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Theft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reasons for disciplinary action and may result in dismissal from the University. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN t/jw27 1 JAN 1 1978 JUL 18 1913 3i\98 L161 — O-1096 A HISTORICAL SKETCH OF i m : University of Georgia By A. L. HULL, Secretary of the Trustees and Treasurer of the University. ATHENS, GEORGIA 1894. ATLANTA, (.A.: TB K I-OOTE VI. -1817-1 8. ( onstitutional Debt of $100,000 — Election of President Finley— Improve- ments on the Campus — Dr. Finley's Death — Rev. Hope Hull 20 VII.— 1819-22. President Moses Waddell — Prof. James Camak — Prof. Tinsley — Students Commons — New College Built — Demosthenian and Phi Kappa ."So- cieties — Old Graveyard 34 VIII.— 1823. Dr. WaddelTs Administration — Penalties — Militia Service — Professor Olds— Dr. Henry Jackson— Rev. Stephen Olin, D. D 40 CONTENTS. IX.— 1824-29. Professor James Jackson—Presbyterian and Baptist Churches — Kobert Toombs— Dr. Waddell's Resignation and Death 43 X.— 3 829-30. President Church — Loss of New College by Fire — Tvy Building — Bo- tanical Garden — Professors Ward and Lehmann 47 XI.— 1830-40. Troup and Clarke Parties — Board of Trustees Increased — Board of Visitors — Dr. Pressley — Professor Shannon — Professor James P. Waddell — Outrage on Professor McCay — Challenge to a Duel — Sketch of Mr. McCay 52 XII.— 1842-56. Loss of Income— Reorganization of Faculty — Sale of Lots — Erection of Professors' Houses — Dr. Henry Hull — Rev. William Bacon Stevens — Changes in Faculty — President Church's Criticisms — Election of New Professors— Dr . Brantly 58 XIII.— 1859-60. New Plan of Organization — Senatus Academicus Abolished — Cobbham Lots Sold — Mess Hall and University High School Built — Election of Chancellor Lipscomb — The LeContes — Professor Venable — Profes- sor Richard M. Johnston. 67 XIV.— 1861-66. Outbreak of the Civil War — University High School — Close of College Exercises — Alumni in Service — Professor William D. Wash — Status at the Close of the War — Hon. Asbury Hull 7*2 XY.-1866-70. Vacancies in the Board Filled— Appropriation to Maimed Soldiers — Speech of Albert H. Cox and its Consequences — Increased Attend- ance of Students — Early Morning Prayers Abolished — Alumni Trustees 78 XVI.— 1872-73. The Land-scrip Fund — State College of Agriculture — Donation of City of Athens — Moore College — Chancellor Lipscomb's Resignation — Sketch of Dr. Lipscomb 83 CONTENTS. XVII.— 1873-78. Chancellor Tucker's Administration Professor \v . Leroj Broun — Sketch of Dr. Tucker ss XVIII.— 1878-81. Chancellor Mell — Professor William Henry Wamiimmw~ i iuiimmi ii i,.r..M,-.ai ... .zLUjiini. JOSIAH MEIGS DR. MOSES WADDEEE. DK. AEONZO CHURCH. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 25 Upon his acceptance of the presidency of the University of Georgia, he at once entered with ardor upon the work and submitted a report to the trustees setting forth his views on the curriculum, the text-books, instruments and library necessary for the equipment of such an institution as was contemplated. A man of great energy, fearless, honest and pure, he gave all his abilities to the upbuilding of the college. In person he was tall and spare, with blue eyes and florid complexion, blessed with perfect health which was uninterrupted until his last and fatal illness. In manner he was affable and kind, but quickly aroused and especially excitable on the subject of politics. In fact, he suffered for his political views at Athens as he had at Yale, for it was the free expression of his opinions that brought about the immediate causes of his removal from the presidency and the loss of his professorship. Left stranded by his dismissal, not only poor but in debt, Mr. Meigs remained in Athens until 1812, when Mr. Jefferson, to whom he was well known, secured for him the appointment of surveyor-general, with his office at Cincin- nati. Two 3 r ears later, he was made commissioner of the general land office and removed to Washington, where he lived until -his death, which occurred September 4th, 1822. His widow, Dr. Charles D. Meigs, the distinguished physician of Philadelphia, Henry Meigs, a prominent lawyer of New York, and other children survived him. His daughter, Clara, married Mr. John Forsyth, one of Georgia's most honored sons. General M. C. Meigs, quartermaster-general of the United States during the Civil War, was his grandson, and many others of his descendants are now living in New York and Philadelphia. 26 HISTORICAL SKETCH V. President John Brown — His Weak Administration — Dr. Henry Jack- son — Suspension of Exercises — Sketch of Dr. Brown. 1811-1816. Upon the resignation of the presidency' by Mr. Meigs, the Rev. Dr. Henry Kollock, of Savannah, was elected to the office, but declined. Rev. Hope Hull, as chairman of the prudential commit- tee, was appointed to act as president until the vacancy should be filled. In 1811, Rev. John Brown, of Columbia, S. C.,was elected and accepted the appointment. Mr. John R. Goulding, of the same city, was made professor of languages. Dr. Henry Jackson, then a young man not long arrived in Georgia from England, having been recommended by the governor, was employed as an instructor in mathematics, "f or the expenses of his board and lodging until such time as the state of the funds shall authorize a competent salary for his services." That time came ere long when Professsor Meigs was removed and Dr. Jackson was appointed to succeed him. During President Brown's administration the fortunes of the college steadily declined. Much was no doubt due to the stringency of the times, the period of the war of 1812 being included in his incumbency. But the lack of discipline and the general laxity of the faculty in the discharge of their duties, brought upon them the censure of the board. Dr. Jackson, who proved to be an able instructor, had gone as charge des affaires under Mr. Crawford, our minis- ter to Paris. His place was temporarily filled by Professor William Green. Complaints were made of neglect by both faculty and students of the religious exercises of the college; of uncleanly rooms arid slovenly habits ; and even of offen- sive immorality. A student, fearless of the consequences, UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. '1 1 had the temerity to publish a libelous paper about the fac- ulty, and the laws of the institution were held in contempt. The attendance of students fell off, the income of the col- lege diminished, and as a necessary result, salaries were cut down— that of the president to $1,000, of professors to $700 and $600. To meet pressing demands, a loan of $5,000 was negotiated, and an effort was made to raise funds by the sale of lands. Lots in Athens, west of what is now Lumpkin street were laid off in four-acre sections and offered for sale at a minimum price of $15 per acre on two years' time. In this desperate state of affairs it was thought best to suspend for a time the exercises of the college. President Brown and Professor Green resigned, leaving Air. Goulding to comprise the faculty. That gentleman, as "senior professor," took charge of the premises, and in the meantime taught a school for his support. The fortunes of the college were at the lowest ebb in its history, and its best friends almost despaired of any revival of prosperity. John Brown was born in County Antrim, Ireland, June 15, 1763, and came with his father to America, settling in Chester District, South Carolina. His educational advan- tages were very limited, eighteen months covering the period of his schooling, part of which time he was the schoolmate of General Andrew Jackson. At sixteen years of age, he volunteered under General Sum- ter and fought gallantly until the close of the war of the Revolution in the campaigns against Tarleton and Corn- wallis. Feeling called to preach the gospel, Mr. Brown studied theology at Salisbury, X. C, under Dr. McCorkle and was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Concord in 1788. The next few \-ears were passed in preaching and teach- ing; then, being called to Waxhaw church, he served as its pastor ten years. Resigning this charge, he again took up the profession of teaching and achieved some literary repu- tation. In 1809, he was called to the chair of logic and moral philosophy in South Carolina College, and two years 28 HISTORIC AL SKETCH later was elected president of the University of Georgia, which office he held until 1816. Dr. Brown was distinguished for his great excellence of character, his humility and generosity. He was essentially a good man. Rev. Dr. Talmadge used to call him "Our Apostle John." He had a vigorous mind and a fine com- mand of language, but though a man of great firmness of character, he was defective in some of the essential qualities of a teacher, especially failing both to excite the interest and to hold the attention of his students. Added to this, his want of the executive talent needful in the head of an institu- tion of learning, made his administration a signal failure. Conscious himself of this, Dr. Brown resigned the presidency in 1816, and retired to his home near Athens, w^here he lived for several years, doing good, and honored of all men. Subsequently, Dr. Brown served for twelve years as pastor of a church in Hancock county, and then removed to Fort Gaines, where he died in 1842, in the eightieth year of his age. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 29 VI. The Constitutional Debt of $100,000— Election of President Finley— Improvements on the Campus — Dr. Finley's Death — Rev. Hope Hull. 1817-1818. During the first thirty years of its corporate existence, the University had sold its lands except in Clarke county and had in hand $150,000 of notes, secured by mortgage, as the proceeds. Upon the interest collected upon these notes with occa- sional encroachments on the principal as it was paid, the in- stitution had erected its buildings and paid its current ex- penses. There being no regular income, however, upon which it could rely, the Legislature passed the act of Decem- ber 15, 1815, authorizing the Governor to advance to the board of trustees, two-thirds the face value of those notes upon their being deposited in the State treasury. No money was to be paid for them, but upon the organization of the Bank of the State of Georgia, the Governor subscribed for one thousand shares for the Universit/y of Georgia and upon the surrender of the notes and mortgages, transferred the stock to the trustees. The trustees were prohibited by law from selling or other- wise disposing of this stock, but the dividends could be used for the various requirements of the University. The income from the investment was guaranteed by the State to amount to $8,000 per annum. For several years, during its most successful period, the bank stock paid annu- ally ten thousand dollars, but with all other concerns of like character it was lost in the wreck of the Civil War. Despite this, however, the State never repudiated its obligation, but regularly and promptly paid the interest from the treasury. The constitution of 1877 recognized the debt of one hundred thousand dollars and the annual interest has become a fixed charge upon the State. 30 HISTORICAL SKETCH Such is the history of the eight thousand dollars annuity. With the prospect of a stated income, a reorganization of the college was effected. Dr. Robert Finley, of New Jersey, was elected president and took the oath of office in May, 1817. Professsor Goulding retained hischair; Professor Jackson, having returned from Europe, was at his old post. Mr. James Camak, of Colum- bia, S. C, and Mr. Ashury Hull, of Athens, were appointed tutors. The Legislature advanced the hoard ten thousand dollars on the pledge of its surplus bonds. Thus assisted, the trus- tees appropriated une thousand dollars for the library, and made a contract for a home for the president to be built for eight thousand dollars. This is the brick dwelling east of Old College, which replaced the old frame dwelling. The spirit of improvement denned the limits of the cam- pus by the street on the east leading to the graveyard and that on the w r est leading to the "Tanyard Branch." A half acre of land was offered gratuitously to any religi- ous denomination who should first apply, on condition they build a church thereon. President Finley entered upon his office with zeal and ability. Presiding at the commencement in June, he im- pressed the audience with his ease and dignity. It was, however, a commencement only in name— there were in all but twenty-eight students in the college. After the closing exercises, Dr. Finley set out to make a tour of the State in order to become better acquainted with the people and to secure their patronage and their aid in restoring and rebuild- ing the institution. In this tour he was remarkably success- ful, but his usefulness was suddenly cut short by his un- timely death. Returning home in September, he was pros, trated with a bilious attack, common at that season, and lingering until October 3d, he sank in death. Robert Finley was born in Princeton, N. J., in the year 1772. His father, James Finley. a Scotchman, was the friend of President Witherspoon of Princeton, and himself a man of great probity of character. Robert Finley was in- structed by Mr. Ashbel Green, tutor and afterwards presi- 1NIYKKS1TY OF GEORGIA. 31 dent of the College of New jersey, and was admitted to the freshman class in that institution in his eleventh year, re- ceiving the degree of A. B. when he was sixteen. A youth of grave demeanor and force of character, he was appointed a teacher in the grammar school and at once manifested that peculiar talent for governing boys which made him famous in after years. Some of the pupils in this school, older than Finley, broke out into open rebellion against his authority, but he maintained the discipline of his room at the expense of several suspensions and had no further trouble from that source. At nineteen years of age he was invited to take a school in Charleston, S. C, where he spent a year, returning to Princeton to accept the appointment of tutor in that college. In 1794, Mr. Finley was licensed to preach the gospel by presbyter}-, and the following year was called to the church at Basking Ridge, X. J. Here he spent almost all the re- mainder of his life, preaching and teaching. He conducted one of the best known grammar schools in the countrv. In 1798, hewasmarried to Miss Esther Caldwell, daughter of the "Fighting Parson of the Revolution." With her and their nine children he removed to Georgia in 1817, after he had accepted the invitation of the trustees to preside over the University of Georgia, whose destiny seemed to be hov_ ering between life and death. Dr. Finley was much discouraged upon his arrival at Ath- ens, to find the college in such a woeful plight. He found, as he wrote to a friend, "a new country suffering greatly for want of good mechanics and the comforts of life. The col- lege is at its last gasp ; the scorn of its enemies and the pity of its friends; forgotten in the public mind, or thought of onh- to despair of it; neglected and deserted, the buildings nearly in ruins and the trustees doubtful if it can be recov- ered . ' ' Dr. Finley's death, though following close upon so brief a connection with the college, was felt to be a public calamity. The trustees appropriated two hundred dollars to the erec- tion of a monument over his grave, and resolved that his sons should be at no charge for their education at Athens. 32 HISTORICAL SKETCH They further ordered the president to make a title to Mrs. Finley to airy two lots in the town of Athens she might choose, from the unsold lands of the University. The following year, 1818, occurred the death of Rev. Hope Hull. The services of this staunch friend of the Uni- versity make him deserving of more than a passing notice. Coming to Athens in 1803, he devoted himself with untiring industry to the material, intellectual and spiritual advance- ment of the community, and perhaps no man contributed so much to stamp indelibly upon them the sober and religious character which the town and its vicinity have always borne. Dr. Lovick Pierce said of him : "He was the founder of Methodism in this section and in the vigor of his man- hood his fame was almost world-wide. He used to be known under the coarse but graphic appellation of 'Broad Axe,' an honorary distinction conferred on him because of the mighty power that attended his ministry. My eyes first fell on him as he sat near the pulpit of a small log chapel near Athens, called 'Hull's Meeting House.' The wonderful reports which had reached me made me look upon him rather as an august than a fatherly being. His head was rather above the medium size, his black hair curling, just sprinkled with grey. His face was an exceedingly fine one — a well-developed forehead, a small, keen blue eye, with a heavy brow, indicative of intense thought. His shoulders were unusually broad and square, his chest wide and his voice full, flexible and cajjable of every variety of intona- tion, from the softest sounds of s\'mpathy and persuasion to the thunder tones of wrath. Many ignorant sinners charged him with having learned their secrets, and using the pulpit to gratify himself in their exposure, and when convinced of their mistake doubted whether he were not a prophet.* His *A student in the senior class, during- a sermon delivered by Mr. Hull in the college chapel in 1812, was angered by what he believed to be a public exposure of his delinquencies, and afterwards meeting Mr. Hull on the campus, was very rude and insulting to him. The president reported the fact to the board then in session, and an order was passed with- holding his degree from the young man, unless he should, in the presence of the trustees, the faculty and the body of students, read and subscribe to a written apology for the offence. This being done, peace reigned, and the degree was conferred. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 33 oratory was natural, his action the unaffected expression of his mind. He seemed in some of his finest moods of thought to look his words into you. He was one of na- ture's orators. In many of his masterly efforts, his words rushed upon his audience like an avalanche and multitudes seemed to be carried before him like the yielding captives of a stormed castle. Grave and guarded as he was, there were moments when he entertained his friends with the recital of thrilling incidents in his history. He survived until 1818, when he died, saying, 'God has laid me under marching or- ders. I am read\- to obey.' " The following resolution was entered on the minutes of the trustees : "The board, entertaining the highest sense of the long, zealous and distinguished usefulness of their fellow- member, the Rev. Hope Hull, and feeling the deepest regret for his loss, most unfeignedly sympathize with his family and friends for their afflictive bereavement, and cheerfully offer this public demonstration of their entire conviction of his worth and services." 34 HISTORICAL SKETCH VII. President Moses Waddell — Professor James Camak — Professor James: Tinsley — Students Board in Commons — New College Built — Sketch of Campus — Demosthenian and Phi Kappa Societies — Old Graveyard. 1819-1822. Upon the death of President Finley, Rev. Nathan S. S. Beman was elected to the vacant office. That gentleman at first accepted, but in deference to the wishes of an invalid wife, afterwards declined the appointment. The nomination then, of Rev. Ebenezer Porter of Savan- nah, was made, but he, too, declined. Rev. Moses Waddell was next elected president. Mr. Wad- dell was born in Rowan county, N. C, July 29, 1770. He attended a neighboring school, studying with such diligence, that when he was but fourteen years of age, he was invited to take a school at a little distance from his home, with the stipulated remuneration of seventy dollars a year and his board. In 1786, he came to Greene county, Georgia, with his parents and opened another school. He was quite popu- lar with the young people and was invited to all their "par- ties," at which dancing was the chief feature of amusement. Mr. Waddell became so fond of this pleasure that his in- dulgence in it brought him to the serious reflection that it was harmful. So great was the temptation to him to dance that he finally changed his place of abode, going to the house of a pious gentleman, where he assiduously spent his evenings in the study of the classics. In 1789, he professed conver- sion and joined the Presbyterian church. Subsequently, in view of preparing himself to preach the gospel, he went to Hampden Sidney College, entering the senior class in 1791. For some years after he was licensed, he preached and taught at different places, finally locating at Willington, S. C. In the meantime, he had among his. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. ^5 pupils, William H. Crawford and John C. Calhoun, men who in after life became the peers of any this country lias ever produced. Mr. Waddell was married first to a sister of John C. Cal- houn, who survived her marriage but little more than a year. In 1800, he was married a second time to Miss Eliza Pleas- ants of Virginia. At Willington, Dr. Waddell began a work of education which made him famous throughout the South. The school numbered at its maximum attendance, one hundred and eighty, comprising boys who afterwards became the most distinguished men of South Carolina and Georgia. When the University of Georgia was lying prostrate un- der the misfortune of President Finley's death, superadded to the distressing condition in which he found it, it was felt that Dr. Waddell was the only man who could undertake its resuscitation with any hope of success. The trustees sent him an urgent invitation to assume the presidency. Though ver\ r reluctant to face the responsibil- ity of such a task, he yielded to the arguments of the com- mittee who visited him, and removed to Athens in 1819. The reputation of Dr. Waddell, which had preceded him, added to his energy and high character, soon raised the en- rollment of students from seven to more than one hundred. His discipline was firm without severity and only those who trifled with him felt how severe he could be. No stu- dent ever tried it twice, and one having come out from such an interview with him, said to a companion: "When you hear a boy bragging how he bullied Dr. Waddell, you may know he is lying, for it can't be done." But with all his firmness, Dr. Waddell had the tact to know when not to punish. One night he caught, as he believed, Ned B playing cards. The next morning, overtaking him on the campus, the doctor said: "Edward, I think I saw you playing cards last night." "I reckon not, sir," said the culprit. "Yes, I am sure it was you," replied the doctor. "It couldn't have been me," answered Ned, "because I don't know the ace of jacks from the nine of deuces." Dr. Waddell smiled, but did not press the matter any further. 36 HISTORICAL SKETCH With Dr. Waddell's accession, Professor Camak retired from the faculty, and Dr. Alonzo Church, then teaching in Eatonton, Ga., was elected to the chair of mathematics. Mr. Camak was a native of South Carolina. He was a professor in this University when Dr. Finley came to Geor- gia, and after his resignation, was married to Miss Helen Finley, a daughter of the late president. Removing to Mil- Wlgeville, Mr. Camak engaged in business and was made cashier of the Central Bank. He acquired a fine property there and afterwards moved back to Athens where he dur- ing his lifetime, and his family long afterwards, were among the most prominent citizens of the place. Upon the resignation of Dr. Henry Jackson in 1820, Dr. James Tinsley was appointed professor of natural philoso- phy. Dr. Tinsley had been a pupil of Dr. Waddell at Willing- ton. He studied medicine and was admitted to practice, but being very erratic, he defied both the conventional rules of society and the ethics of practice. He was a man of re- markable physical strength, though his weight never ex- ceeded one hundred and sixty pounds. Dr. Tinsley was sub- ject to violent and alarming hemorrhages from the lungs, and on account of this one weakness he exposed himself to the most inclement weather without overcoat or umbrella, with the collar and bosom of his shirt open and often with- out a hat, in order to "harden" himself. He never kept any medicines, depending upon what he might find in the house of his patient, and his surgical operations were performed with whatever was convenient at hand. Dr. Tinsley had no fitness either by nature or education for the position to which he was elected, but his friends thought that the power of his intellect would overcome his want of training and enable him to sustain himself. Their mistake was soon apparent, and aftertwo yearsof irksome restraint, he resigned. The problem of the disposition of the students had long- exercised the faculty and trustees. At first they boarded anywhere in the neighborhood ofthe college ; then they were required to room in the Old College. Later, by an act of the Legislature, they were permitted to "board at any place UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 37 within the town or vicinity of Athens, provided, they board with moral, respectable families, of which the president- of the college shall judge." Then Commons were provided, a steward's hall established and maintained for a dozen or more years. B} r resolution of the trustees in 1820, the quality of board required was: "For breakfast, a sufficiency of whole- some cold meat with wheaten flour biscuit or loaf bread, butter, tea or coffee. For dinner, a course of bacon or salted beef, with a suitable proportion of corn bread and at least two kinds of vegetables, and on Wednesday, to have an after course of pies, puddings or pancakes. For each supper, a plentiful supply of tea or milk, with a sufficiency of wheaten flour biscuit and butter." Truly a substantial bill of fare and not open to the charge of extravagance. The board also declared that "students on Sabbath after- noons must confine their w r alks to one mile, provided, this healthful and innocent indulgence is executed free from any violation of the laws of the college." In 1822, a contract was let for the building of "New Col- ege" at $24,980 to John R. Goulding, quondam professor, and Thomas Moore. The Philosophical Hall had been com- pleted a year before and was used for the college chapel. In the second story, the library was arranged, aud there the trustees held their meetings. There is a resolution extant, passed about this time, requesting the president to procure some more comfortable seats for the use of the* board, which suggests visions of old split-bottom chairs and hard wooden benches on which were seated those grave and reverend seign- iors. After the completion of New College in 1823, the li- brary and apparatus were transferred to that building. 38 HISTORICAL SKETCH 1 FRONT STREET Presbyterian ■ ■ Church Grammar School Printing- Office and Demosthenian Hall Wooden Chapel New College B Old College President's House Chapel Steward's Hall THE CAMPUS IN 1821 While we are upon the subject of buildings, it may be said that the Demosthenian Society, which was organized inl803> and had for twenty years been holding its meetings in the old school-room, now being in a nourishing condition, both as to members and funds, built the hall north of the chapel which for seventy years has echoed the clarion tones of im- passioned speakers. A new stimulus was given this old mother of debaters by the organization of a rival, the Phi Kappa Society, by Joseph Henry Lumpkin in 1825. For many 3'ears these two vied with each other for the honors of the college, and swore their members with great and in- violable oaths to secrets which might not even be thought of in the presence of another. TMYKKSITY OF GEORGIA. 39 In 1824, the Old College walls gave indications of weakness and were strengthened by the iron bars which have no doubt aroused the curiosity of many a student. The campus, which seems to have been open at the time, was ordered to be closed "with posts and plank in front, and common rails with stakes and riders on the other sides." Interment of corpses on the college hill, where persons had been in the habit of interring them, was prohibited in future, but the commissioners of the town of Athens were permitted and authorized to inclose a piece of ground not exceeding one acre as a burial ground. The place of interments referred to, is now covered by the houses east of the campus, and the "burial ground" of one acre a little farther south, filled with the dead of a third of a century, still lies with its tall pines standing sentinel over its graves. 40 HISTORICAL SKETCH VIII. Dr. WaddelPs Administration — Penalties — Militia Service — Professor Olds — Dr. Henry Jackson — Kev. Stephen Olin, D. D. 1823. Dr. Waddell's entire administration was one of strength and success. The college grew in influence and in public fa- vor. The trustees gave their cordial support to the presi- dent, who on his part, seemed to haveno other desire than to raise the institution which had been confided to his care, to the highest standard of morality and scholarship. In this he succeeded beyond the expectations of the most sanguine From the plane to which Dr. Waddell raised it, the University has never receded, and when the times and the circumstances of the people are considered, it was hardly possible for any man to have done more. His discipline was never relaxed. To the students he was; kind, but always Arm. He commanded their respect and de- manded their obedience. There were dissensions in the faculty — as will always be — and there were resignations and re-elections, and complaints and lawlessness among the students ; but the policy of the president never wavered. The universal regret of trustees, faculty, students and citizens at his resignation attested their endorsement of his course. During Dr. Waddell's ten- ure of office, the minimum age of admission of students was fixed at thirteen for the freshman, fourteen for the sopho- more, fifteen for the junior and sixteen for the senior class. It was said that the president advocated administering discipline by flogging to the freshmen and sophomores, but the board thought that mode of punishment incompatible with the dignity of a great university. In deference to his opinions, however, the faculty were authorized to remand refractory students to the grammar school, where the principal, Mr. Moses W. Dobbins, a nephew and namesake IMYKRSITY OF GEORGIA. 1 1 of the president, wielded the birch with skill and liberality. A student would submit to anything short of expulsion rather than be sentenced to the grammar school. A law was passed at one time that "no student of the grammar school should engage in any dramatic perform- ance in the town of Athens, either in term time or vacation." vVc do not know whether the board disapproved of theat- ricals on moral and religious grounds, or whether the histri- onic talent of the youths was at so low an ebb as to dis- courage any hope of improvement. Under the laws of that day, students were subject to militia duty. They organized a company among themselves and made a great frolic of the whole aifair. "Muster day" proved at last so disastrous to study and good order, that the governor was appealed to to withdraw the arms which had been furnished them. The faculty being required to be at their recitation rooms during study hours attending to the behavior of the stu- dents, Dr. Henry Jackson, who had succeeded Dr. Tinsley in his old chair, resigned a second time because he was unwilling to do police duty on the campus. Gamaliel S. Olds, of Massachusetts, was elected in his place, who, in the brief space of one year, proved his utter unfitness for the position. Upon his retirement, Dr. Jack- son was recalled and served until his final resignation in 1827. Dr. Henry Jackson, a native of England, came to Georgia a youth, not long before the close of the last century, at the invitation of his brother, James Jackson, once governor of Georgia. Elected to a professorship in the University in 1811, he proved to be a valuable acquisition to the faculty, a scholar of great scientific attainments and a gentleman of many fine traits of character. When the Hon. William H. Crawford went as minister to the court of France, Dr. Jack- son was invited to go with him as secretary of legation. Obtaining leave of absence from the trustees, he went to Fiance and was in Paris during the "hundred days reign" after Napoleon's return from Elba. While passing through Washington on his way abroad, he met a lady to whom he was singularly attracted, but the 42 HISTORICAL SKETCH fact of her husband being very much alive was an insuper- able objection to his making it known to her. On his return from Europe, he heard that she was a widow and so soon as propriety permitted, he paid her his addresses and was married to her. The lady was the widow of Howell Cobb, a member of congress from Georgia and uncle to Governor Howell Cobb. Dr. Jackson was a conscientious teacher and was much ad- mired by the students who were under his instruction. He passed his latter days at "Halscot," his home near Athens, where he was wont to receive and entertain his friends both young and old. His son, General Henry R. Jackson, is a distinguished citizen of this State. Rev. Stephen Olin was a native of Vermont, and a class- mate of Professor Alonzo Church, and through his efforts was invited to take the chair of belles-lettres and ethics, then newly established. Dr. Olin had taught for several years in South Carolina and lived for a time in Charleston. He was a man of im- mense frame, tall and muscular, with large grey eyes and a magnificent head. He was unsurpassed as a teacher and ex- erted great influence over the students. One of the students once asked another why he always recited well to Dr. Olin while he neglected his other studies so shamefully. "Well,' said he, "I can't stand the look of those eyes when I miss." As a preacher he was gifted in a remarkable degree, elo- quent in delivery and great in thought. When he delivered his first sermon in Athens, Dr. Church asked Dr. Waddell what he thought of him. "While he was speaking," said he, '•I thought anybody could preach as well; but after he had finished, I thought no one could preach so well." Dr. Olin's health failed and he was forced to resign. H e was recalled three years later, but again resigned, having served four years as professor here. Subsequently he trav- eled extensively abroad, was elected president of Randolph Macon College in Virginia, and afterwards president of Wes- leyan University, Connecticut, where he remained until his death. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 43 IX. Professor James .Jackson — The Tariff — Presbyterian and Baptist Churches — Robert Toombs — Dr, Waddell's Resignation and Death. 1824-1829. Another well known member of the faculty under Dr. YVaddell, was Professor James Jackson,electedinl823to the chair of chemistry and French. He was a son of Governor James Jackson and a member of the first graduating class of the University. He was generally known as "Major" Jackson and among the students as "Old Take and Take" from an expression that he used in the class-room until it became fixed upon him. He was a most amiable man and the boys teased him with impunit\\ On one occasion a student who had some talent as a draughtsman, drew on the wall outside his recitation room, a monkey with the features of Major Jackson. Xat- uralh', he was very much irritated when he saw it and at once recognized the artist by his skill in drawing. The offen- der was reported to the faculty and summoned to appear and make his defence. The accused, on hearing the charge, frankfy admitted that he drew the monkey, but denied that he intended it for the professor. "You lie, sir!" said the infuriated major. "You did intend it for me, for it isexacth- like me." The absurdity of the situation was too much for the faculty, and the culprit was dismissed with the verdict not proven. Major Jackson was a favorite with the students and dere- lict boys looked upon him as their best advocate before the faculty. A kind-hearted man, a thorough gentleman and an earnest Christian, his tenure of office extended over twenty- seven years, a longer period than any officer of the college had ever held his chair. In 1827, the tariff was the all-absorbing political question of the day. In the board, Major Merri wether put himself on 44 HISTORICAL SKETCH record by a proposition to adopt a uniform of domestic homespun for the students. The students, full of patriotic zeal, held a mass meeting and resolved to wear only home- made goods. The trustees met them more than half way in adopting as the prescribed uniform for students, "a frock- coat made of dark grey (Georgia homespun, wool and cot- ton, the seams covered w T ith black silk cord or narrow braid, black buttons and pantaloons of same material, corded or braided in the same manner." An exception was made in favor of calico, for the reason that "morning gowns" of calico were quite fashionable, both students and professors wearing them on the streets. This garment — which must have been a marvel to behold — consisted of two widths of calico gathered at the neck with a string, buttoned at the waist and reaching to the ankles, having loose, flow- ing sleeves. The figure and color was left to the taste of the wearer, and there was as great a variety as can be seen at a county fair. Fancy the Chancellor of the University or the dignified Dean of the Faculty sailing down the street in a flowered calico morning gown ! With the reality of wearing the homespun, came a cooling of patriotic fervor and a petition went up from the boys to repeal the law, which, it seems, was cheerfully done . The Presbyterian congregation which Dr. Waddell had or- ganized, by permission of the board, built a house of wor- ship on the campus, where the library building now stands. The door was towards the chapel arid the high pulpit and the galleries around the sides are doubtless still fresh in the memories of old students. Dr. Waddell ministered to this church until he left Athens- The Baptists also built a church on the northwest corner of the campus a few years later, in which Mr. Shannon preached, and afterwards, Dr. Brantly. Both these churches stood until about 1857, when the first was torn down and the other burned by an incendiary. Some of the most distinguished men of the country passed out of the University as pupils of Dr. Waddell. Eugen- ius A. Nisbet, George F. Pierce, John A. Campbell, Paul F. Eve, Nathaniel M. Crawford, Robert Toombs, John N. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1") Waddell, Charles J. Jenkins and many others of lesser note, but of wide reputation in their own States, received the im- press of his character while under his instruction at Athens. A story of Robert Toombs has swung round the circle of the papers of late years, which represents him expelled from college for gambling, standing beneath the old oak in front of the chapel at commencement, pouring forth such burning words of eloquence that the chapel is deserted and the speakers left to declaim to empty benches. And from this circumstance, the old tree has ever since been known as the "Toombs Oak." It has even been said that on the day of Air. Toombs' death, the old oak was struck by lightning and destroyed. There is not the semblance of truth in the story. It was a fabrication of Henry W. Grady, who, in an admiring sketch of the great Georgian, wrote charmingly of his overwhelm- ing eloquence and pointed it with a story drawn from his own vivid imagination. The facts of Robert Toombs' dismissal from college are of interest because of his own prominence in after life. They are taken from the record and are as follows : "R. Toombs called J. H. a shameful name, which he ac- knowledged to the faculty, and the said H. attacked him and beat him on Friday night. Toombs went to H.'s room with bowie knife and pistol, threw the knife at G. H. and pointed the pistol at J. H., which another student wrested from him. Afterwards Toombs attacked J. H. with a knife and hatchet, but students interfered, preventing in- jury. Saturday morning, Toombs waylaid the H's. on their return to college, attacking J. H. with a club and pistol." Upon his trial before the faculty, the facts being stated and not denied by him, Mr. Toombs was dismissed from col- lege. At the following meeting of the faculty a letter from Toombs was read, acknowledging the impropriety of hiscon- duct. Accompanying the letter were petitions from the Demosthenian and Phi Kappa societies asking, if not a re- mission, at least a mitigation of the punishment. After due consideration, the faculty remitted entirely the sentence, but put him on probation for the remainder of the term. Subse- 46 HISTORICAL SKETCH quently— at the close of the term — Toombs withdrew from college and went to Virginia. In 1829, Dr. Waddell sent in his resignation to thetrustees. Efforts were made to induce him to withdraw it, but his determination was taken. Arrangements were made for suitable ceremonies of a public and final leave-taking at the close of the commencement exercises, and on the day of his departure from home, the facult}' and students marched to his house in a body to bid him farewell. Dr. Waddell went from Athens to Willington, where, with his son, James, he reorganized his old academy. His own time was chiefly occupied in preaching in the neighborhood. In 1836, he was stricken with paralysis from which he never recovered. Lingering nearly four years, almost helpless, he died July 21, 1840, at the home of his son in Athens, to which place he had been removed. I'MVKIisi TV OF GEORGIA. 47 X. President Alonzo Church — Loss by Fireof New College — Loan by Legis- lature — Ivy Building — Botanical Garden — Professor M. A. Ward — Professor William Lehmann, 1829-1830. Alonzo Church, then professor of mathematics, was elected to succeed President Waddell. Dr. Church was a native of Vermont and a graduate of Middlebury College. Soon after his graduation he went to Eatonton, Georgia, to take charge of the academy at that place. He there met and married Miss Sarah Trippe, a lad}' of superior accomplishments and rare beauty. Coming to Athens in 1819, as professor of mathematics, Dr. Church conducted his department with eminent suc- cess and so impressed the board by his force of character, that upon the retirement of President Waddell, he was at once unanimously chosen in his place. In person, Dr. Church was tall and well-proportioned, of dark complexion, with lustrous black eyes and hair, graceful in carriage and dignified in bearing. He was of a quick tem- per and absolutely fearless, but had great self-control. Well behaved students had respect and affection for him, but the disorderly feared and avoided him more than any- other member of the faculty. He was a rigid disciplinarian, prompt to correct and rebuke the slightest indication of disorder or inattention in his class-room ; and yet in his kindness of heart, he would help along an ill-prepared student almost to the extent of reciting the lesson for him. An incident related by Dr. John N. Waddell illustrates the promptness of Dr. Church to quell any disorder and the fear among the students of his displeasure. "On the news of the birth of his son being learned by the students, a petition was presented to the faculty for holiday in compliment to the family and as a welcome to the advent of the young stranger. Just before eleven o'clock, 48 HISTORICAL SKETCH the hour of morning recitation, the petition was returned, having been granted. It so happened that just then were gathered in the room above Dr. Church's study, some dozen of the most orderly students preparing for the recitation. On learning the decision of the faculty, the news was re- ceived with most exuberant joy and boisterous laughter. In a few minutes, to their utter discomfiture, Dr. Church ap- peared, and on discovering who it was that was making such a disturbance, lifted his hands, exclaiming, "Why, gen- tlemen, I am more than astonished!" The students had only time to say, "Doctor, we have holiday," when he left them abruptly, and they expected nothing less than a sum- mons before the faculty on the charge of disorderly conduct. But when the doctor, on going out to inquire the cause of the holiday, learned that it was on the occasion of the birth of his son, he returned immediately to the students, ex- plained and apologized. Thus Alonzo W. Church was greeted on his arrival with a demonstration not usual among in- fants in Athens." It was the custom in that day to hold morning and even- ing prayers in the chapel. Dr. Church always lead the even- ing service, and it was expected that some other member of the faculty would conduct that of the morning. One morn- ing the students were so disorderly that Professor Ward went after the president. Seeing him walking across the campus, the professor called to him, "Oh, doctor, come here. We can do nothing with the students." Dr. Church walked at once into the chapel and looked around without speak- ing a word. Death -like silence ensued. Taking up the Bi- ble, he read a chapter, offered a prayer and without another word dismissed the students, who quietly made their exit. As an example of the discipline President Church exercised, may be mentioned the expulsion of eleven students in a bunch for riotous conduct on the campus one night. One of the condemned was Howell Cobb, who was reinstated upon the solemn declaration of his mother that she had made him retire and had afterwards seen him asleep in bed on the very night of the riot. Others who saw him on the campus, without disputing Mrs. Cobb's statement, suggested that UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 49 he might have dressed and slipped out of the window after his mother's visit to his room. Dr. Church's family were remarkable for their personal beauty. He and Mrs. Church were a singularly handsome pair; his sons were all handsome men and the daughters were the toasts of every student of their time. Especially beautiful were Miss Julia and Miss Lizzie, afterwards Mrs. Croom and Mrs. Craig, and there no doubt lingers yet in the memory of many an old student of the forties, delightful recollections of evenings passed in their parlors. To the unremitting ministrations of Mrs. Craig, then Mrs. Robbe, many a sick and wounded Confederate prisoner during the war, owed such cheer and comfort as she was permitted to extend them. The chair of mathematics becoming vacant by the promo- tion of the incumbent to the presidency, Mr. George W. McGehee, of Tennessee, was appointed to the vacancy, but on his way to assume its duties, was taken violently ill and died before reaching Athens. At their next meeting the board elected one of their own number, Dr. Henry Hull, professor of mathematics. James P. Waddell, son of the late president, was elected pro- fessor of languages, but declined, and Rev. James Shannon, of Augusta, was then appointed and held the office until 1836. Dr. Olin having resigned, Rev.