living and dead we number less than three thousand souls. Not more than two thousand could march in the ranks to- day. But we have somewhere heard — did we hear it in college .'' did our Greek professor tell us about the pass of Thermopylae and the three hundred ? The noble six hun- dred will be remembered when the great armies of the Crimea are forgotten. At the opening of our civil war, in the startling defeat at Bull Run, our huge army was scat- tered ; the big mob of spectators ran away. But one little 'compan)^ held its own, and held together and marched in good order straight back to Washington. That little com- pany was led by, captain, major, general, governor, United States senator and, best of all to-day, loyal alumnus, Joseph Roswell Hawley ! Not one of that great, defeated, disin- tegrated army at Bull Run cares to have his name remem- 1 6 HAMILTON COLLEGE bered ; but the example of obedience to orders by that Httle company at the beginning of the long drawn conflict taught an impressive lesson of self-control, and will be remembered in our history forever. The graduates of Hamilton College can easily be counted. Some of us may have feared the extinction of the family. But as we look into these bright young faces, and as we begin to count these undergraduates, these recruits, these cadets, I feel assured that the collegiate succession is not likely to fail. Many second editions are here ; many third editions, revised and corrected. To every one of these undergraduates it will be a life long incentive to know that he is a graduate of a college whose alumni are not ashamed, but are proud of her and of each other. Let us be en- thusiastic together, and let us not be ashamed of our en- thusiasm. We do take pride, as we rightly may, in our scholars, oriental and philosophical and linguistic and sci- entific ; in our very large number of teachers, theological and classical and educational, repeating successfully the lessons they have learned on yonder hill. Notwithstand- ing Mr. Carnegie's tirade against collegiate education for a business man, our more than one hundred and forty-eight merchants, and bankers, and manufacturers, and agricultur- ists are successfully contradicting every day his thoughtless and fallacious assertions. We take unselfish pride in our devoted physicians, saving the lives of the suffering ; in our lawyers and judges, righting the wrongs of the op- pressed and cheated in a score of States and cities. We glory in our one hundred editors, wielding with vitality and vigor, and if need be with vengeance, the pens they practiced with in college. We remember to-day with profound respect the great number — one-fourth of our graduates, serving their Master, not only in metropolitan pulpits and profes- sorial chairs, but in solitary mountain glens, in the cabins of the miner, and far out on the plains in the taper-lit hut of the lonely settler ; and we remember with enthusiasm those heroes of the higher life, laboring alone in a solitude, INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT STRYKER. l/ loneliest of Earth, alone among the millions who speak another language and bear a foreign name. These, our college brothers, need not, like the Cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church, robe themselves in red in order thus to symbolize their wilhngness to shed their blood for their Lord. And specially, with the deepest reverential affection do we recall at this hour that roll of honor which ought to be hung, if it be not already, in our Memorial Hall, by the side of our list of missionaries. On that roll should be in- scribed, in letters of gold, the names of the one hundred and seventy-six graduates and undergraduates who enlisted in the war for the Union — many of them our heroic dead who died for us upon the field of honor. These, all these and many more, bear witness that the education given in this college for the past eighty years has been of real value, both theoretical and practical. All who have received it, not without exception, but in a very large proportion, have accomplished, in the vocation into which God has called them, their own best work in the world. The good education here given has been largely the ef- fect of the intimate personal intercourse between the teachers and the taught. Our graduates are remarkable for self-reliance and self-control. They have received a manly education. Very few of our alumni fear to face an audience. They also adapt themselves easily and readily to changing circumstances. In many respects our educa- tional methods have been remarkably original. You will pardon me, of one your ancient professors, for saying that of late I have been amused — I could not help it — when I noticed that educational methods long in familiar use among us, when adopted just now elsewhere have been an- nounced, forsooth, as altogether new and unheard of ! Now, shall all this cease ? Shall this smaller college, and others with it, go out of existence, absorbed in great uni- versities ? Let a great university in a large commonwealth B I 8 HAMILTON COLLEGE. monopolize the higher education and you will con- centrate education at the expense of its diffusion. This would be a "public calamity" indeed, a "public calamity" compared with which the ever-to-be-building and never- to-be-finished Capitol at Albany would be a public bene- faction, an incalculable benefit. Destroy the nesting places and you'll have no birds. In the 1 3th century the Uni- versity of Salamanca was the only university in Spain — crowded to repletion with ten thousand students — yet never were the Spanish people so ignorant and supersti- tious. In my judgment, we are too often deceived and in- jured by making numbers the criterion of merit. But for our college we have no fear. Our trustees, to-day, by one of the most honored of their number will here and now give you a visible pledge that they will continue to per- petuate and confirm as well as reform and improve. In the spirit of our omniscent all-wise Lord they will ' ' not destroy but fulfill. " They are about to inaugurate a presi- dent of this college for the first time in history, who is not a graduate of Yale, nor of Dublin, nor of Dartmouth, nor of Amherst, but of Hamilton ! We make no comparisons. We appreciate and would not depreciate predecessors. And without anticipating improperly the address of induc- tion, I may be permitted, as one of the older alumni and one of his teachers, to assure our new President that we have faith in him ! He will let us tell him what is not news to most of us, that he has abundant energy, enthu- siasm, breadth of mind and breadth of purpose, ' ' mental alacrity and bodily vigor," imagination, culture, a youth- ful spirit, friendly feeling, kindly temper, executive force, and that by his unselfishness, his self-sacrificing devotion he has already aroused an enthusiasm which proves that he is just the man for our leader. As graduates of the col- lege, " for better for worse, for richer for poorer," we shall stand together, and stand by him. And we shall pray for him ! The last stanza of the beautiful hymn of Prof. North gains once more a new and assured significance. I remem- INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT STRYKER. 1 9 ber the sainted mother of our new President, as I repeat the words : " Allies unseen thy steps attend, And saints redeemed thy service share; Upward from many a Christian friend Ascends for thee the strength of prayer." And now the address of induction is to be delivered by a gentleman of whom I have a wholesome fear ! You will not wonder that I fear him when I tell you that when I was an undergraduate student in an under-class in this col- lege, he was a dignified senior ! I remember his senior oration in the college chapeL I thought it then one of the most eloquent addresses to which I had ever listened. I have not changed my opinion. And the Congress has en- dorsed the collegiate estimate of his abilities, for, in the 40th Congress, the House of Representatives made him its speaker. By a not impossible conjunction of circum- stances, he might have been President of the United States, for he was third in the line of succession. I need not introduce the Hon. Theodore M. Pomeroy, of the Class of 1842, ^ae* .v\ .^^^ c«^ ^'> - '^'*^^^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 029 911 055 2 1 "^/f'-^Ali^ 1 I^K*-* . , _> -.^.-J "w->"\ M 1 ;^,_7- v^iT^HfiH H ^J --?»^= •£ '^^Ai .» ** ij-n iy