— afterwards Bishop — William Capers, of Charleston, was nominated, and he having de- clined, the professorship of belles-letters and ethics was va- cant until 1830, when Dr. Olin re-entered the facult}' for a brief term of three years. In 1830, the University sustained a serious loss in the de- struction by fire of the New College, with the library, now a most valuable one, and all the scientific apparatus. It was supposed to have caught in one of the dormitory rooms, and there being no means whatever in the town for extinguishing fires, it was a total loss excepting the walls. There was nothing to be done but appeal to the State for help. 50 HISTORICAL SKETCH The SenatusAcademicus sent up a memorial to the Legisla- ture setting forth the fact that the forty thousand dollars of surplus bonds and mortgages deposited in the treasury in 1816 against the issue of one thousand shares of bank stock, had been collected and covered into the treasurj* to the credit of the State. In behalf of the University the Senatus asked that this sum be turned over to the trustees to be used in rebuilding the college, in purchasing new ap- paratus and instruments, in refurnishing a library and for other wants of the institution. In response to this request the General Assembly appropriated six thousand dollars an- nually from 1830 to 1841, and in addition thereto for im- mediate use, loaned to the University ten thousand dollars* which was afterwards repaid in annual payments of one thousand dollars. With these funds the burned building was rebuilt at the cost of $12,349. The present chapel was erected on the site of the old 40x60 wooden one of 1808; the "Ivy Building" was built for a new library and cabinet of minerals; two new chairs were established — natural philosophy and modern languages— and a botanical garden was planned and planted under the care of John Bishop, gardener from England. Dr. Malthus A. Ward of Salem, Mass., and Professor Wil- liam Lehmann, a native of Germany, and a minister of the Lutheran church, were elected to the new departments. Dr. Ward was a gentleman of fine education and an en- thusiastic botanist. He laid out and planted the botanical garden, which became his especial hobby. Many an hour in that delightful resort of former days have students and townsmen whiled away, enjoying the dolce far niente under the willows from St. Helena, or stretched beside the little lake, or strolling along the shaded walks. That charming re- treat, hallowed by many a whispered confession and bright- ened by many a blushing admission, fragrant with flowers, tinted with the sunset's gold, and musical with the thrush and mocking bird, is now, alas! the washing-ground of the loud-mouthed colored laundress; and a few old cedars, a broken hedge of osage orange, a poplar, and mayhap, a wil- low, are the sole relics of its ancient beauty. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 51 No one who ever saw Dr. Ward could forget him. Tall, thin and awkward, every handsome feature conspicuous by its absence, his appearance hardly failed to excite a smile ; but a gentler, kindlier man never lived. In a recitation in botany, the professor asked a student how many species of a certain plant there were. The young man replied at a venture, "Three, sir." "Yes, yes," said the doctor, "but there were formerly only two, and the same now is." The quaintness of his expressions seemed to impress his lectures on the students. He once said, "Words, young gentlemen, are only pegs on which to hang our ideas." This struck the boys' fancy and ever afterwards the old professor was known as "Dr. Pegs." After his connection with the college ceased, Dr. Ward lived for many years and until his death, at his home on the hill beyond the branch, amid the flowers and fruits and many varieties of ornamental trees he had planted 3'ears before. William Lehmann, a German by birth, was a man of fine attainments. He was a good English scholar, a thoroughly competent linguist and an enthusiast in the ancient classics. It was a saying of the boj^s that when Professor Lehmann should reach the spirit world, the first question he would ask, would be, "Where is Homer? I want to see him !" Mr. Lehmann was an excellent musician and a fine pian- ist. On one occasion while visiting the dormitory rooms, he came upon a student playing the violin in study hours. At his citation, the delinquent appeared before the faculty and plead guilty. Some one proposed to fine the boy as a pen- alty, when Mr. Lehmann seconded the motion, saying, "Yes, Mr. President, fine him ; he do play so bad." Tall, of stal- wart frame, and quite bald, Mr. Lehmann was an imposing man in appearance, but far too lenient with the students, who took advantage of his good nature and imposed upon him continually. Both these gentlemen served the University faithfully until 1841, when the state of its finances demanded their retirement. 52 HISTORICAL SKETCH XL Troup and Clarke Parties— Board of Trustees Increased — Board of Visitors — Dr. $amuel P. Pressley — Professor Shannon— Professor James P. Waddell— Outrage on Professor McCay— Challenge to a Duel— Sketch of Mr. McCay. 1830-1840. Duringthe intense political excitement between the Clarke and Troup parties, which perhaps was not surpassed by the antagonism of the Democrats to the Republicans in the hot- test days of reconstruction, serious complaints were made by the Clarke party of the vicious influence of the University. It was charged that the trustees were all Troup men and that only Troup men were put in the faculty, and worse than all, that their boys went to college and came home im- bued with the damnable heresies of the Troup party, and forsaking the principles of their fathers, deserted to the ranks of the enemy. This was too grave a charge to be ignored. Consequently, in 1830, the Legislature enacted a law increasing the num- ber of trustees to twenty-eight, giving an equal representa- tion on the board to the two political factions. The new trustees appointed under this act were Howell Cobb, Daniel Hood, Angus McD. King, Wilson Lumpkin, Thomas W. Murray, David A. Reese, James Tinsley, Stevens Thomas, James C. Watson, Zachariah Williams, and Jacob Wood. In that day, far more than now, the young men of Georgia were deeply interested in the great questions which agitated the country. It was no uncommon thing for a party of students to leave college to go to Watkinsville or Lexington, or some other neighboring town to hear Mr. Crawford or Mr. Berrien, or Mr. Toombs or Mr. Stephens speak on the issues before the people, and on their return take their pun- ishment as became men. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 53 Fired with the enthusiasm of youth, some did not hesitate- to attack the opposite party in their college speeches. At the first meeting of the board after its increase, a resolution was passed requiring the faculty to exclude from the productions of the students at commencement, all political matter involving the party politics of the day. This, however, was a ghost that would not down at their bidding; for, from time to time, resolutions were adopted reiterating the opinion of the board that political speeches should not be permitted on the stage of the Univer- sity. Doubtless it was a proper inhibition and the party attacked keenly felt its necessity ; but, the other side secretly enjoyed the situation none the less. Indeed, it was due to this fact that the students dared to hand in one speech to the faculty and speak another on the stage, feeling sure of the support of his own side if the worst came. At the request of the trustees in 1830, the Senatus Aca- demicus appointed annually fifteen persons as a Board of Visitors to attend the examinations of the students preceding commencement and report to that body. The appointment of this board after the abolition of the Senatus Academicus was delegated to the Governor, and their powers were en- larged. It may be gravely doubted, however, if any practical good has ever resulted from their visitations. This is not necessa- rily the fault of the gentlemen composing the board of visi- tors. From the very nature of things, a committee of strangers cannot enter upon the premises of a college, take up its curriculum, inspect its class work, read its examina- tion papers and investigate its internal workings, and learn enough about the institution in a week's time to report, with suggestions of any value, upon its faults or its necessities. Yet, year after year, the State pays the expenses of gentle- men who faithfully, it is conceded, perform this duty and render their report to the Governor, which is acknowledged and duly filed away with other State papers. Upon the second resignation of Dr. Olin, Rev. Samuel Pressley was elected professor of metaphysics. 54 HISTORICAL SKETCH In 1836, Professor Shannon resigned. He was a man of great independence of thought. He declined the honorary degree of D. D., conferred upon him by the University, be- cause he said a literary institution had no right to judge of the theological standing of a minister of the gospel — a thing of which it could know nothing. Mrs. Shannon was Meth- odist ; he a Baptist. When it was suggested that Mrs. Shan- non should join his church to be with him, he said he would vote against receiving her unless she sincerely believed in the doctrines of his church, and he didn't think she did. After Mr. Shannon's resignation, he was elected president of a college in Missouri, and removed to that State where he spent the remainder of his life. Mr. Shannon was succeeded by Mr. James P. Waddell. Professor Waddell, known among the boys as "Old Pute," was a ripe classical scholar and a poet of merit. He had , after his graduation, served as tutor in the University for two years, and marrying a daughter of Rev. Hope Hull, went to Willington to reopen the academy there with his father. Professor Waddell had been elected to the chair of ancient languages in 1830. At that time no little excitement pre- vailed throughout the State among the various Christian de- nominations on the subject of education, and some jealousy of the University was developed. It was charged that a monopoly of offices in the faculty was enjoyed b} r one de- nomination. The administration of the affairs of the Uni- versity had, in fact, been'in the hands of Presbyterian presi- dents from its foundation. With perhaps one exception, the most important chairs had been filled by Presbyterians. It is absurd to suppose that this was due to any partiality for that denomination in a board of trustees, the majority of whom were not Presbyterians. But conceding the largest degree of wisdom and patriotism to the board, the fact as it existed, gave great dissatisfaction. When, therefore, Mr. Waddell's election added another Presbyterian to the faculty, there was a general expression of that dissatisfac- tion in the journals of the State. The excitement grew in in- tensity until the Senatus Academicus, who, under the law* UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 55 reviewed the action of the trustees, superseded Professor Waddell, who had not yet assumed the duties of the chair, by the appointment of Rev. James Shannon, pastor of the Baptist church in Augusta. Professor Waddell was an excellent teacher, barring his inability to control the students under him, who, neverthe- less, had great respect both for his character and his schol- arly attainments. He was an enthusiast on the subject of the classics, and when he, with rapt expression, would repeat some favorite passage from a tragedy of Euripides or de- claim, ore rotundo, some oration of Cicero, he seemed lifted above the plane of mundane things. It was then that some wicked boy, having neither the fear of the faculty be- fore his eyes, nor the love of the classics in his heart, would shy a missile at the professor and bring him back to a con- sciousness of his surroundings. Professor Waddell served acceptably for twenty years, re- moving after his retirement from the University-, to Mont- gomer\\ There he taught successfully a boys' school and afterwards was appointed private secretary to Governor John Gill Shorter. He died at Athens in 1867. At the time of which we are writing, 1835, the library re- ceived some valuable aquisitions besides the purchase under appropriations by the board, in ninety volumes of public acts donated by the British government, and in files of newspapers of the State given by the Governor. In addi- tion to these, acknowledgment was made of "specimens of rare minerals from the awful crater of Mona Loa in Owyhee.'' In 1840, there was committed one of those senseless out- rages that students are sometimes lead into without consid- ering its criminalit}- or its possible results. Mr. Charles. F McCay was at the time professor of civil engineering. He was not popular with the students and, during his absence one night, his room was forcibly entered, his books, bedding and clothing taken out and burned back of New College. There were numerous witnesses to the burning, but there was some difficulty in finding out who were the guilty par- ties. The students arraigned before the faculty all admitted 56 HISTORICAL SKETCH being there, but declared they were trying to put out the fire and save the clothes. Mr. McCay strongly suspected several boys, one of them young Mr. Dearing, who, it was afterwards shown was innocent, and accused them before the faculty. This accusation lead to a difficulty and a challenge from Dr. William E. Dearing, an older brother of the accused. Mr. McCay promptly accepted the challenge and a meeting was arranged to take place at the old cemetery just back of the campus. An amicable settle- ment was made before shots were exchanged, but Professor McCay at once sent in his resignation to the Prudential Committee. He was requested to continue in his chair until the meeting of the board. The matter having been brought up, a long, spirited discussion ensued, which resulted in the Professor being permitted, by a close vote, to withdraw his resignation. Mr. McCay was a fine scholar and an exacting teacher. He was sure to find out all the student didn't know about the lesson. He seemed to take genuine delight in "busting" a boy and showed no sympathy for him when he was down. Withal he was a conscientious professor, a strict disciplina- rian and a fearless police officer. Naturally, he was unpopu- lar with the students, and many were the attacks upon his door and the rocks that went through his windows on dark nights, when he roomed in New College. On several occasions he was violently assaulted and beaten by riotous students. One night a student provided himself with a "locust" made of a match-box with parchment stretched over the end, through which a horse hair was passed. This interesting toy, when twirled around, made a loud, rasping noise like the insect from which it took its name. Quietly climbing into the trap hole in the passage by Mr. McCay's door, he made his locust sing. As he expected, Mr. McCay at once came out into the passage, looked up and down, but seeing no one went back. The locust began singing again and immedi- ately the professor emerged. Simultaneously the noise ceased. Baffled again, Mr. McCay returned and stood be- hind his door. At the repetition of the noise, he suddenly threw open the door, and the noise as suddenly ceased. UNIVERSITY OF GfEORGIA. 57 Then he pulled oft' his shoes and slipped up to the end of the hall, shutting his door rather noisily to deceive the aggressor. But as the mischievous boy was locking at him all the time, the match-box was silent. Then the professor went back to his room and the noise was repeated. Finally, he located the disturber of his peace and deliberateh' brought his table, lamp, and chair and took his seat outside the door, determined to catch the offender if it took all night. It did not take so long , for the discomfort of his situation and the certain prospect of spending the night in the attic, brought about an unconditional surrender of the "locust," which was followed the next day by the usual summons before the faculty. After Mr. McCay left the University, he became professor at Columbia, and subsequently, was made president of South Carolina College. Removing later to Augusta, Georgia, he engaged in banking and insurance business and acquired a handsome property. After the close of the war, he went to Baltimore, where he spent the remainder of his days. 58 HISTORICAL SKETCH XII. Loss of Income — Reorganization of Faculty — Sale of Lots — Erection of Professors' Houses — Dr. Henry Hull — Dr. William Bacon Stevens — Changes in Faculty — President Church's Criticisms of New Profes- sors — Dr. William T. Brantly. 1842-1856. In 1842, the income of the University was seriously im- paired by the loss of the annual appropriation by the State of six thousand dollars, leaving the total available income less than twelve thousand dollars. This reduction in its funds made necessary a reduction in the expenses of the College. A reorganization of the Faculty ensued, accompanied by a reduction of salaries. The services of Professors Ward and Lehmann and Tutor Lee were dispensed with. Major Jack- son took the chairs of chemistry and natural history. Nat- ural philosophy was assigned to Mr. McCay. Dr. Hull Mr. Waddell and Dr. Church retained their respective depart- ments. The following year, however, the prospects bright- ening, particularly in view of a prospective sale of town lots, a new chair was established — belles-lettres and rhetoric — and Joseph H. Lumpkin, Esq., was requested to fill it. Judge Lumpkin declining, Rev. William Bacon Stevens, of Savannah, was appointed and accepted. Judge Lumpkin's services were secured to the college in the law school, which was established that year, but which existed only in name until sixteen years later, the exigencies of the office of Chief Justice rendering any effective work in the school im- practicable. The increasing demand for city lots, added to the financial straits of the College, seemed to justify the sale of the remainder of the Milledge donation. Accordingly, by direc- tion of the board, Dr. Hull surveyed and platted the lands, which were advertised to be sold, excepting the thirty-seven acres comprising the campus, they being by statute, inalien- able. The lots sold at that time, including those immedi- O* : Z222E_-^ UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 59 ately around the campus and westward across the Tan- yard branch, yielded eighty-five hundred dollars. It was thought best to reserve the lots in what was known as Cobbham until another time, and indeed, they were not offered for sale until 1857, when twelve thousand dollars more was realized. The funds arising from the first sale enabled the Board to erect two dwellings on the campus — Professor Waddell's and that one opposite occupied by Dr. Brantly and after- wards by Professor Rutherford. The rent of these houses to professors was fixed at six per cent, on $2250, the estimated cost of each. In 1846, Dr. Henry Hull resigned the professorship of mathematics and Mr. McCay was transferred to that de- partment, Dr. John LeConte being elected to supply the chair of natural philosophy. Dr. Hull had served sixteen years in the chair which he re- signed. Born in Washington, Georgia, he came to Athens when four yearsof age. Graduating with the class of 1815, after taking his degree of M. D. in Baltimore, he entered upon the successful practice of medicine in Athens. He was appointed a trustee of the University in 1825. Having a natural fondness for the study of mathematics, he was offered the professorship when it became vacant in 1829, and the distasteful drudgery of what was then a country practice encouraged him to accept it. Tall and graceful in bearing, courteous in manner, even-tempered and generous, Dr. Hull was a general favorite with faculty and students, and in all their difficulties, the latter counted on his aid and sympathy. In his class-room, he was accustomed to begin the recitation by calling on the student nearest him. One day he unexpectedly called on the occupant of the other end of the bench, who said, " Doctor, I did not learn that." "And why not?" said the professor. "Because," candidly replied the student, "I expected you would begin at the other end of the bench." The Doctor smiled and advised him not to depend on that chance in future. During his term of office, Dr. Hull made the acquaintance of M. Nicholai, the French astronomer, who visited at his house and with 60 HISTORICAL SKETCH whom he became quite intimate. They made together many observations and Dr. Hull materially aided the scien- tist in the objects of his visit to Georgia. After his retirement from the faculty, Dr. Hull spent the remainder of his days as a farmer and a student. When the old students would return to Athens, they always asked for Dr. Hull, and found him but little changed, with the same read}' smile and old-time courtesy. He lived beyond the time allotted to man, enjoying excellent health, a typical gentleman of the old school, and after a brief illness, died where he had lived nearly all his life, in the eighty -third year of his age. In 1847, Professor William Bacon Stevens resigned, having been called to the parish of St. Andrew's Church, Philadel- phia, from which he was afterwards elected to the high office of Bishop of Pennsylvania. Dr. Stevens was of Northern birth, but came early in life to Savannah, where he lived perhaps ten years. He was at first a practicing physician, but abandoned that profession, entered the ministry, and became the rector of one of the Episcopal churches in Savannah. He was one of the found- ers of the Georgia Historical Society and was the author of a history of Georgia. Of literary tastes, Dr. Stevens was a scholarly man, a graceful orator, a courteous gentleman and a person of distinguished appearance. But with all his accomplishments, there was a haughtiness of manner and a look of austerity, especially in the recitation room, that made him unpopular with the students, and their dislike culmi- nated the year he left college in their hanging him in effigy on the old oak in front of the chapel. And yet, Dr. Stevens was a just and conscientious teacher. His defect seemed to be the utter lack of those qualities which attract the young, and while every other professor in college had a nickname, the students only spoke of this one as "Dr. Stevens." Singu- larly, this repellant manner wore off after he resigned his professorship, and his old pupils who met him in late years, when he was Bishop of Pennsylvania were charmed to find him then as genial and affable as they had previously thought him cold and unapproachable. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Bl Dr. Stevens was succeeded by Dr. Brantly, the pastor of the Baptist Church in Augusta. In 1851, Dr. William Louis Jones was appointed to the chair of chemistry vice Professor James Jackson, who, after a service of twenty-seven years, had resigned. Dr. Jones left the following year to take a special course under Pro- fessor Agassiz at Harvard, and Dr. Joseph LeConte took his place. At the same time Emanuel Scherb, Marcellus Stanley and William H. Waddell were appointed tutors. Mr. Scherb left the place after a few months without any notice. Then Mr. McCay retired and William Leroy Broun was made professor of mathematics, and a year later Charles S. Venable of Hampden Sidney was called to the chair vacated by Dr. John LeConte. These frequent changes in the faculty would indicate there was some disturbance in the college atmosphere. Such in- deed was the case ; such a disturbance in fact as gathered slowly into a storm, which before very long burst upon the devoted heads of the entire corps of professors. Dr. Church, with his masterful character, had long domi- nated both faculty and trustees. He had views on the proper conduct of a college, which amounted to convictions. The officer who could not or would not come up to his stan- dard, or who could not accept his views, was in his opinion not the officer the college needed. Complaints were made, without mincing matters, of incompetency or of neglect of duty. The first gun was fired by the President in his annual report to the board in 1855. Said he, "Young professors are ver\ T apt to discover defects in laws and rules, and in their zeal and wisdom, too often legislate to the injury rather than to the advantage of the institution." And in another place, "Dr. John L resigned only a few days before the commencement of our present term. He had given no notice of his intention. The interests of the insti- tution ought to be paramount to those of an individual, and no officer should accept an office unless he be willing to comply with the rule of the board under which he receives his appointment." 62 HISTORICAL SKETCH ' 'Had Professor J oseph L— consented as I thought he should to take a half recitation in chemistry, which would have given him still only one and a half recitations and a half in science, the studies "would have been arranged in their usual order. In consequence of this refusal, I was obliged to take a third recitation, the professor having but one. The va- cancy should be filled at once. Still, it had better not be filled, than to be filled by an individual not competent to dis- charge his duties. Mere science will not qualify a man for a professor. He may be eminent in his attainments and event felicitous in his ability to teach, and yet be a curse to the institution. There must be moral and social qualifica- tions as well as literary and scientific. No man who has not been long and intimately connected with an institution of this kind as an instructor can estimate the influence for good or for ill which a professor exerts, apart from his mere daily instructions in science. Every professor unless willing to devote his time and labor and ease, if necessary to promote the highest prosperity of the institution, cannot successfully accomplish the purpose for which he has been placed in office. But above all, I am constrained to say that an indispensable qualification to make the perfect teacher is piety. I do not mean that he should be a mere professor of religion, a member of some Christian church. The man whose life is inconsistent with his Christian profession leads students to despise him and to regard true religion with distrust and treat it with disrespect." Wise old man ! "I must ask the board to determine a question of law be- tween myself and Professor L — . Until the commencement of the present term, the law respecting rooms has received but one interpretation by any member of the faculty. The Pro- fessor now construes it differently and refuses to comply with what has heretofore been considered legitimate compliance. The law is as follows : 'The professors and tutors shall each of them daily visit the rooms of the students at such hours as may be assigned them by the President.' " On whom the President was expending his ammunition when he described the ideal professor we do not know. Certain it is that description cannot be surpassed. The UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 63 xiistorv of the University of Georgia, her experience with her professors, the success of her students, and the testimony of the alumni, have proved the correctness of Dr. Church's estimate. The conscientious, painstaking professor with strong religious convictions, is the one who has won the con- fidence of the student and impressed him with lessons of truth. A few months later, the President again addressed the board in no uncertain tone. In the meantime he had ten- dered his resignation and this meeting was called to con- sider the nomination of his successor. Said he, "The num- ber of students present at this time is seventy -nine, and I am constrained to say that even with this small number, the dis- cipline of the institution is far worse than I have ever known it during the thirty-seven years of my connection with it." Then he proceeds to state what he considers the cause of the decline. He referred to the want of harmony in the faculty during the past few years, the differences of opinion as to the government and course of instruction ; the refusal of Professor Jones to comply with the conditions upon which he was elected ; the changes in the course of studv made by Mr. McCay and Dr. LeConte against his protest ; the inattention of Professor McCay to his duties ; the refusal of the LeContes to visit the rooms of students or to suppress disorder on the campus ; the refusal of Professor Venable to perform the same duties ; the inability of Professor Waddell to maintain order or to control his classes ; the want of pro- fessional qualifications in Professor Broun. He complained of a recent rule of the faculty permitting any professor to prevent a student from entering college or sustaining a full standing in his class, whatever ma}' be the opinion of the re- maining members of the facult\ r , the result of which had been to drive away to other colleges numbers of \ r oung men who could have sustained themselves with credit until their graduation. He appealed to the community, the resident trustees and the citizens of the State to witness whether any other object than the prosperity of the college had en- 64 HISTORICAL SKETCH grossed his attention since his first connection with its faculty. The effect of this communication was an immediate resolu- tion that all the members of the faculty be requested to fur- nish the board with their respective resignations forthwith, with a view to the reorganization of said faculty. The request was complied with, with apparent cheerfulness. All the resignations were accepted and an election appointed for December 10th, 1856, following. The reorganized faculty consisted of Alonzo Church, Presi- dent; Patrick H. Mell, Professor of Languages; John D. Easter, Natural Philosophy and Chemistry ; Williams Ruth- erford, Professor of Mathematics; Joseph Jones, Professor of Natural Science ; Richard M.Johnston, Professor of Belles Lettres^ William Henry Waddell, Adjunct Professor of Lan- guages; William D. Wash, Adjunct Professor of Mathe- matics. Dr. Brantly was re-elected to his chair, but declined, and Dr. James Woodrow also declined the chair of natural science. Dr. Church did not much longer remain in office. His final resignation took effect January 1, 1859, when he retired with a widowed daughter, the only one of his family left in Athens, to a residence a little out of town. There in peace and in quietude, but with failing health, he lived until, dur- ing the following year, the summons to the presence of the Master came. William T. Brantly was born in Beaufort, S. C, May 1, 1816. His father was a distinguished minister of the Baptist church, and his mother a sister of Governor Charles McDonald. His early youth was spent in Philadelphia, where he was employed for a time in the banking house of the Drexels, and afterwards offered a partnership in the busi- ness. This tempting offer he declined under the conviction that he was called to preach the gospel. Entering Brown University, he graduated under the cele- brated Francis Way land, for whom he entertained the highest admiration. Before his graduation even he received a call from the church in Augusta, Georgia, in which he had IMYKKSITY Ot QEOftGlA. 0& preached while on a visit during vacation. This call he ac- cepted with many misgivings. Bight years later, Dr. Brantly was elected professor of belles-lettres and oratory in the University of Georgia, and h"re he spent the happiest years of his life. A charming wife and lovely children, ample means and acongenial occupation combined to make his days full of pleasure, while he enjoyed the society of the best people and the most cultured intellects in the State. Dr. Brantly was himself an ornament to any society. Handsome and cultured, courtly in manner, a brilliant talker, an eloquent speaker, he was a welcome guest at every gathering. While a professor at Athens he also served the Baptist church as pastor. His sermons were elegant, yet eas\ r of comprehension, and the students, as well as the poor and unlearned, flocked to hear his discourses. A polished and graceful orator, he inspired his pupils with his own love of eloquence and some of the most attractive speakers of our State learned their tones and gestures from this master of oratory. When the}^ spoke, he himself became enthused. On one occasion when John B. Gordon was declaiming upon the stage, Dr. Brantly walked down and said to another student, rubbing his hands, "Gordon is doing splendidly." Eight happy years, full of valuable service to the Univer- sity, were spent at Athens, when the connection was severed by the trustees asking the resignation of the entire fac- ulty. Although Dr. Brantly was re-elected to his chair — per- haps, unanimously — the sense of the slight tenure of office under such methods was a potent factor in deciding him to accept a call to Philadelphia. Serving the church there until after the battle of Manassas, in 1861, he resigned his charge and cast his lot with his own people in Atlanta. The first Mrs. BrantW, a daughter of Dr. Turpin, of Augusta, died in 1866. A charming woman she was, whose beauty and attractions, with all the brilliancy of the father, were inherited by a lovely daughter, Miss Lou, the sweet- heart of half the students of the time. 66 HISTORICAL SKETCH In 1871, Dr. Brantly moved to Baltimore, where lie served the church for eleven years. On the night of March 5, 1882, having preached as usual during the day, he laid down to rest and never awoke again on earth. tJNlVERS] TV of GEORGIA. 67 XIII. New Plan of Organization— Senatus A.cademicus Abolished— Cobbham Lois Sold — Mess Hall and University Bigb School Built— Election of Chancellor Lipscomb — .John and Joseph LeConte — Professor Ven- able — Professor Richard |£. Johnston. 1859-1860. In 1859, a new scheme of organization of the University was adopted by the board, which was essentially as follows : 1.. To establish an institute combining all the instruction given in a well-regulated village academy and in the Fresh- man and Sophomore classes in college, and having sufficient capacity to board all its pupils from a distance. 2. To establish a college proper with only Junior and Senior classes, under five professors. 3. To establish University schools, independent of the college and of each other, viz. : a law school, a school of agriculture, of medicine, of civil engineering and a com- mercial school. 4. The establishment of scholarships by donations or devises. 5. The conferring of honors and degrees. 6. All departments to be under a Chancellor, who shall be the head of the institution. The law school was at once established under the super- vision of Joseph H. Lumpkin, Thomas R.R. Cobb and William Hope Hull, and steps were taken which ultimately resulted in the existing connection between the Medical College in Augusta and the University. This scheme was reported to the Senatus Academicus, at what proved to be its last meeting in November, 1859, and was adopted by that body. The act of December 4, 1859, declares that "Whereas, ex- perience has shown that the body known as the Senatus Academicus on account of the hurried manner in which its 68 HISTORICAL SKETCH sessions are generally held, has a tendency to defeat rather than promote the objects for which it is designed, therefore be it enacted that the body Senatus Academicus shall be abolished and all its rights, powers, duties and privileges shall be given to the Board of Trustees of the University of Georgia, in whom alone shall be vested the government of the said University, subject to the General Assembly of this State." The appointment of fifteen persons annually as a board of visitors to attend the examination of the classes of the University hitherto made by the Seuatus Academicus was by the same act vested in the governor. By virtue of this act, the Senatus Academicus, that "an- cient aegis of the University," was abolished after an exist- ence of more than seventy years. From the sale of the remaining lots in "Cobbham," the available assets of the University in bonds and notes amounted to $33,600. It was determined that this should be appropriated to erect new buildings. Accordingly, con- tracts were given out for the erection of the present library building at $11,600; a "Mess Hall"— the brick dwelling on Lumpkin street— at $4,000, and the University High School, now called "Rock College'," at $23,000. The last two proved unprofitable investments. The mess hall scheme was not even attempted, and the house has only been tenanted by renters, excepting a brief occupancy b}~ a professor. The High School was opened in January, 1862, with most flattering prospects, but the varying fortunes of ensuing years made impossible the development of the plan for which it was intended. The resignation of President Church left the college with- out an executive head. Henry Hull, Jr., Esq., was nomi- nated, but declined the appointment. Mr. Henry R. Jackson and Judge Joseph H. Lumpkin were successively tendered the position, both declining. Col. William L. Mitchell, a prominent member of the board was then designated chair- man of the faculty to act as president pro tern. The UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 69 board seemed at a loss to whom to turn, and were on the point of adjourning without action, when Mr. Benjamin C. Yancey, a newly-elected trustee, who had taken his seat for the first time, arose and said, though with some diffidence, that he could point the board to a gentleman in every way fitted for the place by scholarship, eminent piety, broad culture and experience in teaching. That man was Rev. An- drew A. Lipscomb, of Alabama. So cordial was his endorsement and so convincing was his testimony to his worth that a committee consisting of Rob- ert Toombs, William Dougherty and Benjamin C. Yancey, was appointed to wait on Dr. Lipscomb at his home, notify him of his election as chancellor and urge his accept- ance. The committee visited Alabama without delay. Dr. Lipscomb, after a brief consideration of the offer, accepted the appointment and assumed its duties the following year. Prior to this, on the resignation of Professor Joseph Jones, Harry Hammond, Esq., of Beach Island, S. C, was elected to his place. Later, Professor Easter tendered his resigna- tion, then Professor Johnston and, afterwards, Professor Hammond. More than passing notice is due to some of the gentlemen who had severed their connection* with the Uni- versity. The LeContes were native Georgians, both alumni and honor men of the University. Their difficulties here were by no means due to incapacity or lack of effective teaching. Both men of piety and pure lives, lovable in their characters, devoted to scientific research, they had the active talent which has put them in the front rank of America's pavants. They, with Professors Broun and Venable, repre- sented the advanced thought of the day. They believed the University should be at least a high-grade college, and that university methods should be introduced at Athens. Dr. Church conservative and wise, opposed radical changes be- ing made and declared that the university system was unsuited to the age at which students attended this college. The young professors espoused the doctrine of the geologj- 70 HISTORICAL SKETCH cal creation of the world. Dr. Church abhorred it as the rankest heresy. The one party were disposed to relax the exactions of police duty on the campus and to put more responsibility for good conduct on the boys themselves. Dr. Church regarded strict discipline as the foundation stone of the college edifice. With such divergent views, a rupture was inevitable, and the board, themselves conservative almost to " old fogy ism," sustained the president when the issue was made. The LeContes went to Columbia, S. C, and after the war, to the University of California, at Oakland, building an en- viable reputation as teachers and scientists. Dr. John LeConte died a few years ago the president of that Univer- sity. Dr. Joseph LeConte remains there full of honors. Professor Venable's connection with the University was too brief to make much of her history. He was known during the Civil War as Adjutant to the great commander, Gen. Robert E. Lee, and for many years since, has been pro- fessor of mathematics at the University of Virginia. Richard M. Johnston was born at Powellton, Ga. A lawyer by profession and a student by taste, he brought to the chair to which he was elected plenty of common sense and a thor- ough knowledge* of boys. . Full of humor, genial and kind, he attracted a student at first sight. Quick to detect a de- ception, he did not hesitate to visit his scorn upon the de- ceiver; and, if by chance, he did any injustice to a student, he was quick to offer him the apology due a gentleman in the presence of the class. He endeavored to cultivate in the young men under him an innate love for truth and honor for their own sake. Col. Johnston was a favorite with all — 3'oung and old, students, faculty and citizens. He and Mrs. Johnston, both accomplished musicians, were always in demand at every social gathering, and there was univer- sal regret when they left Athens to open a boys' school near Sparta. Subsequently removing to Baltimore, Col. Johnston conducted a most flourishing school at Waverly. Of late years, IMVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 71 he has devoted himself to writing character sketches of Georgia folks, and all his "output" is readily in demand for the magazines. Though advanced in years, his heart is young and his memory green. Health and happiness to thee, old friend ! 72 HISTORICAL SKETCH XIV. Outbreak of the Civil War — University High School— College Ex- ercises — Alumni in Service — Professor William D. Wash — Status at the Close of the War — Hon. Asbury Hull. 1861-1866. The five years following Dr. Lipscomb's inauguration were not conducive to study nor to the growth of the Uni- versity in any respect. The fall of 1860, pregnant with important issues, stirred the whole South, and the election of Mr. Lincoln, followed b}' the secession of South Carolina and, a few weeks later, by the secession of Georgia, kept the students and the faculty at the highest pitch of excitement. The year 1861 opened with one hundred and twenty-three students enrolled. Be- fore midsummer, seventy -five had enlisted and were then in the army, and nearly all the others were preparing to vol- unteer. Professor Wash resigned and joined a regiment from his native state, Mississippi, which served in Morgan's famous band. Dr. Mell accepted the captaincy of an infantry com- pany named for him the Mell Rifles, and volunteered ; but just before they were ordered out, a severe affliction in his family made it necessary for him to remain at home. There was drilling and studying of tactics, and marching and countermarching. With or without permission of pa- rents or faculty, the boys left for their homes or to join the companies already in the camps, or those being formed for service in the army, little dreaming what the next four years held in storf for them. The attendance steadily decreased and each session opened with fewer numbers than the close of the preceding one. President Davis was petitioned by the chancellor in behalf of the University, to exempt from conscription all college DNIVBRB1TY 01 GEORGIA. 73 students under twenty-one years of age. The president re- plied that he had no control in that matter, which was deter- mined by the act of Congress. Times grew harder. The income of the college was seri- ously diminished. Salaries were reduced at first twenty per cent, and afterwards one hundred per cent., the chancellor receiving $250 per annum in Confederate money. In the meantime, the Collegiate Institute, as it was called, under Mr. Benjamin R. Carroll, of Charleston, and Mr. L. H- Charbonnier, continued to prosper. Many sons of refugees and others from Charleston, Savannah and Augusta were sent there to be put under the admirable ^control of Mr. Carroll. The bo3 r s were formed into companies and in- structed in military tactics by Captain Charbonnier, himself a French soldier and a graduate of St. Cyr. When the act of Congress was passed, requiring the enrollment of youths be- tween the ages of seventeen and eighteen, the Secretary of War detailed these high school boys for local defense. In October, 1863, the college was closed in consequence of a proclamation of Governor Brown, calling out State troops and home guard companies for the defense of Geor- gia after the capture of Chattanooga by the Federals. This proclamation took away the chancellor, all the professors and the students, the most of whom joined a company raised in Athens and attached to a regiment commanded by Dr. Mell. The dormitor\ r buildings were now occupied by the families of refugees from New Orleans, Mobile and Savannah. The High School was converted into an hospital. From this time until January, 1866, history is silent as to the University. But though the University was silent, not so her alumni. They were busily engaged in making a history, whose pages glow with bold words and brave deeds, with victories and with privations which have not been surpassed and which will never be forgotten. To repeat their deeds, would be to recite the story of every campaign from Sumter to Appo- mattox. To name the heroes of the war, would be to call the roll of half the catalogue of students. From secession 74 HISTORICAL SKETCH to surrender, the sons of the University illustrated their Alma Mater in field and forum, proving themselves in both, the peers of the best men of America. It is almost superfluous to. name Howell Cobb, the Presi- dent of the first Provisional Congress, and Robert Toombs, the first Confederate Secretary of State, both afterwards generals in the army, or Alexander H. Stephens, the Vice- President of the Confederacy, or Francis S. Bartow, Eugen- ius A. Nisbet, Benjamin" H. Hill, Thomas R. R. Cobb Jabez L M. Curry, W.R. Chilton, Martin J. Crawford, Wile\ P. Harris and Alex. M. Clayton, framers of the Constitution, or John Gill Shorter, Herschel V. Johnson, Louis J. Dupre, Joseph H. Echols, Lucius J. Gartrell, David W. Lewis, Rob- ert Trippe, members of Congress, or John A. Campbell, As- sistant Secretary of War, or Philip Clayton, Assistant Sec- retary of State. We mourned thelossof Francis S. Bartow at Manassas, of Thomas R. R. Cobb at Fredericksburg, of Marcellus Doug- lass at Sharpsburg, of Gustavus A. Bull at Seven Pines, of Edward D. Tracy at Port Gibson, of Thomas U. Camak at Gettysburg, of John B. Lamar at Crampton's Gap, of Henry R. Thomas at Knoxville, of Thomas L. Cooper, James B. McMullin, William G. Delony, Henry M. Dun- woody, and Screven and Whatley, and Turner and Harris, and Stovall and Rush, and Mell, and many another who fell in skirmish and on battle-field, or languished and died in prison or in hospital. And who has surpassed the cour- age of William M. Chase at Franklin, or William L. Church at Brandy Station, or John B. Gordon at Petersburg, or Garlington, or Sims, or Wash? Without discounting the bravery of the private soldier, and he deserves unstinted praise, the educated brain invariably made its mark in the army. It controlled the nerves and trained the museles to endure the fearful strain of forced march and starvation. It was the college man, the educated brain, that withstood the attack of disease; that rallied from the exhaustion of the wound and kept up the spirits amid the gloomy surround- ings of the prison pen. Among them all, in the trenches or UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA . fO in the charge, there were none more brave than the men who were nurtured in the halls of the University of Georgia. In this connection, it is fitting that a tribute should be paid to the memory of William I). Wash, Adjunct Professor of Mathematics, who resigned his office at the close of the year 1861, to enter the service of his country. Joining a company of Mississippi cavalry, he was attached to General John II. Morgan's command in June, 1862. At Bradyville, Tenn., March 1, 1863, he was ca'ptured and imprisoned at Cam]) Butler, Illinois. Here, though inured to the hardships and privations of a soldier's life, he succumbed to the horrors of a Northern prison and died twenty-seven days after his capture. A comrade wrote: "He knew no fear. I have no hesitation in saying he was the bravest man I ever saw, as cool in battle as if he did not know w r hat was going on. At Cynthiana, Ky., he went ahead of his command amid a shower of bullets and minded them no more than a summer shower. At Gallatin, Tenn., he distinguished himself by coolness and bravery. I have been intimately acquainted with Mr. Wash and with pleasure bear testimony to his Christian integrity, nobleness of purpose and undaunted courage. Many a time have I heard his full, rich voice in camp lifted to Heaven in prayer. The high moral tone of his character won him the respect of all with whom he met." It is a matter of deep regret that there is no fuller record of the individual heroism of our alumni. But it is so, too, of the history of the South. The years following thesurrender were so full of sorrow and distress and apprehension, that the inclination to collect and record the proud deeds of that struggle was utterly wanting, until death or failing mem- ory put it beyond the pale of possibility. It is the misfor- tune of the South that her youths are growing up ignorant of their fathers' valor and of the heroism of their own people. The old campus presented a woeful appearance after the close of the war. The walks were overgrown with grass, weeds grew rampant everywhere, fences were broken or 76 HISTORICAL SKETCH burned, windows demolished, and the interior of the chapel and dormitories hacked and smoked, and in every way dis- figured by their late tenants, the Federal soldiers. The summer of 1865, Dr. Lipscomb preached the com- mencement sermon at the Presbyterian church. The trustees at that meeting determined to re-open the college notwith- standing the distressing condition of the people. The chancellor and faculty were requested to have the premises put in order and to make arrangements to resume the work of the institution. Gen. Steedman, the military governor of Georgia, had the garrison removed from the campus to the High School. The buildings were thoroughly purified and whitewashed and some semblance of respectability was imparted to them. Mrs- Thomas Moore took the New College and opened a boarding- house for students, under the direction of the chancellor. The one session plan was adopted, having all the vacation in the summer, and has continued ever since to be the law of the college. In that year of 1865, occurred the death of Hon. Asbury Hull, for forty -seven years the honored secretary and treas- urer of the Universit}' of Georgia. Though never a member of the board, his advice and coun_ sel were always sought in questions of interest to the col- lege and his excellent judgment and marked executive ability were often invoked to aid the purposes of the trustees. Mr. Asbury Hull was the elder son of Rev. Hope Hull and very like him in personal appearance. A lawyer by profes- sion, he gave the most of his time to the administration of business affairs. Dignified, calm and impartial, he was called to preside at all the public meetings of his day. His sincerity and piety inspired all classes with the utmost confi- dence in the man, and though his opinion on every question was declared without the reserve, no word of aught but re- spect was ever uttered by his strongest political opponent. He was long the cashier of the State Bank at Athens and, from its incipiency, the president of the Southern Mutual In- surance Company. Several times a member of the Legis- UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. , , lature, he served both as Speaker of the House and Presi- dent of the Senate. Mr. Hull was a fluent speaker and especially fervent in prayer. His death was sudden and painless. He had concluded morning prayers with his family, and a few minutes later, his wife going to call him to breakfast, found him sitting in his chair with open Bible in his hands, dead. After the death of Mr. Hull, William L. Mitchell, Esq., a member of the board, became his successor in office. Dr. Lipscomb, Dr. Mell, Mr. Rutherford, Mr. Waddell and Dr. Jones were in their places on January 5th, 1866, and the session opened with seventy -eight students present. For a few years after the war, the class of students was unlike any that had ever attended college before. Many of them were grown men and most of them had been through the costly experience of a four year's war, with all its lessons of en- durance and self-denial. They had not come for pastime or to idle away their time. They were in dead earnest. It was a question of food and raiment, a struggle for existence. Poorly fitted for a college curriculum, it was only by hard work that they kept up with the requirements. But those were the men who a few years later swayed the sceptre of the State and redeemed Georgia from the blighting curse of the carpet-bagger. All honor to them and their persevering industry ! 78 HISTORICAL SKETCH XV. Vacancies in the Board Filled— Appropriation to Maimed Soldiers- Speech of Albert H. Cox and its Consequences— Increased Attend- ance of Students— Early Morning Prayers Abolished— A liuiini Trustees. 1866-1870. At the session of the board in July, 1866, a resolution was adopted providing for a re-election of the faculty every four years by ballot without discussion. The election of ad- ditional professors was in contemplation, and it looked as if the resolution was intended to quietly rid the college of any who might not prove acceptable. This " smoking out" pro- cess was never resorted to, however, the resolution having been afterwards rescinded. A professional school of engineering was established and General Martin L. Smith was elected professor. General Smith was a distinguished engineer officer of the war and would have brought great ability to his chair, but unfortu- nately died before the opening of the term. The work of the school was postponed until the next year, when Capt. L. H. Charbonnier was appointed to the vacancy. Profes- sor Leroy Broun was recalled to take the department of natural philosophy. Captain J . Pembroke Jones, late of the Confederate Navy, was appointed adjunct professor of mathematics. The annual commencement, which had been advanced to July, was now restored to its old date in August. This action of the board, it was said, was due to the ladies of Athens. As one of the trustees said, "it was a question of watermelons." The hospitable housekeepers said they could get nothing to eat for their guests so early in July, and the}- insisted that commencement should be held when peaches and watermelons were abundant. It was an argamentum I'MYKUM TV OF GEORGIA. ad hominem which could not be successfully resisted, and, as usual, they carried their point. An unprecedented number of vacancies in the board oc- curred in 1867. Jndge Joseph H. Lumpkin and Bishop Hlliot died; Henry Hull, David A. Reese and Richard M. Johnston removed from the State, and H. V. M. Miller and Benjamin F. Ward were vacated for absence by operation of law. The gentlemen elected to fill these vacancies were Martin J. Crawford, Joel A. Billups, Stevens Thomas, David C. Bar- row, J. W. Armstrong and George F. Pierce. An act was passed by the Legislature appropriating three hundred dollars to the maintenance and education of each maimed soldier who should avail himself of the opportunity. Ninety -three responded to this offer and were located at the High School, then under the charge of Mr. Benjamin T. Hunter. The intense political excitement of the reconstruction period was at its height in 1867. Mr. Benjamin H. Hill had finished that remarkable series of letters, "Notes on the Situation." Governor Brown had cast his lot with the Radicals, who were arraigned against the intelligence and integrity of the State. At the commencement of that year, during the exercises of the junior class, Albert H. Cox, of LaGrange, came upon the stage. Handsome, with a clear voice and graceful man- ner, he soon caught the attention of the audience. His sub- ject was"The Vital Principle of Nations." Having delivered his introduction, he entered upon his speech, which, for true eloquence, close reasoning and pure audacity, has never been equalled by the production of any other student on that stage. He arraigned the Republican party and scored the scallawag without mercy. Without using his name, he at- tacked Governor Brown and held him up to the gaze of the audience as a traitor to his people, turning to him as he sat with the trustees on the stage and pointing at him in scorn. The whole audience was with the young speaker, and, with glowing faces, gave him unstinted applause. Mr. Hill sat 80 HISTORICAL SKETCH near him and visibly encouraged him by voice and gesture. Governor Brown across the stage sat placid and unmoved. It was a scene never to be forgotten, and when Cox retired from the stage amid a storm of applause and a shower of bouquets, he went with more reputation made during that brief half -hour than many a man makes in a lifetime. Upon resuming their session, the board of trustees "re- affirmed its conviction of the importance of that law of the University by which party political subjects are excluded from the speeches of students at commencement." This audacious speech threatened to be more serious in its consequences than anyone dreamed at the time. Georgia was under military control, and General John Pope, of "Headquarters in the Saddle" fame, commanding at At- lanta, issued an order closing the college and withholding the payment of the eight thousand dollars b}^ the State. The chancellor visited General Pope and secured a revoca- tion of the first order. A correspondence ensued between General Pope and General Grant in relation to the matter. Mr. Hill visited President Johnson and General Grant in the interest of the college, and it was not until a special meet- ing of the board had been held to issue an address to the authorities at Washington, that the appropriation was re- stored. In 1868, the number of students reached 354. However, of these, 132 were students in the high school department, many of them mature men, old soldiers seeking to make up the lost years they had spent in the field. The tuition fees amounted to $15,000 and the prospects of the college war- ranted the establishment of a chair of History and Political Science, to which Hon. Alexander H. Stephens was elected, but which he declined on account of ill health. Professor Charles Morris was invited to the chair of belles-lettres, hitherto so admirably taught by Dr. Lipscomb, and Profes- sor M. J. Smead assumed the department of modern lan- guages, which had been practically ignored for fifteen years. Frank A. Lipscomb, who had returned from a course at the University of Berlin, was made adjunct professor of UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 81 ancient languages, and Major R. W. Barnwell was ap- pointed the librarian of the college. Dr. Lipscomb, being in feeble health and feeling the re- sponsibility of his position pressing upon him, handed his resignation to the Board, but at their urgent request with- drew it. A total eclipse of the sun occurring in 1869, Professor Broun was authorized to take with him four students of the senior class and go to Abington, Va., to observe it. An appropriation was made to pay the expenses of the party and some valuable observations were made on the occasion by the professor and his assistants. In that year the time-honored custom of before breakfast recitations was abolished and the hasty morning toilet, the hurry and scurry to answer at morning prayers was hence- forth but a memory of the past, no doubt to the delight of both students and professors. It may be doubted whether the early prayers ever found the students in a devotional frame of mind. Many a boy has appeared in the chapel two minutes out of bed, sans socks, sans trousers, sans coat, his slippers and dressing gown alone saving him from the charge of indecency. The early morning recitation used to be a great trial to Professor Wash. He rarely got out to prayers and often the class would have to wait for his appearance in the recita- tion room. One morning the freshmen finding him not in, all slipped off their shoes, intending to steal softly out and "cut" the recitation. Their unusual quiet aroused the sus- picions of Mr. Wash, whose room was adjoining. He opened the door to find half the class tiptoeing down the hall, every man with his shoes in his hands. "Comeback, gentlemen," said he quietly, "and put on your shoes. I will be in di- rectly." It might have been imagination, but the lesson seemed unusually hard that morning and Air. Wash unneces- sarily exacting. For some time efforts had been made to arouse among the alumni a greater interest in the University. The suggestion was made by the chancellor, adopted by the board and 82 HISTORICAL SKETCH authorized by legislative enactment > to add four more trustees, one to be elected annually by the alumni society. The trustees first elected under this law were N. J. Ham- mond, Pope Barrow, A. 0. Bacon, and John C. Rutherford. This new privilege, added to the action of the board setting apart a day at commencement for the alumni orations, brought an increased attendance upon their meetings for some years. Latterly, though, the graduating class were ad- mitted to the meetings of the society, and as the} 7 invariably voted in a body a la Solid South, their candidate was inva- riably elected. It was no difficult matter for an ambitious young fellow to "fix" the graduating class before hand and secure his election to that coveted position. It is not: charged that this was always done, but the older alumni, seeing the drift of the matter, gradually lost interest in the occasion and during the last few years of that regime, the meetings were but poorly attended. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 83 XVI. The Land-scrip Fund — State College of Agriculture — Donation by ( ii> of Athen: — Moore College — Chancellor Lipscomb's Resignation — Sketch of I >r. Lipscomb. 1872-1873. In 1862, by an act of Congress, thirty thousand acres of public lands for each representative of each State were ap- propriated to the States for the "maintenance and support nf at least one college, where the leading object shall he, without excluding other scientific and classical studies, and including military tactics, to teach such branches of learn- ing as are related to agriculture and the mechanic arts, in such a manner as the legislatures of the States may respec- tively prescribe, in order to promote the liberal and practi- cal education of the industrial classes in the several pursuits and professions in life." Owing to Georgia being out of the Union at the time and very busily engaged in getting back in for several \ears af- terwards, it was not until March, 1866, that our Legislature accepted the grant. The same } r ear the governor was directed to apply for and receive the scrip, sell it to the best advan- tage and invest the proceeds of the sale in bonds of this State and disburse the interest of said investment for the support and maintenance of a college, such as was contem- plated by the act of congress. The "Land-scrip," so-called, was a \Varrant of the United States Government authoriz- ing the State, or its transferee, to locate so many acres of public lands not otherwise appropriated and sell the same for the purposes of the act. The governor sold this scrip to parties in Ohio for $243,000, which amount as a principal fund is held forever without diminution by the State. On March 30, 1872, a contract was made between the governor and the trustees of the University, by which the latter administered the fund. 84 HISTORICAL SKETCH The executive order relating to this contract says: * 'Whereas, the time allowed the State accepting said dona- tion to establish a college or colleges under the provisions of said act of Congress will expire on the 2d day of July, 1872, when by the terms of said grant, if a college such as is therein described shall not have been established, the grant shall cease, and this State will be bound to repay to the United States the proceeds of the donation aforesaid, and, whereas, the University of Georgia is the only institution of learning in this State having power by law to organize and establish a college in all respects such as is described in said act of Congress, and the board of trustees of said Univer- sit}' having established a college above named, as follows: (then follows the organization of the college). Ordered, that the $243,000 derived from the sale of the land-scrip, as afore- said, shall be invested in the bonds of the State of Georgia bearing seven per cent, interest and that the mone}^ so in- vested shall constitute a perpetual fund, thecapital of which shall remain forever undiminished and the interest of which shall be inviolably appropriated to the endowment, support and maintenance of the college organized by the board of trustees of the University of Georgia as hereinbefore set forth." Upon the execution of this contract, the board met to ratify it and appointed May 1st following, as the date on which the State college should be formally opened for the recep- tion of students. That year the attendance at the University reached the highest point in its history — 318 — of whom 94 were State college students and 54 were high school students. The necessity for more room for laboratories and class- rooms was so apparent, and the prospects of the college so flattering that the city of Athens, by a vote of its citizens, donated $25,000 to the University for a building to supply the want. This was done in recognition of the services the University had done the town as its virtual founder, and for years its main support." UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. v "> The large vote, almost unanimous, by which this dona- tion was supported, was due mainly to the popularity and personal efforts of Dr. Richard D. Moore, one of the most active trustees on the board, and in recognition of that tact, the building, when completed, was named for him, "Moore College." There has long existed in the minds of even intelligent men a very hazy notion of the connection between Franklin Col- lege and the State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. Both, like the Technological School, afterwards established, are separate departments of the University of Georgia, which has the authority in its charter to establish other colleges in the State. The trustees by their action said, "we have ample buildings, apparatus and a valuable library which are occupied by Franklin College, whose income is lim- ited. The State college has a good income, but no buildings, nor can any of the fund belonging to that college be ex- pended upon the purchase or erection of buildings. We will permit the State college to use the lecture-rooms and labora- toriesof Franklin College; certain professors in the latter can also teach in the former, and the State college fund can help to pa3 r their salaries and other ordinary expenses, excepting repairs. This, in fact, is done. The professor of physics in Franklin College, for instance, teaches also in the State col- lege and his salary is paid by both institutions. There is practically, no distinction between the two, the lectures going on simultaneously and the classes advancing pari passu. By combining the incomes of the two colleges, several other important departments are supported and the efficiency of both colleges greatly increased. The copartnership was the salvation of the University of Georgia and the only oppor- tunity it has ever had to enlarge its curriculum and rise to the level of a high-grade institution of learning. • During the year 1872, Professor Smead died and was succeeded by Professor Cyprian P. Willcox; Dr. W. L. Jones resigned and Professor H. C. White was elected in his place; Gen. E. P. Alexander was appointed vice-chancellor and professor of industrial mechanics, but declined ; Dr. E. 86 HISTORICAL SKETCH M. Pendleton was made professor of agriculture, and Capt. James Bonham became instructor in military tactics. The following year, Chancellor Lipscomb resigned. Andrew Adgate Lipscomb was a native of Virginia. His boyhood was spent in the historic region of Manassas, and every foot of that fiercely -contested ground was familiar and its features distinct in his recollection. Entering the ministry of the Protestant Methodist church, his feeble health soon demanded his retirement, and he located in Ala- bama, building up a prosperous female school at Mont- gomery. Dr. Lipscomb was a scholar of great erudition and a lec- turer of great power. As a sermonizer, he was prone to get beyond the depth of his audience, but at times, both in the pulpit and on the rostrum, he rose to flights of eloquence rarefy equalled in a land of orators. He was essentially a benevolent man, large-hearted and loving. It was his fault, if fault it could be called, to think too well of everyone. He never recognized the "old Adam,' 1 nor admitted the ex- istence of ''pure cussedness" in any boy. Henry W. Grady, when a college student, in a college paper, admirably carica- tured the chancellor in a mock account of trial by the fac- ulty of a student for a misdemeanor. When the other profes- sors had expressed their views, one plainly declaring that he believed "Mr. M. was dwunk," Dr. Lipscomb said, "I ap- prehend that the unconscious cerebration in Mr. McL — 's case, reacting through the nervous system, so excited the brain cells, that the impulse given to muscular action be- came irresistible." Though abhorring discipline in its strictest sense, Dr. Lips- comb, by personal appeals to the better nature of his boys— "My dear boys" as he was wont to call them — and by earn- est personal interviews, awakened in many a student aspi- rations to a nobler life. While chancellor he inaugurated the Sabbath afternoon service for students. In these lectures he was at his best. Brief— never longer than a half -hour— pointed, and perfect gems of thought and delivery, they attracted large audiences 1 \l\ EBSITY OF GEORGIA. . s < from the city, taxing the utmost capacity of the prayer- room. A. master of elocution, a thorough rhetorician and an enthusiast in teaching, the careers of his pupils, many of them prominent men in this and other States, is the measure of Dr. Lipscomb's success. When lie retired from the University, he did so seeking ie- lief from the responsibilities of his office. Always a sufferer, his nerves were always overstrung, and while apparently well, and seemingly robust, if interested in his subject, he would be greatly prostrated by the reaction. Dr. Lipscomb served the University well in the most try- ing times of its history and left it the established pride of the State. For a few years after his resignation, he served as a lecturer at Vanderbilt University, then returned to spend the remainder of his threescore and ten years at his home in Athens. After the death of Chancellor Mell, Dr. Lipscomb filled temporarily the chair of moral philosophy. 88 HISTORICAL SKETCH XVII. Chancellor Tucker's Administration — The "Walk Around" — Professor W. Leroy Broun — Sketch of Dr. Tucker. 1873-1878. Chancellor Lipscomb was succeeded by Rev. Henry H. Tucker, D. D. At the same time Rev. Eustace W. Speer was elected professor of belles-lettres and Gen. William M. Browne professor of history and political science. The first annual report of Chancellor Tucker divulged a woeful condition as to the discipline in the college. He declar- ed the students were very disorderly, stamping, scraping the feet and* even smoking cigars, both at prayers and in the recitation rooms, and doing it withal with a manner so child- like and bland, that it was impossible to determine who the guilty parties were. At the same time the chancellor bore testimony to the gentlemanly conduct and admirable be- havior of the students in their personal relations both to the faculty and to the citizens of the town. Evidently the students were trying the mettle of the new chancellor as students will do, to see just how far they mightimpose upon his forbearance. The Doctor declared the scholarship medal system a failure and the society medals a source of great trouble, and alto- gether found much to criticise that was left over from the last administration. The commencement at which that report was made is re- membered by what was jocularly called "The Chancellor's Walk Around.' 1 The house which Dr. Tucker was occupying being unsuited for an entertainment, a public reception was given in the Library room. The guests having assembled, they were formed in two concentric circles after pairing off, and put in motion in opposite directions. Round and round they went, refreshed from time to time with copious draughts of lemonade until the limit of human endurance UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 89 was reached. Then bidding good night to their host, who was really delighted with the success of the experiment, the company took their leave. A reorganization of the faculty resulted in the later resig- nation of Professor W. Leroy Broun, who was succeeded hy Montgomery dimming, a first honor man of the Univer- sity of Toronto and winner of the Prince of Wales' prize. Professor Charles Morris also resigned at the same time. The plan of reorganization declared the chancellor's office to be one of honor and distinction without salary. It was his dut\- to preside at commencement and to confer degrees, the faculty being left to select its own chairman. This much of the plan, however, was repealed soon after to the extent of making the chancellor also a professor as he had always been. During the three years of Dr. Tucker's administration, the roll of matriculates steadily diminished from 266 in the year of Dr. Lipscomb's resignation to 229,203, 161, 116. Dr. Tucker attributed the decline to the continued changes in management in the University and the utter unfitness of the University system, as adopted, to the class of immature students who attend our colleges. Besides that, he inveighed against the low standard of scholarship established by the faculty and charged that no student was refused admis- sion to any class on account of low scholarship. To the cor- rection of these evils, he suggested as an additional remedy — free tuition to all. Whatever were the true causes of the decline, the responsi- bility of the chancellor, justW or unjustly, was not ques- tioned, and the trustees cut the Gordian knot by asking for his resignation. The failure of Chancellor Tucker's admin- istration should not be visited too severely upon him. Doubtless he had not the quality of mind nor the power of execution that make the ideal college president, and even with the most favorable surroundings he would not have suc- ceeded in that office. But there were antagonisms to Dr. Tucker in the faculty, and influences constantly at work to '90 HISTORICAL SKETCH •undermine his strength and negative his efforts to advance the standard of the University. Against such odds success was impossible and his own retirement only a matter of time. Henry Holcombe Tucker was born in Warren county, Georgia, May 10, 1819. His widowed mother marrying a second time, removed to Philadelphia in his childhood, and there he lived until his nineteenth year. He entered the University of Pennsylvania, but graduated at Columbian College, in Washington City, in 1838. For a few years he engaged in mercantile business in Charleston, then studied law, and was admitted to the bar in Forsyth, Ga., prac- ticing until 1848. The knowledge of the practical business of life which he acquired during that decade was of great advantage to him in after life. The death of his wife, within a year after her marriage, brought the conviction to Dr. Tucker's mind that he ought to preach the gospel. He accordingly studied for the ministry under the venerable Dr. Dagg at Mercer; but ur- gent invitations to engage in teaching diverted him from the active ministry. He taught in the Southern Female College at LaGrange, and in 1853, was offered the presi- dency of Wake Forest College in North Carolina, which he declined, to accept the pastorate of the Baptist church in Alexandria, Ya. Here he married Miss Stevens, the excel- lent lady who survives him. In 1856, Dr. Tucker went to Mercer, taking the chair of belles-lettres and metaphysics, which he held until the ex- ercises were closed by the war. During the war, Dr. Tucker was active in every move- ment to alleviate the sufferings of the people. He was the founder of the Georgia Relief and Hospital Association, which carried aid and comfort to thousands of sick and wounded soldiers, and he freely spent his time and money in helping the destitute. On the re-organization of Mercer University in 1866, Dr. Tucker was chosen its president. During his incumbency UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 91 the college was removed from Penfield to Macon, largely through his influence. Resigning in 1871, be went abroad, traveling in Europe with his family a year or more. During a visit to Rome, he organized a Baptist church, and baptized a man in the river Tiber, probably the first event of the kind which had occurred there for fifteen centuries. To one trait of character Dr. Tucker doubtless owed much of the failure of his administration as chancellor at Ath ens. That was his utter lack of policy. He was a thor- oughly honest man, and hated shams of every description. He called a spade a spade, and went straight at everything with a directness that fairly shocked some people. His treatment of the students was fair and open. He never locked his room door nor his desk. Yet during his absence nothing was ever disturbed. On one occasion a number of Baptist ministers, passing through Athens on their way to a state convention, had to lie over a night. One of the resident Baptists, an influential man, suggested that they be entertained at the homes of the people, and asked Dr. Tucker how many he would take. "None, sir," said he. 'T don't want them bringing dirt into my house. Put as many as you think I ought to take at the hotel and I will pay the bill." He said once that he didn't like the Baptists anyhow, and the Baptists didn't like him ; bnt he never wavered in up- holding the doctrines of his church. He made many ene- mies among that denomination while he was president of Mercer, and the falling off in the students here while he was chancellor was chiefly in that class of patronage. Dr. Tucker once said, after his resignation : "The trustees thought I couldn't run the college, but they adopted all my recommendations." This was quite true, for they abolished the University system, returning to the curricula with the various courses each leading to its degree; the}' urged that the standard of scholarship be raised; they made the chan- cellor alone responsible for the discipline of the college, and finally, thev made tuition free. <)2 HISTORICAL SKETCH Dr. Tucker was a great preacher. His thoughts were original, his expressions clear cut and quaint, and his de- livery forcible. It was a treat to hear him. There was a crispness about his preaching as refreshing as the air of an autumn morning. His mind was very active, and he was quick as a flash at repartee. In his home he was a charm- ing host, and his charity to the needy was boundless. None but he knew how helpful he was to the poor. After his retirement from the University, Dr. Tucker went Atlanta, where he lived, the editor and proprietor of the Christian Index. He died September 9, 1889, from the effects, of a fall from the window of his house, after lingering a few days in unconsciousness. William LeRoy Broun was one of the ablest men who had ever been connected with the University. He was not only a close student and exact in his store of knowledge, but a broad-minded, liberal man. He conscientiously endeavored to enlarge the sphere of the University and increase its ca- pacity for usefulness. It was the divergence of their views, though both aimed at the same result, that brought on the separation between him and Dr. Church in 1856. As president of the State College of Agriculture, Professor Broun desired to extend the work of that branch of the University, and required all the land-scrip fund to accom- plish it. He disapproved of the policy the trustees had adopted of scattering that fund among the branch colleges, and in a public address unfortunately charged them w T ith misappropriating it. Though he did not intend the remark in an offensive sense, it did give great offense, and at the ensuing meeting of the' board, their disapprobation of his course was expressed in the strongest terms. Professor Broun, conceiving his opportunity for usefulness to be at an end, resigned. "Little Bruin," as the boys called him, was a well-known figure at Athens. Short of stature, with an immense head and large, projecting forehead, his personnel was peculiarly his own. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. ( .^> After leaving. Athens, Colonel Hronn went to Yander bilt and was subsequently chosen President of the A. and M. College at Auburn, Alabama, which office he still admin- isters with marked ability. -U HISTORICAL SKETCH XVIII. • Chancellor Mell — Colonel Charles C. .Jones— Professor William Henry Waddell — Agricultural Trustees — Branch Colleges — Free Tuition — The Funding Law — Chancellor Mell's Administration. 1878-1881. Rev. Patrick H. Mell, D. D., was elected by the board to succeed Chancellor Tucker. Colonel Charles C. Jones, Jr., was elected Professor of natural philosophy and astronomy vice Montgomery Cum- ming, resigned. What the appropriateness of this appointment noonecould ever perceive. Colonel Jones, an eminent historian, a ripe scholar and a learned gentleman, would have graced other chairs in the University, but for this he had no fitness by previous training. None knew this better than he, and he promptly declined the honor. Professor Charbonnier was assigned to the chair, which he still occupies with so much ability. The new chair of natural history and geology was filled by the appointment of Professor George Little, who retained it, however, but a short time. The opening session of Chancellor Mell's administration was marked by a luss as serious as any the University had ever sustained— the untimely death of Professor Waddell. William Henry Waddell inherited all the ability as a teacher which his father and grandfather had acquired through years of experience. Graduating with the tirst honor in 1852, he taught a year in a Mississippi school. Elected tutor in the University, he entered the faculty, of which , he remained a member until his death . A close s tudent and a finished scholar, Professor Waddell added to these gifts the power to interest and enthuse, which never failed to make its impress upon his pupils. Cordial in manner, strict without severity, honest and just, the student felt safe in his hands and it is doubtful if he ever made an enemy among all who came under his instruction. I NIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 95 Professor Waddell was Lall and moved rapidly and un- gracefully. When he walked he strode, swinging his arms at length, and bis entree into church always excited a smile. He was a deeply religious man, a ruling elder in the Presbyterian church, and latterly licensed to preach. He had a habit while walking along the street of raising his hat ;is if in courtesy to some lady. Often no one being near, his friends were curious to know what it meant. In some way it was found out that it was an act of devotion while he offered a silent prayer. Like Mr. Wegg, Mr. Waddell occasionally "dropped into poetry," nor did he woo the muse in vain. The following lines, written by him, Dr. Lipscomb pronounced among the best he had ever read : REGKET. o current <>r life, Willi thy jarring and strife. Thy hanks were once curtained with drapery bright ; But the stream of my hours. Has forsaken the Mowers And wanders alone through the blackness of night. () river of years Fast flowing with tear-. The zephyrs of Eden once sang to thy waves : Xow the winter wind roars On thy desolate shores While thy shadowy depths are hut merciless graves. Still On, ever on, Thy wafers roll down To the sunless retreats of eternity*.- sea : Where the waves of the deep Their dark vigils keep, And murmur no more o'er the land or the lea. Professor Waddell was married to Mrs. Tew, a daughter of Colonel A. V. Brumby, of Atlanta, who accompanied him to Europe on a visit in 1872. He died suddenly in September, 1878, at Milford, Va., on his way home from Baltimore, the victim of a painful dis- order. 96 HISTORICAL SKETCH Mr. Waddell, as one remarked at the time, touched at many points. In the college, in the church, in the com- munity, and in society, his loss was felt to be irreparable. Nor has his place yet been filled. In 1878, a proposition was made to have four additional trustees appointed from the Georgia State Agricultural Society, in which the board refused to acquiesce. Two years later, however, a bill was passed by the Legislature which provided for that addition and the gentlemen elected by the Society, Messrs. W. H. Felton, J. H. Fannin, L. F. Livingston and S. M. H. Bird, took their seats with the board. There was no more reason why the Agricultural Society should be represented in the board of trustees of the Uni- versity than that the Independent Order of Odd Fellows should, or the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company. Every citizen of the State has an equal interest in the insti- tution and its trustees are not supposed to "represent inter- ests," but to exercise wisdom and discretion in the manage- ment of its affairs and in the fulfillment of its purposes. There was, however, a growing belief among a certain class of so-called farmers that the land-scrip fund was "our" money and the new law was an invitation to them to send a committee to watch its expenditure. It is but just to say that some of these agricultural trus- tees were earnest men and sincere friends of the University and by their conservative counsels aided its growth and prosperity. The year 1878 witnessed also the expansion of the branch college system. The school at Dahlonega had previously been incorporated into the University and was receiving annually $2,000 from the land-scrip fund for its support. Now schools at Milledgeville, Cuthbert, Thomas- ville and later at Hamilton, came forward with offers of land and houses, asking that they, too, be adopted into the family. This was cheerfully done by the accommodating board, and each got a slice of the land-scrip fund until it be- came evident that the mother institution was feeding her adopted children at the risk of starving herself. INIVKK-ITV OF GEORGIA. 97 The theory of the branch college idea was that they wo did become feeders to the University, sending their graduates to us to take advanced or special courses in the completion of their education. As a matter of fact, they became not feed- ers, but competitors. Chancellor Mell complained of this and stated that of 160 students, only five were from the branch colleges. It is doubtful — the figures are not at hand — if so many as fifty, all told, have come from those schools to the University in the fifteen years of their connection w r ith it. The growing conviction in the minds of the trustees of the injury done the University by this course resulted in the withdrawal of financial aid from all excepting Dahlonega, followed by a total divorce from Cuthbert and, practically, a separation from the others. Much confusion and no little dissatisfaction resulted from the varied rates of tuition charges which had existed since the organization of the State College. Under the contract with Governor Smith, a certain number of students were to be admitted free, while others were charged a fixed sum in that college. A higher sum was charged in Franklin College. There were certain free schol- arships granted to the city of Athens and there were still other conditions under wbich a student's charges were re- mitted. In spite of the higher charges in Franklin College, however, more students were registered in that than in the State College, doubtless, because the student preferred the course whose degree w r ould be of most value to him after graduation. At this stage of affairs, the subject of free tuition was con- sidered by the board. Approximate estimates showed that by charging a matriculation fee of ten dollars for each stu- dent, the income of the University would authorize free tui- tion with the aid from the State of $2,000 for one year to offset the tuition fees then received. But some of the bonds in which certain funds arising from the sale of lots had been invested, were about to become* due. Unless these funds could be reinvested at the same rate of interest and that in- 98 HISTORICAL SKETCH teres! be permanent, the trustees were not assured that the plan could be adopted. The whole matter was presented to the Legislature through a committee of the board and a statement of the facts made, which resulted in the Act of September 26, 1881. This act, "To enable the trustees of the University of Georgia to inaugurate a system of free tuition in that insti- tution;" also provides that whenever the University shall present any of its valid matured bonds of the State to the treasury, it shall be the duty of the governor to issue to the trustees in lieu of those matured bonds, an obligation in writing, in the nature of a bond, in an amount equal to the principal of the matured bonds and falling due fifty years from the date of issue, bearing interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum and not redeemable by the State before that time, nor negotiable, nor transferable by the trustees. After the passage of this act, tuition was made free in all the academic schools of the University. In addition to the matriculation fee, a charge of five dollars for each student is made for the support and enlargement of the library. The operation of this law does not extend to the law and medical schools. Those are professional schools, the fees of which do not go into the treasury of the college, but to the professors who teach therein. Prior to the execution of the contract with Governor Smith, there had been intermittent action providing for free tuition to certain classes. In 1830, the poor school commis- sioners of each county were allowed to send a student to college for four years without charge. Sons of ministers of the gospel and young men preparing for the minist^ were admitted free if unable to pay their tuition. Maimed Confederate soldiers were provided for by special legisla- tion; and in 1868, fifty free scholarships were opened to young men upon their merits without regard to their pecu- niary condition. Chancellor M ell's administration was a decade of prosper- ity to the University. He brought to the office long experi- UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 99 ence as a college professor, strong convictions of duty, a well-digested policy and the confidence of the powerful re- jigious denomination to which he belonged. He at once set to work to gain more students, and to that end, his efforts never flagged. Indeed, it was charged that he measured the success of his administration by the number of matricu- lates, and that violations of the laws were overlooked rather than dismiss the offenders. Be that as it may, the attendance increased from 116 in the year of his inau- guration to 216 in the year of his death. Dr. Mell had to contend, as he said in one of his reports, with the most ungenerous competition of other colleges. ''Attacks are made on us," said he, "not only in private circles, but from the pulpits in all sections of the common- wealth. Our scholarship is disparaged; infidelity and irre- ligion are charged against us. Most exaggerated accounts are given of extravagant living, and parents are made to believe that immorality and vice reign rampant here." Against this and other difficulties, the Chancellor set his face steadfastly to carry out the policy he had adopted. He believed it was better to find out what mischief a stu- dent was contemplating, and prevent its execution, than to wait until the deed was done and then administer punish- ment. He used every means to maintain good order. The citizens were brought to co-operate with the faculty and the faculty with the chancellor. The Greek letter fraterni- ties w r ere encouraged to influence their members, and the non-fraternity men were invited to co-operate with the pro- fessors in controlling their classes. The college dormitories were converted into boarding houses — Old College, under the fatherly care of Mr. Peter A. Summey, and New College under Mr. Richardson — and efforts w r ere made to give a semblance of home to those uninviting walls. This last was a compromise between the chancellor and trustees. Dr. Mell bitterly opposed the dormitory system. He regarded it as an open bid for noise and disorder and idleness. He recommended their utter abolition and the scattering of the 100 HISTORICAL SKETCH students amongjthe various homes and boarding houses of the town. But the board did not see its way to abandon its only means of furnishing cheap board, and the college boarding house was the outcome. It served a purpose, but its influ- ence was neither educative nor refining. Cheap board meant poor food, and the "Summey House biscuit" was a dyspep- tic germ when fresh and a dangerous projectile when stale. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 101 XIX. The McCay Donation — The Charles McDonald Brown Fund — The Terrell Donation — other Donations and Bequests. 1879-1882. In 1879, it was stated to the trustees that a friend of the Uriversity desired to make a donation for its benefit with a view that it should be kept at compound interest for a given time before being used. The board declared its willingness to accept it upon the conditions named. The friend referred to was Mr. Charles F. McCa} r , former- ly professor of mathematics, but who, after leaving the pro- fession of teaching, became the leading actuary for insur- ance companies in America. No doubt Mr. McCay 's occupa- tion had led him to figure on the possibilities of a fund put at compound interest, and the donation was made in conse- quence. The deed of gift is as follows : The Charles F. McCay Donation. City of Baltimore, State of Maryland: Know all men by these presents, that I, Charles F. McCay, of the city and State aforesaid, for and in consideration of the affection and interest felt by me in the University of Georgia, located at Athens, Georgia, with which I was con- nected for twenty }-ears, from 1833 to A. D. 1853, and of the sum of Ten Dollars to me in hand paid by the trustees of the said University, the receipt of which is hereby acknowl- edged, have given, granted and conve\ r ed and by these pres- ents do give, grant and convey to the trustees of the Univer- sity of Georgia, the sum of Seven Thousand Dollars in bonds of the Western Railroad of Alabama, indorsed by the Georgia and the Central Railroad Companies of Georgia, upon the following trusts and limitations: ICte HISTORICAL SKETCH First. That the trustees of the University of Georgia shall hold and safely keep said bonds until they shall mature, and not permit the principal or interest thereof to be used in any manner or for any purpose different from the donations and trusts hereinafter specified. Second. That the said trustees of the University of Geor- gia shall, from time to time, collect the 8 per cent, interest due on said bonds and the principal, when due, and shall an- nually or semi-annually, when practicable, invest the interest when received, and the principal when collected, in bonds of the State of Georgia, or in bonds of the Georgia and Central Railroad and Banking Companies or of the cities of Augus- ta, Atlanta and Savannah, Georgia, and shall continue to reinvest the interest as received on said bonds and the prin- cipal when collected (and the dividends on said stocks) so that the same shall be compounded annually, or semi-annually if practicable, without any diminution of any part thereof for any other uses than such reinvestment and accumulation of interest, principal and dividends until the expiration of the term of twenty-one years after the death of all the fol- lowing named persons, viz. : Mary M. Buchanan, my granddaughter; George Read McCay and Emma Thornton McCay, grand- children of my brother Isaiah ; Robert McCay Bisell and Susan Kent Bisell, grandchildren of my sister Susan ; Helen McCay and Susan McCay, granddaughters of my brother Neal ; Laura Ta}dor and Catharine Taylor, adopted grand- daughters of my brother Kent ; Thornton Carson, grandson of my brother Robert; George S. Sheldon and John E. Sheldon, grandsons of my sister Sally Read ; Harvey DuBose Hill and Janie May Hill, grandchildren of my brother George ; Thacker Howard and Antoinette Howard, grandchildren of my brother Milton ; UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 108 Annie I Wish and Annie Harrison, granddaughters of my brother Albert ; Sarah Jackson and Bnshrod Jackson, grandchildren of my sister Sarah ; Minnie Williams and William Dickens, grandchildren of my brother William; Harrold Baxter, grandson of my sister Martha, and Arthur Machen and Abbott Gresham, grandsons of my friend, John J. Gresham. And after the lapse of the said time, the said trustees shall continue to keep the aggregate sum so accumulated on the bonds and stocks before mentioned, as a permanent fund, and shall use the interest or dividends therefrom for the payment of the salaries of professors or lecturers in the University of Georgia, residing in Athens, Ga., where the University is lo- cated. In testimony whereof, I have signed and sealed these pres- ents and a duplicate thereof, this 8th day of December, 1879. Charles F. McCay. [l. s.] In presence of P. G. Wallace. Some years later, by mutual consent, the bonds delivered to the trustees were exchanged by Mr. McCay for State of Georgia bonds of the face value of $15,000. It is estimated that about one hundred years will have ex- pired before the interest of this fund can be available under the trust. In that time, if no disaster befall, the fund will have amounted to about $10,000,000, and the University will have an income from that source of $500,000, with which to pay the salaries of its professors. Would that some calculating friend had in its early infan- cy thus endowed the college. In 1882, the University was the recipient of another dona- tion more immediately useful, but in a different way— the Charles McDonald Brown Scholarship Fund. The following letter from Governor Brown explains fully its objects : 104 historical sketch Charles McDonald Brown Scholarship Fund LETTER OE GOVERNOR BROWN. Athens, Ga., July 15th, 1882. To the Board of Trustees of the University of Georgia: Gentlemen — I have had the honor to hold the position of trustee and member of your Board for over a -quarter of a century. During all this time I have felt great interest in the success and prosperity of the University. It has long been my wish to do something which may afford substantial aid to it, and result in permanent future good to the people of this State, who have so long sus- tained and honored me. I am now in better condition to carry out this cherished object than I have been at any time since my connection with the Board. Nearly one year ago, my son, Charles McDonald Brown, a noble Christian youth, of fine intellectual and business capacity, the soul of honor and integrity, who had been a student in the University, was taken from us by death. He was named for my true and cherished friend, the late Gov- ernor Charles J. McDonald. He was possessed of some estate, the bulk of which he left to me and his mother, giv- ing small sums to each of his brothers and sisters, in token of his love and affectionate regard for them. He had bright prospects, and if he had lived, might reasonably have expected, at no distant day, at my death, to go into the possession of considerable addition to his estate. Now, while it is my object to do something that will ad- vance the interests of the University, and aid, to some useful extent, in the education of worthy young men of the State, who are not able to educate themselves, I desire, at the same time, to perpetuate the name of my said deceased son in connection with the University, and also that of my old friend, Governor McDonald, whose name he bore. As a means of doing this, I propose, with your consent, and upon the terms and conditions hereinafter mentioned, to make UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 105 a donation to the University Of Fifty Thousand Dollars, money that might have been possessed by my son if he had lived— to be known and in all appropriate publications made by the University designated as the "CHARLES ^'DONALD BROWN SCHOLARSHIP FUND." This donation to be made on condition that the State of Georgia will receive the said sum (which I will pay in cash) into her treasury, to be used in payment of the public debt, or in such other manner as may be for the best interest of the State, and will issue her bond, or bonds, to the Univer- sity, bearing 7 per cent, interest, the interest to be paid semi-annually to the University, the bond or obligation to run for fifty years. At the last session the General Assembfy passed an act to make permanent the income of the Univer- sity, which provides, in substance, that whenever the trus- tees of the University of Georgia shall, through their duly au- thorized agent or officer, present at the State treasury, for redemption, any valid matured bond of the State, as the property of the University, that the Governor shall issue to the trustees in lieu of said matured bond, an obligation in writing in the nature of a bond, in an amount equal to said matured bond, falling due fifty years after date of such issue, the same to bear interest at the rate of 7 oer cent, per annum, and not to be subject to be called in for redemption by the State before the time; not to be negotiable by the trustees, but payable to them alone, to be issued under the great seal of the State, signed by the Governor, and coun- tersigned by the Secretary of State. All I ask is that the State treat the amount which I pro- pose to donate to the University just as she would treat any other amount of money which may be the property of the University, due at the maturity of any bond or bonds of the State, belonging to the University. I have long thought it the duty of the State to endow the University liberally, and believe that wise statesmanship and sound policy dic- tated such a course. While the representatives of the people have not yet done what, it seems to me, would be wise in this particular, they have shown a disposition to make per- 106 HISTORICAL SKETCH manent the endowment which the University possesses, and I think it would be only a reasonable extension of this law to make it apply to all funds that may be donated to the University, as well as funds belonging to the University in maturing bonds. I cannot doubt that the Legislature will see the wisdom and propriety of doing this, and I, therefore, make the dona- tion conditional upon the passage of an act to carry out this object, in accordance with the rule above mentioned, at the next session of the General Assembly, and upon the further condition, that the fund shall be used for the pur- poses and in the manner hereinafter mentioned. There are hundreds, and I believe thousands, of young men of good character in Georgia, who are intellectual and ambitious to become useful, who desire to obtain a liberal education ; some with a view to the prof ession of law, others the practice of medicine; some for the gospel ministry, some engineers, architects, chemists, teachers, professors in colleges, and other useful and honorable pursuits ; some of whom have at their command part of the means neces- sary to board and clothe them while engaged in the pur- suit of their studies, in connection with the University. Other young men may be very bright and very worthy, w^ho have none of the means necessary to pay for board and clothing while engaged in their studies. I believe there are manj^ young men of both classes mentioned who would consider it their good fortune to" be able to borrow, at a reasonable rate of interest, a sufficient amount to carry them through college or to enable them to graduate in the particular profession or pursuit which they intend to follow, and who would be willing, after they had obtained an edu- cation and prepared themselves for business, to refund the money as soon as they could make it, after providing for their livelihood in an economical manner, until they are able to pay it. Such a young man, who takes a proper view of the sub- ject, would not desire to incur more indebtedness than neces- sity required. He would be willing, for the sake of obtain- UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 107 ingan education, to wear plain clothing, and be content with cheap board, it" it was really good and wholesome. I know from experience in early life the feelings of a youth, desirous of educating himself without the means to do so, and the good fortune which a loan of money for support while engaged in study was considered as conferring upon the recipient. I recollect very well, too, that prudence dic- tated an economical course so as to incur no more indebted- ness than was absolutely necessaiw. I preferred to live plainh- and cheaply and study hard, ratherthan be too much loaded with debt, but I considered myself very fortunate when I was able to borrow 7 the amount actually necessary for the prosecution of my studies, even to a limited extent. And I doubt not there are at this time large numbers of young men in similar situations, who are prompted by the same feelings. The object of this donation is to establish a fund in the hands of the University, the interest of which is to be loaned to young men of the character I mention. First. To aid in part, such young men as may have some means, but not sufficient to carry them through the course selected by them. Second. To aid those who have no means, but who are bright and worthy and ambitious to succeed. I desire that the University do this, by loaning the interest which may accrue from the principal each year, to young men of the classes above mentioned, no young man to avail himself of the benefit of the fund until he is eighteen years of age, each to sign a pledge of honor when he enters the college and com- mences to receive the fund, that he will refund the amount that he receives to the University, as soon after he completes his course of study as he may be able to make it, living eco- nomically in the meantime, and as this obligation, given dur- ing the minority of the student, would not be legally binding, let him also pledge himself that, when twenty-one years of age, he will give to the University his obligation, legally binding himself for the payment of said sum, as aforesaid, with four per cent, interest per annum upon the same. 108 HISTORICAL SKETCH As each will incur indebtedness by borrowing the means necessary to educate himself, each will become more self- reliant, which will be better for him in the end, if he is man- ly and possesses talent, than if the amount had been given to him. And as tuition is now free in the University, I direct that not more than two hundred dollars per annnm shall be loaned to any student, to be advanced to him monthly, dur- ing the scholastic year, but interest to commence to run on the amount advanced each year, at the end of the year. Having no tuition to pay, a young man, with close economy, may be able to get along upon that sum, and many who have part of the means necessary will not desire so much. I earnestly urge upon each recipient of the fund, the im- portance of paying back the money as promptly as possible, and I trust each will consider it a sacred obligation, as the payment increases the amount to be loaned to others who will be anxious to receive the same benefits enjoyed by him- self. If there should be a larger number of promising young men to apply for the benefits of the loan than can be accom- modated, then I direct that the trustees of the University provide for a selection of recipients, from time to time, in such manner as in their judgment may be most fair and equitable. My wish is that they be selected as impartially as may be from all parts of the State, so that each section of the State may be represented. If there are many appli- cants, and it can conveniently be done, I think a competitive examination might be best, but there will no doubt be many cases where this cannot be had without difficulty and where the young man is very bright and worthy, in which case the appointment can very safely be made without a competitive examination. I wish such young men selected as are bright, of good moral character, apt to learn, in reasonable health and am- bitious, to prepare themselves for usefulness. I do not wish to make a donation to students, but to place a fund in the r.\i\ kksi TV OF GEORGIA. 109 hands of the University, which it will loan them in aid of their education, to be paid back by them as aforesaid. I desire the amount paid by each student, in return for the money he has received, to be added annually, as it is paid in, to the principal sum above mentioned, and only the interest upon it to be loaned in future, which will enable the Univer- sity, from time to time, to increase the number of young men to whom it can make loans. This will ultimately in- crease the amount of principal, which in course of time, if properly managed, will grow to a large sum. I trust the Legislature of our noble old State will make provision for receiving this accumulation into the treasuiw, from time to time, and issue its bonds to the University in lieu of it, as the fund may accumulate. But if, contrary to my desire and expectation, the State, after having given its obligation for the principal sum of the donation above mentioned, shall at any time refuse to issue its bonds for the accumulated sum in aid of the University, or shall at the end of fifty years, refuse to issue its bond or obligation for the principal sum of fifty thousand dollars, and shall pay the same over to the University, then the board of trustees may in each or either of said cases, invest such fund as may ac- cumulate in the bonds of the United States or of other States. The general provisions above mentioned are subject to the following qualifications : I desire that the sum of one thousand dollars, interest ac- cruing annually from the said principal sum of fifty thou- sand dollars, as above mentioned, be used by the board of trustees aforesaid, to aid young men to pursue their studies in the North Georgia Agricultural College, at Dahlonega, upon the same terms as are prescribed for students at the University at Athens, except that the students who may participate in the benefits of this fund at Dahlonega must be selected under, such rules and regulations as the board of trustees of the University may prescribe (to be reasonable and just), from the mountain counties of Northeast Georgia, and the counties of Oconee, Pickens and Anderson, in the 110 HISTORICAL SKETCH State of South Carolina — Pickens District, now Oconee and Pickens counties, contains my birthplace. My life, up to the commencement of my manhood, was spent in the district of my birthplace in South Carolina, and in the mountains of Northeast Georgia, and the first credit I received for money in aid of my education, was in the county of Anderson, S. C, in which Calhoun Academy, where I commenced my studies, is located. The mountain section above mentioned was the theatre of my early struggle with poverty, in my attempt to educate myself, and I wish to pay its people, who have sympa- thized with and supported me in every emergency, this small tribute of my grateful recollection. As the amounts loaned students at Dahlonega are returned, I wish them to be added to the principal, which is set apart out of the sum of fifty thousand dollars as donated above to raise the said sum of one thousand dollars annually for said college at Dahlonega, so that it may accumulate as in case of the fund set apart for students at the University at Athens, both being placed upon the same principle of accumulation. If the North Georgia Agricultural College should at any time be discontinued (which I trust may never occur), and any other school or college of like grade should take its place at Dahlonega, or in any of the mountain counties of North- east Georgia, that is not denominational in its character, the benefits intended for the North Georgia Agricultural College at Dahlonega are to be transferred to the students of such college or high school as may be selected by the board of trustees of the State University, to take its place in said sec- tion of country. If, unfortunately, there should at anytime in the future, be no such school kept in the said section of Northeast Georgia, for as much as five years, then the fund set apart for that purpose shall be transferred to the University of Georgia at Athens, and become part of the fund to be 'expended in aid of the students there in the manner and on the terms alread\ r mentioned. l\l\ KKHITY OK GEORGIA. 1 1 1 If there should be any year when there are not enough of applicants tor the fund, of good moral character and prom- ise, to consume all the amount of interest accruing during that year, the accrued interest not so used, is to be added to the principal sum and placed at interest, the annual interest to be applied to the purpose a lreach r designated. Incaseof the fund to be loaned at Dahlonega, as living is cheaper there than at Athens, I directthat not more than one hundred and fifty dollars annualh T be loaned to any young man while en- gaged in the pursuit of his studies, to be paid to him month- ly, the interest for each year to commencejat the end of the year. The amount in each case may seem small, but a young man without means who is not willing to live economically to secure an education, or who is willing to go in debt to ob- tain larger sums to be expended in better Hying or for greater display at college, is not, in my opinion, the person most likely to succeed, or most w r orthy to be trusted with funds with which he is expected to return. Any young man who pursues his studies for the purpose of preparing himself for the ministry in any of the churches, and who, after the completion of his studies, devotes his time and talent, under the authority of his church, to the work of the ministr}', as his profession or business, shall only be required to return to the University, one-half the amount received by him, with interest as aforesaid. Any young man studying to prepare himself for the pro- fession of medicine, may pursue his studies' in Augusta, where the Medical Department of the University is located. Xo part of the fund herein mentioned, shall at any time be paid as fees, commission, salary or otherwise, to the trustees, or an}- officer or agent of the trustees, or any officer or agent of the University. As the fund is donated to aid poor, but worthy young men to secure a liberal education, I have full confidence that the trustees and officers of the University, with whom I have acted so long, and their successors, will, as heretofore, in all cases connected with their trust, administer this as apart of the funds of the University, for the good of all, for the 112 HISTORICAL SKETCH usual salaries which the officers would receive if no such fund existed. If it should at any time become necessary, to employ coun- sel to collect money due from any one who borrowed it as a student, and is able to pay it back and refuses to do so, then it wall be expected that the usual fees be paid to such coun- sel, and some attorney might in such case be employed to look generally after such collections, and see that the Uni- versity does not suffer loss by inattention to such collections. I reserve to my four sons, Julius L. Brown, Joseph M. Brown, Elijah A. Brown and George M. Brown, each, the right to select one young man to receive the benefits of the loan, and as the one selected graduates or leaves college, to select another as successor so that each may constantly, dur- ing his natural life, keep one student of his own selection in the University, as a recipient of the use of the funds neces- sary in his case, subject to the regulations above specified, and in case anyone or each of my sons shall select a kinsman as near to him as the fourth degree of consanguinity, such student shall have the benefit of the fund free from the obli- gation to return it to the University if my said son, selecting such relative, shall so direct, all other selections to be made under the rules and regulations to be prescribed by the board of trustees, as already mentioned. And my said sons, and the survivor or survivors of them, shall have all the usual rights of visitation, with power to see that the trust as- sumed by the board of trustees in behalf of the University is justly and faithfully administered, and in case the trust is unjustly, illegally or wrongfully abused, to proceed in the proper court to recover back the funds for the use of my le- gal heirs; but neither my heirs, nor any one of them, shall have the right to recover back the said sum on account of any technical or inadvertent failure to carry out the trust, if there has not been an important or substantial failure to do so. The survivor of my said four sons may by his will appoint some one with like power of visitation, if he thinks proper to do so. Joseph E. Brown. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, 1 13 The trustees accepted Governor Brown's proposition by a formal resolution, but not without opposition from Gen- eral Toombs (then personally at enmity with Governor Brown), who objected on the ground that its conditions were unconstitutional and asked that his protest against its acceptance be recorded on the minutes of the board. Gov- ernor Brown then with the utmost suavity asked leave to file with the protest a paper which he produced and which proved to be a copy of a letter from General Toombs giving an opinion in the case of the Alexander Free School of Macon, the conditions of which were similar to this, and in which, he declared the identical proposition to be constitutional. The Charles McDonald Brown Fund has, up to this date (1894), aided 150 young men in completing their education, and $35,000 has been loaned to them for that purpose. It has been a boon to many an ambitious bo\^, helping him to rise out of the vale of ignorance and furnishing him with the means of making a support. These two notable donations recall the gift from Mr. James Gunn, Jr., in 1802, of one thousand dollars, the first private gift in money to the University, and coming at a time when sorely needed. This was followed in 1817 by a contribution of the same sum by Mr. John Marks, of Madi- son county, for the purchase of philosophical apparatus. From that time no private purse strings were unloosed in behalf of the University until 1854, when Dr. William Ter- rell, of Hancock county, sent the following communication to the trustees : Sparta, July 27th, 1854. To the Honorable, the Trustees of the University of Georgia : ( ientlemen — From such observation as I have had an op- portunity to make, on the condition of the people in differ- ent parts of the world, I am quite satisfied that there are none who are so abundantly supplied with all the neces- saries and comforts of life as our own ; and that there is no form of government so suitable to the intellectual develop- ment of a people or the resources of a country, as that of the United States. 114 HISTORICAL SKETCH To give perpetuity to the compact of these confederated States, the principles of which have thrown so much light on the social and political relations of man, and aided so much in the advancement of civilization and the means of individual and national prosperity, is surely the duty of every patriot. Education is doing much for this great ob- ject in ever\r department of knowledge, except in agriculture, and in this, the most important of all, the United States are far behind most of the States of Europe; and the Southern, with the advantage of soil and climate, much more so than the Eastern and Northern. The best form of government for a country, where a system of agriculture prevails that is constantly tending to impoverish the soil, cannot long sus~ tain a thrifty population or be able to defend itself. To avoid such a calamity, which there is reason to fear will be our condition at no distant day, the people of the South- ern States must find the means of preserving their lands from destruction by bad tillage, which is so strikingly ob- servable in every part of the country. To aid in this great enterprise, if you will allow me to call it such, I propose to your honorable body, to give to Franklin College bonds of the State to the amount of Twenty Thousand Dollars, the annual interest of which shall be applied permanently as compensation for a pro. fessor, whose duty it shall be to deliver in the college a course of lectures during its term, on ''Agriculture as a Science ; the Practice and Improvement of Different People ; on Chemistry and Geology so far as they may be useful in Agriculture; on Manures, Analysis of Soil and Domestic Economy, particularly referring to the Southern States;" the lectures to be free. If this proposition is acceptable to you, I shall ask the privilege of recommending to your consideration for the ap~ pointment of the first professor, Dr. Daniel Lee, who has spent twenty years of his life in the study and practice of agriculture, and who will bring to its duties all his skill and a zeal that ought to insure success. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1 L5 With considerations of the highest respect, 1 am your obe- dient servant, Wm. Terrell. This liberal donation was accepted by the board in reso- lutions expressing their appreciation of Dr. Terrell's patri. otic purpose. The "Terrell Professorship of Agriculture" was created and Dr. Daniel Lee, of New York, was unani- mously appointed to the position. In 1859, Gen. Robert Taylor, of Athens, left by will $5,000 for a scholarship in the college. The funds in which this bequest w as invested were rendered valueless by the war and so lost to the institution. Mention has been made of the $25,000 given by the city of Athens in 1873 for the erection of Moore College. This timely donation enabled the University to greatly enlarge its capacit\- for usefulness when the necessity was upon it to do so. The Gilmer Fund can hardly be classed with donations since the University derives no benefit from it, even remotely. Governor Gilmer left by will to certain trustees $15,000, "to form a perpetual fund for educating teachers of reading, writing and arithmetic, or to otherwise increase the qualifica- tions of schoolmasters of Georgia for properly instructing the children of the State." The securities in which this fund was held coming due, and the difficulty of reinvesting them at the same rate of interest being apparent to the trustees, they proposed to the trus- tees of the University to take charge of the fund and ad- minister it according to the terms of Governor Gilmer's will. This was acceded to by the board solely in the inter- ests of public education, but it has proved a veritable apple of discord. The Gilmer Fund, although of no benefit to the University, has been the source of more wrangling and annoyance than almost any other matter in the control of the board. Other valuable gifts have been made from time to time, of books and scientific collections and curiosities, none the less acceptable because unnoticed in detail. 116 HISTORICAL SKETCH Among these, the fine painting of St. Peters in Rome, by Mr. George Cook, must not be overlooked. It is the gift of Mr. Daniel Pratt, of Montgomery, an intimate friend of Dr. Lipscomb, and now adorns the chapel stage. r.NIYKh'siTY OF GEORGIA. 117 XX. Col. William L. Mitchell — Dr. E. \v. Speer — Dr.William Louis Jones — (icn William M. Browne — Experiment Station — Library — School of Technology — Death of Chancellor Biell. 1882-1888. The death of William Letcher Mitchell in 1882 removed from the college roll a conspicuous character and a friend devoted to all its interests. A graduate of the class of 1825, elected a tutor in 1830 and a trustee in 1842, he was acting president during a brief interregnum and succeeded Mr. As- burv Hull as secretary and treasurer, and Judge Lumpkin as professor of law. In all these offices he was faithful to the trusts confided to him, and at all times and under all cir- cumstances, unwavering in his devotion to the University. Col. Mitchell was a man of pronounced character and strong convictions. He was never found on the fence. He was always ready with either j-es or no for an answer. A warm friend and a good hater himself, he counted both among his acquaintances all through life. He had a cousin of the same name living in Athens, and to distinguish him, the soubriquet of '' Slick-head" was given Col. Mitchell from his manner of brushing the hair. This nickname stuck to him for many years. A warm attachment grew up between him and Dr. Lipscomb, and throughout the latter's administration Mr. Mitchell was fidus amicus curiae. With an active mind and original in thought, Mr. Mitchell would sometimes present the most startling propositions, both in private and in religious assemblies. He was always interesting and often instructive. Once discoursing on the Last Supper, quoting the words "drink ye all of it," he said: "Now, the Episcopalians think that means you must drink it all it]). Sometimes, when they have their commun- 118 HISTOKICAL SKETCH ion, the preacher prepares for a big congregation, and only a few come, and they have a good deal of wine left over. Then the preacher has to call in the church officers to help him drink it and sometimes they come away a little tipsy." He always insisted that the "thorn in the flesh" from which St. Paul .suffered was a second wife. In his latter years, Mr. Mitchell was a great sufferer from asthma and from its effects he finally died, in the full com- munion of the Presbyterian faith. After a service of eight years, Dr. Eustace W. Speer, a scholarly man and a polished rhetorician, resigned the chair of belles-lettres, and Professor Charles Morris was recalled to take his place in the faculty. Dr. William Louis Jones was elected professor of agri- culture in the place of Gen. Browne who had not long be- fore died. William M. Browne was a native of Ireland. After going through the famous school at Rugby, he graduated at Dub- lin University. Coming to America after an extensive tour of travel on the continent, he settled in Washington City, where he became the editor of the leading administration paper under President Buchanan. At the outbreak of the Civil War he espoused the cause of the South, and 'going to Richmond, was appointed by President Davis, who had known him well, one of his aids with the rank of brigadier- general. General Browne became a resident of Athens a year before the close of the war. A scholarly man, a great reader and anamiablecompanion,hemade many friends in Georgia. Indeed, it has been said that his friends made the chair which he occupied especially for him. In so far as his connection with the chair of agriculture was concerned, he was a fail- ure. He had no training whatever for the work. He didn't know the difference between nitrogen and ammonia, and he believed that feeding a cow on fodder would dry up her milk. But as a student of history and kindred subjects, he was quite well fitted for that department, and his lectures were much appreciated. He died in 1883, a member of the Metho- dist church. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1 L9 Dr. Jones brought to his office a vigorous intellect and a mind trained by long habit to accurate observation. As editor of the Southern Cultivator, the leading agricultural paper in the South, he had earned the reputation of a clear- headed, practical farmer. His advice on all sorts of plans was sought by farmers all over the South, and when given, was regarded as an ultimatum. By education and subse- quent training, by the habits of his life and the character of his mind, Dr. Jones seemed to be eminently fitted for this work, and if any one could raise the department from the worse than useless state to which it had fallen, he was be- lieved to be the man to do it. He set to work with energy to make something of the chair, but from the very nature of things he was doomed to disappointment. The only class- room work that could be done was the work of the ''Terrell Professor of Agriculture," performed in a course of lectures on agricultural chemistry by Prof. H. C. White. Beyond this, everything was experiment in the field. The professor, therefore, rarely met the students in classes, and his time was devoted to the work of the farm. The act of Congress appropriating $15,000 annually to the support of experiment stations in the agricultural col- leges gave Dr. Jones, who was made director of the station in Georgia, an opportunity he had long desired. Extensive preparations were made at the college farm for experiment- ing with ensilage and dairy products and the various crops of the Southern States. The act of the Legislature, however, upset all his plans by creating a board of directors, who captured the funds and all its appurtenances, removed the station from Athens and appointed an entirely new set of officers. Disappointed and supplanted in the field of farm experi- ment, Dr. Jones not long afterwards resigned his professor- ship and retired the third time from the University. From its earliest years, the library of the college had been almost like a sealed book. It had been the custom for one of the professors to act as librarian, opening the room for an hour on certain days to enable students to get books 120 HISTORICAL SKETCH which they might take to their rooms. In 1887, a new plan was adopted by which the advantages of the excellent library were offered to all the students and its usefulness greatly increased. Miss Sarah Friersonwas elected the muse of literature, and under her methodical arrangement and ad- mirable management, the library is the chief resort of the bo\'s. The room is cheerful, nicely-carpeted, furnished with comfortable chairs and is made still more attractive by plants and flowers. The librarian is always attentive and polite, and such is her popularity that no student has cared or dared to violate the rules imposed upon him by "Miss Puss." Another branch college was established by the Legislature in 1885 — The School of Technology. A commission ap- pointed by the governor controls the details of this institu- tion, their acts subject to the revision of the trustees of the University. When the selection of its location was under consideration, the trustees offered free a site for the build- ings on the campus, the use of the library and laboratories for the students of the school, and their assent to the pro- fessors of the University delivering lectures in the Technologi- cal School as might be provided for in future. The com- mission, moved by a handsome donation offered by the city of Atlanta, chose that place above all other competitors. Under the act of the Legislature, the entire commission be- come ex officio trustees of the University, adding five to that already too numerous and unwieldly body. In 1887, a difficulty between two students, which was warmly espoused by their respective fraternities, lead to a challenge and a prize fight under the "Marquis of Queens- bury 's rules." The fight was extensively advertised during a week of training, and was largely attended by students and citizens in carriages, buggies and on horseback. The lack of any effective steps to prevent the meeting and the fail- ure to discipline the principal offenders brought some severe criticisms upon the faculty, both in and out of University circles. The action of the board on the matter at its next annual meeting caused Chancellor Mell to send in his resigna- rNIYKKsiTY OF GEORGIA. 1 2 1 tion, which, however, he was induced to withdraw. Before another year had expired, he had joined the great majority. Patrick Hughes Mell was born in Liberty county, Georgia, July 19, 1 S14-. At the age of seventeen, he taught a country school, saving enough to take him to Amherst College, Mass., where he graduated, pa} r ing his expenses there by teaching during vacation. After leaving college, he taught at Springfield and at Hartford, but declined flattering offers there to return to his native State. Upon the recommendation of Governor Troup, he was elected professor of ancient languages in Mercer College in 1842, and twelve years later, was called to the same chair in the University of Georgia. Here he spent the remainder of his days. Dr. Mell had been offered, but declined the presidency of Georgetown College, Kentucky, of Wake Forest, X. C, and of Mississippi College. He also declined the pastorate of several large city churches, but while at Penfield and at Athens, he served the churches at Bairdstown and Antioch, the first for thirty and the other for twenty years. As a preacher of the gospel, Dr. Mell ranked high. He made no pretense of oratory, nor even reached the point of eloquence, but the exhaustive analysis of his subject and the close reasoning of his argument, held his hearers' strict attention and left them with the sense that there was noth- ing more to be said. He had the unbounded confidence of bis own denomination and held the office of Moderator of the Southern Baptist Convention for many years, being an- nually re-elected until the last year of his life. At one session of that body, held in Louisville, Ky., a brother who was speaking referred to the late Civil War as the "rebellion." Dr. Mell immediately rapped sharply with his gavel and said : "That w r ord is out of order on this floor." Nor did he yield one iota of his devotion to the South or the justice of the Confederate cause. In 1861, he raised a company of volunteers, called for him the Mell Rifles, but before the}- enlisted, the death of Mrs. Mell, leaving a family of small children, made it imperative 122 HISTORICAL SKETCH that he should remain at home. Later in the war, he com- manded a regiment of "six months" troops at Rome and Savannah. Personally, Dr. Mell was austere in manner, very reserved and distant, but courteous to all, even to punctiliousness, and to his friends, he verged upon cordiality. As a professor, he was a hard man to recite to. His custom on the assembling of the class was to say : "Mr. Blank, will you be- gin the lesson?" If Mr. Blank happened to be an average student, upon such an invitation he would utterly fail to sug- gest an idea ; but if by chance he was able to respond with an}' success, the professor would, after a little, say: "That will do, sir; Mr. X., will you please take it up there?" No change of expression ever indicated to either whether he had failed or recited correctly. The writer came in one Saturday morning to a class in Lat- in under Dr. Mell, after an all night 'possum hunt, barely getting to the chapel at the last tap of the prayer-bell. As might have been expected, so soon as he composed himself on the recitation bench, he fell asleep. The professor promptly called on him to read a passage in Cicero and ap- preciating the situation, let him sleep through the hour— but gave him zero. Dr. Mell's policy, as he himself announced to the board, was to find out first what mischief was brewing and then prevent its outbreak. In pursuance of this idea, he some- how—no one ever knew just how— learned everything that was going on. It was even said that he would occasion- ally join a party of mischief-makers, going along with them unrecognized in the darkness of the night, to astound them afterwards by his accurate knowledge of the offense. On one occasion, while a professor at Penfield, a party of boys planned a raid on a neighboring watermelon patch. Dr. Mell got wind of their design and quietly joined the party. When they arrived at their destination, one fellow said: "Boys, suppose old Pat should turn up here!" Said another: "If he did, I would kill him." Whereupon, the professor, who was a man of undaunted courage, stepped UNIVERSITY ov GEORGIA. L23 forward and said: "Here I am, sir." The last speaker im- mediately drew a pistol, pointed at his breast and pulled the trigger. The weapon missed fire and the audacious student threw it from him and vanished in the darkness; nor did he appear at the college again. This incident was related by a gentleman who was associ- ated with Dr. Mell at Mercer. Of Chancellor Mell's administration at the University we have already spoken. Perhaps its only fault was a lack of aggressiveness. Dr Mell did not like to assume responsi- bility. He would not shirk it when it was placed upon him, but fearlessly faced thesituation and executed the laws as he understood his duty to be. But because he assumed no con- trol of other departments than his own, there were com- plaints of laxity and inefficiency, which resulted eventually in the removal of some of his associates in the faculty. A brief illness following upon prostration brought Chan- cellor Mell to his bed, from which he never arose. On Janu- ary 26, 1888, he breathed his last. 124 HISTORICAL SKETCH XXL Acting Chancellor Charbonnier— Election Held for Dr. Mell's Suc- cessor — Chancellor William E. Boggs — Professor Williams Ruther- ford — Secret Fraternities and the Literary Societies — Reorgani- zation of Board of Trustees. 1888-1889. The annual session of the board following the death of Dr.Mell, was one of great interest on account of the pending election of his successor. Col. L. H. Charbonnier had been appointed in the interim acting chancellor and filled the position with dignity and consummate tact under the most trying conditions. Declining to permit the use of his name for the permanent duties of the office, he maintained the standard of deportment and scholarship of the college with distinguished ability during the year of his incumbency. In anticipation of a warm contest for the chancellorship, every effort was made to secure a full attendance of the trustees at their meeting. One old gentleman in feeble health was brought from a distant part of the State who never even realized where he was. Two elements appeared in the board — one demanding a young, progressive, active man, fully abreast with the times; the other more conservative, insisting on a minister of the gospel, a person of sobriety and of positive religious con- victions. The day and hour were set for the election. Citi- zens of the town, alumni from other places, students and ladies, all shared in the interest of the occasion. The ''pro- gressive" element put in nomination Professor Harry C. White; the "conservatives" presented the Rev. G. B. Strick. ler, of Atlanta. After the usual speeches and remarks defin- ing exactly the position of the speakers, the balloting began. Dr. Strickler was elected by a majority of one. QNIVERBITY OF GEORGIA. L25 Before the session came to a elose, it was known that he had declined the office and that Professor White had with- drawn his name from further eonsideration, leaving the board without a candidate and the University without a chancellor. An adjourned meeting of the board was held in October, when happily both elements, at the first suggestion of his name centered upon a gentleman of great ability, progres- sive in thought, aggressive in character and immovable in the discharge of duty, the Rev. William E. Boggs, D. D., of Memphis, Tenn. Dr. Boggs' election was unanimous and after due consid- eration, he accepted the call and entered upon the duties of the office in February, 1889. With Dr. Boggs, other additions were made to thefacult}'. The newly-established chair of biology was filled by Pro- fessor John P. Campbell. Dr. J. W. Spencer (whose tenure of office was very brief) was made professor'of geology, and Mr. Charles M. Snelling, military instructor and adjunct professor of mathematics. Professor W. H. Bocock was appointed to the department of ancient languages, vice Professor Woodfin, resigned, and Mr. W. D. Hooper, in- structor. Professor Williams Rutherford, for thirty-three years the honored instructor in mathematics of two generations of students, retired from active w ork in the same year. The board, in accepting his resignation, continued his salary for one year, requesting him to aid the chancellor in what- ever way might be agreeable to him and made him Emeritus Professor of mathematics. Professor Rutherford was an alumnus and the son of an alumnus of the first graduating class of the University. Upright, faithful, honest and just, he inspired confidence and respect in every student who came under his instruction. Though they often sorely tried his patience, all loved "Old Foot," and all confessed that his simple faith and irre- proachable life, was a sermon that spoke louder to them than words. His influence was always for good and the results 126 HISTORICAL SKETCH of his personal work among the students of the college in encouraging them to right living and in weaning them from vicious habits, cannot be estimated. It is that kind of a teacher who has the making of a man. May his days grow brighter as his sun goes down. The subject of secret fraternities has of late years engaged the serious attention of all college officers. The earliest record of their appearance in the University of Georgia, is the organization of the "Mystic Circle" in 1845. What the object of the society was we may not know, but the record, which until recently was in the college library, in- dicates that they had a good deal of fun in their meetings. A high dignitary of the circle in New York, a few years ago requested of the trustees that this record be turned over to him, which request was cheerfully granted. The effect of that fraternity upon its members may be conjectured from a resolution adopted in 1848, declaring it to be contrary to law for any student to become a member of any secret society r other than the Demosthenian and Phi Kappa societies, unless permitted by the faculty. A half dozen years later, the faculty suppressed another organiza- tion which threatened trouble. In 1866, a chapter of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon frater- nity was established in the University and the chancellor and other members of the faculty were admitted as honorary- members. After a while other Greek letter societies established chapters and active rivalries grew up between them, leading to bitter animosities and personal encounters. In the meantime, the literary societies waned and the halls which once re-echoed the tones of Lumpkin and Toombs and Pierce and Stephens and Cobb and Hill, were silent, save with the perfunctory program of the day's routine. The very property deteriorated, and the debating rooms, which used to be the pride of the membership, with broken seats, defaced furniture and ragged carpets, became a disgrace to their owners. The banners which once were so proudly borne in procession, now torn and hung awry, awoke no en- thusiasm. The very name of the societies were held in con- IMVKKSITY OF GEORGIA. 121 tempt, and on their anniversaries, hardly a corporal's guard could be got to march to the chapel. It lias been denied that this was due to the Greek letter fraternities. Possibly, it was not, but it is a coincidence that as *he one increased, the other decreased. The year of Chancellor Lipscomb's retirement, the board passed an order requiring students to sign a pledge not to join any secret society. Chancellor Tucker reaffirmed the declaration that the fraternities were an element of disorder and ought not to be permitted to exist, and in conse- quence, additional legislation was enacted by the trustees looking to their suppression. Chancellor Mell did not share the objections of his prede- cessor. On the contrary, he fostered the secret fraternities and said they were a valuable aid to him in maintaining the discipline of the college. But under that fostering care, col- lege politics waxed hotter than ever before. The fraternities dominated the college and, by trades and combinations, ab- sorbed all the offices, until at length the non-fraternity men arose in their might and, by a counter combination, over- threw their rulers and proceeded to divide the spoils. And so continued the irrepressible conflict until the entn < of another chancellor. One of the first issues made by Dr. Boggs was with the fraternities ; and he required them upon pain of suspension to pledge themselves to take no part by combinations, ex- pressed or implied, in controlling the college elections. They have faithfully abided by that pledge and that evil has dis- appeared from the annals of the University. In 1889, the board consisted of forty-one trustees and had become such an unwieldly body and the responsibility -o divided that an act was passed by the Legislature reor- Lianizingits membership. Governor James M.Smith, during his term of office, had recommended that the board be re- duced to nine, but his suggestion was not adopted. The new law vacated all places on the board and pro- vided for the appointment by the Governor of one trustee from each congressional district, two from the city of Ath- 128 HISTORICAL SKETCH ens and four from the State at large. The Governor, the chairman of the commission on the Technological School were ex officio members of the board, and subsequently, the chairmen of the commissions on the school for girls at Mil- ledgeville and the college for colored youths at Savannah were added, running the number up to nineteen. The terms of office were fixed at eight years and the appointments made so that four shall expire every two years. The appointees of the Governor met in Athens in Septem- ber, 1889, and organized under the terms of the act, elect- ing for their chairman, Hon. J.J. Gresham, who for seven years had been president of the old board, and appoint- ing Lamar Cobb, Esq., secretary until the annual meeting in June. At that session, Major Cobb being ineligible under the rule, not being a member of the new board, Mr. A. L. Hull was elected to the office. Upon the death of Mr. Gresham, Hon. N. J. Hammond was made chairman and during his incumbency has added to the distinguished ser- vices he had already rendered the University. Prior to the enactment of the existing law, the board had always filled its own vacancies, and without limit as to number. The appointment of trustee of the University has alwaAS been esteemed an honor and the list of trustees comprises the most distinguished citizens of the State. As an evidence of the appreciation of the compliment of appointment, in 1825, Col. John A. Cuthbert asked of the Senatus Academ- icus the privilege of contesting the election of Governor Troup to a place on the board. It was not the habit of the board to re-elect one who had resigned, save under circum- stances which precluded a regular attendance upon its ses- sions. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 129 XXII. Attendance and Patronage oi' the College— Offenses and Penalties — Examinations — Athlel ics. The attendance upon the University of Georgia has never atxained the mark its friends have set for it. It has seemed that there were very many boys in the State who were able and who ought to be desirous of attending college, and yet let us consult the record before passing judgment. In 1802, President Meigs reported the attendance, of about forty students which he says * 'compares favorably with William and Mary, Cambridge and Yale, none of which have more than two hundred students, although those institu- tions are from 100 to 170 years old." The average number of students tinder Dr. Wadded was sixty and his administration was considered especially suc- cessful, both in point of numbers and work. Towards the close of Dr. Church's term of office, the roll of students a little exceeded one hundred. In one of his re- ports, the president estimated the total number of young Georgians attending this and other colleges at six hundred. As the white population of the State was then about 600,000, that was a ratio of 1 to 1,000. In the States of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and the New England States, with a white population of 9,000,000, there were 5,000 college students— a ratio of 1 to 1,600, and that, too, with all the advantages of age and endowment in their fa- vor. In 1871, there was reported an attendance for the year of 262. Owing to extraordinary circumstances, this was a larger number than usual, and it is fair to discount it to ar- rive at an average of say 210. Chancellor Lipscomb made the following statement to the board: "The number of undergraduates in all the colleges of this country in proportion to the population is onl 130 HISTORICAL SKETCH about one-half of what it was thirty years ago. The stu- dents in attendance on all the colleges in New England at the present time do not exceed by one hundred those in at- tendance in 1838. Thus, too, in the State of New York, the population within twenty-two years has been increased about fifty per cent, and yet the absolute numerical increase of undergraduates • has been but 94 and that, too, with twelve colleges in 1870 instead of six in 1848. But Georgia has a larger ratio of students than is usual to population." Without the data at hand to determine the ratio at the pres- ent time, it is safe to conclude that it has not increased. It has probably decreased. But though we have nothing to be ashamed of as com- pared with other States, yet the question may be pertinently asked : "Why do not more young men go to college?" The causes which interfere are many and complex. Chief among them is the impatience of young men to make money. So soon as he is through the high school, the average boy — es- pecially the city boy — wants to "go into business," and as the majority of parents yield to his wishes in the matter, es- pecially if the pittance he may receive for his services will relieve them of his support, the stores and offices are filled with young men, clerks and bookkeeperes, who would be far better off completing their education. And what shall be said of those Georgians who send their sons to colleges in other and distant States? Years ago when the University of Georgia was poorly equipped in many respects and the teaching force was cut down by the poverty of her resources, there might have been some excuse for such a course. But now when every department offers the undergraduate advantages equal in effective work to any other college in the country for all but special post- graduate training, it does seem a folly and a lack of pa- triotism, that he should go farther probably to fare worse. On this subject, I cannot do better than quote Chancellor Lipscomb. Said he: "I deplore this as the last extreme of intellectual humiliation. The intellect of a people is essen- tially its own, and its first earthly necessity is to keep it as UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 131 its own. If this greatest of providential trusts is delegated by proxy to others, not a vestige of manhood will remain. It is important to educate our sons in our ideas, but still more in our associations of life, and in this view, I pray you see to it that Georgia is not left an alien and a stranger on her own soil." Would that that earnest appeal of the wise and patriotic chancellor could reach the heart of every father in the State. There would be but few Georgia boys to swell the rolls of foreign colleges, and there would be a greater pride in our own University. It is a false but popular estimate of an institution of learn- ing which makes the numerical attendance the measure of its success. As between different colleges, every condition of location, requirements for admission and standard of schol- arship should be considered. A comparison of one year with another should carry with it all the circumstances sur- rounding each. The average attendance at the University of Georgia since the war has been 1 97 — all students of col- lege grade. We hear much from time to time of how much it costs the State to educate a student at the University. Waiving the point that the expenses are not paid by the State, such a calculation is childish and absurd. What father would calculate how much in dollars and cents it costs to raise his child or estimate his value by the amount paid for his support. Georgia is the better for such an alumnus of her University as Bishop Pierce, even it had cost one hundred thousand dollars to educate him. The question with us is how can the University of Georgia send out the wisest and purest men and the largest number ■of them, to solve the problems of the day and to promote the true civilization of the State? To furnish such men to the commonwealth is the work assigned it to perform. How that work has been done, the roll of the ilumni is the best an- swer we have to make. It is interesting to note the change in sentiment as to the .gravity of offenses in the college. 182 HISTORICAL .SKETCH In the earlier years of its history, students were held to strict observance of the Sabbath, and were permitted to take a quiet walk not more than a mile from the campus. The circus was regarded as a delusion and a snare, and under no circumstances were students permitted to attend it. Professors kept close watch upon the tent, and in order to elude them, it was often necessary for the boys to black their faces and sit with the negroes. But tempo ra mutantur et nos mutamur cum illis. In 1868, the faculty advanced the afternoon recitation to twelve o'clock so as to give the boys an opportunity to go to the circus v and since that time, there has been no inhibition on that amusement, provided, it does not conflict with any college exercise. In 1822, J. B. was dismissed "for playing at the unlawful game of cards." Three years later, a hungry trio of youths were remanded to the grammar school for " bringing into college and preparing for eating, fowles." What the grava- men of this offense was, we do not know. Possibly some professor had missed a favorite hen and suspected the per- X^etrators of the theft, and the tell-tale feathers may have betrayed them. A little later, five students were reprimanded for being found in an unoccupied house "eating cordial, wine, fowles and cakes, with fiddling and dancing." One sentimental swain was dismissed for "fiddling out at night," and an- other was fined one dollar "for fluting. Would that those stiingent rules were still in force that an unoffending com- munity might pass in peace and quietude the hours allotted to sleep, undisturbed by the twang of the weekly serenader 1 UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 133 TABULATED LIST OF dismissals DURING SEVENTY YEARS. OFFKNCKS. 1822-32 1832-42 1850-60 1860-73 1873-S3 L883-93 S3 [dleness and Neglect... --- 9 10 7 3 I fi 15 37 Drunk 11 13 2 6 11 7 3 2 34 Disorderly Conduct — Gambling li) 2 4 4 1 4 1 55 1 Playing ( lards . . . 4 Fifflit iiiir 9 4 10 :; 8 1 19 Stabbing and Shooting. Disrespect to Professors Fighting ( 'hickens Profanity < 'heating and Lying 2 1 22 ~4 . '■,!::::::: i .... 1 4 1 9 Duelling 4 Indecency 3 1 1 5 9 Refusing to Recite Disturbing ( 'hurch 7 2 s ... ... 3 Having Arms 4 4 The faculty records prior to 1822 have been lost, as those from 1842 to 1850. The record shows that from 1822 to 1892, a period of seventy years, excepting the eight years above referred to, and three years during the war when the college was closed, there were 200 dismissals for the follow- ing causes : Drunkenness, 34; disorderly and riotous conduct, 55; fighting, 19; shooting and stabbing 8, disrespect to profes- sors, 22; idleness, 37; gambling, 8; refusing to recite, 8; duelling, 4; disturbing religious worship, 3; indecency, 8; carrying deadly weapons, 4; fighting chickens, 4; profanity, 1 ; lying and cheating, 2. A study of the table will show that drunkenness has steadily decreased ; disorderly conduct is variable, and so is neglect of study, while fighting has decreased and other minor offences have ceased altogether. This may be taken as a fair criterion of the behavior of the students, for while it is not pretended that instances of violation of law and morals do not occur, their average con- duct shows a very marked improvement. In 1832, a dis- graceful riot occurred on the campus. A party of students 134 HISTORICAL SKETCH paraded the grounds, threw stones at the professors' houses > battered the door of a tutor's room, broke out his windows and threatened a personal attack upon him. Eleven of the offenders were detected and expelled. In 1839, several students broke open the room of Professor McCay in the new college, during his absence, took his books, bedding and furniture down and made a bonfire of them on the campus. Two were detected and expelled. The following year, six students of the senior class, in- eluding the honor men of the class, got drunk and created much disorder on the campus. President Church and Mr. McCay went out to quell the disturbance, and were both attacked with stones and sticks. Dr. Church was seriously hurt, Mr. McCay receiving a few bruises. All six of the rioters were expelled. A year later, a serious affray occurred between four stu- dents,^ which one was dangerously stabbed, it was thought fatally. This was followed by a shooting scrape between two others. In 1851, a young man was expelled for cursing the entire faculty to their faces. The next year three students made an attack upon a tutor, badly wounding him. These instances are given to show the lawlessness which would crop out from time*to time. But in the last thirty years, despite the demoralization of the war, no such offences have been committed as would be denominated felonious in their character. The drift of the times, the Christian sentiment of the age, and the personal influence of the faculty with the students have brought about the change. It may be safely said that no institution in the country can show a better record for sobriety and general good be- havior than the University of Georgia; and as for "hazing'* and "rushing" and other specimens of rowdyism which we read of in Northern and Western colleges, such things were never known among us. The old method of oral examinations allowed small op- portunity for "booking." The present method of written UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 135 examinations with the pledge that no assistance has been received, admits abundant opportunity for cheating if the student is disposed to avail himself of it. Originating in a feeling of self-protection, a sentiment has arisen against this dishonesty, under which the class deals with the culprit in- stead of the faculty. Several eases have occurred where the accused was formally arraigned before his class, charged with the offense by the prosecutor and called upon to answer either in person or by attorney. If found guilty, lie was tabooed or allowed grace upon promise of reforma- tion, or reported to the faculty, according to the gravity of the offense. The contempt of his fellows has ten times the effect upon a boy that the condemnation of a college faculty has. College athletics is a feature of comparatively recent ori- gin in American institutions. In our University, thirty years ago it was unknown excepting in the occasional erection of a hand-swing and a horizontal bar, called b}^ courtesy "the gymnasium," which after a few weeks use was allowed to go to decay. Once in a while, a game of foot-ball was played on the unfrequented streets — not the rough and turn, ble scuffle now called by that name, but a genuine old-fash- ioned game in which one side "bucked" the ball and followed it up to kick it home. These, together with jumping with dumb-bells, comprised the active sports of the students. After the war, baseball was introduced, and the old field below thecampus was alive with players and spectators. A stimulus to athletics was given when the trustees made the first Monday in May "Field day." A club was formed and prizes offered to contestants in running, jumping and feats of strength and activity. Baseball nines and football teams were organized and match games between classes and other colleges kept up the interest in the sports. There have been many who decried the inter-collegiate games and lamented the time wasted and the distraction of the occasion. That there are evils attending such games none will deny ; but that those evils have been greatly mag- 136 HISTORICAL SKETCH liined is doubtless as true. A close observation of the effects upon the students themselves warrants the belief that they are beneficial to the institution. With us, at least, as a rule, the best players have been the most diligent students, includ- ing the honor men of each year. The games work off the superfluous energy in the boys and take up the excess of vitality that in former days found its vent in riots and dis- turbances of various kinds. During the year when a resolution of the board inhibited match games, and athletics were discouraged, there was more disorder in classes, more violations of the laws, more outrages committed than in the five previous years. If the professional element is kept out of the teams, their successes and defeats bind the boys closer, awaken their college pride, advertise the institution and attract other students to join it. This has been the practical result with this University so far, and the hard-fought battles on the ball-ground ; the college yell and the college colors will be a sweet memory of a life-time with the boys. To Dr. Charles H. Herty, adjunct professor of chemistry, perhaps, more than to anyone else, is due the development of athletic sports at the University of Georgia. An ardent player himself, he organized the society, taught them the yell and at much personal sacrifice brought up the teams to a state of efficiency which made them a credit to the college. The trustees have recently awakened to the importance of physical culture, and a department has been established with Dr. Herty as director. Sadly lacking in a suitable building and equipment, but little may be expected, until some one with the generosity with which Fayerweather equipped Vir- ginia's State institution, shall prove his interest in the de- velopment of our own youths by a like bequest. PROFESSOR CHARLES MORRIS. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 137 XXIII. Professor Charles Morris — Incidents and Reminiscences of student- — The Alumni. 1893. In June, 1893, the vacancy in the chair of English caused by the death of Professor Morris, was filled by the election of Dr. Benj. F. Riley, President of Howard College, Ala- bama. Mr. John Morris, son of the late professor, was made his assistant. Professor Charles Morris was a gentleman of the old school, a Virginian of Virginians, courteous and brave. Prior to the war, he was a professor at William and Mary and during the war served until the surrender as brigade- quartermaster. Major Morris was a scholar of broad culture, filling at different times both the chairs of Greek and belles-lettres with ability, and as a writer, in purity of diction and ele- gance of expression, he had few equals. He had traveled abroad and had mingled with men and rubbed against the world, and was free from the dogmatism which is so apt to clothe the lifelong teacher. Major Morris professed to be a typical "old fogy," and clung to the manners and tradi- tions of the ante-bellum days with a tenacity which never elaxed. He was a declared foe to "science" so-called, and all its pretensions. He planted by the moon, and insisted that wheat would turn to "cheat" and tobacco degenerate into mullein. Plain and unaffected in manner, but always a gentleman, sincere and tender-hearted, he was greatly be- loved by all the students and esteemed by all who knew him. Throughout his entire connection with the Univer- sity, he was not known to have an enemy. Professor Morris was for many years a sufferer from neu- ralgia and was very sensitive to cold. In April, 1893, after 138 HISTORICAL SKETCH sitting throughout a contest for speaker's places, he went to his home feeling tired and sick. In a week, pneumonia en- sued, and after a brief illness, he passed away in the morning of May 3d. In his death the University lost an able teacher, a wise counsellor and a faithful friend. One of the greatest pleasures in meeting old friends is re- counting the incidents and recalling the scenes of former da3 r s. Memory especially likes to dwell on the incidents of school-boy days, and even the hardships of those times, as wecall them up, are surrounded with a pleasingglow. A vol- ume might be written of these alone, but a few must suffice. William E. Jones (1826), after editing a paper in Athens, emigrated to Texas, from which State he was sent to Con- gress. While attending court once near the Rio Grande, some of Santa Anna's pickets crossed over, captured judge, jury and lawyers, and marched them off to a Mexican prison. While they languished here in durance vile, the pris- oners devised a plan of escape by tunnelling under a wall, but were discovered. Their jailor was a fat old Mexican of rotund proportions, whom the prisoners had dubbed " Gut- sy." When they were asked who gave them the means to work with, Jones promptly replied, "Gutsy." The utter amazement of that individual at the unjust charge may be imagined. The Mexicans determined to convert their pris- oners to the Catholic faith, and twice a day marched them to the church to prayers. The incorrigible Jones, having previously primed his companions, immediately after a prayer gave the command, " Single wiggle ! " at which every man stood up, facing the priest, placed his thumb to his nose and wiggled his fingers with the utmost gravity. After the second prayer, the order, "Double compound action!" brought all to their feet with both hands extended from the nose and fingers wiggling furiously. In a little while further missionary work was abandoned. Charter Campbell (1827) was a great wag, full of fun and mischief. To come within the pale of the law which required the wearing of homespun, but permitted the use of calico, he took the curtains from his windows and pinning them to UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. L39 the waist of his broad-cloth coat, which he was loathe to discard, appeared thus at prayers to the intense amusement of the assembly. When called upon to "speak," Campbell arose and recited the multiplication table with all the dra- matic expression of a tragedian. Dr. Church stopped him and required him to appear the next afternoon with a mem- orized speech. This time, with expressive gestures, he deliv- ered the long rule for the traverse table. Dr. Church was teaching mathematics at the time, and so admired the thor- oughness with which the rule had been memorized, that he let the recitation pass. John D. Diometari (1835) was a native of Greece. How he came to Georgia is not known, but the Presbyterian Edu- cational Society, a local organization of that day, adopted him and sent him to college with the ultimate view of his entering the ministry. If Diometari ever had that idea, he soon abandoned it, and it was not long before he was ini- tiated into the mysteries of "High, Low, Jack and the Game." He was brought up by the faculty, his stipend was with- drawn by the society and there seemed nothing for John but to leave college. Being a general favorite, however, friends interfered with timely aid and the trustees remitted his tui- tion fees. Still he was compelled to leave college before graduating. The following resolution, in the ornate style of the day, appears in the minutes of the trustees : "A merito- rious young foreigner, the native of a country whose history forms so large a portion of the meditations of the classical student, who has thrown himself upon our hospitality and proved himself worthy of it by the fidelity with which he has discharged his duties as a student in this institution, ought not to be deprived of any of the advantages which it can afford to him because, yielding to the pressure of neces- sity, he has retired from it before the final examination of his class. Therefore, be it "Resolved, That the degree of A. B. be conferred on Mr. John D. Diometari." Diometari was a smart fellow and quite popular with all classes. Later in life he was appointed American consul at 140 HISTORICAL SKETCH Athens, in his native country, where he sustained himself with credit. Along in the forties, Billy and Davy, two carpenters be- longing to Dr. Henry Hull, were at sundry times hired to the college to do general repairs. They were brothers, men of unusual intelligence and keen native wit, and each had by an accident lost an eye. Billy was working at his bench one day, shoving his plane in a leisurely way, when Dr. Church coming by, stopped and said: "Billy, why don't you work faster?" The old man laid down his plane and said: "Mars' Church, I ain't in no hurry 'bout dis. I'm workin' on a life- time job." Davy was a favorite with the boys, who were continually chaffing him, and he had picked up a great many phrases from them, the meaning of which he could only conjecture. One day some students came by and one said: "Professor, let me hear you talk Latin." "I ain't got no time to be foolin' wid you white boys," said he. "Dave, I am told you talk Latin like your mother tongue. Let us hear you." Turning around and spitting in his hands as his habit was, Dave said: " Tuesstultus datnnatus" and resumed his plane, chuckling with great glee. Sam Watkins was the bell ringer and factotum during the fifties and how many years before history does not relate. He was not very bright and the boys used to take delight in calling him from all parts of the campus at once. Sam would obediently turn to the last call and the state of utter confusion into which he was led was ludicrous enough to witness. Stephen V. Benet (1844) was the son of Pedro Benet, a Minorcan, who settled in St. Augustine, Fla., and kept a lit- tle shop where he sold everything from buttons to beeswax. The children were educated above the station of the father, and Stephen came to the University to complete his course. Securing an appointment to West Point, he left Athens senior ha If -advanced. He graduated with credit from the Military Academy, serving afterwards in the regular army. When Florida seceeded, Benet refused to resign and denied his alle- UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1 i I glance to his State. He served but little in the held during" the war, but rose to the rank of brigadier-general and was chief ordnance officer of the U. S. Army, which position he held at his retirement. General Benet is still living. Henry M. Law (1^46) was one of the most eloquent young men who ever attended the college, but sobriety and industry were not his distinguishing traits. On a certain night with some boon companions, Mr. Law paid a visit to the "Forks of the Road" a disreputable groggery near the present site of the Rock College, where they met other hab- itues of the den. After frolicking awhile and drinking a good deal, the crowd called on Law for a speech. Respond- ing to their urgent demand, standing on a barrel-head, he announced as his subject "temperance," and warming as he spoke, he delivered an oration that for convincing argument, pathos and passionate appeal, it is said, has never been sur- passed. His audience, first amused, then confounded, bowed beneath his eloquent periods like ripening wheat before the storm. It broke up the meeting and some of that party never tasted liquor again. Shelton and Simeon Oliver (1849) were twin brothers and as alike as two peas. There was not a feature b}' which one could be distinguished from the other. Naturally, much con- fusion and many ludicrous mistakes arose from the likeness, which they enjoyed and encouraged as only two mischief - loving boys could. If one was absent from recitation, the professor never knew which to mark. A friend, referring to some former occurrence, would never know until he was. told that he was talking to the other brother. One of them was engaged to a young lady while at college, but she was never sure which it was — in fact, it didn't matter as the other was exactly like him. William D. Anderson (1859) was a hard student and first honor man in his class and those who knew him only in his later years would not suppose that he had been one of the most mischievous boys in college. But with all his love of fun, there was a manliness about him which made every- body love "Bill Anderson." On one occasion, he with other 142 HISTORICAL SKETCH students was standing at the hotel corner with a friend, who was indulging in loud and profane remarks. Suddenly, the young man's father came up behind them and astounded at what he heard, stopped, saying, "My son, can that be you?" "No, sir," said Anderson, "that was I," saving his friend a reprimand and relieving the grief and shame of the father- Dr. Lee, who only met the classes occasionally, never knew but one or two of the students. The boys, well aware of this, used to answer for any who were absent. Once Dr. Lee, beginning with the roll, said : "Mr. Anderson, explain if you please, the action of manure on a growing crop." Josh Head, thinking Anderson was absent, replied for him, but shot wide of the mark and made a dismal failure. Seeing this, Anderson said, "Dr. Lee, that was not Anderson w r ho answered. I know that question perfectly well." But Head was not to be caught in that trap. He declared that he was Anderson. The class were silent witnesses. The pro- fessor looked puzzled. Anderson insisted that he should not be marked for a failure, and Head persisted in his identity. The truth of course came out eventually, but it was very funny while it lasted. Mr, Anderson was a gallant soldier and a distinguished lawyer, resigning a nattering political future to enter the ministry of the Methodist church. George D. Bancroft (1868) entered college without any preparation, without an}' fondness for books, and chiefly, be- cause his associates had entered. Almost immediately he became fired with the ambition to lead his class and so as- siduously did he apply himself and so accurate w^ashis work in every department that he went right to the front and graduated, sharing with another the first honor. He was most susceptible to the attractions of the fair sex and a few hours in the company of a sweet young girl would leave him over head and ears in love — and then it would be hard to say wmether "Old Bangs" was most happy or most mis- erable. To one noted belle, he was engaged to be married ; preparations for the wedding were begun, invitations had been engraved and presents purchased, when the astounding- news reached him that the night before, the bird had flown. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, I \:\ A month's absence during which he basked more or less in the sunshine of another bright presence restored him to good spirits. George Bancroft was a skillful musician and with Dennis, Alfriend and Victor Smith was a weekly recurring nightmare to many a sleepy household. Later he devel- oped a remarkable aptness for mathematics, and, had not his health failed, bid fair to attain an enviable reputation. He was the soul of truth, honor and inflexible rectitude. Xot long after Dr. Tucker's induction to office, the faculty were startled one morning on coming out from prayers to find that they had nearly all been buried during the night. Some college humorist, with the aid of the college artist, had neatly rounded off seven graves side by side in front of the library building and borrowing suitable headstones from a neighboring marble-yard, erected them tenderly inscribed to the memory of the too early deceased professors. The janitor was called up, and with the assistance of a drayman, soon removed the sad memorials and smoothed the turf. A sad occurrence in 1881 threw a gloom over the college. Walter Rountree, while out walking one afternoon with his brother and two other companions, became engaged in a difficulty with two negroes, who, it seems, had borne him some ill-will. They met in front of the courthouse, and after some words, pistols were drawn and in the melee which ensued, Walter Rountree was shot. He was taken to his 'noarding house, where he died that night. Great excitement ensued among the students and other negroes, and a riot was with difficulty averted. A post-mortem w T as held, but the ball was not found. The pistols used were found to be of different calibres and the identity of the fatal shot was a necessary evidence in the prosecution of the negroes. Under an order of court, two surgeons went to the young man's home, exhumed the body and continued the search for the ball until it was found. It proved to have been shot from the brother's pistol. The negroes were tried for assault with intent to murder, found guilty and sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary. 144 HISTORICAL SKETCH A study of the lists of students who did not complete their course in college compared with those who took their de- grees, is suggestive. Of course, many were not permitted by force of circumstances to continue at the University ; and some — not a few of them brilliant youths of fairest promise — the icy hand of death snatched from the Alma Mater's arms ere they had laid hold on the laurels that were almost within their reach. But the majority, unused to study and unfit for work, idle and indolent, gave up the race, fell behind and out, and their comrades knew them no more. Some it is true became conservative citizens, plodding along, building homes and helpful in their spheres. A few names are found there which tell of power of intellect, widespread influence or devoted lives. But with these few exceptions, the mak- ers of the commonwealth, the executors of her laws, the names which adorn her history are found among the alumni. The reason is not hard to find. The youth who has a fixed purpose to go through the course, who turns not aside, who overcomes the obstacles he needs must meet, exercising his mental powers and training his intellect until his work is finished, goes out like the wrestler, with muscles hardened for the contest. But the laggard, unlearned, untrained to think or act except upon impulse, is swayed by his shrewder fellows or lives the creature of fortuitous circumstance. A candid reviewer of the history and work of the Univer- sity, however unfriendly he may be, must acknowledge the service she has done the State. Of a total attendance of more than forty-five hundred students, two thousand and fifty-six have taken degrees. Ten per cent, of these were ministers of the gospel, conspicuous among whom appeared George F. Pierce, Bishop of the Methodist church, Na- thaniel M. Crawford, John N. Waddell, Gustavus A. Nun- nally and John D. Hammond, all presidents of colleges; Benjamin M. Palmer, Edward P. Palmer, Thomas A. Hoyt, Walter R. Branham, Robert Q. Mallard, William D. Ander- son and Thomas F. Scott, Bishop of Oregon, while others living in the retirement of less prominent charges have shed UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1 U> the sweet influences of their lives and prayers over many communities far and near. Among distinguished physicians are found Charles D. Meigs, Paul F. Eve, Richard I). Moore, Charles W. West, DeSaussure Ford and Crawford W. Long, the tardily ac- knowledged discoverer of anaesthesia. As jurists, Joseph H. Lumpkin, Eli genius A. Nisbet, John A. Campbell, Charles Dougherty, William C. Dawson, Alex- ander M. Speer, Robert P. Trippe, James Jackson, Linton Stephens and Samuel Hall shine pre-eminent. As great advocates, Benjamin H.Hill, Thomas R.R. Cobb, William Hope Hull, Nathaniel J . Hammond and Henry Jackson are unsurpassed, while Junius Hillyer, Joel A. Bil- lups, Joseph B. Cumming, Walter S. Chisholm, Pope Bar- row and A. 0. Bacon lead the attorneys at the bar. Charles J. Jenkins, Howell Cobb, Herschel V. Johnson James Johnson, John Gill Shorter and John B. Gordon all filled the gLibernatorial chair and shared the honors of statesmen with Robert Toombs, Alexander H.Stephens and James H. Blount. There are legislators like John Billups, Asbury Hull, Ben- jamin C. Yancey, William H. Felton, J. L. M. Curry, Wil- liam H. Sims; financiers like Ferdinand Phinizy, John T. Grant and John J. Gresham ; soldiers like Gordon, Bartow, Delony and Garlington ; civil engineers like George G. Hull, Samuel Spencer and James M. Edwards; scientists like John, Joseph and Louis LeConte and William L.Jones; teachers such as Gustavus J. Orr, James P. Waddell, Shelton P. San- ford, Williams Rutherford, William D. Williams, John R. Blake, Morgan P. Calloway and William Henry Waddejl. These and younger men, some now nearing the meridian of life, who have graduated since the war, Samuel Lump- kin, Emory Speer, William R. Hammond, Henry W. Grady, Nat. E.Harris and Barrow, Hurt, Meldrim,Wm. H.Fleming, and W T m. Y. Atkinson, soon to fill the governor's chair, all swell the roll of the makers of the commonwealth and illumine the pages of her history. 146 HISTORICAL SKETCH What institution can boast of a longer or brighter list of names in proportion to the number on its rolls? A historical sketch of the University would not be complete without at least an allusion to the present faculty'. While it is not the purpose of the writer either to ignore or eulo- gize any one of the gentlemen who compose that able body, it is perhaps enough to say here, that for earnest devotion to their work, for conscientious discharge of their duties as professors, for thorough equipment and for a deep and gen- uine interest in the advancement of the college, the present faculty do not yield to any in other times or in other States. The disciplineis firm — some of the boys say, severe — the curriculum is as full as the conditions will permit, the moral atmosphere is pure, religious influences surround and the best social advantages are open to the students. Criticism and the condemnation of a professor by a stu- dent should not be accepted as an ipse dixit. Professors have no claim to perfection and students are not infallible; and it is impossible but that some of two hundred young men who are in almost daily contact with the teacher should dis- cover his failings and reveal their own dislike. On the whole with us the entente cordiale between prof essors and students is as good as in other institutions ; perhaps no better than the average, certainly no worse. The professors are doing good work and are insisting on thorough preparation in the class-room ; the students know it and are responding man- ' fully. There has been no more potent factor in the development of Georgia than her University. But tardy justice has been done it, even by its friends, and efforts to decry its influence are constantly being made by its enemies. But despite it all the University of Georgia continues to grow in favor and in usefulness. It fixes the standard of scholarship for the schools and colleges of the State and is the fountain head of learning and education in Georgia. It is a popular fallacy that the common school is the foundation stone of our system of education. It is a mistake. The current runs the other way. The University sets the pace, the schools must IMVKKsi TV OF GEORGIA. 1 17 strive to keep up with it. Much injustice has been done, some through malignant opposition, but much through ignorance, which the friends of the University have borne in silence. It is amazing to learn how much is believed against it and how little is known about it. Though these pages may not enlighten the ignorant, they will at least give some pleasure to those who have not for- gotten their boyhood's days, and arouse, though dormant, their abiding love for their Alma Mater. In either case, the author will be content. CATALOGUE OF THE TRUSTEES, OEFICERS AND ALUMNI OF THE University of Georgia FROM 1785 TO 1894- CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. CATALOGUE. TRUSTEES. Elected. Resigned. 1785. *John Houston, Governor Died . 1797 1785. *James Habersham, Governor 1798 1785. *William Few 1800 1785. * Joseph Clay 1798 1785. * Abraham Baldwin Died . 1805 1785. *Nathan Bronsoo Died. 1797 1785 *John Habersham Died. 1799 1785. *Abiel Holmes 1797 1785. *William Houston 1797 1785. * Jenkins Davis .Died. 1797 1785. *Hugh Lawson 1798 1785. * William Glascock Died . 1 793 1785. *Benjamin Taliaferro 1799 1798. *Joseph Clay, Jr 1799 1798 * Seaborn Jones 1800 1799. * William, Stephens, Governor 1800 1799. *George Walton, Governor 1800 1799. *Abram Jackson 1800 1799. *Peter Early, Governor 1808 1799. *Thomas P. Carnes 1800 1799. *John Springer. . .. Died. 1799 1799 *William Stith 1800 1799. -George Walker 1800 1800. *James Jackson, Governor 1801 1800. *John Twiggs 1811 1800. * John Clark, Governor 1811 1800. *Robert Cunningham, D. D Died . 1806 1800. *John M illedgc, Governor 1806 1800. *Josiah Tatnall, Governor Died. 1803 1800. *Ferdinand O'Neal 1811 1800. *John Stewart 1811 1800. *James McNeal Died. 1804 18-0. *George Walton, Governor Died. 1804 1801. *David B. Mitchell, Governor 1811 1802. *Edvvin Mounger 1811 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA Elected. Resigned. 1802. *Abrun Marshall 1811 L802. *Hope Hull 1811 1803. *Thomaa P. Carnes 1811 1804. *Jared Irwin, Governor 1811 1804. *Dennis Smelt, M. D 1811 1806. *Thomas Flournoy 1811 1811. *Peter Early, Governor Died. 1816 1811. William H. Crawford, hL.D 1830 1811. *John Griffin Died. 1814 1811. •Edward Paine Died. 1841 1811. *Stephen Upson Died. 1824 1811. *Joel Abbott, M. D Died. 1826 1816. *Augustin S. Clayton Died. 1839 1816. * James Meriwether 1831 1816. *Young Gresham Died, 1820 1816. *Thomas W. Cobb Died. 1830 1816. *John Elliott 1826 1816. *James M . Wayne 1858 1816. Edward Harden Died. 1849 1816. *Xicholas Ware Died. 1824 1816. *Thomas U. P. Charlton 1824 1816. *John A. Cuthbert 1825 1816. * Henry Kollock, D.D Died. 1820 1816. *Duncan G. Campbell . Died. i828 1816. »Hope Hull Died. 1818 1820. *Stephen W. Harriss Died. 1828 1820. *James Nisbet, M. D Died. 1832 1820. *George R. Clayton 1-824 1822. *William H. Jackson 1864 1823. *Joel Crawford 1828 1824. *W r illiam Terrell 1828 1824. *Abram Walker Died. 1834 1825. *George M. Troup, Governor 1833 1825. *Henry Hull, M. D 1829 182H. ■ George Pt. Gilmer, Governor 1857 1826. *John M. Berrien, LL. D Died. 1856 1828. *01iver H. Prince Died. 1837 1828. *James Whitehead 1847 1828. *James Camak Died 1 848 1829. *Tomlinson Fort, .M.D 1856 1830. *William Schley, Governor Died 1858 1830. -Alfred Cuthbert 1835 1831. *Howell Cobb, of Houston county 1839 1831. *John A. Cuthbert 1835 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, Elected. Resigned . 1831. *Angus McD. King 1847 1831. *Wilson Lumpkin, Governor 1871 1831. *David A. Reese, M. D.. '. . 1866 1831. *Stevens Thomas Died. 1839 1831. *James Tinsley, M. D 1844 1831. *Zachariah Williams .Died. 1840 1831. *Jacob Wood 1842 1831. *Thomas W. Murray ..• Died. 1832 1831. *Daniel Hook, M. D 1839 1831. *James C. Watson Died. 1845 1832. *Henry Jackson, M.D., LL. D 1836 1832. *Jeptha V. Harris Died. 1856 1832. *George W. Owens 1845 1833. *Richard W. Habersham 1839 1834. ♦ThomasN. Hamilton 1851 1836. *Charles J . McDonald, Governor 1858 1836. *Thomas F. Foster 1845 1839 "William C . Dawson Died. 1856 1839. *Charles Dougherty Died. 1853 1839. * Jesse Cleveland. .. . 1840 1839. *Thomas W. Harris 1842 1839. *Charles J . Jenkins, Governor 1884 1840. *Mark A. Cooper. . % 1885 1840. *Barzillai Graves 1847 1840. *Robert M.Echols Died. 1848 1841. *JohnBillups. 1871 1842. *Howell Cobb, Governor Died. 1868 1842. *William L . Mitchell Died. 1882 1483. *Stephen Elliott, Jr., D.D Died. 1867 1844. *Junius Hillyer 1858 1845. *William Law 1860 1845. *Absalom H. Chappell 1855 1847. *James H. Couper, LL. D 1858 1847. -William Dougherty 1855 1847. *George W. Towns, Governor Died. 1854 1847. *Samuel Boykin, M. D Died. 1848 1848. *John Wingfield, M. D Died. 1857 1848. -Marshall J. Wellborn 1848 1849. * Adam L. Alexander 1858 1849. *Leonidas B . Mercer, M. D : 1859 1851. 'Richard D. Moore, M. D Died. 1873 1854. * Joseph H. Lumpkin, LL. D Died. 1866 1855. *Herschel V. Johnson, Governor 1868 1855. *John B. Lamar 1858 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY <>F GEORGIA. Elected. Resigned. •David W. Lewis Died. 1883 •Benjamin H.Hill Died. L886 •Charles J. Munnerlyn 1860 1866. *P. M. Nightingale.... . 1858 1856. *Iverson L. Harris 1873 1857. Joseph E . Brown, Governor 1889 1857. *Henry Hull, Jr 1867 1&58. * John B. Barnard Died. 1863 1868. *ThomasR. R. Cobb Died. 1862 1858. *Erancis S . Bartow Died. 1861 1858. *A. E. Cochran Died. 1866 1858. *Thomas W. Thomas Died. 1864 1S58. *Wiliiam Dougherty Died. 1872 1859. *Robert Toombs Died. 1885 *Benjamin F . Ward 1867 1860. *Marcellus Douglass Died. 1863 I860. H. V. M. Miller, M. D. . 1867 1860 . *BeD jamin C . Yancey 1889 1863 . Samuel Barnett 1873 1863 . Richard M . Johnston 1867 1863 . Henry R . Jackson, LL. D . 1872 1863. *David A. Vason 1889 1864. * James Jackson, LL. D Died. 1886 1864. -Eugenius A. Nusbet Died. 1871 1886. MamesL. Seward Died. 1884 1867. *George F. Pierce, D. D Died. 1884 1867 . *Martin J . Crawford Died . 1884 1867. Joel A. Billups 1889 1867. *Samuel Hall Died. 1888 1867 . David C . Barrow 1885 1867 . *Stevens Thomas . 1881 1867. *J.W. Armstrong 1869 1868. H. V. M. Miller, M. D 1889 1869. •John W. Beckwith, D. D 1889 1869. Lamar Cobb 1889 1871 . Dawson A. Walker ] 872 1871 . * John J . Gresham 1889 1871 ■ *Dunlap Scott Died. 1874 1872. *William Hope Hull .Died. 1882 1872. *James M, Smith, Governor 1885 1872 . Nathaniel J . Hammond 1889. 1872 . Pope Barrow 1875 1872 . Augustus O. Bacon 1 ^74 1872 . *John C . Rutherford 1880 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Elected. Resigned. 1873 . *Young L . G . Harris 1884 1873. John Screven 1889 1873. John B. Gordon 1884 1874. *Charles T. Goode Died. 1874 1874 . *Ferdinand Phinizy 1876 1875 . Alexander R. Lawton 1889 1875 . *Thaddeus G. Holt 1876 1875 . ''Alexander H. Stephens Died. 1883 1876. A. T. Maclntyre 1889 1877 . Emory Speer . 1885 1878. *Davenport Jackson . 1882 1878. *A. H . Colquitt 1889 1878. *Abda Johnson. . . .' Died. 1881 1879 . W. H. Felton 1889 1879. *S. M. H. Byrd 1889 1879 . *James H. Fannin 1889 1879. L. F. Livingston .. . . 1889 1881 . W. W. Thomas 1889 1883 . Augustus L. Hull 1889 1883 . J. B. Cumming 1889 1883. *R. C. Humber 1889 1883 . * James S. Hamilton Died . 1888 1884. *B. P. Hollis 1889 1884. W. A. Little 1889 1884 . Pope Barrow 1889 1885 . William M . Reese 1889 1885. D. B. Hamilton 1889 1885. Alex S. Erwin 1889 1885. Charles Z. McCord 1889 1885. *Henry W. Grady 1889 1885. Henry D . McDaniel 1889 1886. Henry Jackson 1889 1886. Pleasant A. Stovall 1889 1886. Peter W. Meldrim| 1889 1887. John B Gordon 1889 1887. Richard B. Russell 1889 1889. Henry H. Carlton 1889 1889. John B . Gordon, Governor 1891 1889. William H . Felton 1889. Nathaniel L. Hutchins ' 1889. Pleasant A. Stovall 1891 1889. Augustus L . Hull 1889. Nathaniel J . Hammond 1889. John J. Gresham Died. 1891 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Elected . Resigned . 1889. Henry D. McDaniel 1880. William A . Little 1889. David B. Hamilton 1880. William W. Thomas 1891 Alex. R. Lawton 1889. John Screven 1889. A . T . Maclntyre 1 B89. *Henry W . Grady Died 1889 18S9. *Benjamin P. Hollis Died 1893 1889. H. V. M. Miller 1889. Joel A . Billups 1889. Nathaniel E . Harris, Ex-Officio 1891. William J . Northen, Governor 1891. Andrew J . Cobb 1893 1891. Augustus O . Bacon 1891. Joseph B . Cumming 1894 1891. Spencer R . Atkinson 1891. William Y. Atkinson, Ex-Officio 1891. Peter W. Meldrim, Ex-Officio 1891. William H. Fish 1893. Howell Cobb 1894. Roger L. Gamble SUMMARY. Whole number 207 Deceased 164 Resigned and still liviDg 22 In office 21 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. SECRETARIES. Elected. Resigned. 1801. *John Hamil 1810 1810. *Duncan G.Campbell 1811 TREASURERS. Elected . Resigned . 1801. *James Meriwether Died. 1808 1808. *Augustin S . Clayton 1815 SECRETARIES AND TREASURERS COMBINED. Elected . Resigned . 1812. *Augustin S. Clayton 1815 1815. *John Hodges Died.. 1819 1819. *Asbury Hull Died. I860 1866. *William L. Mitchell Died. 1882 1882. Lamar Cobb 1890 1890. Augustus L. Hull PRESIDENTS. Elected . Resigned . 1801. *JOSI AH MEIGS, LL.D 1811 1811. *JOHN BROWN, D. D 1816 1816. *ROBERT FINLE Y, D. D Died. 1817 1819. *MOSES WADDELL, D. D 1829 1829. *ALONZO CHURCH, D. D 1859 CHANCELLORS^ I860. * ANDREW A. LIPSCOMB, D. D., LL. D 1874 1874. *HENRYH. TUCKER, D.D., LL. D 1878 1878. ^PATRICK H. MELL, D. D., LL. D Died. 1888 1888. WILLIAM E. BOGGS, D. D., LL. D CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. PROFE.SSORS. MODERN LANGUAGES. Elected. Resigned. 1805. *Petit De Clairville ' 1810 1831. •William Lehmann, A. M 1842 1868. *Emanuel V. Scherb, (Instructor in French) 1854 1869. *M. J. Smead, Ph.D Died. 1872 1872. Cyprian P. Willcox, A. M., LL. D ANCIENT LANGUAGES. Elected. Resigned. 1811. *John R. Golding, A. M 1819 1820. * Joseph Wallace, A. M 1822 1830. *James Shannon, A. M 1835 1836. *James P. Waddell, A. M 1856 1856. *Patrick H. Mell, D. D., LL.D I860 1860. * William II. Waddell, A. M Died. 1878 1878 . William G. Woodfin 1889 1889. Willis H. Bocock NATURAL PHILOSOPHY OR PHYSICS. Elected. Resigned. 1811. *Henry Jackson, LL.D 1820 1820. * James Tinsley, M. D 1822 1822. *Henry Jackson, LL. D 1825 1825. *Gamaliel S. Olds, A. M 1826 1826. *Henry Jackson, LL. D 1827 1827. *James Jackson, A. M 1842 1842. *Charles F. McCay, A.M., LL. D 1846 1846. *John LeConte, M. D., LL. D 1855 1855. Charles S. Venable, LL. D 1856 1856. John D. Easter, Ph. D 1859 1861. William L. Jones, M. D 1866 1866. William LeRoy Broun, LL. D 1875 1875. Montgomery dimming, A. M 1877 1877. L. H. Charbonnier, A. M., Ph.D MATHEMATICS. Elected . Resigned . 1813. *William Green, M.D 1816 181 7 . *James Camak, A. M 1819 1819. *Alonzo Church, A. M 1829 1830. *Henry Hull, M. D L846 2 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Elected. Resigned. 1846. *Charles F. McCay, A. M. LL . D . . . . i 853 1854. William LeRoy Broun, A. M., LL. D j §59 1856. Williams Rutherford, A. M 1386 1880. David C. Barrow, Jr., . & M. E CHEMISTRY AND GEOLOGY. Elected . Resigned . 1823. *James Jackson, A. M 1850 1851 . William L. Jones, M. D 1852 1852, Joseph LeConte, M. D., LL. D. . : 1356 1857. Joseph Jones. M. D. , LL . D 1858 1858. Harry Hammond, M. D 1860 1861 . William L. Jones, M. D ■ 1872 1872. H. C.White, C. & M. E., Ph.D ETHICS AND METAPHYSICS. Elected. Resigned. 1826. *Stephen Olin, A. M 1828 1831 . *Stephen Olin, D. D 1833 1833 . *Samuel P. Pressly, A. M Died. 1836 1860. *PatrickH. Mell, D. D., LL. D Died. 1888 CIVIL ENGINEERING. Elected . Resigned . 1837. *Charles F. McCay, A. M., LL.D 1842 1867 . L. H. Charbonnier, A. M 1877 1883. D. C. Barrow, Jr., C. & M. E., A. M 1889 1889. C. Morton Stralian, C . * M . E LAW. Elected . Resigned . 1843. * Joseph H. Lumpkin, LL.D 1866 1867. *William L. Mitchell, A. M. , LL.D Died. 1882 1880. Pope Barrow, A . M 1883 1880. George D. Thomas, B. S 1893 1884. Andrew J . Cobb, B. L 1893: 1890. Howell Cobb, A. M 1893. Sylvanus Morris, A. M CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. BELLES-LETTRES AND RHETORIC. Elected. Resigned. L843. *\Villiam B. Stevens, D. D 1848 1848. »William T. Brantly, D.D 1857 1857. Richard M. Johnston, A. M 1801 ♦Charles Morris, A . M 1872 1872. *Francis A. Lipscomb, A. M Died. 187a 1 874. E . W . Speer, D.D 1882 1882. *Charles Morris, A . M Died. 189a 1893. Benj. F. Riley, D.D NATURAL HISTORY OR BIOLOGY. Elected. Resigned. 1831. *Malthus A. Ward, M. D 1842 1888. John P. Campbell, Ph. D AGRICULTURE. E I ected . Resigned . 1854 *Daniel Lee, M . D 1862 1873 . *E. M. Pendleton, M. D 1876 1876 . George Little, Ph. D 1878 1878. *W r . M. Browne, A. M Died. 1^83 1883. H. C. White, Ph. D 1883 1892 . James B. Hunnicutt, D. D HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE. Elected . Resigued . 1874. *William M. Browne, A. M Died. 1883 1892. John H . T. McPherson, Ph. D LATIN LANGUAGE AND LITERATUKE. Elected . Resigned . 1872. *Wiliiam Henry Waddell, A . M Died. 1878 GREEK LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE . Elected. Resigne.d. i 872. *Charles Morris, A. M .- 1876 ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE. Elected. Resigned. 1875. William W.Lumpkin, A. M 1876 GEOLOGY. Elected . Resigned . 1888. W. M. Spencer, Ph. D 1890 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. HDJUNCT PROFESSORS. Elected. Resigned. 1847. *Nahum H. Wood, A. M., of Mathematics 1851 1858. * William H. Waddell, A. M., of Ancient Languages 1860 1858. *William D. Wash, A. M., of Mathematics 1861 186f>. L. H. Charbonnier, A. M., of Ancient Languages.. 1867 1866. J. Pembroke Jones, of Mathematics 1867 1869. *F. A. Lipscomb, A. M., of Ancient Languages 1872 1876. *George Bancroft, A. M., of Mathematics Died. 1878 1878. D. C. Barrow, Jr., C. & M. E., A. M., of Mathematics 1883 1894. Charles M. Snelling, A. M., of Mathematics 1894. William D . Hooper, of Ancient Languages 1894. Charles H. Herty, Ph. D., of Chemistry INSTRUCTORS. Elected. Resigned. 1888. Charles M. Snelling, A. M 1894 1890. W. D. Hooper 1894 1890. Chas. H. Herty, Ph. D 1894 1891. Jesse Coates, C. E 1894 1892. Oscar H. Sheffield, C. E 1893. John Morris, B.L 1894. Andrew H . Patterson TUTORS. Elected. Resigned. 1804. *Addin Lewis, A. M 1808 1808 * James Meriwether, A. M 1809 1816. *Asbury Hull, A. M 1818 1818. *Ebenezer Newton, A. M 1820 1820. *Joeiah J. Kilpatrick, A. M 1820 1821. * Alexander H. Webster, A. M 1823 1822. *James P. Waddell, A. M ... 1824 1823. *Charles D . Davis, A. M . 1824 1823. * James C. Patterson, A. M 1825 1824. *Ephraim S . Hopping, A. M 1827 1825. *Alvin Lathrop, A. M 1830 1829. *Benjamin B. Hopkins, A. M 1832 1830. *WilMam L. Mitchell, A. M 1833 1832. * William H. Hunt, A. M 1833 1833. ^Charles P. McCay, A . M 1835 1834. Shaler G. Hillyer, A. M : 1S35 CATALOGl'K UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. L835. •Lamson Miner, A. M 1836 1836. * James T Phelps, A . M 1836 L887. •Charles S. Dodd, A. M 183*7 L83& •George W. Schenck, A. M 1838 •Sylvander Hutchison, A. M Died. 1838 •William A. [rving, A. M. 1839 1-:;-. •Nahum H. Wood, A. M 1847 1842. »Joseph T. Lee, A. M 1842 1845 * William J. Perdue, A. M 1845 1846. •Alexander If. Scudder, A. M 1846 1S4T. Montroville C. Fulton, A. M 1851 I860. •Thomas G. Pond, A. M 1853 1852. *William G. Deloney, A. M 1853 1 B53. *Alonzo Church, A M 1853 1 B53. -William H. Waddell, A. M 1858 1 B53 . •Marcellus Stanley, A. M 1854 1854. John W. Park, A. M 1856 1856. •WilliamD. Wash, A. M 1858 1872. Edward Hunter, C. and M. E 1875 1872. William A. Blount, A. M ....... 1873 1 872. James Bonham 1875 1873. *Charles A. Atkinson, A . M Died. 1875 1876. William H . Fleming, C. E 1875 1884. A. W. VanHoose, A. M 1885 1885. C. M. Strahan, C. & M. E 1889 1 893 . H. C . Moreno, A. M 1894. A. Belcher CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA FACULTY AND OFFICERS. 1894. WILLIRM ELLISON BOGGS,D,D.,LL.D.,CHHr7CELLOR L. H CHARBONNIER, Ph.D., Dean of the Faculty. H. C. WHITE, Ph. D., President State College of A. & M. A. UNIVERSITY SCHOOLS. I. Milledge Chair of Ancient Languages and Literature. WILLIS H. BOCOCK, A. M., Professor. WILLIAM D. HOOPER, Adjunct Professor. A. BELCHER, Tutor. II. School of Modern Languages and Literature. CYPRIAN P. WILLCOX, LL.D , Professor. III. School of English Language and Literature. B. F. RILEY, D. D., Professor. JOHN MORRIS, Instructor. IV. School of Metaphysics and Ethics. WILLIAM E. BOGGS, D.D., LL. D., Professor. V. School of Physics and Astronomy. L. H. CHARBONNIER, A. M., Ph.D., Professor. ANDREW H. PATTERSON, Instructor. VI. School of Pure Mathematics . WILLIAMS RUTHERFORD, A. M., Emeritus Professor. DAVID C. BARROW, JR., A. M., C. & M. E., Professor. CHARLES M. SNELLING, A.M., Adjunct Professor. H. C. MORENO, A. M., Tutor. GEORGE P. BUTLER, A. B., Fellow. CATAI.tM.lK I'MVKKSITY OF CKOKOIA. VII. School of Applied Mathematics and Engineering. 0. -MORTON STRAHAN, C. & M. E., Professor. O . H. SHEFFIELD, C . E., Instructor. VIII. School of Chemistry and Geology. H. C. WHITE, Ph. D., Professor. CHARLES H. HERTY, Ph. D., Adjunct Professor. IX. School of Agriculture and Horticulture. J. B. HUNNICUTT, D. D., Professor. X. School of Biology. JOHN P. CAMPBELL, Ph. D., Professor. NOEL McII. MOORE, Fellow. XI. School of History and Political Science. JOHN H. T. McPHERSON, Ph. D., Professor XII. School of Law. HOWELL COBB. A. M., ) L- tTo SYLVANUS MORRIS, A. M., \ ^iessovs of Law. SAMUEL C. BENEDICT, M. D., Lecturer on Medical Jurisprudence. JOHN D.[MELL, B. L., Lecturer on Parliamentary Law. XIII. Military Tactics. CHARLES M. SNELLING, Commandant of Cadets. Librarian. MISS SARAH FRIERSON. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. FACULTY OF MEDICINE. GEO. W. RAINS, M. D., LL. D., Emeritus Professor of Chemistry. DeSAUSSURE ford, a.m., m. d., Professor of the Principles and Practice of Surgery. THOS. R. WRIGHT, M. D , Professor of Operative and Clinical Surgery; Dean. THEODORE LAMB, M. D., Professor of the Principles of Medicine and Diseases of the Chest, WM.H. DOUGHTY, JR., A. B., M. D., Professor of Anatomy and Clinical Surgery. GEO. A. WILCOX, M. D., Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics and Gynaecology, EUGENE FOSTER, M. D., Professor Practice of Medicine and State Medicine. JAMES M. HULL, M. D., Professor of Opthalmology, Otology and Laryngology. THOMAS D. COLEMAN, A. B., M. D., Professor of Physiology and Pathology; Secretary. JOSEPH E. WILLET, A. M., M. D., Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacy. JOSEPH EYE ALLEN, M. D., Professor of Obstetrics and Pediatrics. HENRY C. DOUGHTY, M. D., Demonstrator of Anatomy and Operative Surgery * L. C. SPENCE, M. D., Demonstrator of Anatomy and Operative Surgery* C.J. MONTGOMERY, B. S., M. D., Clinical Assistant. W. W. BATTEY, M. D., Clinical Assistant. standing were entitled to the decree of A. M. This rule continued in force until 1872. It is safe to assume, therefore, that all Alumni prior to 18W), excepting such as died within three years after graduating, were Masters of Arts. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. ♦Ebenezer Newton. ♦John Phinizy. ♦James Thweat. *JohnL. Wingfield, M 1812. D. *Nathaniel Ashley. ♦Richard Jones. ♦Weldon Jones. ♦Thomas F. Foster, Trustee: Member U. S. Congress . 1813. 1814. ♦William Baldwin, M. D. ♦Thaddeus G. Holt, Trustee; Judge Superior Court. *Milton Howard. ♦Asbury Hull, Tutor, Sec'y and Treas. of Board of Trustees, Speaker of House of Represent- atives. 4 1815. *John Irwin. ♦Henry Hull, M. D., Trustee; Prof. Math, and Astr . *ArcherF. Matthews. *Jabez P. Marshall. 4 1816. ♦Waters Briscoe. ♦William C. Dawson, Trustee; Mem. U. S. Congress; Judge Su- perior Court; U. S. Senator. ♦Ethelred Laogston. *Miles C. Nisbet. ♦Richard W. Randolph, M. D. 5 1817. 1818. 1819. 1820. ♦William W. Carnes. *Pulaski S Holt. *Elizur L. Newton. 3 1821. * Robert W . Mechlin. *Eugenius A. Nisbet, LL: D., Trustee; Mem. U. S. Congress; Mem C. S. Congress;. Judge Su- preme Court. ♦Alfred V. Scott. 3 1822. ♦Paul Coalson. *William H. Jack. *Robert A. Jones. ♦Wiley W. Mason, Chancellor Su- preme Court of Ala. * James C. Patterson, D. D. ••Turner H. Trippe, Judge Supe- rior Court. *James P. Waddell, Prof. Ancient Languages. ♦Benjamin F. Ward. * Lucius L. Wittich. 9 1823. ♦Thomas 1ST. Beall. * James N. Bethune. ♦Norman L. Chester, M. D. ♦William B. Cobb. * George Foote. ♦James A. Frierson. *John H. Gray, D. D., President LaG range Synodical College, Tenn. ♦Iverson L. Harris, Trustee; Judge Superior Court; Judge Supreme Court. ♦John S. Lewis. * James C. Martin. ♦Thomas J. Meriwether. * William Koberts. ♦John G. Rutherford. ♦Richard T. Sankey, M. D. ♦James Scott. * James S. Sims, M. D. *Isaac W. Waddell. ♦William W. Waddell, M. D. *Claiborn A. Watkins, M. D. *ErnestL. Wittich. 20 CATALOGUE IWIVKRSITY OF (J K< i|{< i 1 A . 1 82 f . •David Beck. ♦Abram B. Dale. •Benjamin C. Franklin, Judge Sup' r Court, Texas. •Richard K Hines. *Hines Holt. Mem. U. S. Congress. ♦John H. Morton. ♦Hugh M. Neisler, M. D. * James 0. Screven. ♦Thomas A. Watkins, M. D. * Oliver Wiley. 10 1825. *Edmond Atkinson. *John Campbell . ♦William Dougherty, Trustee. *John F. Hillyer, D.D.,LL.D. *Hugh A. Haralson, Mem. U. S. Congress. ♦Kinchen L. Haralson. •James W. Harris. ♦William L. Harris, Judge Su- preme Court of Mississippi. ♦George Graves. *John J. Hunt. ♦William L. Mitchell, LL. D., Trustee; Professor of Law. ♦Henry H. Means. ♦William C. Micou. *Adrian N. Mayer. •Henry J. Pope. * Benjamin C Pope. ♦John Sankey. ♦Keuben Y. Reynolds, M. D. ♦Ferdinand Sims. ♦Albert P. Torrence. •George J. S. Walker. ♦James B. Walker, M D. ♦William E. Walker. ♦William N, Walker. ♦Edward R. Ware, M. D. ♦Edward H . Wingfleld . •Middleton Witt. 27 1826. ♦Joseph H. Blackshear. ♦Thomas J . Bryan. ♦John A. Campbell, LL. D. ; Mem. Alabama Legislature; Colonel in Indian War, 1886; Associate Jus- tice Supreme Court U S.; Ass't. Sec'y State Confederate States. *Robert Caldwell. * I Tarn den C. Carter. ♦Daniel Chandler, Mem. Alabama Legislature. ♦John A. Cowles, M. D. ♦Robert Dougherty, Judge Supe- rior Court of Alabama . ♦Charles H. Dupont, Judge Supe- rior Court of Florida; Judge Supreme Court of Florida. ♦Paul F . Eve, M . D . ; Professor Surgery Georgia Med . Coll. ; do. Louisville Med. Coll.; do. Mis- souri Med. Coll. ; Professor Op- erative Surgery Nashville Uni- versity . ♦William E. Jones, Mem. IT. S. Congress; Judge Superior Court of Texas. ♦Ezekiel Lamar, M. D. * Thomas McGruder. ♦Richard H. Meriwether. •James A. Meriwether, Mem. U. S. Congress; Judge Superior Court ♦Benjamin T. Mosely. * William II. R. Mosely. ♦Augustan Owen, M. D. ♦William H. Paine. * William H. Reynolds. ♦Hezekiah W. Rice. •Addison R. Semple. ♦Isaac R. Walker. 23 1827. ♦Erasmus L'Acee. ♦Augustin S . Clayton. ♦George R. Clayton. ♦Nathaniel W . Cocke. . •Stewart Floyd . ♦Leonidas Franklin. ♦George Hargraves. ♦Abram S. Hill, M. D. ♦Henry P. Hill. ♦Serenus A . Mayer. ♦William B. McKigney, M. D •BenningB. Moore ♦Giles Mitchell. ♦Hugh W. Nesbitt. •John Rutherford. ♦David L. Sherrill. ♦Robert A. Ware, M. D . •Thomas B. White. ♦William White. 19 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1828. *Jolm B. Barnard, Trustee. *Timothy Gk Barnard, M. D. * James J. Bryan. *Thomas E . Blackshear. *.TohnA. Calhoun. *Samuel J. Cassells, B. B. ♦Eclmond B. Cobb. ♦Lowry L . DeGraffenried. *Elam A. Erwin. ♦John J. Floyd, Judge Superior Court. •George H. Harris. *Sampson W. Harris, Mem. Con- gress from Alabama. * John R . Hayes *Junius Hillyer, Solicitor-General; Judge Superioi Court; Trustee; Mem. U. S. Congress; Solicitor U . S. Treasury. * Joseph A. Kenney. * John Lamar. ♦Henry C. Lea. * Aaron L. Lewis. *William B. Lumpkin. *Ebenezer McKinley. *Archelus H. Mitchell, B. B. *Briggs H . Moultrie . ♦George M. Newton, M. D., Prof. Anatomy Georgia Med. Coll. *John B. Pinney, M. D., Gover- nor of Liberia, Africa. * Andrew G. Semmes. *John Stoney. ♦Austin M. Walker, M. D. 27 1829. * James Adams ♦William E. Adams. ♦Gray A. Chandler * Nathaniel M. Crawford, B. B., President of Mercer Univ. ; Prof. Moral Phil. Univ. Miss.; Prof. Theological Seminary, George- town, Ken. * John M. Cuyler, M. D. ; Surgeon of U. S. Mil. Acad., at West Point. •Edward J. Erwin. ♦William B. Flournoy. ♦William E. Fullwood, M. D. *George F. Heard. Shaler-G. Hillyer, B. B., Atlanta, Ga., Tutor; Prof. Mercer Univ. ♦Samuel T Lawrence, M. D. •Richard D. Moore, M. D., Trus- tee; Prof. Med. Jurisprudence. ♦Isaac N. Moreland. * Edward C. Paine. *George F. Pierce, D. B , LL. B., Trustee; President Emory Coll. ; Bishop Methodist Episco- pal Church, South. *Thomas F. Scott, B. B., Bishop Protestant Episcopal Church, Oregon, ♦William W. Smith. ♦John B. Trippe, A.M., Treasurer State of Georgia. ♦William J. Vason. *John N. Waddell, B. B., LL. D., Prof Ancient Languages, Univ. Miss . ; President LaGrange Synodical Coll., Tenn.; Chan- cellor Univ. of Miss.; Chancel- lor Southwestern Univ., Clarkes- ville, Tenn. •John D. Watts. 21 1830. ♦Benjamin B. Beall. ♦John M . Borders, M . D . ♦Thomas W. Dyer. •Abram B. Elliott. •Nathaniel G. Foster, Mem. U. S- Congress; Judge Superior Court. ♦Marcus A . Franklin, M . D . ♦Joseph Griffin. ♦Alexander Grinnage . *Francis R. Goulding. *Hugh L Henderson. *Edward N. Heron. * Charles W. Howard. ♦ William H. Hunt, Prof. Mathe- matics, Georgia Mil. Institute. ♦Robert B. Houghton. ♦ Wi Hi am Mc Elroy . ♦Felix G. McKinne. ♦William McKinley. •Albert G. Semmes, A. M., Judge Superior Court of Florida. ♦James M. Smythe. ♦George McD. Vance . ♦David White. ♦Amos Whitehead . ♦Frederick D. Wimberly. 23 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA 1831. •Robert E. Belcher. •JohnS. Dobbins ^Theodore M. Dwight. •Boiling Hall. ♦Bennett Harris, M. D. *Jiunes W Harris. * Henry \V. Kneeland. •Thomas J. Moore, Lawyer. •James A. Nisbet. •Samuel B Robertson. *Todd Robinson. *Mimnel Rutherford. * Joseph B. Saffold, Montgomery, Aia. , Lawyer; Mem. Ala. Leg- islature Chancellor Supreme Court of Ala. •Ebenezer Starnes, Judge Supe- rior Court; Judge Supreme Court. *\Yilliam Taylor, Judge Superior Court * William P. White •William W. Wiggins. 17 1832. ' •John W. Baker, Prof. Ancient Lang. Oglethorpe University. •William H Crawford. ♦Robert M. Gunby. *Joseph J. Hutchinson. •James Johnson, Member U. S. Congress; Judge Superior Court; Provisional Governor of Geor- gia. •William LeConte. •John \V. Lumpkin. *John B Mallard. *Telemachu8 F. Montgomery. •JohnR. Reid. •Alexander H. Stephens, Trustee; Mem. U. S. Congress; Vice- President of Confederate States; Mem. U. S Congress; Governor of Georgia. •Henry P. Thomas, Lawyer; Mem Legislature; Col C. S. A.; killed in battle of Knoxville. •Stevens Thomas, Trustee; Sec'y. So. Mut. Ins. Co. 13 L833. •Philip Clayton, Auditor U. S. Treasury; Assistant Secretary C. S. Treasury; U. S. Consul to Callao, Peru. * James C. Cosby. •Adam (i Foster. •Bedney Franklin. *Jamea F. W. Freeman. *Jarnes H. George. •John T. Grant, Mem. Ga. Legis- lature. •John J Gresham, Trustee; Presi- dent Board of Trustees. * Bernard E. Habersham. •Edward R. Harden, Judge Supe- rior Court of Nebraska. * William H. Harris . ^Daniel Ingles. *Colden R. Ketchum. * Allen B. Means. •James S. Pinkard. *Abner B. Powers, Judge Superior Court •Henry Saunders, M. D. 17 1834. •Henry L. Benning, Judge Su- preme Court; Brig.-Gen. C S. A. •Moses L . Barron, M. D. * Ed win Cater. •Howell Cobb, Trustee; Sol. -Gen.; Mem. U. S. Congress; Governor of Georgia; Speaker of the U, S. House of Representatives; Secretary U S. Treasury; Presi- dent Provisional Congress of the Confederate States; Col- 16th Ga.; Brig. -Gen. and Major. Gen. C S. A. *Thomas M. Cobb. •John R. Dyer. *James F. Gibert. •Heury S. Glover. •Henry M. Jackson, M. D. •Herschel V. Johnson, Mem. U\ S. Congress; Judge Superior Court; Governor of Georgia. •John U. H. Lillibridge. * William H McBryde. •Charles G. McKinley. •William H. Meriwether, M. D. *John T. Milledge. •Augustus Reese, Judge Superior Court. *James H. Saye. •Michael C. Summerlin. •Francis J . Walker. 19 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1835. * Francis S. Bartow, Mem. Pro- visional Congress. Confederate States; Col. C.S.'A.; killed in battle of Manassas. * Walter R. Branham, D. D., Ox- ford, Ga. *John D. Diomatari, U, S. Consul to Athens, Greece . *David Finley,D. D. 'Robert Iverson. ♦David H. Janes. ♦Crawford W. Long, M. D., Ath- ens, Discoverer of Anaesthesia. ♦Erasmus L . Ragan . ♦William G. Smith. "Samuel M. Strong. ♦James D. Thomas. * John J. A. Thomas. * George M. Troupe *Charles W. West, M. D., Prof. Chemistry, Geo. Med. Col. and Savannah Medical College. ♦John H. Whitehead. ♦Junius A. Wingfleld. ♦Grafton D. Woodbridge. 17 1836. ♦ Augustus O. Bacon. * James W. Bailey. ♦Francis G. Baldwin. ♦James F. Bonner. ♦Edmond W Butt. ♦ James C. Chalmers. ^Andrew J. Cook. ♦Josiah W. Dunham. ♦James S. Hamilton, M. D., Trus- tee. Jeptha Y. Harris, Atlanta, Ga., Planter; Mem. Legislature Miss.; State Senator; Colonel C. S. A. ^Stephen W. Harris. William A Jarrett, M. D., Mil- ledgeville, Ga. *John Jones, D. D., Chaplain of the Senate ♦Joseph Law. ♦William H. Lee. ^William S. Lowry, Professor of Latin, Erskine College, S . C . *Thomas L. McBryde, D. -D., Mis- sionary to China. *John McKittrick. *Willia7n McWhorter. ♦Thomas S Mallard. ♦Martin H Martin, M. D. ♦Hugh E. Morrow. ♦Thomas II. Moseley, M. D. ♦Samuel IN * . Varnadoe. ♦Jesse M Vason, M. D, ♦George O'K White. ♦Joseph C. Wilkins ♦Benjamin C. Yancey, Trustee; Mem Legislature of South Caro- lina; President of the Senate of Alabama; Mem. Legislature of Georgia; U. S. Minister to Ar- gentine Confederation; Lieut.- Col, C . S. A. ■ 28 1837. * William Banks. ♦William J. Bulloch ♦George W Cooper. ♦J. R. Cunningham. ♦Telamon A Cuyler. ♦James Jackson, LL. D., Trustee; Judge Superior Court; Mem. U. S. Congress; Justice Supreme Court. ♦Palaamon L, Janes, Professor Math., Mercer University. .♦David W. Lewis, Trustee; Mem. Legislature; Pres. State Agri. Society; Mem. Congress; Pres. N. Ga. A. &M. College. ♦Richard A. Milner. ♦Thomas A. Mitchell. *George W. McCay. *Benjamin P. Pressley, Judge Cir- cuit Court of South Carolina. ♦John G. Shorter, Judge Superior Court of Alabama; Mem. Pro- visional Congress C . S . ; Gov- ernor of Alabama. * Albert Williams. ♦AugustinS. Wingfleld, Solicitor- General . 16 1838. *Edmund Anderson, Terry, Ala. ♦Lewis Anderson, M. D . ♦Milton E. Bacon, Pres. Female Colleges LaGrange, Ga., Aber- deen, Miss., Winona, Miss. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. "'James A , Bradley. Edward P Clayton Roberl I)> oald. •Abram B Fall. •William R. Gignilliat. State Senator. *John M. Giles * William P Harrison, Uchee Anna, w . Florida •William Bope Bull, Prof, of Law : i S. Solicitor •Isaiah T Irvin, Speaker of House d, LL. D., Ma- con, Ga., Prof. Mathematics, Mercer University. ♦James D. Sharpe. •Patrick H. Shields. •Peter Winn. 26 1839. ♦Alexander S . Atkinson. •Burwell A. Brown. William IT. Dabney, Rome, Ga.; Mem. Secession Convention; Lawyer; Mem. Senate of Geor- gia. •Jesse S. Felder. ♦Elijah W. Harris. ♦Paul Johnson. •Joseph B. Jones. ♦Thomas C. Xisbet. ♦John Phinizy. Alxeander M. Speer, Madison, Ga., Mem. Legislature; Senator; Judge Superior Court; Colonel C. S. A.; Associate Justice Su- preme Court. ♦Robert P. Trippe, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature: Senator: 5f em. U. S. and C. S. Congress; Associate Justice Supreme Court. ♦Benjamin F. Whitner, Saoford, Fla., Planter. 12 1S40. Sumner W. Baker. Andrew Baxter, Atlanta, Ga. -Benjamin C. Bonner. ♦Augustin L. Borders. ♦James Brownlee. * Joseph H. Echols, Mem. C. S, Congress. ♦Louis Goneke. ♦Milton A. Graham . ♦Claudius B. Gray. ♦James W. GreeDe, Judge Superior Court ♦Jeremiah Kendall. •William H. Mosely. ♦ William J. Perdue, Tutor. Joseph D. Pope, LL. D., Colum bia, S. C; Mem. Secession Con- vention: Mem. S. C. Legislature- State Senator; Prof, of Law S. C; College, *John W. Quarterjnan. *Thomas P. Saffold, Madison, Ga., Planter. ♦William C. Stevens. *Thomas O. P. Vernon, Judge Circuit Court of S. C. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. * William Williams, B. B , Prof. Theology, Mercer Univ.; Prof So. Baptist Theol. Sem., Green ville, ». C. ♦William W. Winn. 20 1841. * Joseph A Anderson. John Anderson. *Solomon Baroard ♦Thomas K. R Cobb, Lawyer; Trustee; Prof Law School; Mem. Secession Convention; Mem. Provisional Congress ot the Confederate States; Colonel Cobb's Legion; Brig.-Gen'l C. S. A.; killed in battle at Frecl- ricksburg, Va. JohnP Culbertson *LutherJ. Glenn, Lawyer; Colo- nel, C. S A. Joseph B. Gibert. ♦iarnuel Hall, Trustee; Associate .lustice Supreme Court. *Charles B. Jones. ♦Ulysses R. King. William W. Knox. Joseph LeConte M. D., LL. D., Berkely, Cal.; Prof. Nat. Sci- ence, Oglethorpe Univ. ; Prof. Natural Science, Univ. of Ga. ; Prof. Chem. and Geol., S. C. Coll.; Prof. Chem. and Geol, Univ. of California. *Louis LeConte. ♦George R. McCalla. John L. Mallard. Gideon A. Mallette. ♦Zacnariah L. Nabors, Henry Newton, Athens, Ga. ♦John N. Newton. ♦William H. Newton, M. D . William II Norman. Jonathan W. Williams. Thomas 8. Winn, Stewart's Sta- tion, Ala. 23 1842. * Alexander A. Allen, Judge Supe- rior Court. ♦Henry M. Anderson. Thomas A . Baynard . * Alfred Buckner. Thomas W. Carr, Tallahassee, Fla., Planter. James C. Cooke. ♦Jackson C. Curry, Captain C. S. A. ; died in service. William II. Felton, M. B , Car- tersville, Ga. ; Mem. U. S. Congress; Mem. Legislature. ♦Albert C. Garlington, Brig.-Gen'l C. S. A. James Graves. ♦Thomas A. Hamilton. John H . Harper. ♦Stephen W. Harris. ♦Henry Hull, Jr., Banker, Trustee. ♦ James R. McCarter. ♦Peyton C. Moore, Merchant. Elisha Strong, M. D., West Point, Miss. ♦John C. Vason. ♦James N. West. John M. White. John W. Wofford. 21 1843. ♦George W. Allen, Mem. Alabama Legislature . ♦James H. Anderson. Samuel K. Borders, Alabama, Farmer. ♦John L. Byrd, Senator Georgia Legislature. Jabez Lamar Monroe Curry, LL. B., LL. B., D. B , Washington, D. C; in Mexican war, 1846; Mem. Alabama Legislature; Mem. U. S. Congress; Mem. C. S. Congress; Colonel C. S. A.; President of Howard College, Alabama; Prof. English and Philosophy, and President Board of Trustees Richmond College; U. S. Minister to Spain; Gen'] Agent Peabody Education Fund and the Slater Fund . ♦Robert J. Henderson, Covington, Ga., Lawyer; Judge County Court; Brig.-Gen'l C. S. A. James F. King. ♦Samuel D. Kirkpatrick. ♦James LaRoche, Planter, Darien, Ga. ♦LaFayette Lamar, Captain C. S. A.; died in service. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. William Lunch, McElroy, Ga., Judge County Court; Planter. * Law boo < ■ MeElvey. *JameS Morrow. M. D. -Edward 11. Pottle, Mem. Legisla- ture; Senator; Judge Superior Court: Captain 5th Ga., C. S. A.; Colonel (ia. State Troops. *Linton Stephens, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature: Senator; Colonel C. S. A.; Associate Justice Su- preme Court. ♦William T. stokes ♦Joel L . Turner, M . D . , Hartwell, Ga. Thomas W. White, Hernando, Miss., Lawyer; Mem. Miss. Leg- islature. 18 1844. *PeterW. Alexander, Journalist. ♦John Ashley. John M. Billups, Columbus, Miss., Banker: Planter. Eli H. Glover. ♦James L. Grant. ♦Benjamin H. Hill, Trustee; Law- \ yer; Mem/Legislature; Senator; C. S. Senator; Mem. U. S. Con- gress; U. S. Senator. *H. H. Jones, Macon, Ga., Jour nalist. ♦Benjamin Jordan, Planter. Archibald G. McLeroy. *John K. Norton. ♦John Kucker. ♦William Screven. ♦James II. Towns. ♦Dickinson H. Walker, Monroe, Ga , Lawyer; Sol.-Gen'l; Mem. Legislature; Major C. S. A. 14 IS 45. -William Ashley, M. D. Joel Abbott Billups, Madison, Ga., Lawyer and Planter; Trustee; State Senator. ♦William T. Bailey, M D. William W. Can. M I)., Calvary, Ga ♦William A. Dunn, M. D. ♦Joseph T. Elston, M. D. 3 ♦Alexander A. F. Hill, M. I>.; Bur geon U. S. Army; Captain C. S A. Robert R. Howard, Union Springs, Ala., Lawyer; Planter. William L. Jones, Atlanta, Ga., M. D., Prof. Nat Science; Direc- tor Ga. Experiment Station. * Charles B . King. ♦Henry R. J. Long, Athens, Ga., M. D., Surgeon C. S. A. ; Physi- cian and Planter. Edward P. Harrison , D. D . , Harri- sonburg, Va., Prof. Lousiana State College, Prest. Austin Col- lege, Texas Thomas B Phinizy, M. D., Au- gusta, Ga., Planter. *Thomas G. Pond, Tutor. ♦George C. Whatley, Mem. Ala. Legislature; Major C. S. A., killed in battle. ♦Nathaniel J . Way, Planter. 16 1840. ♦William H. Allen. ♦Daniel D Bacot, M. D. ♦Samuel J Bailey. William S. Basinger, Athens, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legislature; Ma- jor 18th Ga , C. S. A.; Lieut.- Col. Sav . Vol . Guards ; Pres. N . G. A. & M. College. John R Blake, Prof, of Nat. Phil. LaGrange; Svnodical College, Tenn.; Prof \Nat Phil, and Chairman of Faculty, Davidson College, N. C. James A. Carlton, Athens, Mer- chant. ♦James G. Collier. ♦George O. Dawson. ♦William G. Delony, Tutor; Law- yer; Mem. Legislature; Col- onel C. S. A.; killed in battle. *Charles H. Dendy . ♦Henry M. Dunwoody; killed in battle . Eugene W. Harris, Atlanta, Ga. ♦John Hurt, Atlanta, Banker ♦George M. T. Hurt, Atlanta, Banker. Thomas A. Royt, D.D., Philadel- phia, Pa. ♦Abda Johnson, Lawyer; Trustee; Col. 40th Ga. C. S. A. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. *Elijah C. Jones, M. D. *Henry M. Law, Lawyer. William A. Lofton, Lawyer, Ma- con. Thomas B. Moss, Lexington, Ga. Teacher. *Reuben P. Peoples. ^Benjamin Screven, Capt. C. S. 4.; died in service. *John M. Ware. James W Warren, Atlanta, Secre- tary Executive Department. 24 1847. * William W. Anderson. *Henry H. Bacon, Mem. .Legisla- ture. *Lucius H. Briscoe, Lawyer. Alonzo W. Church, Lawyer; Tutor Univ. Ga., Washington, D. C. *Ira E. DuPre, M. D. Sylvester J . Farmer, M. D. Leonidas 0. Ferrill, M. D. * Wesley P. Gahagan. *Alexander C. Hanson, M. D. *George G. Hull, Civil Engineer; Sup't. A. & W. P. R. R. * William B. Jones, M. D. Samuel E. Kerr. Robert J. Morgan, Judge of Chan- cery Court, Tenn. " :: Bolling A. Stovall. *Ezekiel H. Taylor. Joseph N. Whitner, Lake City, Fla., Prof. State College of Fla. 16 1848. *Gerard W. Allen. Killed in Bat- tle. *RobertE. Allen. *Cornelius Ashley, M. D. * James Bancroft. *Thomas U. Camak, Capt. C. S. A. ; killed in battle of Gettysburg . ^Madison D . Cody, killed in bat- tle of Crampton's Gap. *EugeniusL. Douglass. *Marcellus Douglass, Trustee; Lawyer; killed in battle of Sharpsburg. *Charles A. A. Dunwoody. Charles S. Hardee, Savannah, City Treasurer. Lucius M. Hart. Wra.L. Lampkin, Dalton, Ga., Banker. Winfield S. Lampkin, Merchant, Auburn, Ala. William W. Lumpkin, Atlanta, Capt. C. S. A.; Piof. of Eng. Lit. *AugustusM. Mclver. ^Richard H . McLeod . :i: Benjamin T. Mosely. * James O. Moss. * Joseph J. Singleton. *WilliamA. Stokes. *Frederick R. Tarver; killed in battle . *BeverlyA. Thornton, Columbus, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature; Sen- ator; Capt. C. S. A. *JohnM. Tilley; killed in battle. James S. Walker. William D. Williams, Macon, Prof. Latin Emory College; Sup't of Georgia Asylum for the Blind. 25 1849. *Matthew Ashley. Edward Bancroft, Athens, Ga., Planter. GnstavusH. Bates, M. D., Cov- ington, Ga. *RichardH. Bellamy. Isaac L. Bolton, Hickory, Miss., Planter; Probate Judge; Mem. Miss. Legislature. Morgan P. Calloway, D. D., Ox- ford, Ga., Vice-Pres. and Prof. Latin, Emory College; Pres. LaGrange Female College ; Mem. Constitutional Convention, 1865. *CharlesW. Carey. *John R. Church, Lieut. U.S.A., Capt. C. S. A; died in service. *Ephraim L . Davis . *EdgarG. Dawson, M. D. *William E. DuBose. Joseph Ganahl, Augusta, Lawyer; Major C. S. A.; U. S District Attorney. *Robert C. Hall. *William T. Harris. Lawyer; Col. 2d Ga. Regt. ; killed in battle. *John W. Hill, M. D., Planter. Wm. W. Hill, Planter, Washing- ton, Ga. CATALOCJl'K IN1\ KHSITV OF (JEORGLA 'Calvin E Johnston, Planter. •Woodford A Johnston, Planter. George W. Means, Ocala, Fla., Lawyer. Hugh *N Mitchell, M. D., Hosch- ton, Ga., Physician; Surgeon C. S.A. *Adiel S. Moseley, M. D. •Tignell L. .Moss, Planter. •George W. Xoriuan. ♦Thomas ,1 Nuckolls. *Shelton Oliver. *Simeon Oliver. Benjamin H Pope, Panola Co., Miss , Planter. A. F Pope, Crawford, Ga., Plan- ter; Captain C. S A.; Judge Inf. Court; Mem. Legislature. •George S. Riley. •Robert Thomas, Planter; Major C. S. A. •William R. Waring. Richard H. Wood, Morgan Co., Ga., Farmer. •John M. Wright. 34 1850. •Thomas J. H. Anderson, Plan T ter. Emory F. Anderson, Atlanta, Mer- chant. -•John D. Barnard, M. D. ♦Henry C . Billups, Col. C. S. A. *Thomas L. Cooper, Lawyer; Ma- jor C. S. A.; killed in battle. ■ James D. Frederick, Marshall- ville, Ga., Major C. S. A ; Mem. Legislature; Senator; Planter. William D Hoyt, M. D, Rome, Ga., Surgeon C. S. A. William King, M. D., Atlanta, Ga., General Supt. Internal- Revenue Service. Washington L. Lang. •Robert Q. Mallard. William II Milton, Marianna, Fla., Major C. S. A.; Judge Court Probate; States Attorney; Mem. Legislature of Fla. •Sempronius Moody. ♦Charles A. Redd. William Reid, Washington, D. C, Law ye i ; Editor; Col. C S. A.; in Government seivice. •Martin W. Biden, Lawyer; Clerk ( iircuit Court of Utah •Richard D 13. Taylor. •Robert G Taylor. John W Walker. Thacker V. Walker, M. D., Texas. 19 1851. Robert J. Bacon, Albany, Ga., Clerk R. R. Commission; Mem. Legislature and Senator. Nathaniel L. Barnard, Savannah Lawyer. •William C. Bellamy, M. D. At. lanta, Ga., Surgeon C S. A. •David T. Blake ly, M. D. Samuel Boykin, D I)., Nashville, Tenn.; Editor and Author. Francis Canahl, San Francisco, Cal., Lawyer. •Thomas S. Hardee, M. D., En- gineer C. S. A. •William T. Harris. •George T. Landrum. . William P. McWhorter, Wood- ville, Ga., Merchant and Plan- ter. # Cicero A. Mitchell, Athens. •Thomas G. Moffett, A, M. * Charles D. Moore. John W. Park, Greenville, Ga., Tutor in Mathematics; Lawyer; Major C. S. A. •Edward W. Pou, Smithfiold,N. C, Mem. Legislature N. C; Law- yer and Planter. •James H. Phinizy. •Reuben O. Reynolds, Aberdeen, Colonel C. S. A.; Lawyer; At- torney-General Miss.; Reporter Supreme Court ;Lieut.-Governor. John N". Slaughter, M. D., Lafay- ette, Ala . •James I. Snider, M. D. •Joseph H. Stovall, Commission Merchant. •James Taylor. •Edward D. Tracy, Lawyer, Judge Superior Court of Alabama.; Brig.-Gen'l C. S. A.; killed in battle of Port Gibson, Miss. 23 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1852. Edward W. Abrahams. *Young J. Anderson, Major C. S. A . ; died in service. Joseph G. Blount, Gadsden, Ala., Farmer. *Samuel W. Bowen, Lie at. U. S. A.; Brig.-Gen. C. S. A.; killed in battle. James S. Cothran, Abbeville, S. C, Lawyer; Judge Circuit Court, S. C. ; Mem. U. S. Congress; CaptainS. C. A.; Div. Counsel Southern Railway. ■ *John A. Comer, M. D. Wade A. Culbertson. John F. Douglass, Major Nicara- guan Army. William E. Epps, A. M., Clarkes- ville . Nathaniel J. Hammond, A. M., Atlanta, Lawyer; Sol. -Gen ; Re- porter Supreme Court; Attorney- Gen. State of Georgia; Mem Const. Con. of 1805 and 1877, Mem. TJ. S. Congress; Chairman Boai\t of Trustees. *Leroy W. Hayes, Merchant. James L. Heard, Elberton, Ga., Mem. Legislature, Planter. *James A • Hill. * William C. Jennings, Merchant. *Julian T. Johnson, Planter. * Andrew M . Jones. Walter G. Jordan, Jasper county, Planter. *Lucius M. Lamar, Hawkinsville, Ga., Col. 8th Ga. Reg., C S. A. ; Mem. Legislature; Senator. ■Edward P. • Lumpkin, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature; Captain Q. S. A. John B . McGehee, Savannah, Ga., Pres. Gordon Institute -John McMillan, Planter . Henry T. Massengale, St. Louis, Mo., Merchant; Major C. S A. Anderson W. Reese, Macon, Ga., Lawyer; Editor; Lieut. 15th Ga., C. S A. John B. Bespass, Butler, Ga. Thomas F . Screven, M . D . , Savan- nah, Planter. *John J. Thomas, Athens, Planter. *William H. Waddell, Prof. An- cient Languages . Josiah L . Warren, Savannah, Ga . , Commission Merchant; Mem. Const. Con. 28 1 853, George T. Barnes, Augusta, Law- yer; Mem. Legislature; Mem. U. S. Congress; Col. C. S. A. John S. Baxter, M. D., Macon, Merchant. James H Bowen, M I). Richard Burroughs, M D. *Joseph M Cary. * Thomas J. Charlton, M. D , As- sist. Surgeon TJ. S. Navy; Phy- sician *Allen E Cochran, Lawyer; Mem. C S Congress; Judge Superior Court. *John F. Cooper, Captain C. S. A.; kil ed at Manassas Leroy 0. Dennis, Eatonton, Ga. * John H . Echols John L. Felder, M. D , Texas. *Char!es T. Goode, Lawyer; Trus- tee; Col.C. S A. Edward S. Hammond, M. D. Isaac S. Hardemao, Macon, Law- yer. Burwell P Hill, Washington, Ga., Planter. Robert H. Howard. Henry F Hoijt, D. IK, Elberton, Ga.. Chaplain C S. A. * Andrew J Johnson. John E. Jooes, Robinson Springs, Ala, Planter. *WilliamH. Kerr. William H. M. King. *James N. LeConte, M. D. *Antony McCulloch, Lawyer. *James Marks * Valerius C. Mason. Thomas J. Nea., Lawyer; Senator; Captain C. S. A. Jonathan B. S. Davis, Newnan, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Const. Con., 1865. *J. Andrew Dunn, Merchant. Francis M. Green, Silverton, S. C. ; Farmer Elisha Jones Hall, M. D. Midway, La. ♦James M. Hull, Planter. John T. Hurt, Maxey's, Ga., Planter; Mem. Legislature. Capt. C. S. A. ♦Samuel J . Jones, Thomasville, Pl*nter. ♦John Lamar. Lawyer. William H. Mattox, Heardmont, Ga., Plante-; Col. C. S. A.; Mem. Legislature; Senator; Mem. Constitutional Convea tion, 1877. James W. Moore, Hampton, S. C, Adjt.-Gen. C. S. A.; Major- Gen. S. C State Militia. Edwin D. Newton, M. D, Ath- ens, Ga., Surgeon C. S. A. Francis M. Potts, Atlanta, Ga., Merchant . William H. Sims Columbus, Miss., Lawyer; Colonel C. 8. A., Lieut. -Governor Miss. ; 1st Asst. Sec. Interior U.S. * William T. Walton. ♦Richard M. Whitehead, killed at Front Royal. ♦Joseph H. Wilkins, Waynes- boro, Ga., Lawyer. ♦LucienS. Wilson. 21 1857. *JohnK. Arrington. * Jarrell Beasley . James H. Blount, Macon, Law- yer; Lieut-Col. C S. A.; Mem. Constitutional Convention, 1865; Mem. U. S. Congress; Special Envoy to Hawaii. ♦Amni D. Burns. Wilson D. Cheney. * John L . Couper, Lawyer. ♦John W. Hancock, Lawyer. Sampson W. Harris, Carrollton Ga., Lawyer; Col. C. S. A.;- Sol. -Gen. ; Judge Superior Court. Robert W . Heard . ♦Ridge way W. Hogan, Capt. C. S. A. ♦Benoni L. Jones. Lawyer. Augustus H. Jordan. ♦Barna McKinne, Major C. S. A.; died >n service. * William A. McTyer, Eufaula, Ala., Capt. C. S. A. Thomas A. Merritt. * James W. Moore, Augusta, Merchant. James F. Park, Ph.D., LL. D., La Grange; Teacher; Planter. Keith a . Quarterman, Sumter Co., Ga., PUntpr. John F. Smith, Oglethorpe Co., Planter; Capt. C. S. A. James H. Tankersley, killed at Chickrtm»u?a. ♦John P. C. Whitehead, Lawyer. 21 1858. ♦Robert W. Adams, Teacher. Gilmer Banks, Tallassee, Ala., Planter; State Senator. Stephen T. Beasly, M. D., Texas, Surgeon C . S . A . ^Augustus P. Hodo, Lawyer. CATALOGUE IMYKRSITY OF GEORGIA. ♦Robert C. Humliir, Katonton, G<* . Planter; Mem. Legislature; Mem. Constitutional Convention, 1st;:,: Lieut. C. S A . Trustee. -William T. Mitchell, Lieut. C. S A ; died iu service. *John R. North, Lawyer; Cipt. C. S. A. ; died in service. *James M. Oliver, C apt. C. S. A. : died in service. •William M. Pritchett, Capt. C S. A. : died in service. ♦George G. Ragland, Capt. C. S. A. ; killed in battle. *\Villiara R. Roberts, C S. A.: killed in battle. ♦Joseph Taylor, Planter. 1859 John Q . Adams, Washington, Ga . , Teacher Augustus O. Bac^n, Macon, Law- yer; Major C. S. A.; Trustee; Speaker of House Ga. Legisla- ture . Pope Borrow, Savannah, Ga., | Lawyer; Capt. C. S. A.; Mem. Constitutional Convention, 1877; Mem Legislature; U. S. Sena- ! tor ; Pres . N . E . R . R . ; Trustee . Winfield S. Bird, Lawyer; Consul \ U. S. to South America. Lamar Cobb, Athens, Ga., Law- I yer; Major C S. A.; Trustee: Sec . and Treas . Board of Trus- tees. John Gerdine, M . D . , Athens, Ga . , Physician. •William G. Hill, Lawyer. *D. C. FTodo, Lawyer. E. C Kinnebrew, Athens, Ga., Lawyer. Teacher. *L. A. Lane, Lawyer. •A. S. Mitchell. •Thomas Mosely; killed in battle. Gustarus A Xunnally, D. D , Memphis, Tenn., Pres. Mercer University . John D. Pope, Los Angelos, Cal., Judge Superior Court of Geor- gia; U. S. District Attorney. •Joseph W. Roberts. R. D. Seals, Ala, Dentist. Ivey F. Thompson, Cedartoira, Ga., Lawyer: Mem. Legisla- ture ; Sol . -Gen ; Captain C . S . A . John Y. Wood, Cedar Grove, Ga., Lawyer; Major C. S A : Mem. Legislature; Senator. 18 1860. * William D. Anderson, Marietta, Ga., Mem. Legislature; Captain C. S. A. Richard B. Baxter, Sparta, Ga., Planter. Milton A. Brown. •John T. Burns, Lawyer; State Senator; Comptroller-General of Georgia. •John H. Cline. •William F. Crane, Planter. James E. Harper, Augusta, Ga., Lawyer ; Sergeant-Major 27th Ga. C . S . A . HughN. Harris, M. D., Athens, Ga., Agent Georgia R. R. * James J. Head. *N. C. Kimball. William H. Lee, Columbus, Miss., Banker . •Frank Lumpkin, Lawyer •Robert C. Lumpkin. William D. Mitchell, Thomasville, Ga., Lawyer; Col. C S. A.; Mem. Legislature; Judge Coun- ty Court. Thomas A. Murray, Marietta, Ga. ? Teacher . •Crawford J. Reese. •John C. Rutherford, Lawyer; Captain C . S . A . : Trustee . William A. Tennille, New York, Captain C. S. A.; Cotton Mer- chant. Edward J. Thomas, Savannah, Ga., Civil Engineer; Sup't. R. R. "John H. Thomas. *RobertS. Thomas, Texas •Samuel S. Tumlin, Lawyer. John Weatherly, Jackson county, Ga., Teacher. A. Grattan Whitehead, M. D.; Waynesboro, Ga., Physician, Captain C. S. A. Thomas Wray, Planter. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. B. L. Augustus O. Bacon, ante. Pope Barrow, ante. *PittM. Brown. *R. A. Chambers, Captain C. S. A. : died in service. *J. M. Cleveland. Lamar Cobb, ante. *Virgil C. Cook. * James Gardner; killed in battle. *James G. George. *William Robert Gignilliat, Cap- tain C . S . A . George G. Grattan, Harrisonburg, Va. *A. A. F. Hill, ante. Wiley C. Howard, Atlanta, Ga., Lawyej ; Capt. Cobb's Legion C S. A.; Judge Court of Or- dinal y. * Winder P. Johnson, Jeffeison Co., Ga.; Mem. Legislature. *Roswell King. *L. A. Lane. S. C. Mitchell. L. O. Niles. George L. Peavy, Greenville, Ga., Mem. Legislature; Senator. A. C Perry, Newnan, Ga. *H. J. RaDdai. 42 1861. A. B. Jabez M. Brittain, Covington, Ga. Edward A. Carter, Waynesboro, Ga., Planter. Edward Y. Clarke, Atlanta, Edi tor, Col. C.'S. A. R. A. Clayton, Caitersville, Ga., Merchant. *J. A. Foster, killed in battle at Santa Rosa Island . G. C. Gairdnei\ killed in battle. J. J. F. Gore, Farmer. AVilliam A. Hemphill, Atlanta, . Ga., Publisher; Bank Presi- dent; Mayor of Atlanta. ♦Thomas J. Hester. *E. T. Lankford; killed in battle. T.N. McMullen ♦J . H. McWhorter; killed in bat- tle . ^Benjamin Mell; killtd in battle at Crampton's Gap. *Benjamin B . Moseley . G. C. Riley. J. J . Robinson. *George, W. Rush, Capt. C. S. A . ; killed in battle . J. N. Sheats, Oconee Co.,Ga., Plantei . F. M. Stovall, Augusta, Ga., Merchant. J. M. Ware. ♦George C. Walker; killed in bat- tle. Harry Wells, Zebulon, Ga., Judge Court of Ordinary. 22 B. L. Madison Bell, Atlanta, Ga., Major C . S . A . ; Mem . Constitutional Convention, 1867; Comptroller- General of Ga. Hezekiah Bussey. Thos. B. Cox, McBean, Ga., Capt. Cobb' s Leg ion C . S . A . ; Farmer, M. J. Cofer, Eatonton, Ga. * Thomas Evans, Lieut. C. S. A.; died in seivice. S.J. Flynt. Joseph H. L. Gerdine, Macon, 'Ta., Lawyer. John W. Heidt, Atlanta, Ga., Lieut. C. S. A.; Sol. -Gen.; Chaplain Ga. Senate; Pres. LaGrange Female College ; Regent S. W. University, Georgetown, Texas. Sylvester M. Herrington, Athers, Ga., Judge Court of Ordinary, U.S. Commissioner. Robert Humphries. Samr.el Humphries, Miss. John T. Jordan, Sparta, Ga., Mem. Legislature; Capt. C. S. A . ; Lawyer. F. L. Little, Sparta, Ga., Judge County Court. *Frank Lumpkin, ante. ♦Robert McCay, Baltimore, Md. G . E . Macon . ♦George VV . Moore . Thomas F. Newell, Milledgeville, Planter; Capt. C. S A. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEOKMA. James M Pace, Covington, Ga., Captain C S. A ; Mem . Const. Con., L877." \ \ . S l'arks, Journalist. W. J. Raines. Cosmo B. Richardson, Savannah, Captain ( . S. A. John C. Rutherford, ante. James D. Rush, Butler, Ga., Judge Ordinary. ♦W. D. Seymour. Toombs Speerman, Social Circle. George D. Smith, Savannah, Ga.. Sol. -Gen' 1. John II. Swearingen. ♦John II Thomas. Ivey F. Thompson, ante. Wells Thompson. ♦Samuel S . Tumlin, ante . Benjamin M. Turner, Barnesville, Ga. F. H. Turnipseed. H. D. D. Twiggs, Augusta, Ga., Lieut. -Col. 1st Ga. C. S. A.; Judge Superior Court; Mem. Legislature. R. J. Walton. W S. Walton. *\V. W. Williamson, Captain 8th Ga. C . S . A . ; Mem . Legislature. W. T. Wimberly, McBean, Ga., Farmer. 39 1862. Thomas A. Barrow, Pelham, Ga., Captain C. S. A. William H. Bass, Atlanta, Civil Engineer. ♦William H. Brooke. John W. Brumby, Athens, Captain C. S. A.; Manufacturer. Howell Cobb, Athens: Judge City Court; Captain C. S. A.; Trus- tee. ♦John R. Crane, Merchant. Sampson II. Hardeman, Washing- ton, Ga.; Judge County Court; Mem. Legislature. ♦Alsey Huggins. ♦J. H. Kinnebrew. 8. /'. Tei ,. Crockett, Texas, Lieut. C. S. A. John O. Waddell, Atlanta, Ga., Farmer; Major 0. S. A.; Pres. State Agri. Society. Chas. X. West, Savannah, Lawyer. 12 18G3. John T. Glenn, Atlanta, Ga., Cap- tain C. S. A.; City Attorney; Solicitor-Gen'l. Thomas W. Grimes, Columbus, Ga,, Lawyer; Solicitor-Gen'l.; Mem. Legislature; Mem. U. S. Congress. 2 1864. 1865. 1866. ♦Robert B. Gunby, Columbus. Carlton Hillyer, Augusta. Auditor Ga. R. R. i Augustus L. Hull, Athens, Banker; Trustee; Sec. and Treas. Univ. of Ga. ♦Francis A. Lipscomb, Adjunct Prof. Ancient Langs,, and Prof, of Belles-Lettres. Samuel Lumpkin, Atlanta, Sol.- Gen'l; State Senator: Judge Superior Court: Associate Jus- tice Supreme Court. James B. McCleskey, Atlanta. B. L. * William M. Browne, Pr>f. of History, Polit. Science and Ag- riculture Univ. of Georgia; Brig.- Gen. C. S. A. Howell ( 'obb, ante. Sampson II. Hardeman, ante. Henry Jackson, Atlanta, Ga., ante. Mem. Legislature; Lawyer; Capt. C. S. A. *James J. Turnbull, Mem . Legis- lature. 11 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1867. A. B. G. Legare Comer, Euf aula, Ala., Lawyer . William A. Fort, Ameri^us, Ga., Judge Sup. Court; Mem. Leg- islature; Mem. R. R. Commis- sion. Malcom Johnston, Atlanta, Ga., Lawyer . Samuel Spencer, New Y^rk, Supt. Y. M. R. R., 1st Yice-Pres. Bait, and Ohio R. R.; Pres. Southern Ry. Co. ^Thomas A . AYard . 1868 A. B. Alfred H. Alfriend, Monticello, Ga., Planter. *George Bancroft, Prof. Math. Howard Coll . , Ala . ; Adj . Prof. Math. Univ. of Ga. *Horace D. Beene, Lawyer. Julius L. Brown, Atlanta, Ga., Lawyer; Attor. W. & A. R. R.; Pres. Dade Coal Co. William A. Carlton, M, D., Ath- ens, Ga. E. Baxter Connell, M. D., Texas. Alfred H. Cox, Atlanta, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature; Sol. Gen. * William L. Dennis. John E . Donaldson, Donaldson- ville, Ga., Lawyer; Mayor. *Charles Dubose, Lawyer. George T. Goetchius, Rome, Ga. Charles M. Goodman, Atlanta, Merchant . ♦Walter S. Gordon, Contractor. "Henry W. Grady, Journalist. *RobertB. Hodgson, Merchant. *Benjamin P. Hollis, Lawyer; Trustee . *DavenpoTt Jackson, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. *Louis E. LeConte, Lawyer. Martin V. McKibb«-n, Jackson, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legisla- ture . Peter W. Meldrim, Savannah, Ga., Lawyer; Trustee; State Senat >r. W. H. Mims, Yienna, Ga.; Law- yer. Herbert P. Myers, Savannah, Ga. William F. Parks, Augusta, Tt acher . *F. Bowdre Phinizy, Cotton and Com. Mr reliant. J . W . Rhod-s, M . D . , Georgia . Jep'ha H. Rucker, Athens, Cot- ton Broker. R. A. Russell, Hamilton, Ga. r Lawyer . W. B. Thomas, Augusta, Judge County Court of Clarke; R. R. Manager . William W. Thomas, Athens, Pres . So. Mutual Ins . Co . ; Trus- tee. Robert Toombs, M. D., Wash- ington, Ga. Henry A. Whitman, Charleston, S. C. S. F. Wilson, Gallatin, Tenn , Law- yer; Judge of Superior Court of Tenn. Hamilton Yancey, Rome, Ga., Lawyer and Insurance Agent. C. E. 33 *Frank H. Harris. George D. Harris, Adairsville, Ga. J. Fenwick Kollock, Savannah, Insurance. W. W. Kollock, Clarkesville, Ga. John M. Nevitt, Savannah, Archi- tect. 5 B. L. *John Billups. "Alexander T. Dent. T. W. Dodd. M. C. Fulton, Decatur, Ga., Plan- ter. *Thomas F. Greene. *Otis Jones. A. L. Mitchell, Athens. City Treas- urer; Judge County Court; Sol.- Gen. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. •M. w . Riden. J. E. Sohofield. E. Thompson. 10 1S69. A. B. *A. P. Adams, Savannah, Ga., Mem. Legislature; Judge Supe- rior Court. F. M. Allen. R, T. Barksdale, Washington, Ga Samuel Barnett. Atlanta, Ga., In structor Univ. of Ga.; Prof Math. Univ. La : Adjunct Prof of Math. Davidson College, N C . : Lawyer. •Benjamin W. Barrow, Lawyer. Thomas W. Baxter, Atlanta, Ga., Merchant. William 8. Bean, D.I), Clinton, .. Editor. Edgeworth Bird, Baltimore, Com. Merchant. William />. Bonnell, China, Pres. Female Coll , Covington. X. J. Bussey, Columbus. IL II. Cabaniss, Atlanta, Pub- lisher. C. A. Crane, Atlanta, Ga., Mer- chant. Charles A. Collier, Atlanta, Ga.. Banker. James M. Edwards. Xew York, Civil Engineer: Supt. M. & B. Div. of E. TV, Va & Ga. P. P.: now Vice-Pres. and Gen. Mana- ger L., X. <). & T. P.P. Geo. II. >:.stes, Talbotton, Ga.. Merchant *W. M. Finley, Lawyer. Wm. II. Pish, Americus, Judge Superior Court; Trustee. M. Guyton, Marianua, Fla. William P. Hammond, Atlanta, Lawyer; Judge Superior Court •E. S. Harrison. Benj. H. Hill, Atlanta, Lawyer Solicitor-Gen. ; U. S. District At- j tornev. •O C. Hill. A. C. Howze, Birmingham, Ala., Lawyer; Probate Judge Perry Co. *R. T. Hull, Savannah; Banker. *S. Jordan. II. II. Linton, Athens, Planter; Tux Collector Clarke Co. *T. P.Lyon. A. T. Mclntyre, Thomasville r Lawyer. *H. G. Mclntyre, Thomasville r Lawyer. O. E. Mitchell, Atlanta, Ga., Dep- uty U. S. Marshal. *S. S. Murdoch. *E. M. Murphey. J. C. McMichael, Atlanta, Editor. *W. H. Parsons. J. D. Pambo, Bainbridge, Ga. J. L. Robertson. Frank J. Spain, Quitman, Ga. Emory Speer, Macon, Solicitor- Gen. Western Circuit: Mem. U. S. Congress: U. S. District At- torney; now Judge U. S. Court. Benj. G. Swanson, LaGrange, Far- mer. Howard Yan Epps, Atlanta, Ga., Lawyer; Judge City Court. Jesse W. Walters. Albany, Mem. Legislature ; Solicitor-General; Lawyer. Jas. T.' White. Atlanta, Teacher and Merchant. J. T. Wimbish, Columbus, Law- yer. H. W. AVoodruff. Alex. C. Young, Columbus, Ga., Manufacturer. 4.") B. S. *Thomas W. Young. C. E. William W. Thomas, ante. B. L. John E. Donalson, ante. J. B. McCleskey, ante. P. W. Meldrim, ante. Boiling Whitfield. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1870. A. B. Charles L. Bartlett, Macon, Law- yer; Sol.-Gen'l; State Senator; Judge Superior Court; Mem. U. S. Congress. Walter C. Beeks, Griffin, Lawyer; Judge County Court; State Senator. W. A. Broughton, Madison, Plan- ter; State Senator. Orville A. Bull, LaGrange, Ga., Lawyer; Sol.County Court; Mem. Legislature. *A. S. Campbell. M. D., Augusta, Prof. Medical College. Washington Dessau, Macon, Law- yer; Presidential Elector. Miller DuBose, Sparta, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. D. B. Fitzgerald, Omaha, Ga., Far- mer ; Mem. Legislature. *J. M. Goss, Lawyer, Brenham, Texas. John D. Ua?nmond, D. D., Fay- ette, Mo . . Pres . Central College. Nathaniel E. Harris, Macon, Law- yer; Mem. Legislature; State Senator; Trustee. *R. W . Hardwick, Merchant. Robert A. Hemphill, Atlanta, Publisher. W. B. Hill, Macon, Lawyer; Prof, of Law Merver Univ.; Reviser of Code of Ga. John Hutchings, Rome, Merchant. J. B. Hutcheson, Comanche, Texas, Lawyer, Sol'r. -General. Wjlliam E. Jackson, Augusta, Lawyer . Walter M. Jackson, Augusta, Manager Street Ry . R. H. Johnston, Atlanta, Ga., In- surance . Thomas J. Jones, M. D., New- nan, Physician. *C. A. Key. E. C. Long, San Antonio, Tex., Druggist. W. S. McCarty, Monroe, Ga., Teacher. R. T. McMullen, Hartwell, Ga. J. A. Morris, Hampton, Ga., Planter . J. T. Olive, Lexington, Ga., Lawyer. J. A. Robson, Sandersville, Law- yer; Mem. Legislature. H. C. Roney, Thomson, Ga., Mem. Legislature?; Judge Su- p rior Court. J. W. R<»quemore, Mt. Pleasant, Texas, Prof, in College. J. B. B. Smith, Atlanta, Jour- nalist. N. M. Solomon, Macon, Mer- chant . M. D. C. M. Summerlin, M. D., Sun Hill, Ga., Mem. Legisla- ture . John B. Strong, LaGrange, Ga., Lawyer; Ordinary Troup Coun- ty. *W. D. Trammell. A. E. Trimble, LaFayette, Ala., Prof, in College. George W. Vines, M. D., Dade- ville, Ala., Mem. Ala. L gisla- ture; Physic 'an. Isaac W. Waddell, Dahlonega, Ga., Pres. NV G. A. and M. Collfgre. *R. J. Willingham,M.D., Lexing- ton, Ga. A. F. Woodward, Griffin, Ga., Merchant. 39 C E. J. M. Edwards, ante. R. S. Woolfolk. 2 B. L. *B. W. Barrow, ante. *W. M. Finley, ante. A. W. Hill, Atlanta, Ga., Banker; Mem. Legislature. *Samuel Hoyle. R. M. Jackson, Watkinsville, Ga., Judge County Court. *Davenport Jackson, ante. J. A. Peudleton. M. M. Richardson, Hartwell, Ga., Lieut. C. S. A.; Clerk Sup. Court. *W. D. Trammell. Howard Van Epps, ante. John R. Webb. Hamilton Yancey, ante. 12 CATALOG I'K IMVKKSITY OK (iKOIUUA. L871 A. B. Harry C Ansley, Washington, D. C, Treasurer Southern Rail- way Co. \V. T. A rmstead, Jefferson, Tex., Lawyer: Mem. Texas Legisla- ture: Senator. J . A . Barclay, Jeffersonville, Ga,, Farmer. W A. Bell. R. L. Berner. Forsyth, Ga., Law- yer; Mem. Legislature. E. II Briggs. * J L. Brooks A. W. Carswell. *T. H. Cunningham. Brantley A. Denmark, Savannah, Ga.. Lawyer; Bank Pres. G. R. Glenn. Macon, Prof. Wes- leyan Female College. R. Henry Goetchius, Columbus, Ga., Lawyer: City Attorney. Judson L. Hand, Pelham, Ga.; Merchant and Planter; State Senator John L. Hardeman, Macon, Ga., Lawyer: Solicitor-Gen.; Judge! Superior Court. J T Heard. Augusta, Merchant George A. Howell, Atlanta, Law- yer. J. G. Johnson. T. Key. P. H. Mell, Ph. E>., Auburn, Ala., State Chemist of Georgia; Prof. Alabama Polytechnic Institute. D. Munroe. A. A. Murphev. Atlanta, Lawyer. *R. W. II. Xeal. Judge Co. Court. T. C. Xewton, Washington, D. C, D S . Patent Office . *E. NewioiL . (, G. Randall. •E. G. Simmons. Americus. Law- yer. J. J. Swann, Texas, Lawyer. J £. Waller. Henry E Ware. LaGrange, Ga.. ver . W Warren. J. Ernest Vonge, Pensacola, Fla., Lawyer; Mem. Gen. Assembly of Florida: Presidential Elector; Adjutant-Gen Fla. Philip K. Fohge, Pensacola, Fla., Banker; British Vice-Consul. C. E. Joel Hurt, Atlanta, Gen. Mana- ger Street Railways; Secretary Atlanta Home Insurance Co. E. K. Lumpkin, Athens, Law- yer. T. K. Mikell. J . S . Saunders . J. B. B.Smith, ante. 5 B. L. W A. Broughton, ante. Washington Dessau, ante. Walter B Hill, ante. B. H. Hill, ante. Charles D. Bill, Atlanta, Sol'r- General. W. B. Hinton, Buena Vista, Ga., Lawyer. James L . C . Kerr, Atlanta, Law- yer. ♦Stephen Clay King. Henry H. Linton, ante. *R. W. II. Xeal. Charles W. Seidell, Atlanta, Law- yer; Secretary to Gov. Stephens. Brittain H. Tabor. Robert Whitfield, Milledgeville, Sol*r-General. Fletcher P. Wethington, Wakena, Fla., Lawyer. 14 1872. A. B. Samuel B. Adams, Savannah, Ga., Lawyer. John C. Avery. Pensacola. Fit. Lawyer: Judge Criminal Court. .1 A Aycock, Tennessee, Editor. \V . A . Blount, Pensacola, Fla. , Tutor University of Georgia; CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Lawyer; Mem. Constitutional Convention of Florida, 1885; At- torney for four Railroads . M. C. Davis, Alabama, Lawyer. E. F. Dupree, Zebulon, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legislature; Judge County Court. Charles E. Harmon, Atlanta, Ga., Gen. Pass. Agent. W. & A. R. R. Robert N. Holtzclaw, Perry, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. J. F. Jackson, Athens, Ga., Mer- chant . W. H. C. Lloyd. James M. Mason, Fairburn, Ga., Farmer; Mem. Legislature. J. L. Mc Williams, Stone Moun- tain, Teacher. ♦Benj. F. Payne, Lawyer; State Senator . Ralph Peters. Cincinnati, O . , Su- perintendent Perm. Lines; Pres. C. G. &P. R. R. Leonard Phinizy, Augusta, Law- yer D. A. Small, Alabama, Teacher. C. J. Swift, Columbus, Manufac- turer . B. F. Thompson, Xewnan, Ga., Lawyer . W.B. Walker. B. S. Walker, Monroe, Lawyer and Editor. A. M. Williams, Savannah. ~»A. P. Whittle, Lawyer. William Wynne, Washington, Ga., Lawyer . 23 B. S. Charles A. Atkinson, Instructor Univ. of Ga. 1 C. E. *Robert E . Bruce . Henry D. Collier, Atlanta, Chief Eng.G. J. & S. R. R. William R. Davenport. Edward Hunter, Louisville, Ga., Instructor Univ. of Georgia; Chemist State Agri. Bureau; Lawyer. P. H. Mell, ante. 5 B. L. Charles L. Bartlett, ante. Howell C. Glenn, Atlanta, City Recorder; Solicitor City Court. ♦Arthur H. Gray, Mem. Legisla- ture. Andrew J. Lamar, Mobile, Ala. John W . McCalla, Elberton, Plan- ter. A. A Murphey, ante. George G Randall, ante. Tinsley W. Rucker, Atlanta, Ass't* U. S. Dist. Att'y. ♦AbnaT. Smith, Cuthbert. John T. Tooley. George C. Tumlin. Philip K . Yonge, ante . J. E. Yonge, ante. 13 A. M. G . R . Glenn, ante . A. A. Murphey, ante. P. K. Yonge, ante. J. E. Yonge, ante. 1873. A. B. Robert Adams, Americus. E . L . Anthony, Texas, Mem .U.S. Congress. *H . W . Barrow Lawyer . C. M. Beckwith, Houston,. Tex., Asst. Prof. Mathematics Univ. of the South . ♦J. T. Buchanan, Lawyer; State Senator Texas. Thomas D. Huff, Columbus, Ga., Broker . C. A. Niles, Atlanta, Journalist. M. L. Parker, Hartwell, Ga., Teacher. R. H. Randall, Lithonia, Ga. S. Alonzo Reid, Macon, Lawyer. James D. Scott, San Antonio, Tex., Pres. Texas Chatauqua Assembly. J. R. Shannon. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Wm. M. Slaton, Atlanta, Princi- pal Boys 1 High School . 11 F. Strohecker, Macon, Lawyer. *W A. Whittle, Lawyer. 15 B. S. E. W. Montgomery C & M. E Samuel Barnett, ante. J. G. Beasley. G. W. Gignflliat. Edward Hunter, ante. P. H. Mell, ante. *R. B. Trippe, Atlanta, Lawyer. •; B. L. W. A. Blount, ante. M. C. Davis. . ♦Idus L . Fielder, Deming, New Mexico, Lawyer; Mem. Legis- • lature of Arkansas. Daniel A. Groover, Statesboro, Ga., Lawyer. John E. Hartridge, Jacksonville, Fla., Lawyer; Judge U. S. Court. J. L. Johnson, Rome, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. A. A. Lipscomb, Washington, D. C, Lawyer; District Attorney. T. C. Milner, Calhoun, Ga., Law- yer; Mem. Legislature. *P. W. Milburn, Lawyer. James Whitehead, Warrenton, Ga., Lawyer. 10 A. M. *R. J. Willingham, ante. 1874. A. B. Jesse A. Baker, Guthrie, O. T., Lawyer. E. L. Brinson, Waynesboro, Ga., Lawyer; Judge Court of Ordi- nary. W. E. Johnson. F. T. Myers, Tallahassee, Fla., Lawyer; Clerk Supreme Court of Fla.; state Senator. C. Z. McCord, Augusta, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature; Trustee. Alonzo D. Schofield, Macon, Manu- facturer. 6 B. S. F. J. Amis, Texas. A. F. Moreland, Texas. W. R. Power, Marietta, Lawyer. D. C. Barrow, Athens, Assistant State Geological Bureau; Pro- fessor of Mathematics Univ. of Georgia. 4 C E. *G . A . Illges ; died in Texas . B.C. McKinney, Sumter Co., Ga., Merchant. ♦Fort West, Teacher . C. & M. E. D. C. Barrow, ante. B. L. J. B. Conyers, Cartersville, Ga. H. B. Everett. *W. M. JacksoD, Lawyer. J. M. Moon. S. W. Schofield. J. G. Parks, Dawson, Ga., Law- yer; State Senator. Lewis W. Thomas, Atlanta, Law- yer; Solicitor City Court. 8 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. A. M. ♦Charles A. Atkinson, Instructor Univ. of Georgia . Sylvanus Morris, Athens, Lawyer; Solicitor City Court; Prof, of Law. 2 fM. D, James B. Adair. John G. Carithers. Clarence P. DeVore. William A. Gibson. William F. Hale. Milo G. Hatch. Wesley Jefferson. James T. Luyton, S. C. Henry L . Hardy . William L. Meroney. William H.McNowill. William T. Morgan. Henry J. Kaines. 1875 . Jonesville, 14 A. B. T. C. Carlton* Slater, Mo. H. G. Dickinson, Texas, Lawyer. W. H. Doughty, M. D., Augusta, Physician; Prof. Medical Col- lege. W . C. Foster. D. H. Hardy, Texas. K . M. Hodge, Macon, Lawyer. M. T. Hodge, Lawyer. W. T. Huguley, West Point, Ga., Manufacturer. *J. I. Ingraham, Washington, Teacher. D. R. Keith. J. H. Lumpkin, Atlanta, Lawyer; Supreme Court Reporter; Judge Sup. Court. H. B. Mitchell, Athens, Planter. James H. Mobley, Hamilton, Ga., Merchant. Daniel W . Rountree, Atlanta, Lawyer, Mem. Legislature; Sorr-Gen. P. G. Smith. Hugh N. Starnes, Griffin, Ga., Station Horticulturist. *W W. Sturges. H. P. Tanner, Atlanta, Lawyer; N. P. and J. P. James H. Worrill, Columbus, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. W. C. Worrill, Cuthbert, Law- yer. 20 B. Ph. George D. Case, M. D., Druggist 1 B. S. P. A. Stovall, Savannah, Journal- ist; Trustee. T. P. Yincent, Athens, Merchant. (5. E. Marion Erwin, Savannah, Lawyer; Clerk U.S. District Court. William H. Fleming, Augusta, Lawyer ; Tutor Univ. of Geor- gia; Supt. Public Schools; Mem. Legislature. J. M. Hodgson, Athens, Merchant. M. L. Morris, Texas, Lawyer; Judge County Court. C. Pv. Twitty, Camilla, Ga., Bank- er. 5 C. & M. E. S. W. Cozart. .Carlisle Terry, Los Angeles, Cal., United States Coast Survey. 2 t The Medical College of Georgia, at Augusta, was incoipoiated as. the Medical Department of the University, August, 1873. CATALOGUE IWIVKHSITY OF OFORGIA. B. L. •"Henry W. Barrow, Lawyer. James Iff. Bellafa . Frank L. Haralson, Atlanta, Lawyer: Si ate Librarian. Rufus Bardy, Texas, Lawyer; Judge Superior Court. John C Hart, Union Point, Ga., Lawyer: Mem. Legislature. James 11. Hoskinson, Rome, Ga. Robert S. Howard, Athens, Law- yer. Samuel G. McLendon, Thomas- ville, Mayor; Mem. Legislature; Lawyer . "John A. McWhorter, Lawyer. Robert L. Surnmerlin, Lake City, Fla., Lawyer. John (' . Williams. Boykin Wright, Augusta, Solicitor- General . 12 A. M. George F. Gober, Marietta, Ga., Solicitor-General; Judge Supe- rior Court. 1 M. D. E. J. Burkhalter A. H Baker. G. B Battle. L. M Boyd. J. W Bowie. O. D Couch. E. A. Dugas. E. J. Eve. P. H. Eve. T. G. Erwin. G. F. Hunt. W. T . Lockey. P. A Mcintosh . T. B. Miller. J. A. Martin . J. G. O'Brien. J. L. Oliver. W. E Prescott. W. R Robson . L. 0. Shivers. B P. Sorrells. T. N. Skeen. W . . Southard. J. H. Springer. H C. Walton . R. J. Walton . J. E. Washington. 1876. A. B 27 * James M . Carlton, M . D . , Physi- cian, Athens. Andrew J.Cobb, Atlanta, Lawyer; Prof, of Law, University of Georgia; Trustee. Richard W. Cone, Sandersville, Ga., Lawyer. Arthur W. Davis, Atlanta, Insur- ance. Henry G. Ganahl, Savannah. Thomas R. Gibson, Augusta, Edi- tor; U. S. Consul to Beirut. *Robert P. Hill, Atlanta, Lawyer. Jarrell N. Hogg, M. D., West Point, Physician. John W. Hogg, M. D., Erin, Ga., Physician. *BarteeW. Jones. Leonidas M. Landrum, Atlanta, Principal Grammar School. William J. Matthews. *Robert Emmett Mitchell, At- lanta, Teacher; Mem. Legisla- ture. Henry P. Moore, Macon, Jour- nalist Junius W. Nisbet, Macon, Law- yer; Clerk City Court. Alexander H. Reid, Eatonton, Farmer . W. Olin Sanders, Greene County, Farmer. Eugene Thompson, Florence, Ga., Planter. Henry H. Tucker, Jr., Atlanta., Lawyer; Editor. John L. Tye, McDonough, Ga., Lawyer. Henry B. Baker, Suspension, Ala., Merchant. 21 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. B. E. Benjamin M. Hall, Atlanta, Prof, of Math. North Ga. Ag. & M. College . C. & M. E, Martin L. Morris, Texas., Judge of County Court. 1 B. S. William M. Henry, Rome, Ga., Lawyer ; Mem . Legislature ; Judge Superior Court. George D. Thomas, Athens, Law- yer; Prof, of Law, Univ. of Georgia . Joseph S. Cook, Atlanta, Master Mechanic . Jas. U. Jackson, Augusta, Stock Broker and Pres . R . R . 4 Master of Agriculture. Martin L . Morris, ante . 1 B. Ph. Thomas R. Rusk, Columbus. 1 B. L. Samuel J . Hale. Hudson A. Jenkins, Eatonton, Mem. Legislature. Barton E. Thrasher, Watkins- ville, Judge Court of Ordinary. J. Harvey Turner, Texas. 4 M. D. Gh T. Perrin . 1). B. ^"isbet. J. A. Liddell. W P. deLaPerriere. T. R. Wright. B. R. Saxon. W B. Standifer. J. H. Crozier. W . A . Adams. R. J. Matthews . F. R Wallace . A J. Graham . J. G. Medlock . G. R . Pattillo. E. M McNair. F. M Usry. G W '. Sherrer. S. G Scoven . *W. J . Mitchell . E. J. Rowland . W .E . King. Pierce Hubert. J. M Courson. S. V. Oliver. A E Oglesby. M. M. Lively. H. H. Ivy. L . G. Hardman F. M Jordan. 29« Master of Arts in Course. W. D. Mitchell, Thomasville. See- class of 1860. 1 1877. A. B. ♦William W. Black, Lawyer. C. Murphy Candler, Decatur, Ga. r Lawyer ; Mem . Legislature . James S. Hamilton, Gainesville,. Ga., Mining. Alexander R. Lawton, Jr., Savan- nah, Lawyer. Artemus O. Murphey, Barnes- ville, Ga. Alonzo C. Riley, Macon, Ga.> Lawyer . Robert A. Simpson, M. D. Wash- ington, Ga., Physician. William H. Thompson, Gaines- ville, Lawyer; Solicitor Coun- ty Court. William S. Walker, Monroe, Ga. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF (5EOROIA. B. s. Eli If. Mallette, Thomasville, Ga . Insurance. \V. Remer Mclntyre, Thomas- ville, Ga., Lawyer. 2 B. E. Benjamin W. Butler. Edward H. Dorsey, Watkins- ville. Merchant. Albert D Smith, Prof . of Math. Howard College, East Lake, Ala. Orville L. Green, Fort Valley, Ga.. Merchant. John E. Witherspoon, M. I)., Co- lumbus, Ga., Prof. Middle Ga. Ag. College . 5 B. C. Sc. George P. Alexander, Savannah, Merchant. B. Ph. Daniel P. Hill. William M. Howard, Lexington, Ga, Lawyer; Sol. -Gen. M. Young Mclntyre, Savannah, Cotton Factor. 3 B. A. George W. P. Coates. Bliss Woodward. B. L. William Y. Atkinson, Xewnan, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature; Speaker of .the House; Governor, elect of Georgia. Andrew' J. Cobb, ante. Wallace \V . Eraser, Savannah, Lawyer; Sol'r-Gen. Robert M. Holley, Palmetto, Ga., Lawyer. Darling J. Knotts, South Carolina. Hamilton McWhorter, Lexing- ington, Lawyer; Judge Sup Court. Henry B . Mitchell, ante . W. S. Morris, ante. Moses M. Smith, Pittsburg, Tex., Lawyer; Mem. Georgia Legisla- ture. Seaborn L Weaver, Birming- ham, Ala., Lawyer. 10 A. M. James C Hinton, Macon, Ga., Prof. Math. Wesley an Female College . 1 M. D. J. E. Allen. *E. C. Armistead. M. E. Bowers. W. F. Brunner. W. F. Carroll. A. C. Davidson. R. H. Drewry. J. G. Gilmer. D . H . Harrison . J. M. Head. J. W. Hogg.. P. L. Hudson. M. VV. Jester. W. S. Keisler. G.T.Miller. J. A. Marshall. * W . J . Rogers . L. W. Singleton. J. N. B. Spence. Robt. J. Walter. Robert C. Wiley. 22 1878 A. B Richard D. Callaway, Washing- ton, Ga., Farmer; Capt. C. S. A. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Nicholas B. Chenault, Augusta. A. M. Charles L. Fioyd, Atlanta, Teacher . ♦John J. Huguley. William F. Brown, Carrollton, *Samuel T. Lane, M. D., Athens. Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legisla- Daniel T. Mclntyre, Savannah, ture . Commission Merchant. 1 Thomas S. Mell, Athens, Lawyer; B. L. Mem. Legislature. William L. C. Palmer, Thomas- ville, Prof. So. Ga. Agricultural Philip W. Davis, Lexington, Ga., College. Lawyer; State Senator. James G. Russell, Canton, Texas, T. W. H. Harris, Rome, Ga., Lawyer; Judge County Court of Lawyer . Texas . A . C . Lowrey, Deming, New George G. Sale, Newberry, S. C, Mexico, Editor. Math . ; Lawyer . George D. Thomas, ante. James B. Shields. H. H. Tucker, Jr., ante. Paul B. Trammell, Atlanta, Ga., 5 State Senator; Col'ector Internal Rev. M. D. Benton H. Walton, Hamilton, Ga., Lawyer . 13 Julius C. Barnes. Reuben C. Binns. B. E. George A . Bunch . *John A. Butler. Robert G . Bryans . Colgan C. Carroll. Benjamin M. Gross, Thomson, Ga., William H. Doughty, Jr. Lawyer; Judge County Court. Louis C. Fargo. T. Foster McFarland, Chatta- Robert L . Purse . nooga, Tenn. James M. Guess. Moses G. Michael, Athens, Mer- George L. Hummell. chant . Silas D. Mayes. 3 John F . Winter . Samuel M. Mims. * Francis H. O'Brien. C E. Michael J. O'Dowd. Thomas S. Roney. Zachariah A. Smith. Bliss Woodward. 18 1 1879. B. C. So. A. B. Richard J. Moseley. John Hooper Alexander, Atlanta, L. Robert Coates, M. D., Balti- Pres . South Georgia Agri Col- more. lege; Lawyer. George II . Jackson, Augusta, Ga., *Edward T. Bishop. R. R. Agent. James Bishop, Jr., Eastman, Ga., William D. Dearing, Savannah, In- Lawyer. surance. Elijah A. Brown, Atlanta, Treas- 4 urer Dade Coal Mines. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Ignatius L. Candler, .lonesboro, ( . t . Teacher Samuel C Candler, Los Angelos, Cal., Lawyer; D S Land Am Carlton 13. Chapman, Macon, Teacher . R. Toombs l)n Hose, Jacksonville, Fla Joseph H. Felker, Monroe, Ga., Lawyer. Felix K. Groover, Grapevine, Texas. Druggist. Wallace W. Lambdin, West End, I Ga., Teacher. Lewis F. McCord, Augusta, Mer- chant. William J. McCurdy, Madison County, Ga., Farmer. Joseph H. Napier, Jefferson ville, Ga., Teacher. Cadar S. Parker, Thomasville, i Merchant . Richard B. Russell, Athens, Law- yer; Mem. Legislature; Sol.- Gen'l. John J. Strickland, Athens, Law- : yer. George W. Trenchard, Indian Ter- ritory, Teacher. 18 B. S. B. Johnston Edwards, Monroe, Ga., Judge County Court. Wyche W. Lin ion, Thomasville, Ga. John F. Parker. Thomasville, Prof. Math. So. Ga. Agri. Col- lege; Farmer. 3 B. Ph. William T. Griffin, Jeffersonville Ga., Farmer. Richard B. Russell, ante. William E. Smith, Bainbridge, Lawyer . John G. Stanley, Quitman, Far- mer. 4 B. A. John B. flattaway, High Shoals, Ga., Farmer. 1 B. C. Sc. Sylvanus G. Carter, W T alton Co., Ga., Farmer. Eugene J. Frederick, Macon Co., Ga. 2 B. L. JohnT. Anderson, Athens, Law- yer; Real Estate. J. H. Armstrong, Troy, Ala., Teacher . *T . Charlton Dupont . Alex R. Jones, Seattle, Wash., Lawyer . William M. Ragsdale, Atlanta, Merchant. John J. Strickland, ante. 6 M. E. Louis H. Jones, A. M., M. D., Atlanta, Physician and Chemist. Thomas S. Mell, ante. A. M. Louis H. Jones, ante. Thomas S. Mell, ante ■ M. D. Paul F. Bowers. A- W. Carswell. J. H. Chandler. Horace Darden . William H . Dugas J. D. S. Davis. O. A. Fitts. J. H. Gheisiing. A. A. Graham . Sterling Gibson. W. F. Gordon. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. w . He well. J. M Hull. s. A W () J. 0. G. R . L R F. J. Moseley . * . Oglesby. . Rogers. Salley. Thompson . Wallace. J. J. A. L. Wright. Wikle, AnnistoD 1880. A. B. 21 James L . Baker, Buena Vista, Ga., Lawyer. O. H. B. Bloodworth, Monroe, Ga. , Lawyer; Sol. -Gen. ; Mem. Legislature. Walter T. Cheney, Rome, Ga., Lawyer . Noah M. Collins, Griffin, Ga., Lawyer. Irby Dunklin, Fort Worth, Tex., Lawyer . Charles II. Edwards, Nunnally, Walton Co., Ga., Teacher. T. A. Hammond, Jr., Atlanta, Lawyer . W. Albert Hill, Georgetown, Ga., Teacher . Thomas V. Lester, Fayetteville, Ga., Lawyer. Jos. Hansell Merrill, Thomasville, Ga., Prof. So. Ga. Agri. College; Lawyer . Robert W. Milner, Lithonia, Ga. Blanton H. Noble, Athens, Law- yer. Gustavus J. Orr, Jr., Dalton, Ga , Pies. Dalton College. C. C. Richardson, Macon, Ga., Lawyer . Archibald A . Willcox, Columbus, Ga., Insurance. C. DeWitt Willcox, Lieut. 2d Regt. U.S. Artillery. William J. Williams, Russellville, I Ky. J. Walton Young, LaGrange, Ga., Merchant. 18 B- E. Leonidas F. Daniel, Bonham, Texas. James M. Mayne, Oconee Co., Ga., Farmer. B. Ph Walter T. Cheney, ante. Blanton H. Noble, ante. C . C . Richardson, ante . B. C. Sc. Onan M. Houser, Fort Valley, Ga., Farmer . Albert L. Cumming, Warrenton, Ga., Farmer. 2 C. E. William H. Steele, Rome, Ga. t-^upt. Cotton Factory. A. M. Samuel Barnett, ante. W. S. Bean, ante. B. L. ♦Edward T. Bishop. Thomas S. Mell, ante. Richard B. Russell, ante. Owen J . H. Summers, Florida. M. D. A. R. Able. J. B. Barwick. A. JS. Cooper. Joseph H. Crawford. John G. Crowley. C. J. Davis. W. T. Dalton. O. B. Evans. James R. Greer. CATALOGUE IMVKRSITY OF GEORGIA. J. B. Gordon. w . H . Grooves. .1. 1; Henderson. J. R. Kidd. Theo Lamb. C. w . L'Engle. J. H. May field. F M. ( >wnby. J. D. Perkins. H P Quillian. *W. M. Starnes. A H Story. w . J . Thurmond. F. A. Thomas, Walton c. J. Woodbridge. 1881 A. B. 24 Marcus W. Beck, Jackson, Ga., Lawyer; State Senator; Sol'r- Gen. George R. Brown, Canton, Ga., Lawyer. Enoch H. Calloway, Waynesboro, Ga., Lawyer; State Senator Joseph G. Camp, Douglasville, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legisla- ture. John E. Gross, McDuffie Co., Ga., Teacher. Walter W. Hardy, Senoia, Ga. *R. Fletcher Lowe. John P. Matthews, Sharon, Ga., Farmer. David W. Meadow, Danielsville, Ga., Lawyer. *John T . Malone . Gwinn H. Nixon, Augusta, Cot- ton Factor. William L. Radney, Waco, Texas, Lawyer; State's Atty. James B. Sanders, \\ ashington ( o .. Ga., Teacher. *John R. Slater, Valdosta, Ga., Lawyer Henry C. Tuck, Athens, Ga., Lawyer ; Mem . Legislature ; Mayor of Athens. Oeorge Ware, Atlanta, Lawyer. Williamson Worrell, Upson Co., Ga. 17 B. E. S . deBruyn Kopps, Savannah, Civil Engineer. 1 B. S. Austin LeeMcRae, McRae, Ga. *W. T. Bennett, Jefferson, Ga. Charles H. Brand. Lawrenceville, Ga., Lawyer; State Senator. B. Ph. Thomas W. Alexander, Augusta, Ga . , Cotton Factor . G. M. Elbridge, Philadelphia, Pa. Clement J. Hood, Harmony Grove, Ga., Banker. M. Cooper Pope, -Washington, DC, Chief R. R. Dept. In- terior. 4 B. C. Sc. James J. Howell, Sumter Co., Ga. ♦ 1 B. L. James H. Palmer, Mitchell Co., Ga. M. D. John R. Brooks. Watson L. # Coleman. Wm. J. Covington. John W. Colley. \Y r m. D. Durham. Edgar Ew^-ll. John Z. Ferrell. Ashley C. Fu'gham. Joseph E . E. Green. Jonathan M. Grimes. Wm. P. Gaffney. Franklin R. Gross. Thomas L. Harris. Robert J . Jamerson. Thomas J. M. Kelley. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Oscar R. Lowrance. George E . Lyndon . Royall G. Miller. Benj. E. Morgan. Martin Morrison. John K . Maloy . Elijah P. Mixon. Fletcher T . Mixon. Daniel W. Maun. James P. Miller. Wm. A. Neal. James C. Raley. Leonidas C . Robins . William B. Sreedley. Linton A. Stephens. George L . Smith . Wm. Mc Henry Shankle. Henry J. Stephens. Andrew J. Wood. Cornelius C. Whelchel. George H. Winkler. * 1882. 3G A. B. Lucius C. Adamson, M. D., At- lanta, Ga., Physician. Joe B. Alexander, Marietta, Ga., Lawyer. Piromis H. Bell, Atlanta, Ga., Lawyer. Hugh L. Brock, Jefferson, Ga., Lawyer. Milton A. Candler, Augusta, Ga., Clerk. Frank W. Carswell, Hepzibah, Ga., Merchant. Robert B. Cousins, Waco, Texas, Teacher. Wm. A. Dodson. Americus, Ga., Mem. Legislature; Lawyer. Walker Dunson, Atlanta, Ga., Lawyer; Internal Rey. Depart- ment. W. E. W. Dunson, Gainesville, Fla., Lawyer. D. J. Gaffney, LaGrange, Ga., Lawyer . Wm. Gait, Canton, Ga., Farmer G. G. Glower, Grantville, Ga., Teacher. Walter H. Little, Washington, Ga. Marcus A. Pharr, Jr., Washing- ton, Ga., Warehouseman and Mayor. *HarryH. Phinizy, Athens, Ga.,. Journalist . John D. Pope, Albany, Ga., Law- yer. . A. W. VanHoose, Gainesville, Ga., Prof. So. Ga. Agri. Col- lege; Prof. Howard College, Ala- bama; Tutor Univ. of Ga.; now Pres. Gainesville College. W. G. Woodfin, Jr., Savannah,. Lawyer. 19- B. E. A. H. Frazier, Columbus, Ga.,. Civil Engineer. *P. H. Burruss, Columbus, Ga. Thomas P. Stanley, A then*, Ga., Civil Engineer. a B. Ph. Clarence T. Groover, Thomasville, Ga. J. H. Pittman, LaGrange, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. Burton Smith, Atlanta, Ga., Law- yer. Edward W. Wyatt, Baltimore, Md. 4 B. C. Sc. Thomas B. Perry, M. D., Mil- ledgeville, Physician. James A. Wotton, Atlanta, Ga.,. Electrician . 2 B. A. A . H . Frazier, ante . 1 B.L. Stephen N. Woodward, Barnes- ville, Lawyer. Ebb. T. Lamkin, Monroe, La.,. Planter. David W. Meadow, ante. George Ware. ante. Hugh V . W ashington, Macon, Ga . , Lawyer; City Recorder. John L. Asbury, Jefferson, Ga., Lawyer . CATALOGUE I'XIVKKSITY OF GEORGIA. Marcus W . Beck, antt John .Marrow. Bryan County, Ga. Harwell R. Calhoun, Montgomery, Co , Ga. Henry ( ' . Tuck, ant( ■ John P. Moore, >tatesboro, Ga., Lawyer. 11 M. D. Thomas E. Arlington. Robert A. Ballard. W. W. Bruce. Bam'] T . Uedinafield. Thomas C. Cannon. Noel M . Darden. John II. E. Sheridge. Kufus S. Forehand. Jeff D. Heman. Geo. X. Ivey. Cyrus W. Kitchens. Wm. L. Kneece. Geo. C. Milner. Chas. P. McCall. Swain N Xorris. Wm. H O'Dowd. James M. Page. John E . Roach . D re w r v A . R < >ge rs . Chas. II. Raley. AdolphusC. Stephens. Wiley T. Simpson. Joshua L. Thigpen. 23 1883. A. B. Joseph W. Bennett, Brunswick, Ga., Lawyer. Wm . S . Cheney, Marietta, Law- yer. Wm M. Coile t Winterville, Ga. Herschel V. Duggar, Orlando, Fla , Teacher. Thomas R. Edwards. Atlanta, Ga. W M Foy. Egypt, Ga , Mercan- tile Business. Clark Howell, Atlanta, Journal- ist; Speaker Ga. House Rep.; Pres. Xat Press Club. George F. Hunnicutt, Athens, Farmer. Oscar E. Kmnebrew, Athens, Ga., Druggist. .1 . T. Lofton, Fort Worth, Texas D. C Peacock, Gadsden, A a Teacher J. H. Phinizy, Augusta, Ga.. Law Stadent. C. & M. K. I . M. Strahan, Athens, Ga., Asst. State Chemist; Tutor; Prof. Engineering Univ. of Georgia. 1 B. E. John Bostwick, High Shoals, Ga., Teacher. Davis Freeman, Savannah. Law- yer. Russell R. Reneau, Atlanta. Edwin M. Wade, Washington, D. C , Clerk in U. S. Treas. Department . Warner L. Wade, Augusta, U. S. Commissioner. Harris R.Willcox, Atlanta, Asst. State Chemist; Prof, in S. W. A. G. College; Insurance Agt. 6 B. Ph. J. Prescott Brooke, Alpharetta, Ga., Lawyer. Luther M. Farmer, Xewnan, Ga. Robert X. Holland, Marietta, Ga., Lawyer; Mayor; Mem. Legislature . EngeneJ. Jacobs, Atlanta, Phar- macist. 4 B. L. A.J. Arnold, Monroe, Ga. Bernard Autrey, Chattanooga, Tenn. *W. X. Conley, Cnion Co., Ga. T. B. Felder, Dublin, Ga. D.J. Gaffney, ante. Henry McAlpin, Savannah, Law- yer. Wm. Archer McLean, Gettysburg, Pa. S. A. McCaU, Valdosta, G*. catalogue: university of Georgia. John P. Moore, Statesboro, Ga., ante. John P. Ross, Macon, Lawyer, Judge City Court. Yernon B. Robinson, Wrights- ville, Ga. W. M. Ryals, Cartersville, Ga., Journalist. 12 M. D. Henry H . Allen . Thomas W. Both well. Wm. B. Burson. Felix H . Byrd . James J. Butler. Columbus J . Carter . Henry A. Coon. Lemuel Clements. Franklin S . Douglas . Elijah W. Dean. James P. Davis. Richard T . Dowdy . Almon Gage Gunter. Callistratus P. Graham James T. Hammond. Robert A. Hutchins. Lawson M. Johnson Wesley King. Wm. J. Mc Curdy. John L. McDaniel. Wm . B . Marks . Joseph Pounds. Josiah P. Paye. John W. Robinson. Parker C . Smith . Wm. B. Tucker. Franklin S-. Van Pelt. JohnE. Witherspoon. 1884. 28 A. M. Bennett J. Conyers, Atlanta, Law- yer. 1 A. B. James W. Anderson, Cornu-Copia, Ga. Samuel C. Atkinson, Brunswick, Ga., Lawyer. J. W. Binns, Washington, Ga., Ordinary. Arthur F. Bishop, Avondale, Cin- cinnati, O. James C. Bloomfield,M.D., Athens, Physician. Ashton H. Carey, LaGrange, Ga. Harry F. Dunwoody, Brunswick, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legislature; Mayor. W. T. Garrard, Oakland, Ga., Teacher . R. Harvey Johnson, Atlanta, Ga., Lawyer; U. S. Consul at Ant- werp. J. J. Kennedy, Laston, Ga., Teacher . Robert L. Moye, Cuthbert, Ga., Lawyer; Mayor of Cuthbert. John D. Mell, Athens, Ga., Law- yer; Sol. City Court. Joseph E. Pottle, Milledgeville, Ga., Lawyer. JereM. Pound, Barnesville, Ga., Pres. Gordon Institute. 14 B. E. Robert A. Crawford, Jefferson City, Mo., U.S. Engineer. Frank Upson, Athens, Ga., Law- yer. John G . Walker, Atlanta, Ga . 3 B. Ph. Charlie M. Nix, Alpharetta, Ga., Teacher . John Phinizy, Augusta, Ga., Cot- ton Merchant. Thomas J. Ripley, Atlanta, Law- yer. 3 B. C. Sc. Arthur C. Blain, Brunswick, Ga. 1 B. A. Thomas J. Britt, Sandover, S. C, Planter . John G. Walker, ante. 2 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. B. 1,. John T Alien, Milledgeville, Judge County Court. Albert P. Henley, Athens, Ga., Lawyer. Edgar F. Hinton, Americus, Law- yer. John P. Perry, Klijay, Ga., Law- yer; Mem Legislature. Pinckney D. Pollock. Macon, Prof .English Mercer University. Julius N. Rowland, Atlanta. James \Y . Schell, Senoia, Ga. Milton J. Tompkins, Wichita Falls, Texas. James K. Williams, Ellaville, Ga. 9 M. D. Charles A. Able. Sumpter B . Battery. James Q. Burton. John H. Burr us. • Arthur A. Chance. Thomas L . Calhoun . John H. Conway. Wm. H. Darnell. Wes'ey E. Evans. Lawrence B. Freeman. Richard H. Galphin. Columbus N. Hough. Allen C. Holliday. Lovick P. Herrington. Samuel YV\ Harp. Robert F. Harknesburger. Andrew G. Irwin. Wm. F. Jones. Robert D. Jones. John G. Kella. Boze E. Kitchens. Henry S. Loft. Sidney G. Lanier. Middleton D. Lanier. Walter W Lee . Brittain W. Lockhart. George T. Mitchell. John H. McArther. Abijah F. McCrary. Thomas Page . Patrick W*. Rhodes. Wm G. Rhodes. Alpheus B. Simmons. Charles V r . Smith . Addison W Smith Arthur W Speer. Win . B . Tate . 1885. A. B 87 Percy II. Adams, Atlanta, Ga., Lawyer. Joe R. Burdett, M. D., Washing- ton, Ga., Physician. Wm. D. Carswell, Irwinton, Ga.. Teacher. Wm. H. Cobb. J oe L . Gross, Warrenton, Ga . Robt. M. Harbin, M. D., Rome, Ga., Physician. Thos. W. Harbin, Calhoun, Ga. Farmer . Horace M. Holden, Augusta. Charles Edgeworth Jones, Au- gusta, Hist >rian. E. M. Mitchell, Atlanta, Lawyer. W. W. Osborne, Savannah, Law- yer; Mem. Legislature; State Senator . H. C. Quinn, Norton, Ga., Con- tractor . W. K. Stansell, Cartersville, Teacher. W. Turner, Atlanta. Wm. H. Whipple, M. D., Vienna, Ga., Physician. *P. S. Wilcoxon. Newnan, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. T. A. Williams, Hamilton, Ga., M. R. Wright, Rome, Ga. 18 A. M. P. D. Langdon, Augusta. C. & M. E. B. W. Hall, ante B.E. O. L. Cloud, Atlanta, Ga., Civil Engineer Seaboard Air-Line. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. T. N. Kitchens, Warrenton, Ga., B. W. Cobb. Civil Engineer. J. B. Carmichael. 2 John S. Christian. B. S. .ID Hardwick. C. Q. Hery. John P. Holmes. E. M. Mitchell, Atlanta, Ga., E. H. Hope. ante. Geo, F. Hudlow. 1 James C Jackson. B. Ph. Theo. Koeberle. Geo. P. King. T.J. Kitchens. Irvin Alexander, Augusta, Law- L. P. Lanier. yer; U. S. Commissioner. John P. Lardler. Wm. H. Barrett, Jr., Augusta, Jas. R. McKay. Lawyer; City Recorder. J. C. Matthews. A. L. Groover, Quitman, Ga., J. A. Mullhouse. Banker . F. G. Noble. C. E. Jones, Augusta, Ga., ante. R. D. Nash. R. L. J. Smith, Harmony Grove, W. F. Peacock. Ga., Lawyer. D. L. Peeples. D. W. Waggoner, Winterville, W. F. Quillian. Ga., Farmer. A. E. Salley. 6 H. J. Salley. W. W. Smith. B. C Sc. Jas. P. Smith. L. K. Slurkief *Asbury Hull, Savannah . 1 Tucker I . Stevens . P.J. Stroman . A. N. Talley, Jr. B. A. T. E. Vickers. J. E. Whelchel. 0. L. Cloud, ante. 34 T.N". Kitchens, ante. 1886. 2 B. L. A. M. J. W. Cox, Atlanta, Ga. *Fain, John W. Joe L. Gross, ante. Slaton, John M , Atlanta, Lawyer. R. H. Johnson, Atlanta, ante. N. B. Jones, Clayton, Ga. 2 D. C. McLeman, McVille, Ga. J. M. Merritt, Clayton, Ga. A. B. Benj E. Morgan, Statanville, Ga. John Morris. Instructor Univ. of Ga. Clay, W. L., Savannah, Lawyer. JohnD. Mell, ante. Carswell, John D., Savannah, In- •George R. Street. surance. 0. L. J. Walker, Carrollton, Ga. Cartel, Joseph B. M. M. Wilson, Savannah. Conyers, Samuel T., Atlanta. Cousins, William C, Atlanta, 12 Lawyer. M. D. Dudley, James B. . Franklin, Alfred L., Jackson, Ga. A. F. Boyd. Gilbert, James J., Columbus. A. W. Boyd. Hawkins, Benj. F., Americus. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Butchins, X. L., Atlanta, Lawyer. •Jackson, Tom Cobb, Lawyer. Meador, Richard I).. Atlanta. MoDaniel, Sanders, Monroe, Qa., Lawyer. Meli, Charles I., Athens, Cotton and Insurance. Lutes, Jacob M . o'Kt'lly. .lames \\ '., Athens. Rudicil, Charles C, M. D., Chicka- niauga, Ga., Physician. Selman, George C, Atlanta. shattuck, James P., LaFayette, Ga., Lawyer; Mayor. Sno k, Peyton H., Atlanta, Mer- chant. Sewell, Henry L. Upshaw, Wm. S., Atlanta, Law- yer. Upshaw, Eb. P., Atlanta, Lawyer. Wade, Peyton L., Dublin, Ga., Lawyer . Whatley, Edgar T., Santee, Ga., Ass't. State Geologist. Wooten, Wm. E., Albany, Law- yer; Mem. Legislature. 26 C & M. E. Bond, Marcus B. 1 B. A. Williams, Wm. P. 1 B. E. Ballard, Xath. H. Cook, Walter B., Brunswick, Banker. Jones, Arthur W . , Civil Engineer. Willcox, Cecil H , Atlanta, In- surance. Wilson, G.Neal, Kansas City, Mo., : Auditor K. C, P. & G. R. R. | 5 B. C. Sc. Grant, John W., Atlanta,' Real Estate. Lamar. George W , M. D., Sayan- nali. Physician. 2 B. Ph. Cassels, Robert T . Eerty, Chas. H., Ph.D., Athens, Adj. Prof. Chemistry Univ. of Ga. Morris, Chas. E., Kansas City, Mo., R. R. Service. Ramsey, M . F . Powers, Theo. T., Marietta. Williams, Jas. F. Williamson, Geo. H., Athens, Merchant. 7 B. L. Cheney, Jos. D., McRae, Ga. Mitchell, Eugene M., Atlanta, Lawyer . Moye, Robert L., ante. Smith, R. L. J., ante. Stone, Frank J., Atlanta. Upson, Frank, Athens, Lawyer. Williams, J. S., Waycross. Ward, C. A., Hazlehursr, Ga. 8 M. D. Stephens, R. R. Wood, T. A. Martin, JO. Perry, J. B. Boling, J. M. Cobb, J. D. Roach, J W . Cox, C. H. Hudlow, G. F. Kennedy, J. W. Armistead, R. L. Moss, F. G. Lovvarn, J. L. Duckett, P. Y. Whelchel, K. C. McMaster, D . E . Ray, R. L. Sanders, W. T. Price, J. M. Nunn, P . C . Colley, S. T. Howell, M. S. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OV GEORGIA. Nunez, J. M. Nash, W. T. Stovall, A. S. J Fuller, R W. Morgan, J . B . Brinson, S E. Carlton, J. M. Drane, W. A. Traylor, O. A. Bentley, B. S. Bush, s. T. Williams, W. D Tucker, J. M. Smith, I. I. 30 1887. A. B. Austin, W. L. M. Blonnt, Jas. H., Macon, Lawyer. Finch, Clarence F. Flowers, John E., M. D., Dora- ville, Ga., Physician. Florence, Wm. A. Hodges, Walter L . , Hartwell, Ga . , Lawyer. *Thomson, Ben Hill. *Smith, W. Frank. AValker, Chas. M. Wimberly, Warren W., Macon, Lawyer . Whipple, U. V., Vienna, Ga., Judge County Court. Walker, J. Henry, Griffin, Ga., Teacher. 12 B. Ph. Foreman, Robert L., Atlanta, In- surance. Hammond, Wm. H., Thomas- ville, Lawyer. Kontz, Ernest C, Atlanta, Law- yer; City Recorder. Nowell, Robert L. McGhee, Chas. C, Atlanta. Peacock, Wesley, Uvalde, Tex., Teacher . ^Powers, Wm. B. 7 B. S. C Walters, Glenn, New York, Jour- nalist. 1 B. A. Crawford , Wm . B . , M . D . 1 B. L. Andoe, Robert E., Dawsonville, Ga. Ballard, Edgar L., Fa rburn. Cbisolm, Walter S., Savannah, Lawyer. Dean, Herbert H., Gainesville, Lawyer. Gilbert, Fred. W., Swainsboro, Ga. Howard, J. D., Milledgeville^ Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. Johnston, Green S., Dover, Ga. r Lawyer, State Senator. Pottle, Joseph, Milledgeville, Lawyer. Twitty, Franc E., Brunswick, Ga., Lawyer. 9 B. E. Elkan, M. Milner, H. Key, Birmingham, Ala., Merchant. Johnson, Robert L., Columbus, Ga., Farmer; Civil Engineer. 3. M. D. S. J. Oliver. F. C. Richards. J. F. Rackley. B. A. Syms. John A. Rhodes. E. L. Patterson. G. L. Trotter. W. L. Hood. Robert M . Gray. Isra New. J. I Thorp. Manning Anderson. Thomas i>. Whatley. G. W. Do>.s. J. B. Camp. V. B. Bishop. OB. Manes. D. G. Miller. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF (JKOKOIA. W. I) Put/.. W H . Heard \\ A Richards. A M . Torl.it R. B. Glass. B. O. Sallv. T. P. Mitchell. Julian B Thomas. P. B. Bedingfield. M. C. McClain W. J How.'. W. II . Hutchinson. G. W. Bishop. J. R. Beali. I). R. Kneece. A. D. Lewis. B. F Jordan. W. R. Lovett. John C. Beall. W. R. Harris. "W*. D. Fowler. John M. Glover. A. D. White. J B. Threatt. W. H. Baxley. T. A. Bargeron. S. E. McCutcher. I.J. Sanders. 1888. 4G A. M. Almond, R. W-, Franklin, Ga. Brown, W. G. Franklin. A. L., Brunswick, Ga.. Tut >r Univ. of Ga. ; Lawyer and Teacher Reed, T. W. Athens, Editor. 4 A. B. Boone, Joseph C, Gainesville, Ga., Lawyer. Boston, Jos. E., Marietta, Agt. W. &A.R. R. Broyles, Nash R., Atlanta, Law- yer; U. S. Commissioner. Coil.-, Frank W., M. D., Winter- ville, Ga., Physician. Comer, H. M., Savannah, Cotton Factor. Davis, E. C . Davis, W. A., Lawrenceville. Downing, Hugh U., Columbus. Estes, P. II., Gainesville. Evans, John R., Rayle, Ga., Teacher . Glass, W. M.,Senoia, Ga. Q-'iggs, Asa W., West Point, Ga. r Teacher. Hardwick, T. R., Atlanta. Iliwes, W. M., Warrenton. Hey man, Arthur, Atlanta, Law- yer. Jarrell, Jos. G., M. D., Savan- nah, Physician. Knight, Lucian L., Atlanta, Jour- nalist. Little, JohnD., Columbus, Law- yer. Mell, Jas. C, Macon, Lawyer. Quarterman, W. H., Winder, Ga . , Lawyer . Thomas, W. E., Yaldosta. Williford, Q. L., Madison, Ga. 22 B. E. Daniel, Jno. W., Augusta. Davis, Oscar S., Greensboro, Ga., Merchant. McCarroll, A., Augusta-. Kennon, Wm. A., Brunswick, Manufacturer. Whitehead, Geo. A., Savannah, Merchant. 5 B. Ph. Barnes, Jno. A., Augusta, Law- yer; Mem. Legislature. Bondurant, Emmet J., Athens, Plumber. Brand, L. M., Lawrenceville. Cohen, E. B., Athens, Book- keeper. Cunningham, T. M., Savannah. Day, J. B. H., M. D., Social Cir- cle, Physician. Mercer, Geo . A . , Savannah, Law- yer. Moore, Wilmer L., Atlanta, Mer- chant. Smith, Victor L., Atlanta, Law- yer. Wright, Francis W., Augusta, In- surance, 10 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. B. L. Beard, L. B., Dawsonville. Broyles, Arnold, Atlanta, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. Curry, F. Z , Hampton. *Eberhart, Tol. P. Hodges, Walter L . , ante. Howell, Albert, Atlanta. Lawyer. Hixon, Jas. A., Americus, Law- yer; Judge County Court. Hughes, F. M., Atlanta, Lawyer. Johnson, Albert S., Arlington. Johnson, Bartow B., Florida. Kinnard, W. C, Newnan. Lane, Wm . T . , Monti cello . Miller, Brick S . , Columbus, Law- yer. Moore, John B. Ray, L . L . , Jackson, Ga . , Law- yer. Bitch, Jno. L., State of Wash- ing- on. Steed, W. E., Columbus. Swain, R. V., Warrenton. Wallis, W. P., Americus. 18 M.D. Allen, L. C. Boatwright, WW. Brockington, W. V. Biowd, L. R. Butts, R. M. Cheney, J.N. Coleman, E. T. Crafton, J.N. Derry, H. P. Douglass, W.J. Fulmer, J. Gordon, A. J. Grace, J. T. Gray, G. T. Grealish, D. N. Heavener, W. S. Henry, J. T. Howard, C.N. Hunt, W. T. Jenkens, G. W. Kendall, W. S. Kennedy, D. L. Kirksey, J.J. Lamar, G. W. Lanier, L. H. McCall, E. C. 46 Martin, G. E. Meadows, J M. Moore, G. Y. Peac »ck, E. S. Pennington, J . E. Ray, C . C . Sandel, F. L. Short, O. J. Stothart, J . A . Story, C. R. Terrell, W. W. Thomas, D.N. Tinsley, A. S. Twiggs, R. H. Waldrep, B . F . Wall, J. M. A. Ward, V. J. Ware, F. N. Waters, J. D. Wright, J. B. 1889. A M Bassinger, J. Garnet, Civil En- gineer. Gaston, Jas. M., M. D., Atlanta, Physician. Pope, Wm. H., Sante Fe, New Mex., Lawyer. 3 A. B. Anderson, Geo. D., Marietta, Lawyer . Cooper, Jno. R., Macon, Lawyer. Gil lis, Donald, Palatka, Fla. Hartsfield, Milledge, Washington, D. C, U. S. Treasury Dept. Henderson, W. O., Stilesboro, Ga., Planter. McGough, R., Monroe, Ga. Po hill, H»peC, Macon, Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. Shepperd, W. AV., Walthourville, Ga., Lawyer; State Senator. Stanford, L. W., Hamilton, Ga. T witty, Frank S., M. D., Camilla, Ga . , Physician. 10 B. Ph. Black, Paul S., Washington, D. C, U. S. Land Office. I ATAl.n<,i e l NIVERS] rv 01 GEORGIA. Cohen, Edwanl A. Macon, Law- yer. Cranford, J. Q., Yaldosta, Law- yer. Crawford, Remsen, Atlanta, Ed- itor. Crawley, J. I... Waycross, Ga. Hardeman, Frank, Athens, Cot- ton Buyer. Sample, R. S. Varnadoe, S. M . , Yaldosta, Ga., Lawyer Willeoxon, A . C ., Atlanta, Lawyer. 9 B. E. Iiarnett, J. W., Athens, City En- gineer. Fleming, E. C, Augusta, Cotton Factor . Rockwell, W. O. D., Savannah. Stewart, E . C . , Atlanta . 4 B. L. Bennett, Jno. W., Jesup, Ga., Lawyer; Mem. Legislature. Brown. L. J., Brunswick, Law- yer . Broyles, Xash R., ante. Cobb, T. R. R., Atlanta, Lawyer. Corker, F G., Dublin. Crum, DA. Remer, Vienna, Ga., Lawyer Griffin, Dempsy, Savannah, Law- yer. Harper, Donald, Paris, France, Lawyer . Holden, Thos. L., Jefferson, Ga., Editor. Kontz. E . C . , ante . Lamb, J. H., Delancl, Fla. Lawson, Hal. O, Abbeville, Ga McNeer, R. E. L., Salt Sulphur >l>rings, W. Ya., Lawyer. Plyer, Charles H., Atlanta^ Law- yer. Reed. T. W.,ante. Shattuck, Jas. P., ante. Skelton, J. H., Hartwell, Law- yer. Singletary, J. R., Cairo, Ga. Smith, Y. L.. ante. Turner, J. C, Jefferson, Ga., Banker. Thomas, W. E. Valdosta. Upshaw, E . P . , ante . Ward, F M., San Francisco, Cal. Ward. Walter R. E., San Fran- cisco, Cal . Warren, C. R., Hawkinsville. Wat kins, E. W., County Line, wa. Wellborn Carl J., Atlanta . 27 M. D. Attaway, Edge. J. Bagwell, A. A. Bell, D. A. J., Jr. Bradfield, R. L . Brock, F. M. Brooker, B . D . Buford, O. H. Burch, A. W. Burk, D. H. Cason, C . W . Chitty, F. W. Clark, C. J. Davis, J. M. Dillashaw, J. A. Dillon, Jno. T. Dozier, L. G. Ethridge, S. G. Frost, W. J. Hairston, T . D . Hall, J. H. Hart'y, D.J. Hicks, W. J. Heirs, J. L. Hood, W. J. Hull, J. L. Lasiter, O . F . Loovorn, R. M. May h ugh, Jas. McClain, J. W. McLouchlin, T.J. McMath, J. F. McMillan, J. B. Meadows, J. W. Patton, B. W. Peacock-, M. D. L Peeler, J. E. Posey, J. M. Powell, J. W. Prather, W. S. Preacher, W. A. Price, Z M . Smith, B.J. Smith, J. L. Smith, J. T. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Smith, W. Troutt, J. H. Tutt, C. H. Tyson, J. D. Watts, W. B. Wyman, E. H. 50 1890. A. M. i..S. 1 C. & M.E. Basinger, J. Garnet, ante. 1 A. B. Callaway, F. E., Columbus, In- surance . Ellis, W. D., Atlanta, Lawyer. Hall, B. W , Atlanta, Civil En- gineer. Hardman, Thos. C, Harmony Grove, Ga., Merchant. Harrington, Alfred S., West Point, Ga. Hayes, Zach C, Elberton, Ga., Bookkeeper. Moore, E. B. Poullain, N. L., Madison. Reid, W. Dennis, Eatonton, Ga., Teacher . Shaw, W . J . , Rome . Smith, J. R. L., Macon. Upson, Stephen C, Athens, Law- yer. Way, W. Spencer, Athens, Elec- trical Engineer. 13 B. E. Coates, Jesse, Athens, Instructor in Physics. Collier, Bryan C, New York. Cooper, H. F. Dozier, Jas. H., Civil Engineer. Garbett, M. W., Civil Engineer. 5 B. Ph. Arkwright, P. S., Atlanta, Law- yer. Crittenden, Hiram O., Shellman, Ga., Merchant. Hall, John. Harper, A. S., Rome. Hill, Thos. L., Danville, Ga., Farmer . Holder, John N., Jefferson, Ga., Editor . Johnston, A. F., West Point. Jones, Percy, Atlanta. Lawrence, A. A. Russell, Edward G., Washington, D. C, U. S. Naval Office. Sandf ord D . Stetson, Enid, . T . , U. S. Land Office. Shackleford, Frank C, Athens, Lawyer. Sheffield, R. H., Blakely. Stallings, Wm. L., Newnan, Ga., Lawyer. Williford, J. H., Madison. 15 B. L. Alexander, Jos. A., Baxley, Ga. Avary, Robt. L., Atlanta, Law- yer. Barclay, Wyatt D., Darien. Bond, J. F. L., Danielsville . Boone, Clifton, ante. Cannon, R. C, Waycross. Cohen, E. A., ante. Cooper, Jno. R., ante. Branford, J. G., ante. Dre wry, Jas . H . , Griffin . Edwards, M. C, Cuthbert. Evans, Geo. C, Sandersville. Fitzgerald, J. B., Americus. Frazier, Donald, Decatur. Fried, Jos., Macon. Geiger, Jas. B., Mt. Vernon, Ga. Gordon, W. W., Savannah, Law- yer. Green, Dan. W., Atlanta. Green, T. Fitz,, Athens, Lawyer. Hart, Ebb . J . , Americus . Little, Jno. D., ante. Martin, F. R., Macon. Maynard, R. L., Americus, Law- yer. Moore, Robt . L., Savannah . CA fALOGUE UNIVER8ITY OF GEORGIA. Ifynatt, Pryor I.., Atlanta, Law- yer. Polhill, Bope C, ante. Pollhiil, J. G . Frankville. (.a. Pope, W. II.. anU . Quarterman, W. B., ante. Sheppercb, W. W., ante. Smith, Joel E., Monticcllo, Fla . Spence. Wm, P., Waresboro, Ga. Walker, Joel P., Dublin, Ga., Lawyer . Wheat icy. Walter K., Americas, Lawyer. Willcoxon, AC, ante. 35 M. D. L. M. Able. Jas. F. Baker Jno. H. Barr. Chas. S. Brown. Jas. Roy Chappell. MB Cope. Jno. F. Croniu. II. W. Doster. .1 . W. Eberhardt. C. E. B. Flagg. Jas. M. Gostin. John E. Hanna. G. W. Hatcher. W. S. Hay. R. L. Huddleton. Jno. J Jones. W. T.Jones. D. C. Judson. R. T. Laseter. H. H. Malone. W. C Maloy. W. H. Moore. E. M. Osborne. Geo. Paterson. Chas. B. Patterson. Jno. T. Pattison. F.II. Phillips. S. T. Potts, Jr. J. O. A. Reed. W. B. Rimes. W. W. Boberts. P . E . B . Robertson . W. T. Roney. S. Theo. Ross. Jos. 8. .Samuel. R. B. Sconyers John R. Simpson. S. H. Mnith. W. J. Smith. W. P. Smith. L. C. Spense. Jos. A. Stapler. T. J. Sykes. H. R. Tarver. W. B. Taylor. C. C. Thompson. C. W. Tompkins. H. H. Townes. G. W. Traylor. Jno. A. Tuck. Jas. G. Tuten. L. G. Tyson. B.J. Yeal. J . P . Waldrep . Jos. H. Ware. Jas. J. Watkins. S. L. Wharton. E. A. Wilchester. Jos. J. Williams. J. G. Williamson. M. C.Wilson. Jas. I. Wilson. M.N. Wood. W. E. Wood. 1891. 64 A. M. Harwell. Frank, LaGrange, Ga., Lawyer. A. B. Anderson, Win. I)., Marietta, Lawyer. Boylston, A. D., Atlanta. Boston, Jno. H., Marietta. Brinkley, S. G., (in course) Teacher. Brumby, Campbell W., Athens, Druggi-i. Durden, Frank R.. Swainsboro, Ga., Lawyer. Hurt, G. L., High Shoals. King, Walker, (rock. -it. Tex.; Teacher. M itchell, Frank. ( Irawfordsville, Lawyer. Lanier, R. IL. West Point. Smith, J. D. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Shackleford, Thos. J., Athens, Lawyer. Yoemans, M. J., Dawson, Ga., Sii])t. Public Schools. Wright, Anton P., Thomasville, Ga.., Lawyer. 14 B. S. Hull, Marion McH., M. D., Wash- ington, D. C, Gen. Land Office. 1 B. Ph. Cloud, Joel, Thomson, Ga., Teach- er. Felder, Thos. S., Perry. Mathews, J. F. Peacock, J. H. Pollock, G. D., Canton, Ga., Teacher. Pickett, B. F. 6 B. E. Camak, Jas. W., Athens. Gerdine, Thos. G., Los Angelos, Cal., U. S. Engineer. Sheffield, Oscar H., Athens, In- structor in Engineering. 3 B. L. Arkwright, P. S., ante. Barge, J. J., Atlanta. Crawley, J. L., ante. Cone, J. H., Lake City, Fla. Davis, E. T., Savannah. Farmer, 1. E., Thomson. Foote, M., Atlanta, Lawyer. ^Fontaine, F. M. Garland, J. J., Barnesville. Hardeman, R. N., Clinton. Jones, W. R., Jonesboro. Jones, S. Percy, ante. Mills, M. M., Jackson. Mitchell, G. F., Atlanta. Philips Benj. Z., Atlanta. Smith, J. R. L., ante. Tribble, S. J., ante. 17 M. D. 0. B. Almond. W. E. Arnold. J. A. Barnes. W. R. Barnwell. J. J. Barton. D. H. Blackburn. F, P. Branch. J. A. Brown. J. J. Bridges. J. A. Bryan. B. M. Buffington. O. B. Bush. T. A. Buxton. G. T. Canning. R. L. Credille. J. G. Culpepper. Chas. H. Davenport. Jeff. S. Davis. W.A. Dees. Jas. L. Donnan. S. T. Ellis. E.W.Ellis. W. B. Finney. David Fitzgerald. C. E. Fiveash. John J. Green. B. W. Hall. John T. Hancock. J. T. Hawkins. R. N. Hicks. T. E. Hubert. H. W. llderton. Daniel W. Kennedy. Jas. J. Kilpatrick. W. W. Lee. F. W. McCall. John O. Mann. R. L. Miller. W. H. Mitchell. John A. Pirkle. Wm. Poullett. W. B. Rimes. W. W. Roberts. P. E. B. Robertson. W. T. Roney. John R. Simpson. W. P. Smith. L. C. Spence. Geo. W. Traylor. B.J. Veal. Jas. I. Wilson. Samuel Wilson. M. N". Wood. 5;; CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1892. M. S. Hull, M. McH., ante, Fellow in Biologj . 1 A. M. Calloway, 1". E., ante, Fellow in English. 1 C. E. Sheffield, O. H., ante. 1 A. B. Black, Eugene R., Atlanta, Law- yer. Blasingame, -las. ( '.. Jackson, Ga., Teacher. Boggs, Adam A.. Gottingen, Ger- many. Student. Brown, Louis L., Fort Valley, Ga., Lawyer. Cassels, Sain'l J., Thomasville. *Christie, W. E. Denmark, E.. Savannah, Lawyer. Franklin, V. E., Excelsior. Ga. Prey, E. W.. .Marietta. Horseley, Jos. S., M. D., West Point, Ga., Physician. Kelly. W". Troy, Jackson, Ga., Teacher. Lewis, J. Fred, Savannah, Jour- • nali>t. Park, W. G., LaGrange. Sibley, Sam II., Union Point, Ga., Lawyer. Smith. Harmon II., Senoia, w helchel, J. E.. Gainesville. Youngblood, Dudley. Atlanta. Tally, J. \'., Macon, U. S. Court Reporter. 18 B. E. Dallis, Roy, LaGrange. Gramling, W'm. \.. Brunswick, R. K. Service. Fane .Julian R., Macon, R. R. Service. Lawrence, R. DeT.. Marietta. 4 B. S. Hogg, R. NL West Point. B. A. Calloway, Eugene, Washing-ton Ga. Ilorton, M. C, Pendleton, S. C. Horton, O. E., Pendleton, S. C. B. L. Brewton, S. B., Hagan, Ga. < Irossland, D. F., Savannah. Durden, F. R., ante. Glass, W. M., Senoia. Henry, .J. E., Seal. Ala. Hodgson, E. R., Athens, Cotton. Kimball, J. O., Atlanta, Lawyer. Merritt, G. A., Siloam. Milton, J., Marianna, Fla. Shackleford, F. C, ante. Shackleford, T. J., ante. Stallings, W. L., ante. Weems, E. F., Hampton. 13 M. D. L. P. Bagwell. 0. A. Blanchard. ' F. H. Boyd. J. E. Brunson. E. A. Chance. J. M. Christian. G. H. Dye. O. L. Deadwyler. W. \. Edenfield. J. L. Estes. M. O. Fulcher. J. W. Gillespie. D. C. Harrison. J. W. Jones. J. H. Kennedy. L. P. Lane. G. A. Lawrence. J. R. Littleton. W. II. Moss. M. U. Nix. J. E. Norton. R. R. Pickett. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. A. M. Rountree, Lawrence, Sam. L., Marietta. T. W. Taylor. Lyndon, Lamar, Athens, Manu- 0. 0. Thompson. facturer. H. A. Wall. Nally, Rufus B., Douglasville. H. F. White. 4 J. D. Whitehead. J. F. Wannamaker. J. D. Wilson. B. S. Y. E. Wright. W. D. Woods. L. P. Youmans. 33 Barnwell, E. W., Athens. Bennett, T. J., Jefferson, Ga., Teacher. ' 1893. 2 A. M. B. L. Boggs, A. A., ante, Fellow in Mod. Lang. Bacon, W. W., Albany. A. B. Brown, Jas. P., Greensboro. Brown, L. L., ante. Dart, F. W., Brunswick. Alexander, H. A., Atlanta, Law- Dean, J. E., Rome. yer. Dean, S. C, Atlanta. Barfield,F.G., Cuthbert, Teacher. Erwin, Alex., Athens, Lawyer. Dorsey, Hugh M. Atlanta. Govan, F. G., Rome, Ga. Dodd, Eugene, Ford, Ga. Greer, L. C, Oglethorpe, Ga. Cabaniss, E. G., Savannah. Hardwick, T. W., Tennille. Frey, B. F., Marietta. Harris, C. P., Watkinsville. Goodrich, W. H., Augusta. Harvard, W. V., Vienna. Green, E. P., Marietta. Heyman, A., ante. Hillyer, George, Atlanta. Horton, M. C., ante. Hodgson, Harry, Athens, Jour- Horton, 0. E., ante. nalist. Hiles, W. W., Rome. Halsey, A. 0., Charleston, S. C, Humphries, Jno. D., Hapeville. Merchant. Humphries, Jos. W., Hapeville. Halsey, E. L., Charleston, s. c, Kelly, J. V., Tennille. Merchant. Mathews, W. J., Winder. Johnson, Green F., Monticello, Moon, E. T., Logansville. Ga. Morris, N. A., Roswell. Lewis, M. A., Eatonton. Ogden, Monroe G., Macon, Law- Moreno, Hal. C, Athens, Tutor yer. in Math. Overstreet, E. K., Sylvania. Rountree, B. L., Summit, Ga. Park, 0. A., Cochran. Slade, 'Lester C. , Columbus , Ga. Peacock, Zeb, V., Eastman, Ga., Stewart, N". B., Washington' D.C., Lawyer. Pension Clerk. Persons, G. O., Fort Valley. Taylor, James, Americus. Rutherford, Sam., Culloden. Warren, W. P., Atlanta. Sheppard, W. W., ante. Watkins, Newton, Rutledge. Sibley, Sam. H., ante. 21 Smith, T. C, Atlanta. B. E. Sweat, L. L., Waycross. Whelchel, J. E., ante. Whitaker, D. B., Franklin. Gantt, R. J., Washington, D. C, Winship, Blanton, Macon. Clerk, 35 t-A PALdGtfE QNIVERSli V OF GEORGIA. M. I). (i. R, Anltman. .). .). Burch. .). N. Childs. N. J.Coker. M. M. Connor. A.J. Deas. H. C. Doughty. T. W. Ellis. \\ . ( . Batcher. J. L. Kennedy. W. O. Leary. J. C. LeHardy. V. Lotheridge. W. C. Lyle. (.. R. Maner. H. L. Martin. C. H. Meldrim. J. E. Moon. G. W. Mountain. 0. X. Nix. J. C. Xorton. W. W. Pilcher. T. A. Powell. A. T. Ray. J. H. Sell. II. Smith. H. H. Towns. R. J. Videtro. J. H. Williams. J. W. Wyman. 1894. A.M. Alexander, Harry A., ante, Fel- low in Mod. Lang. Gerdine, Lynn V., Baltimore, John Hopkins. Johnson. Green F., ante, Fellow in English. Moreno. Ealcott C, ante. Slade, Lester C, ante, Fellow in Biology. 5 A. B. Akerman, Jos., Athens. Bacon. Wm. T.. Madison, Ga. Baldwin. Benj. S., Outhhert. Barrow, David C, 3d, Savannah. Brannen, J.E., brie, Ga. Bower, Byron B.,Jr., Bainbridge. Da\ is. Edwin, Greensboro. Dorsey, Jasper \.. Gainesville. Fleming, Paul L., Atlanta. Fricks, Lunsford D., Ohatta- aooga. Fuller, w. A.. Atlanta. Harbin. Win. 1'.. Oarrollton. Earrington, Jno. M.. Wesl Point. Madden. Jno. B., Griffin. McCutcheon, Cicero I)., Jr.. Dalton. McGregor, Thos. A. Moore. Noel Mell., Athens. Fel- low in Biology. WEoye, T. Ralph, Cuthbert. Stephens, Alex. W., Atlanta. Stubbs. Jno. V.. Oedartown. Tidwell, (has. R., Atlanta. Yow, S. Benj., Toccoa. 22 M.S. Barnwell, E. W., ante. Franklin, V. E., ante, Fellow in Biology. 2 B. S. Cloud, D. L., Thomson. C.E. Camak, Louis, Athens. B. E. Beckett. Geo. W., Savannah. Brown, Henry 0., Augusta. Butler, Geo. P., Athens, Fellow in Math. Stelling, Jno. D., Aogn>ta. Wrigley, Arthur. Macon. 5 B. L. Bush, Robt. I).. Camilla. Daly. Aug. I)., Macon. K line, < 'has. I>.. Savannah. Lanier. Jeff. !>.. Savannah. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Lester, Pharos E., Savannah. Brown, R. A. Martin, Gab. P., Arp. (rider, J. G. Mell, Jas. C, ante. Carlton, B. J. Mitchell, Frank, ante. Fressel, J. C. Mobley, Jno. H., Lumber City, Houssien, M. D. Ga. Heme, G. T. Smith, Chas. H., Jr., Buford. Kessler, J. C. Stafford, Eleazer J. Mobley, J. W. Sterling, D. S., Atoka, Tenn. Mole, E. 0. B. Strong, H. C, Atoka, Tenn. Ramsey, W. T. Upson, Stephen C, ante. Smith, 0. R. Wallace, Jas. Q., Albany. Sheppard, C. C. Warren, Louis B., Macon. Turner, H. X. Young, Geo. McLean, 1ST. Dakota. Taylor, T. W. J. 17 Wilkinson, W. S. M. D. Wright, J. C. Wahl, F. Bryan, W. C. Walden, W. V. Bowen, J. H. 20 CATALOGUE ONlVERSl W OF GEORGIA. HONORARY DEGREES 1804. 1824. •Ebenezer II. Cummins, A. M. •Elijah Clarke. A. M. •Moli n Forsyth, A. M. •Henrj Meigs, A. M. •William Prince, A. M. 1806. * William' Best, I). I). •Addin Lewis, A. M. 1807. *Johtt Thomson, A. 31. 1809. •Joel Barlow, LL. D. 1814. •Duncan G. < iampbell, A. M. 1815. *Jofin It'. Thompson. J). I). 1820. ■• Francis Cummins, I). J). 1823. stu* B. Long street, A. M. •Joseph V. Be van, A. If. ■-( barles ( . Mayson, A. M. •Joseph II. Lumpkin, A. M. •George W. Crawford, A. M. * William II. Barr, I). I). -William II. Crawford. LL. D. •Albert I verson, A. M. * Alexander II. Webster. A. 31. •Nathan Warner, A. M. •James Remberl . A. M. * Joseph Travis, A. 31. 1825. •Abram Walker. A. 31., Trustee. *Alvin Lathrop, A. 31.. Tutor. 1826. •Francis H. Cone, A. 31. •Nathaniel 11. Harris, A. M. 1827. ♦Robert Cunningham, I). D. •William A. McDowell, I). I). •Seth P>. Storrs,A. 31. 1828. •William T. Taylor, A. 31. •Thomas Campbell, A. M. 1829. ■Wliowas Goading, J). B. *Geor(je White, A. 31. 1830. •John Satterlee, A. M. 1831. •Henry Jackson, LI.. I>. •George I). Rice, A. M. *Thomas B. Slade. A. M. 6 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OE GEORGIA. 1832. 1842. * William McWhir, B. B. "James Camak, A. M. * R i chard K. Hill, A. M. *Miller II. Hubbard, A. M. 1843. "Edward Lawrence, A. M. * William A. Rembert. *William S. Rockwell, A. M. "George McDuffie, LL. D. 1844. 1833. "Alexander B. Meek, A. M. *George L. Holmes, A. M. *Jacob G. McWhorter, A. M. 1845. 1834. * Samuel S..Bavies, B. D. *James A. Groves, A. M. *Edward Neufville, B. D. -Joseph B Shaw, A. M. 1848. 1835. U„„_„ X> Tnnl7 0nn A TVT ■Adam T. Holmes, A. M. 1836. *John S. Pressley, A. M. * James T. Phelps, A. M. 1837. *Robert A. T. Ridley, A. M. 1838. * James Gardner, Jr., A. M. 1839. * William Preston, D. B. 1841. * Nathan liny t, IK D. * Stephen Elliott, B. B. "Charles D. Bowman, A. M. * William B. Stevens, D. D. Henry Coppee, A. M. Abram H. McClaws, A. M. 1849. "Walker J. Brooks, A. M. 1850. *John McPherson Berrien, LL. D. "Daniel S. Printup, A. M. 1852. "Mareellus Stanley, A. M. *James W. Armstrong, A. M. 1854. * William T.Brantley, D.B. * Nathaniel Macon Crawford, B. B. "John A. Crawford, A. M. 1855. Stephen V. Benet, A. M. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, 1856. *Samu( i II. Higgins, D. I). */. 8, S. K Arson. B. I>. •James /.'. Thomas, D. B. L857. David 0. Barrow, A. M.. Trustee. L858. •Marcellus C. M. Bammond,A. M. •Andrew DeLeffre, A. M. 'Patrick II. Mell, B B. 1859. Eustace W. Speer, D. B. 1860. •Thomas J. Bacon, A. M. -•Joseph C. Stiles, LL. B. 1861. C. M. Cooper, A. M. 1863. -William X. White, A. M. 1866. •William M. Browne, A. M. 1867. L. II. ( Iharbonnier, A. M. •John W. Beckwitlt, I). B. Joseph S. Key, B. I). 1868. •William B. Johnston, A. M. John Fulton, B. I). *Eugenius A. ffisbet, LL. D. L869. II. I). Oapers,A. M. 8. II. Sutherland, I>. B. L. A. Dugas, LL. 1). 1870. •Henry Moot-.'. A. M. •Ferdinand Jacobs,D. D. •Lucius Q. ( . Lamar, LL. J>. 1871. Alexander S. Erwin, LL. I>. W II. Howe, I). Ik * James O. A. Clarke, B. B. 1873. A.J. Battle, B.B. *JohnN. Waddell, LL. B. 1874. •Frank Schaller, A. M. 1876. •John Jones, B. B. Eugene II. Beck, A. M. Benj. P. Gaillard, A. M. 1877. Thomas A. Hoyt, B. B. •Wm. L. Mitchell, LL. I). 1878. •James Jackson, LL. D. •John LeConte, LL. l>. .Joseph LeConte, LL. I>. •David L. Buttolph, I). I». 1880. George W. Rains, LL. I>. P. .1. Berckmans, A. M. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. D. C. Barrow, Jr., A. M. S. J. Coffman, A. M. P. H. Mell, Jr., Ph. D. 1881. S. B. Bradwell, A. M. 1882. 1889. Nathan H. Bass, A. B. 1890. William EL Fleming, A. M. J. G. C. Parker, A. M. Henry F. Hoyt, D. D. Abner W. Calhoun, LL. I). Walter LeOonte Stevens, Ph. T>. Win. M. Hammond, A. M. 1884. John L. Johnson, D. I). Walter P. Wilson, A. M. 1885. W. F. Crusselle, A. M. James C. Harris, A. M. 1885. Joseph D. Pope, A. B. J. H. Belcher, A. B. 1888. J. U. Long, A. B. 1891. William F. Slayton, A. M. L. 0, Adamson, A. M. Morgan L. Parker, A. M. William J. Scott, D. D. 1892, Joseph Jones, LL. D. 1893. I, P. Mendez, A. M. Charles M. Snelling, A. M. John D. Kobins, D. D. Henry P.. Jackson, LL. D. 1894. Alex. E. Lawton, LL. D. W. Leroy Broun, LL. D. W. M. Slaton,A. M. CATA1 0G1 E i N1VKIMTV OF GEORG1 \. *A LIST OF STUDENTS WHO MATRICULATED, BUT DID NOT GRADUATE. 1 82 1 . Andrew-. Edwin R. Barnett, < iharles. Baldw in. Thomas. Blanton, James. Billups, .John. Trustee Speaker of i he Bouse Rut herford, Phaedrus, Sample, -. Sims. Benry. Sullivan. Thomas. Sturges, Daniel. Taylor. John .1 . Thweatt, Micajah W. Thornton, .lame-. President of the Sen-lr nol . ntonj Vincent. Turell, James Ware, Henry. Wat kins, David. Watkins. James. Walker, Robert, Judge Superior Court. Williams. Robert. Williams, Stephen. Young, George H. ate Brown. Robert. Bugg, ( lharles. Bugg, Benjamin. Crabb, William. ( lenient:-. Massey. Ooulson, Paul. Davis, Robert. Frierson, Samuel D. Gage, James. Gautier, Peter. < roode, Mackerness. Groode, Watkins. Bambleton, Alfred. Bardeman, B. F. Barper, James N". Harris. Walton. Beard, Thomas J. Bill, Edward. Bubbard, Bopson. Jamison. Robert . Jenkins, Charles J., Mem. of Congress; Judge Superior Court ; ( Irawford, Levi. Governor of Georgia:k oulson, William. 52 1822. Andrews, Elbert. Blackshear, James II. Bibb, George B. Brown. William. Bunkley, Jess,, l. Bryant. Jefferson. ( larke. John. Clarke. Wiley P. (raw lord, John. Pres. Board of Trus- tees. Langston, Thomas J. Mcintosh, Donald. Montgomery, ( !hristo. Mounger, Benry. Mounter. Edwin. Plummer, Samuel. Randolph, Edmund. Reid, David. Rembert. Samuel Tf. Dawson, Burwell. Dillard, George. Franklin, Robert. Feay, William. Gardner, John. Green, William P. Barris, Peter C. Hill. Meriwether. Boff, Taliaferro. Holt. Fowler. Howard. Augustus. Jones, William. Kennedy, John L. Ligon, Thomas. Macon. William. Meriwel her, James. Mosely, Richard. M\ ers, Adrian. Philips. James. Pope. ( lharles. Reid, George. Reynolds, Jane-- M . Reynolds, Joseph. Scbtt, Josiah. Scott, William. Ware, Joseph. Waiv. Thomas. Watkins, Anderson. Weems, Berrien. 1828. Browning, Albert. ( leveland, John. Early. Thomas. Bambleton, Joseph. Matthews, Joel. Myers, Syrenius. Sanders, Joseph. Shelman, Joseph. Skrine, Quntilian. Welborn, Marshal. 1824. Bryan. Jack son. (lark. Joseph T. Dubose, James ('. Dupont, Joseph. Gibson, Joseph. Gibson, Richard. Buguenin, Edward. King, Thomas. 40 Hi |J£ ~Jt e reC t° rd pnor 1° 18 , 21 has been lost - So from 1851 to 1861. The names for the latter period have been supplied from other sources, but doubtless there are many omissions. I he date indicates the year the student entered college. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA- Mitchell, Walter H. Moulton, Briggs. \csbitt, Hugh W. Semmes, Andrew. Shepherd, Abbot. Toombs, Robert, Trus tee; United States Senator ; Secretary of State of Confederate States ; Brig.-G en'l C. S. Army. Walker, John T. 15 1825. Bacon, William. Bunkley, William. Cabell, William. Crafton, Archibald. Cook, Asa B. Dubignon, Charles. Greenwood, Edwin. Heard, John. Hobby, . Lewis, John L. Rembert, William P. Speers, Robert H. Wilkins, William. Womack, John. Wyche, Jeremiah. 1826. ■ Dubose, William. Henley, John W. Jack, William. Jones, George W. Jones, Wylie. Kenney, Charles. Kenney, Joseph. Lacey, . Marable, E. G. Murrah, William. Rogers, Charles. Rogers, William. Stevens, James D. Stoney, Gailliard. Strobert, Thomas. Wilkins, Thomas. Wiggins, John. 1827. Alexander, James. Baker, — . 15 Banks, . Barrow, A. Barrow, Thomas G. Campbell, Charter. Drysdale, Alex. Gaither, Burgess. Hall, John. Harris, Watkins. Hill, William P. Hines, John M. Howard, John. Jones, Iverson. Knox, Milton. Lamar, John B., Colonel C. S. A.; Killed at Crampton's Gap. Mitchell, Samuel. Mitchell, William H. Moore, Edwin T. Price, . Porter, James M. Reeves, John S. Robert, Samuel. Robert, William. Shields, Benjamin G. Wray, Albert. Wimberley, Henry. 27 1828. 17 Alexander, Robert. Bacon, William B. Branham, James. Blackshear, Jefferson. Batty, Thomas, M. D. Breazial, Willis. Bouchelle, Francis. Bowdre, Lucian. Caldwell, John M. Espey, James. Franklin, William. Fulton, Hamilton Foster, James. Flournoy, John. Gaulden, John P. Henderson, H. S. Holt, Richard. Jones, Albert. Moultrie, Joseph L. Norwood, James. Nott, Edward. Rupert, James C. Russell, Benjamin T. Saffold, Joseph. Williams, Edwin. Wright, Augustus R., Judge Sup. Court. 26 1829. Alston, Gideon. Ashurst, Morrill. Bacon, A. Banks, Marion. Borders, William M. Bouchelle, Joseph A. G. Bearing, John T. DeGraffenreid, Francis. Henning, David M. Henning, Joseph B. Hester, A. D. Lumpkin, John H. Meek, Alex, Judge Sup. Court, Alabama. Milledge, John T. Mitchell, Henry G. Phinizy, Robert M. Saffold, William O. Stanley, Abner B. Spencer, Samuel. Skrine, Virgil. Upson, Francis. Watts, Jacobus. Way, Samuel. 23 1830. Blount, David E. Conger, T. Forsyth, John I. Flournoy, John. Graves, Thomas. Harris, Thomas B. Kilpatrick, John L., M. D. Labuzan, Bartholomew. Linton, John S. Macafee, A. J. Meriwether, William H. Nesbitt, Hugh O'K., M. D. Park, Thomas. Perkins, James. Pope, Barton, M. D. Rucker, Tinsley W. Sherrod, F. O. Toombs, Gabriel. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Toombs, James II. I-:;:;. Taylor, James. Walker, Alex. • Varnadoe, Samuel. Watkins, S. «.. White. William B. Aage, Theodore. :;i Whitehead, John P. C. Williams, George. Wiggins, James. Baldwin, William. Boling, James M . < lunmngham, John R. I >ahney. Anderson. L836. A nderson, ( leorge. _t> Furlow, Timothy M. Attaway, John w . Grant, Augustus L. Baker, John T. 1831. Hamilton. Charles T. Blanton, William. Howard. Thomas. Battle. Oliver. Alexander, Peyton. I \ erson, Robert. Bartow, John. Boon. Francis II. Marion. Joseph .M. Boj d, Joseph T. Borders, Alexius. Martin. B. T. Boykin, James. < larter, Edward. Mitchell, Thomas A. Boyce, John. Cassells, .John. Mills, John T. Brock, James T. Harris. Robert. Owen, A. F. Buffington, ( '. Harrison. Philip H. Page, F. F. < lourvoisie, Joseph A. Eenderson, John. Rivers, John G. Early, Alex. Jackson. Jesse C. Vason, Jesse M. Fall, Calvin J. Jourdan, George. Wade, Seaborn. Cordon, A. G. Matthews, Thomas M. Whidby, James. Hartridge, Theo. Moore, John G. Williams, Milton. Hunt, Robert. Nlsbet, Franklin. 21 Love, Peter. Phinizy, Benjamin. Rabey, Mil ledge. Minims. William. 1834. Mitchell. A. C. Sparks. Thomas. Murdock, John. Sherrod. B. F. Pressley, Benj. White. Joseph M. Blackshear, Hamilton. Pope, R. R. 18 Baird, Benjamin. Bow land, John. Calhoun, A. T. Setori, George. 1832. Cary, John. Smith, Benj. Clark, Archibald. Wade, James. Chambers, James C. Whatlev, E. L. Baker, John. Cooper, George. Womack, H. B. Dill, B. F. Cooper, William A. 29 Dowse, Gideon. Fannin, James H. Franklin. William. Fleming, Thomas. 1836. I . rt'tmw ood, William. Foster, Hiliary. George, J. II. Gardner, Samuel E. Guyton, Charles B. George, A If red. Atkinson. Nat. Harris. Thomas. Hart, Levi. Baldwin. Augustus. Harper, William II. Howard. J. G. Baker. Thomas. Eaxey, B. Houston, John. BriggS, Stewart. Mann, Alfred T., D. D. Jones, Augustus. Bonner, Thomas C. Moore. Alsa. Lamar. Thomas B. ( 'ox. Edward. Neil, George y. Loyd, Benjamin. Cox. Mat. Shannon, Joseph. Lowther, William. ( !obb, Joseph B. Stanley, William. Manning, William. Cumming, William H., Tait. George. Mallard, Samuel. M. I). Thomas. John J. A. McCan. William II. Dearing, Albin P. Walker. Alex. Miller, George W. Dawson, William R. Whitehead, Charles. Nisbet, Robert. Ewing, Joseph B. Williams. Gazaway D. Pope. Alex. Footman, Henry. Williams, Zach.C. Polhill, Thomas II. Harris, Edwin. Wiggins, Green. Reddick, Jamee C. Holland. A. S. 22 Remsen, Rem. Jones, Russell. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Lewis, It. S. Low, . Lumpkin, Samuel IT. McGehee, E. F. McCleskey, L. Mitchell, M. G. Moore, C. B. Moore, S. Gr. Phinizy, John T. Rentry, G. S. Renwick, William. Semmes, John. Stevens, J. Whaley, E. VVhaley, W.J. Way, Richard. Young, C. W. Yonge, 0. 0. :;-> 1837. Baldwin, John. Battle, Thomas. Bibb, William J. Bowdre, . Crawford, Anderson. Crawford, William, ('one, John. Demery, John. Dunham, James H. Dunham, Joseph. Fulton, James A. Greenwood, H. T. Grimes, George S. Hoggins, Joel A. Jones, Thomas H. Lowe, James H. Martin, A. W. McGehee, Abner. McGehee, James. Pope, John H. Render, . Sanders, B. M. Turpin, William H. Whaley, B. T. White, Fred. Yarborough, Thos. H, 26 1838. Baldwin, William. Barber, Philip. Bellamy, R. H. Bibb, George R. Bibb, Joseph. Bibb, William C. Boykin, James. Brownlee, James. Camak, James, M. D. Chisholm, John K. Chisholm, Richard. Dawson, William R. Dearing, Alfred L. Evans, William. Evans, Washington. Felder, Adam. Felder, Lewis. Fleming, Julian. Hancock, George. Harris, Thomas. Hunter, George L. Jordan, Green J. LeFils, Daniel. Meriwether, Thomas Phinizy, Jacob. Poullain, Thomas. Pope, Charles. Pope, William. Roberts, Daniel. Spann, Henry R. Stevens, Thomas S. Strong, Elisha. Thomas, David. Thompson, William Turman, W.R. Walker, Q. P. White, Joseph. Winstead, William. 1839. Bird, John D. Byne, William H. Chairs, Benjamin. Chairs, Turman. Daniel, William. Dunwoody, W. J. Evans, Wesley. Habersham, Stephen, Hadden,D. F. Jones, J. W. Kendall, John. Lindsey, John O. Puryear, John. Riddle, Archibald. Remsen, D. H. Spalding, Randolph. Stevens, L. H. Schley, William. Smith, .John C. Trippe, James. Tucker, John. Walton, William X. Wagner, Edwin. Watkins, Robert. Winn, Sumner. 25 M. 1840. Abercrombie, Charles. Branch, William II. By rd, James R. Cheatham, John L. Curry, William. Grey, H.N. Harris, Stephen W. LaRoche, R. Lumpkin, John 0. Nisbet, John. Price, Joseph A. Rich, David A. Strother, C. Wilie,A.P. Wright, M. R. Wynne, . <;. 16 1841. Andrews, Geo. W. Bartlett, Geo. T., Judge Superior Court. *8 Barron, E.J. Branch, James. Berry, William T. Boyle, James. Carlton, Joseph B.,M.D. Coalson, John J. Croom, Alex. Daniel, Francis. Daniel, Miller. Cutliff,John M. Fannin, Oliver P. Gaines, George. Graves, John T. Graham, Wm. Gibson, Robt. Holland, Geo. W. Holt, Win. C. Lamar, Henry. Lowe, B. Mcintosh, M. McNeil, L. R. Mann, Thomas. CATALOGt !■: tJNlVfcRSIT^ 01 &KORG1 \. Orr, Gustavus J., Com-|Screven, John, Trustee.|Moody, Waldemar. missioner of Educa i ion. Tope. John. Pope, John W. Tow ers, . Russell, J. A. Shepperd John ( '. Scott. Wm. B. Taylor, M. T. Taylor,.). L. Warren. Walter. Wells, Joseph M. w it herspoon, < iicero. Spencer, Solomon. Schley, H.J. Varnadoe, X. Wingfield, Alonzo ( 1844 36 L842. Bacon, Thos. J. Barnett, William. Billups, Joseph P. Borders, Abner. Dawson. Oscar. Fort. Elias. Fort, John. Hall, Geo. A. Harrison, S. E. I [arris, William. Hedden, John A . Hunt. William. McElroy, A. L. Moore, Richard E. Moore, < J-eo, W . Montgomery, James Xorris. F. M . Saunders, Thos. S. Way. Wm. F. 1843. Barnett, August us. Baxter. Thomas, Bradford, A. Brown, Geo. R. ( raw ford. \'at . A. Clinch. I). I.. Coppee, ( 'harles. Collins. A. M. Dunwood \ . I). M. Flewellen, A. c. Foster, Thomas. Gorman, w . a. Lumpkin. Robert . M osel v. A ugust H-. NTeaLR. 8. Bacot, Edward. Bailey, Henry. Benet,Stephen V ( ..mi. F. S. Army. Bryan, .Joseph. Howard. Geo. T, Hurt, John W. Hughes, Daniel G. Jackson. Wm. Bui .Jones, A. F. Lockhart, Richard McLeod, R. II. NTelms, James. Xewsonie. Few is. Rucker, Elbert. 20Rutherford, .James. Rej uolds, Thomas II. • Satfold, [sham IF Steadman, .James. St rotid, .John. Timrod, Henry, Foci. Yerstille. IF \V. Friii,- Walker. Nathan. Lumpkin. .Jos. Troup, 1846 h.Cox, R. R. I icFyon, C. A. IF Fppos. Thomas .J. Ferrell, Coleman. Max well. Edward F. s. Army; by Indians. McKay, Robert. McDonald, IF Meriwel her, Valenl im Mosely, William. Pringle, Edward IF Shannon. Chas. .1. Stevens. ( '. W. Smith, ( lharles 1 1 Arp." Timmons, F. R. Thomas, Edward. Yason. Marcellus. Watkins,John I). F> Williamson, Thos. S. Wright, Edwin. Lieut. Fitzsimmons, o. P. L845. 'Burke, Ft. IF I assaday, IF E. < raw ford. A. T. Chisholm, W. A. I >avis, Geo. s. Dawson. Edgar. Gorely, Henry. Holt. ( icero. Holt, Leonidas. Howard, Chessley. Kerr. Samuel. King, Thomas. Fa Roche, Edward. M ilner, John. killed Gamble, Roger A. Gregory, -J no. c. Hand. B. A. Houston, B.( 0. iHooten, H. C. Johnson, Wm. King, Henry C. King, Stephen C. Lamar, Lavoisier. BilliMontgomery, W. Associate Justice preme < 'ourl . Oliver, Thomas. Ogilvie, F. B. Pearman, Robert. Pope, IF C. Rogers, Henry L. 25Rogers, B. M. Seabrook, Wm. E. Scot I . Joseph J. Smith, Charles. Ware. Robert Y. Ware, James IF Whitehead. John IF Williams. Andrew. W., Sti- 28 L847. Appling,* >i ho. Baldwin, A ugi Bean, Jesse. Belser, James E. Boddie, O. B. Brown, W. A. J. st us S. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Brown, J. R. Cary, Charles W. Carr, Elijah. ' Choice, William A. Evans, Edwin W. Faulk, Charles E. Field, Edward. Griggs, A. W., M. D. Gonder, Mark F. Hardeman, James L. Hardeman, John C. Harper, J. B. Hill, A. C. Hinton, E. Holt, Pulaski S. Howard, Homer. Hopping, D. S. Hooten, James. Hunter, E. G. Jackson, Henry I). Lewis, Oscar. Means, Samuel C. Smetts, A. M. Strong, M. L. Tait, W. L. R. Taylor, K. S. Thomas, James J. Walker, John B. Walker, William A. Walker, Jack H. Witherspoon, William. 3 1848. Anderson, William B. Ar in i stead, John D. Blane, S. W. Bradford, F. Bennett, E. Briscoe, Thomas. Cone, Theodore. Cuniming, Julian. Frederick, James D. Greer, W. P. Gordon, Zach. C. Gorman, Robert. Hooten, William. Hull, Edward W., Ma- jor C. S. Army. Jones, John. King, Thomas B. Mallard, R. T. Morton, Win. J., Mem. Quarterman, Wm. Park, William. Presler, James M. Poullain, William. Rogers, F. O. Sayre, G. S. Singleton, David J. Taylor, Thomas L. Tarver, J. H. - 1849. Atkinson, Camden. Berry, Thomas. Bond, Joseph B. Clayton, William J. Caley, Charles. Davis, W. G. Few, Leonidas. Ficklen, J. B. Force, Thomas. Garvin, John. Hilliard, W. P. Jones, A. M. Lamar, Thos. B. J. Longworth, C. M. Lumpkin, James M. D. Mitchell, William C. Moore, Joseph K. Mofi'att, C. D. Parish, J. S. T. Price, Augustus. Price, P. S. Rowland, D. C. Rucker, Alex. R. Seabrook, W r hitemarsl Willis, George. Young, W. J. Carleton, Benjamin. Emanuel, W. D. Flournoy, Robert. Goode, John C. Hailes, J.J. Hammond, Alex. D. Hutchins, Wylie N. Maddox, J. Z. Moore, C. D. 28 Perryman, T. J. Reynolds, R. O. Sale, John S. Shelby, William A. Symmes, F. W. Trippe, Thomas J. Walker, M. W. Watts, Wm. P. Ward, Francis. 28 1851. 1850. Nuckols, A.J. Ashley, Edward. Banks, Simeon. Bellamy, William. Blount, B. F. Brown, Henry T. Burch, John C. Bryan, H. G. Bryan, Franklin. Crawford, W r illiam P. Castlen, Fleming G. Anderson, William. Bailey, . Baker, T. S. M., Barnard, T. R. Baxter, E. L. Carlton, H. H., Captain C. S. Army ; Mem. U. S. Congress. Edwards, William T. Ethridge, John H. Fannin, James IT., Trus- tee. Gayle, P. H. S. Gordon, John B., Trus- tee; Lieut.-General C. S. Army ; U. S. Sena- X) tor : Governor of Ga. Hull, William Henry. Johnston, Julien. Napier, Leroy. Palmer, W. Palmer, Samuel M. Perry, Robert. Read, Thomas II. Robinson, P. B. Ralls, John R. Smith, Samuel. Tate, En os A. Taylor, James E. Varner, W. D. You n «•, Robert. 25 CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1852. Adams, Archibald. Armstrong, Joseph. Arnold, John W. Black, George R., Col. ( '. S. Armj : Member of I . s. ( longress. Blackshear, R. I >. How en, Francis M. Carmon, \\* i 1 1 i ;i 1 1 1 S. ( lhaires, Joseph J. Clements, John W. ( lurry, X. < lurry, Walker. Dent, John M. Ellington, David II. Fouche, Roberl T. Bayes, Charles. lrh'y. A. P. Jemison, Elbert. Johnson, Andrew J. Jones, Daniel C. Lawrence. Win. II. Massengale, . M itchell, Thomas ('. Montgomery, James Mobley, James B. Miller* F. H. McCant, — . McBray, William. Napier". Nathan. Peek, David. Pope, Chandler M. Read, Cullen S. Remshart, W. W. Stinson, Joseph J. Sm it h. Junius I*. Torrance, Wm. C. Varnadoe, Rufus. Vaughn, Samuel P. Walker. J. I). Ware, James II. Walton, Jesse. Young, Wm. E. i Darlington, John D. Grant, William D. I [ardee, John 8. Hart,Charles T. Merritt, John R. Murray, Roberl R. Nishet. John W. Owens. John E. Parrott, Abner B. Hayes, George E., LieutJRaines, < ladwal W. ('. S. A.: killed a! Pet-|Rogers, Walter T. ersburg. Screven, George. Hill. BlantOH M.. Lieiit.Sto.de, Daniel. C.S. A.; killed in hat-Taylor, Charles A. B. tie. ETolsey, Julius M. La Fitte. Thos. S. Lyle, James P. Meriwether, Mat. Mitchell, Charles Neal. Andrew J. Norton. Thaddeus S. Pope. Wm. ]•;. Lon. Joseph. Peasley, Wm. N. White. James. * Whitehead, Amos. Wilhonrne, Chris. < J. Wilkins, William A. 1854. E n 1853. Andrew-. Henry L, Arrington, Jane-- M. Battle, John ('. I'.row n. j. McAdams. Campbell, W. W. ( artor. Joseph M. M. Eberhart. E, L. Blackshear, James J. Blackshear, Thomas E. Barron, William. Belcher, William W. Bolton. Charles S. Calhoun, Andrew J. Cantelou, Rainsford. (handler, John L. Cox. Swepson. Dawson, Thomas. Deadwyler, George (apt. ('. S. Army. DeLaigle, Henry. Dix. William J. Eberhart, Harrison. Freeman, Alonzo. Furlow, Wm. L. Gordon, Charles P. Harden, John F. Hill, George. II oxey, Thomas R. jKennon, Richard E. Thornton, William T. Ward. William. Wilkins, Hamilton. Winn. Samuel J.. Col.C. S. A. Wolfe, John B. 41 1 s.V,. Allen. W. Arrington, S. Callaway, A. F. Cleveland. W. C. 28Cobb, John A., (apt. C S. A. Gatewood,AinsworthD. Hill, Edward P. LeConte, Wm. L. Lockett, R. s. Kimball, X. C. Mitchell, S. Dalton, (apt C. S. A. Murphy, John W. Oliver, William. Patterson, W. F. Robinson, Cornelius. Russell. Charles P. Shelby, James, Stewart, Joseph. Spivey, Samuel C. Smil b, Geo. D. Swipes, J. He Witt. Sullivan. William D. Vason, Willi. -i.i J. Vickers, P. N. Young, Alfred J. Kilpatrick, Whitner. Lee. Absalom E. ; killed Amos. Edward. in battle. Blackshear, E. T. Lin le. William A. Benson, Lawrence. Maltby, Richard. *Billups, Thomas C. McMillan, Jam— C. IColclough, F. W. C. 25 1857. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Dougherty, Henry, Eubank, ('has. IT. Erwin, J. G. B. Fitzpatrick, II. C. Jamison, W. I). Lee, A Lonzo 0. McElroy, Hugh. Mongin, Wm. I). Pinson, A. J. Reese, David. Rutherford, Williams. Stow, Elijah B. Thompson, Peyton G. is 1858. Bass, Walter. Cobb, Thos. W. Clements,,!. P. Dougherty, Robert. Hayes, Samuel C. Holleyman, George C. Janes, J. L. Jones, H. A. Lawson, W. H. Pope, Henry L. *McCleskey, Joseph H, killed at Malvern Hill. McFarland, T. S. Milner, Algernon. Nance, Almon L. Patrick, John H. Reese, Milton E. Roberts, Joseph M. Sims, A. B. Thomas, James D. Thompson, W. M. Williams, J. 0. Whitehead, Wm. D.; killed in battle. Whitner, Alonzo C. Whitner, Benj. F. Wright, 0. 0. Fleming, J. L. Hawkins, E. A. Hale, R, A. Eester, T. J. Howell, Evan P., Capt. C. S. A. Jones, W. M. Jones, A. M. Kinnebrew, J. II. McMullen, T. M. Reid, J nines M. Smith, J. Morgan. Wimberly,F. I). Winn, W'. A. Winn, W. M. McGinty, Valerius A. Mills, George H. Stevens, James I). Stoddard, John. *Willis, Frank E. Wylly, T. B. King, Sur- geon in French Army. *Winfrey, Henry. Weed, Edwin, D. D., Bishop of Florida. 20 i\-> 1859. Bailey, D. H. Bailey, S. W. Banks, E. A. Bennett, G. P. Brown, D. H. Cheney, John F. Chisholm, S. \V. Douglass, J. 11. 1860. *Barry, John P. *Billups,G. William. Brittain, Robert I. Brooke, J. S. CobbJ 0. H. *Cooper, L. 0. Edwards, W. A. Ford, G. T. Goolsby, R. C. *Greer, John T. Hidell, W. H. * Hodgson, Wm. H. Lyle, Lee M. Manley, R. C. Oliver, William. Roberts,!). B. Starr, F. R. Smyth, W. W. Thompson, B. M. *Ware, Edward H. 1862. John. Allie. Bernard. 23*Billups, Dowdell. Franklin. Gibson, . Gilbert, . Harris, James L. |Hunt, A. L. Keaton, J. K. Polk. Lipman, Lawrence. Mayo, -. Stoddard, Harry. *Young, Wm.H. 1863. VI 1861. Beasley, Wm. B. *Berry, Wm. B. Briscoe, Mat. P. Callaway, John. Calhoun, James M. Dozier, A. Estes, . Gammell, Wm. A. |Hull, E. Seabrook. *Johnston, Malcolm H. *Lamar, A. C. C. *McGinty, Flavius H. Atkinson, . Bailey, Edward. Brittain, William F. Ellis, H. Fulton, . Hodgson, E. R. *Lucas, Singleton N". McCou, . 20McCleskey, Lucius L. Thompson, . White, John R. Wells, . Woolfork, J. H. 13 1864. 1865. 1866. Armstrong, Septimus F. Barnett, Frank W. *Barnwell, R. W. 'Barnwell, Wm. H. C \ rALOGUE i' v ' tVERSITY OF GEORGIA. r>»'i hune, James \. Baird, John B. Bridges, J. B. Crawford, Reese. Comer, B. B. •Dearing, T. II. Dozier, Daniel P. Davis. Buford M. Dent, John II. Elliott,J. Habersham Grady, W. s. •Green, Harry M. Hill, Thos. A.' Hillsinan.C. (i. Hudson, .1. M. .Jackson. How oil ( !. Jester, Win. A. Jones, II. P. • Ion.'-, .1. H. Jones, William. Dane. A. O. Lane, P. M. •Lampkin, Lucas II. McCrary, P. .1. •McLaren, Edward. Mitchell, W. II. Mitchell, W. P. Newton, K. I.. -Parks. .J as. LI. H. Reid, Sidney. Sterrett, K. IT. Smith. Victor M. Smith, W.G. Spears, Frank. •Ward, Tap. II. Wimberly, D. B. Yancey, Goodloe II. Young, Edward B. *Young, James E. L867. Beckham, P. Y. Brown, <;. w. •Brooks, W. II. Byrom, J. S. Camp, C. D. Camp, George K. •Casey Juriah II. Carson, 8. II. ( lohen, John .1. *< 'unningham, Ben D ( lallaway, John J. Callaway. .1. T. Cochran. L. S, Connally, W. I . Dearing, W. W. *{ . rani . dames A. Green, Robt. E. Harralson, Hugh A. I lamilt on. IPC. Hood. M. P. Hodgson, Asbiirx II. Harris. A. (i. Jennings, D. P. Jones, Win. II. Johnston, Mark. Panev. < harles. Lloyd, W. II. C. Martin, d. M. Mattox. John. Miller, d. (). A. Mont fort. D. T. •McWhorter, M. II. •Oglesby, J. T. ( >rr, Andrew J. Perkins, II. C. Peeves. I). P. Pneker. A.C. Saxon, W. T. Stubbs, P. W. Tilly, George P. Toombs, Win. H. Westmoreland, R. W •Weed, Joseph E. 1868. Banks, das. Pet hea, W. W. Bet hea. J. X. Brown, J. P. Brown, G. W. telBothwell, Thos. S. Brinson, Jason S. Carlton, J. IP Carmichael, W. II. Campbell, Dudley. Christian, Jos. 0. Collins, W. W. ( lochrane, P. P. Chisholm" R. P. Day. P.P. Dona Idgon, d. A. Fish, John R. Griffeth, Wm. X. Hampton. Thos. S. Hawkins. P. A. Hamilton. IP C. Hill. (has. I). Hodgson, Alhon Lieut. P. S. Navy 17 1 1 uggins, IP IP II uguenin, P. D. I pwin, < !eo. W. .lames. < has. G. •Jackson, Thos. M . Lamar, Henry J. Martin. J. L. •Mell, w. IP Parnell, P. IP Phinizy, Stewart . i Powell", T. W. Randell,G. <■. Robinson, J. IP Redding, J. P. Sparks. Win. D. Smith. P. X. Strohecker, E. L. Strong, X. B. Thompson, s. C. X'erdery, Marion J. Waterson, W. L. Walt hour, W. L. Whitaker, P. IP 1969. Adams, Jno. M. TIAngier, E. A. Bancroft, Edward. Bivins, J. E. Bristow, T. E. Calhoun, A. E. Chappie, Thos. J. Cody, E. Collier. J. J. Cooper, Hunter P. i tearing, P. P. Portch, J. P. Dougherty, David T. Ennis, J. W. Gamble, Roger P., Judge Superior < lourt ; Trus- tee. Garlington, Ernest A., Capt. P. s. Army; ( lommanding Expedi- tion to A ret i<- Seas. Gilbert, A. H. Harris. J. W. Houston. S. (). Hughes, D. M. •Hughes, W. P. Jones, T. d. C. Ladson, d. IP •Lampkin, Robt. II. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Lampkin, W. W. Johnson, W. G. Heath, W. A. Lane, Jeff. Johnston, Young. Howe, R. R. Lewis, E. E. Julian, J. J. Hull, J. Hope. Long, Jas. W. Lark, G. G. Hunter, T. W. Martin, P. W. Lamar, W. B., Attor- Hunter, J. M. Matthews, T. V. R. ney-General of Flor- Hudson, T. H. Monroe, D. ida. Hurt, E. F. Morrison, Ben. Livingston, T. B. Holtzclaw, B. C. Morrison, J. B. Laing, J. D. Jenkins, A. S. Mitchell, Chas. B. Linder, J. C. McKie, J. S. Mnrph, J. M. Kendall, J. S. Mims, C. T. McDowell, W. A. McLendon, Win. Moore, Elliot, McMullin,A. J. McCoy, G. W. Murphey, P. A. Peabody, Douglass C. Myers, L. M. Payne, B. F. Pendergrass, J. E. Myers, Jas. M. Patterson, R. W. Persons, Clarence. Myers, W. E. Patrick, J. H. Pinson, M. B. Nelson, E. G. Powell, J. S. Powell, J. S. Prather, J. D. Rusk, T. R. Pope, J. Hunter. Seidell, C. W. Smith, Abner T. Redd, Soule. Speights, J. C. Suttle, J. T. Redd, T. S. Stephenson, C. A. Taylor, H. 1ST. Smith, R. N. Simpkins, W. H. Thornton, A. E. Spencer, W. A. Smith, E. J. Thomas, A. H. Shorter, W. A. Simpson, C. T. Walters, John. Turner, C. A. Strickland, E. Walker, A. T. *Weil, Theo. J. Trippe, W. T. Wilcoxon, T. B. Wills, T. J. White, T. W. 49 Wynn, W. Yonge, C. C. 1872. 54. 50 Andrews, Marshall. 1870. 1871. Barnett, 0. S. Barnes, R. B. Boyd, M. L. Angier, C. V. Atwell, John. Brown, J. R. Bagley, H. A. C. Ashley, C. R. Brown, R. M. Baldwin, W. O. Ballinger, E. W. *Bussey, H. C. Bannerman, W. F. Bessman, J. F. Bryan, R. G. Bibb, Win. G. Bibb,W. C. Carrington, F. I). Beane, Jos. E. *Brumby, R. H. *Calvin, G. W. Buchanan, E. S. Brumby, Thos., Lieut. Clark, F. R. Brumby, L. R. U. S. Navy. Clark, R. S. *Clayton. C. W. Craig, W. B. Cleveland, J. L. Cooper, M. B. Carpenter, J. T. Collier, L. W. Cook, Ira W. Cheney, J. A. Cohen, F. J. Coley, Jno. D. Chilton, R. L. Cohen, L. L. Davis, M. C. Dearing, A. P. Cohen, C. H. Davis, J. S. Dowdell, W. L. Cole, R. D. Dennis, M. B. Dubose, W. R. Coleman, B. F. Dodgen, W. J. Epping, H. H. Cutts, C. S. Duncan, E. D. Fulton, T. X. Davis, P.W. Gaskill, Chas. B. Grace, W. C. Davis, C. A. Golson, J. L. Gray, F. P. Dozier, G. X. Hemingway, W. E. Gamble, W. A. Donovan, Robt. Hunter, J. M. Goree, C. P. Erwin, A. R. Hunter, T. W. Hall, J. H. Eddy, C. K. Ison, W. L. Head, W. C. Elam, W.E. Jester, S. H. Hammond, E. M. Fielder, C. C. CATALOGUE l MVKUSITY OF (JKORCfiA, Plata u, J Graves, J, Temple. Greer, R. A. Griffith, W. J. ( tormlej . J. R. Gordon, II. II. Haralson, < . A. Harris, R. .1. Ballenbeck, M. Bawkes, T. X. Bead,J. I.. Bitch, C. F. •Hemphill, .1. L. Bightower, M. II. Boskinson, .1. II . Bouser, F. ( '. Hunter. Ellis. Hunter, .1. M. Hunter, T. W. Bulbert, Tierce. Jester. M. M. Johnson, W. s. Johnson, J . N . Jones, E. E. Jones. II. C. Kennev. J. R. Kirby. J. T. Lamar, T. R. Lampkin, Cobb. Leon. II. I). Lilly. ('.('. Lockett, Jas. McCurry. A. G. •McKinley. A. McK inney, T. <>. McLean. E. S. Martin. G. J. Mann. J. E. •Milburn, F. JL Miller, A. J. Michael. \Y. M. Morris, B. T. Moore. R. D. Myers, D. F. Xt'Wion. J. T. O'Brien, T. P. ( )(lom. F. Patrick, D. S. Padgett, R. R. *Pou, J. T. Ramey, W. II. Randle, J. P. Redding, C. A. Rh ici-.-. .). I'. Reid, J. W. Rodwell, W. II. Roberts, <;. M. Rodgers, R. 8. Saye, Jno. A. Stanford, J. C. Saffold, F. B. Speer, ('.('. Smith, NT. J. F. Smith, F. 1). Smith, Olin. si rickland, Henry. Sturges, Wm. W. Tatom, W. G. Tilton, X. B. Thomas, Geo. E. Thompson, Scott. Vason, A. P. Vonderleith, A. IF Walton, Thos. C. Walker, T. N. Wilkes, W. D. Wilcoxon, J.W. Wilson,.!. W. Weaver, D. J. West, Fort, Wooten, W. M. Wynn, E. S. Yerby, W. R. Young, R. A. 1878. *Bartlett, F:.S. Cater, E. L. Galley, A. R. Daniel, J. H. Daniel, W. H. Faust, G. M. Frazer, C. Gay, R. L. George, A. M. George, J. F. Harris, M. W. Harris, ( }. S. Harris, D. B. Hill, John J. HilLB. M. Jones, M. M. Joseph, D. A. King, H.G. King, W. A. Kinnaman,L. S. Lester, J. G. McGough, Robt. Mitchell, Geo. II. Melson, D. P. Moore, B. F. Moss, J. A. Lease, Wm. C. Phinizy, Jacob Kid ley, F. M. Reid, J. W. Robinson, S. B. Spratlin, W. M. Sells, J. I). Lay lor, R. G. Thornton, W. J. Warren, Lott. Zorn, J. C. Zorn, W.O. 112 39 1974. Arnold, Milton. Benedict, Sam. C.,M.D., Prof. Law. Brandon, J. A. Oalhoun, W. L. Dixon, R. J. Harris, M. W. Harralson, Frank L. Heard, W. N. Jones, W. Edgar. Latham, Geo. McGuire, R. L., Jr. Parker, J. G. C. Prophit, R. L. Weller, Telfair, U. S. Consul South Africa, Zachry J. Greer. Alexander, W. H. Alford, W. S. Brandon, J. A. Oornwell, R. H. Cook, Philip. Drake, J. Frank. . Heard, W. S. Lamar, Jos. R. McLendon, Wm. Neal, J. N. Tanner, G. H. White, B. A. 32 1875. Atkinson, T. A. Brown, Ray. Browne, C. M. Burdette, J. L. Childs, W. L. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA Chisholm, S. A. Cooper, T. L. Cooke, H. R. Delony, Thos. C. Glenn, L. Jud. Cordon, Frank IT. Henry, W. M. Holt, T. R. Hodge, P. J. Kelly, B. A. Kelly, J. M. Lamkin, Robt.W. Lampkin, K. C. Mason, E. H. Miller, W.K. Morris, John W. Payne, Arthur. Poyner, J. B. Singleton, Terrell W. Stokely, Jno. M. Suggs, L. C. Walker, II. B. Walker, Seth M. Walker, D. A. Ware, Pleas. H . 1876. * Adair, Robin. Adams, E. D. Allen, E. H. Bayne, M. G. Baggs, C. W. Bullard, J. B. Carter, P. H. Cartledge, L. H. Erwin, H. C. Flournoy, Geo. Griffin, W. L. Y. McCurdy, W. D. Nowell,*F. T. Oliver, J. W. Peek, S. W. Respess, J. N. Richardson, C. C. Sadler, W. B. Smith, Alex. W. Taylor, R. Murray. Tibbs, G. E.- White, S. G. Willcox, Jas. R. Willhite, J. (). Woodward, S. 1ST. 1877. Alston, R. W. Cooper, Walter G. )a von port, Jno. L. Ficklen, O. B. Fuller, O. C. Goulding, E. Goulding, R. Harralson, J. A. Hartridge, Gazaway. Halley, R. M. Hunnicutt, L. L. Johnson, Geo. S. Knott, Darling J. Lowry, Alva C. McKinley, Guy. Newman, J. W. Pope, Alex. B. Swanson, J. E. Smith, Moses M. Wade, Arthur B. Wade, Walter B. Ward, Whyte. 30 1878. Adams, C. O. Anderson, J. C. Baker, W. W. Brantly, W. G. Buchanan, H. M. Candler, S. C. Carmichael, J. R. ^Chandler, Walter S. Gumming, A. L. Daniel, E. F. Field, Julian P. Fuller, R. W. Gross, John E. liar die, J. C. Harris, W. II. Hamilton, G. E. Hawkins, A. L. *Heckman, Tracy I. Martin, D. S. McCleskey, F. W. Newton, W. W. Oliver R. S. O'Neal, B. P. Phinizy, Billups. Petty, Moses L. Price, Jas. 1). Remington, W. H. Ruff, M. V. 25 Ruff, S. E. ■2-2 Stanley, Millard L. Smith,' .Jos. B. W. Stephens, Geo. Tye, Geo. B. Warren, R. II. Williamson, J. L. Warr, T. T. Wooten, J. M. 1879. A cost a, T. L. Addison, W. P. Armstrong, J. W. Atkinson, H. F. Bigliam, Paul C. Bondurant, C. S. Callaway. P. T. Drewry, N. B. Dobbs, W. L. Fannin, C. F. Frost, W. F. Hampton, T. C. Hawin, W. C. Hodgson, F. M. Howell, J. P. Hughes, J. J. BEuggins, J. H. Hull, Robert M. Joiners, J. J Kiser, E. A. Lanier, T. J. Lavender, J. S. Lester, Alvin O. Lamkin, W. B. *Lowrance, H. H. McBean, Alex. McCleskey, H. S. Mcllhenny, Oliver. McWhorter Thos. McCulloch, C. R. Marks, Mordecai. Magouirk, W. J. Milner, P. C. Montfort, T. W. Morgan, S. C. Myers, Moses A. Neill, Jas.T. Perkins, Capers D. Perkins, Lamar. Price, Parker M. Pittman, Marcus. Persons, A. P. Rowland, R. S. Stapler, M. M. 37 Allen, Clarence I. Arnold. J. W. Atkisson. II. B. Barnes, B. B. Barry, Eugene. Bates. Jack M. Beard, E. C. Bingham, F. F. Burrows. ( '. L. Carlton. Jno. N. Carter. Curtis B. Chandler, C. G. Crane, W. M. Crittenden, Z. A. Daniel, John. Davis, Alonzo. Dobbs, J. E. Dozier, Luther G Edwards, M. c. Felton, H. E. Gilbert, F. \V. Glass, W. M. Gunn, F. B. Bairston, W. M. Hall,Maxcy R. Hardee, Robt.E. Horton, W. C. Jones, J as. A. Maddox, R. F. Martin, W.W. McRee,E. J. Mc Williams, E.J Mitchell, J. M. Palmer, G. T. Parks. Jas. A. Pittman,AV. A. Reaves, Sidney P. Reaves, H. X. Beid, W. D. Riley John L. Russell, L. C. Shockly, W. T. Si miiis, J. H. Smith, Bryant J. ISpence, R. E. L. 'Stanton, E. O. Sykes, J. H. JTalmadge, C. A. ITate, Cale R. Thomas, E. L. iThornton, T. J. \Taughn, II. Wade, E. Warren, C. K. Walker, F. S. Wells, W. L. Wilson, Philip D. 1 sss. :>7 Atkins. T. F. Axson, F. Stockton, Prof. Univ. Vermont. Beck. W. F. Brown, Jos. A. Bryan, John A. Carr, B.T. Childress, W. C. Cobb, Lamar. ( rane. J. R. Crawley, E. H. ( lrummey,C. Crittenden, H. C. Daniel, J. Z. Davidson, W. Deadwyler.G. E. Dean, F. S. Dozier, A. W. Eckles, T. F. Fears, A. C. Foster, R. L. Fowler, J. J. Fowler, J.M. Gantt, Jesse T. Garmany, H. H Cilleland, C.E. Harris, B. Yancey. Ilard.Ewd. Hubert, T. E. llutchings. R. H. -Jackson, Henry R. Lamar, R. L. Lane, W. T. Lane, E. W. Lovell.E. F. Lvle, Dan C. Miller, W r . E. Morton,- James W. Patrick, O. M. Robertson, A. B. Robertson, J. W, Rodgers, E. W. Boss, T. L. Smith, John R. Threadcraft, F. L. Thomas, Jno. M. Tribble, G. J. D. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. West, Jas. B. Westenburg, John. Whitaker,J. H. 1889. Alexander, Geo. L. Braswell, W. O. Burum, Percy. Carbine, W. L. Choate, C. E. Culpepper, J. O. Dearing, M. G. Duncan, C. C. Edmundson, J. W. Harris, W. J. Bolton, T. L. Lipscomb, F. A. Lowe, W. H. Meinhard, Leo. Mullane, J. A. Nevin, J. B. Perry, J. C. Kichards, Ceo. Russell, C. R. Salisbery, E. B. Salisbery, J. H. Sibley, B. Dunbar. Slade, J. J. Vason, Joseph. Willcox,C. P. 1890. Battle, L. B. Behre, D. H. Bishop, Walter H. Bennett, T. P. Cooper, Houston F. Calhoun, Lowndes. Dozier, W. B. Estes, Geo. H., Jr. Goetchius, Julian S. Happ, L. M. Hodgson, C. 1ST. Hutcheson, W. O. Hemphill, W. A. Hirsch, M. L. Jarrett, Geo. D. King, W. R. Martin, J. C. Mell, E. B. Meacham, R. R. Matthews, A. B. Newell, Alfred C. Reeves, John H. 4!) Ponder, A. A. Robertson, M. P. Simmons, T. B. Stephenson, J. R. Sibley, W. Langley. Short, Z. N. Sewell, D. A. Smith, J. G. Thompson, C. R. Thompson, G. A. Wood, F. L. 1891. 33 25 Arnold, W. V. Armstrong, A\ . B. Bethea, C. E. Brodnax, J. C. Butner, J. H. Breitenbucher, P. W. Brumby, Hardeman. Carson, Marcus. Cleghorn, R. C. Durham, C. F. Delaperrierre, R. L. Dunlap, J. T. Doster, B. R. Evans, C. W. Goodrum, C. L. Grady, Henry W. Garrard, Barrow. Harrell, J. W. Harris, S. T. Hall, E. T. Harvey, E. Herty, F. J. Hitchcock, M. S. Hodgson, R. P. Hoyle, L. C. Howell, E. Park. Irwin, D. A. Jones, Geo. Noble. Lawrence, C. C. Lipscomb, Rutherford. Little, W. F. Love, H. J. Morton, Jno. White. Nisbet, Chas. R. O'Hagan, J. Olive, Sam L. Paulk, S. B. Simpson, H. S. Smith, Boykin. Steedly, B. B. Stone, C. D. Teasley, W. A. Tuggle, W. T. Wadley, W. M. Walker, J. J. 1892. Black, J. C. C. Brand, C. E. Banks, Henry. Butler, Robt. M. Cochran, R. O. Curry, R. D. Davis, W. C. Draper, W. M. Dodd, C. F. Dunn, T. J. Eppes, E. B. Ezzard, J. R. Ezzard, H. H. Foster, A. G. Flatau, A. Gearreld, W. P. Gibson, J. J. Gramling, J. E. Gunn, Frank. Harris, Seale. Harris, W. A. Halsey, L. Hawkins, W. A. Herndon, H. H. Hill, John. Holland, H. S. *Hull, Thomas C. Hunter, Sam. G. Kemp, W. L. Lanier, Fortune. Latimer, Arthur. Marks, Myer. Martin, W. T. Montgomery, R. M. Morris, Max. Morton, J. Audley. Murphey, E. E. McCalla, G. R. McKie, G. A. Newton, C. L. Newell, Isaac. Neal, W. T. Orr, Fred J. Proctor, R. W. Powell, N. E. Reese, 8. A. Ridley, R. A. Scott, C. McT. Shackleford, G. O. Slade, C. B. 45 CATALOG!' K UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. Shearouse, P. J. Smith, A. Smith, J. <;. Toomer, I.. ('. Thompson, C. P. Turner, Oscar e. Welch, John W, Wilkins, W. A. Williams. Bion. 59 Roberts, V. A. Rounsaville, F. II. Smith, T. V. Selman, L. s. Steiner, II. il. Taggart, G. I. Wilson, P. K. IS!) I. Barrow, Craig. Barwick, J. A. Brinson,G.G. Brad well, J. I). Branch, steiner. Boland, F. K. Born, E. W. (arson, C. C. Carter, F. A. Cato, G. E. Clark, D. T. Cook, W. A. 'Crane. Ceo. S. Clanton, H. V. Colvin, H. G. Crane, Ben A. Cook, W. G. Cook, J. O. Crittenden, O. A*. DeLoach,R. J. H. Dancy, Wm. R. Dodd, Harry. |Dubose, C. W. Dubose, M. T). Dunlap, S. C. Davis, R. Burton. Dearing, Frank. Draper, Robt. D. Erwin, H. C. Ezelle, P. P. Fletcher. Van. Fender, W. B. Ferrill, F. G. Fleming, Frank L Floyd. C. H. B. Franklin. D. B. Fleming, C. A. Graham, R. W. Hansell, H. S. Halsey, M. Hendricks, J. W. Hill, P. X. Hirsch, David. Hiles, Cordon. HaskelLC. T. 1893 . Abbot. Sam K. Akerman. Alfred. Akerman,< Iharles, Bean. Frank W. Bivings,W. F. Boggs, G. H. Boggs,T. R. Brooks. Shirley Branson, ( '. E. Bnttrill. T. 11. Carter. F. A. Crane. Ceo. S. ( lannon, G. M. Cloud. Hawes. Gumming, H. H. Dougherty, E. E. Daniel. T. Z. Dickey, J. L . Gilbert, Thos. Guyton, Moses. Gammon, F. M. Greenfield, A. D. Gerdine, John. Griffeth, J. W. Griffeth, F. E. Hamilton. W. W. Hillver, Henry. Holden, C. H. Hunter. R. Stuart. Harrington, F. T. Hilsman, A. Jones. Frank S. Langley, Lee M. Lockhart, BCilledge. Lockhart, J. B. Lockhart, M. M. Mr Don-aid. W. A. McCarthy, W. MeRae. (i. L. O'Brien, E. S. Pittman, J. <;. Peeples. R. W. Reab,G. W. Note.— Gen. James N. Bethune. of Columbus, Gra. (1823), erroneously marked with a star, is at present the oldest living alumnus of the University. Boffmayer, [.J, Hunt. li. R. Hnnt.C. P. Hurt. Geo. F. Ilntehinson. M. I ). Jackson, Geo. T. Larson, NV. W. Lindsay. L. A. Lovejoy. R. H. Lyndon, Oscar. Matthews, J. T. M [ze, c. A. Mobley, A. B. Moss, W. L. Neal.T. A. Xisbet. (). B. Xiesler, G. IL O'Brien, E. S. O'Neal, M.E. Osborn,E. S. Pettis, J. O. Pettis, W. M. Pittman, J. G. Porter, J. Henry. Phillips, U. B. Powell, L. E. Pierce, D. 0. Phinizy, Barrett. Richmond, F. C. Reese, Henry. Reayes, R. K. Ryals, E. C. Sanders, K. D. Sanders, Laetns. Steiner, Pinckney. Stephenson, J. W. Sibley, Jas. H. Smith, T. F. Stovall, Harvey. Stnbbs,H. W. Tag'gart, G. I. Tidwell, A. L. Traylor, G. T. Thornton, S. W. Thornton, A. E. Tuggle, W". T. (Jpson, Edward. White, R. F. White, Walker. Wellhouse, Leo. Williams. II. \. Yancey. Win. L. 97 Whole number, 2,491. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. INDEX. The numbers prefixed designate the year of graduation recorded in the preceding Catalogue, in which, under some one of the Degrees con- ferred, the name of the &rraduate will be found. ABRAHAMS. 1852 Edward W. ADAMS. 1829 James. 1829 William E 1858 Robert \V. 1859 John Q. 1869 A. Pratt. 1872 Samuel B. 1873 Robert. 1885 Percy H. A DAM* S()X. 1882 L. C. AKFRMAN. 1894 Joseph. AFFEX. 1807 John. 1842 Alexander A 1843 George W. 1846 William H. 1848 Gerard W. 1848 Robert E. 1869 Francis M. 1884 John T. ALEXANDER. 1844 Peter W. 1877 George R. 1879 J. H. 1881 Thomas W. 1882 Joe B. 1885 Irvin. 1890 Joseph A. 1893 Harry A. ALFRl'END. 1868 Alfred 11. ALMOST. 1888 R. W. A. MTS. 1*74 F. J. ANDERSON. l^.i^ Kdmond. 1838 Lewis. 1841 Joseph IF 1841 John. L842 Henry M. 1843 James 11. 1S47 William W. 1850 Thomas J. IF 1 v.i> Emory F. l>:>2 Young J. I860 William D. L879 John F. lss4 James W. 1889 George I>. 1891 William D. Jr. AX DOE. 1887 Robert E. ANTHONY. 1873 Edward L. ANSLEY. 1871 Henry C. A RK WRIGHT. 1890 Preston S. ARM I STEAD. 1871 W. T. ARMSTRONG. 1879 J. H. ARNOLD. 1883 A. J. ARRINGTON. 18K John R. ASBURY. 1882 J. L. ASH FEY. 1812 Nathaniel. 1844 John. L846 William. L848 Cornelius. 1849 Matthew. ATKINSON. 1808 John. 1825 Edmond. 839 Alexander S AUSTIN. 1887 W. L. M. AUTREY. 1883 Bernard. AVERY. 1872 J. ('. 1890 Robt. L. AYCOCK. 1872 J. A. BACON. 1836 Augustus 1838 Milton E. 1847 Henry IF 1851 Robert J. 1859 Allan-Mis 1860 Thomas J. 1893 W. Wallace 1894 William F. BACOT. 1846 Daniel I). FA I LEY. 1836 James W. 1845 William T. 1846 Samuel J. BAKER. 1X32 .John W. ts4(> Sumner W. 1874 J. A. 1880 -lame- F. B A EDWIN. 1814 William. isiiii Francis G. BALLARD. L886 Nath. IF 1887 Edgar F. 1894 Benjamin S. BANCROFT. L848 James. 1849 Edward. 1868 George. RANKS. 1837 William. . L854 Dunstan M. 1858 Gilmer. BARCLAY. 1871 J. A. L890 Wvatt D. BARF I FED. 1893 Fred G. BARGE. L891 J.J. BARKSDAFE. 1 still R. T. BARNARD. I si's J ( ,hn B. ]s2s Timothy G. 1x41 Solomon. L850 John D. lsr,i Nathaniel L. BARNES. L853 ( Jeorge T. 1888 John A. BARNETT. 1869 Samuel. lss'jj. W. BARNWELL. 1893 Edward W. BARRETT. 1885 Wm. IF. Jr. BARRON. 1*34 Moses F. BARROW. 1859 Pope. 1sc,l> Thomas A. lsc,!) Benjamin W. is;.; Henry W. is7t David C, Jr. 1894 D. C. Jr. 3d. 1894 D. ('.. Jr. BARTLETT. 1870 Charles L. BARTOW, 1 835 Francis S. BASINGER. 1846 William S. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1889 J. Garnett. 1890 William S.,Jr. BASS. 1862 William H. BATES. 1849 Gustavus H, BAXTEK. 1840 Andrew. 1853 John S. 1*55 Edwin G. 1860 Richard B. 1869 Thomas W. BAYNAKD. 1842 Thomas A. BE ALL. 1823 Thomas N. 1830 Benjamin B BEAN. 1869 William S. BEARD. 1888 L. B. B.EASLEY. 1857 Jarrell. 1858 Stephen. 1873 J. G. BECK. 1824 David. 1876 Eugene H. 1881 Marcus W. BECKETT. 189-i George W. BECKW1TH. 1873 C. M. BEENE. 1868 Horace D. BEEKS. . 1870 Walter S. BELCHER. 1831 Robert E. BELL. 1861 Madison. 1871 W. A. 1882 Piromis H. BELLAH. 1875 James H. BELLAMY. 1849 Richard H. 1851 William C. BEMAN. 1856 Edward P. BENNETT. 1881 W. T. 1883 J. W. 1889 J. W. 1893 Thomas J. BENN1NG. 1834 Henry L. BERNER. 1871 R. E. BERRIEN. L806 Thomas M. BETHUNE. 1823 James N. BIGGS. 1856 Thomas D. BILLUPS. 1844 John M. 1845 Joel A. 1850 Henry C. 1868 John. BINNS. 1884 J. W. BIRD. 1805 Wilson. 1859 WinfieldS. 1869 Edgeworth. BISHOP. 1879 Edward T. 1880 E. T. 1879 James, Jr. 1884 Arthur F. BLACK. 1877 Wm.W. 1889 Paul S. 1892 Eugene R. BLACKSHEAR. 1826 Joseph M. 1828 Thomas E. 1854 Robert D. BLAIN. 1884 A. C. BLAKE, 1846 John R. BLAKE.Y. 1851 David T. BLASINGAME. 1892 James C. BLOODWORTH 1880 O. H. B. BLOOMFIELD. 1884 James C. BLOUNT. 1852 Joseph G. 1857 James H. 1872 William A. 1887 James H.,Jr BOGGS. 1892 Adam A. BOLTON. 1849 Isaac L. BOND. 1886 Marcus B. 1890 J. F. L. BONDURANT. 1888 Emmett J. BONNELL. L869 William B. BONNER. 1836 James F. 1840 Benjamin C BOONE. 1888 J. E. 1890 Clifton. BORDERS. 1830 John M. 1840 Augustin L. 1843 Samuel R. BOSTON. 1888 Joseph E. 1891 John H. BOSTWICK. 1883 John. BOWER. 1894 Byron B.,Jr BOYKIN. 1806 Samuel. 1851 Samuel E. BOYLSTON. 1891 Albert D. BOWEN. 1852 Samuel W. 1853 James H. BOZEMAN. 1855 Edward K. BRADLEY. 1838 James A. BRAND. 1881 Charles H. 1888 L. M. BRANHAM. 1835 Walter R. BREWTON. 1892 S. B. BRIGGS. 1871 Edward H. BR INKLE Y. 1891 S. G. BRINSON. 1874 E. L. BRISCOE. 1816 Waters. 1847 LuciliusH. BRITT. 1884 T. J. BRITTAIN. 1861 Jabez M. BROCK. 2 Hugh L. BROOKE. 1862 William H. BROOKES. 1871 J. L. BROOKS. 1883 J. Prescott, BROUGHTON. 1870 W. A. BROWN. 1839 Burwell H. 1854 Edward N. 1855 Felix P. 1860 Milton A. 1860 P. M. 1868 Julius L. 1878 William F. 1879 Elijah A. 1881 George R. 1888 W. G. 1889 L. J. 1892 Llewellyn L. 1893 James P. 1894 Henry C. BROWNLEE. 1840 James. BROYLES. 1888 Nash R. 1888 Arnold BRUCE. 1872 Robert E, BRtfMBY. 1862 John W. 1891 Campbell W. BRYAN. 1826 Thomas J. 1828 James J. BUCHANAN. 1873 John T. BUCKNER. 1842 Alfred. BULL. 1854 Gustavus A. 1870 Orvill A. BULLOCH. 1837 William J. BURDETT. 1885 Joe R. BURNS. 1857 Amzi D. 1860 John T. BURROUGHS. 1853 Richard. BURRUSS. 1882 P. II. t'ATAI.OM \: I'MVKIISI TV OK < ; Ko IM : I A . BUSH. CARSWELL. CHURCH. COILE. iv.m Robert D. 1871 A. W. is 17 Alonzo W. L883 William M. BUSSEY. 1882 Frank W. 1849 John R. 1888 Frank W. L861 Hezekiah. 1886 William I). CLARK. COLLIER. L868 N. .1. 1886 .John I). lsoi Gibson. L846 .James C. BUTT. CARTER. 1856 William A. L869 Charles A. 1886 Edinond W. 1826 Hampden C. 1861 Edward V. L872 II (>nry L. BUTLER. 1861 Edward A. CLAY. 1886 William L. L890 Bryan C. 1877 Ben jamin W. ls7^ John A. 1*7!) SylvannsG. 1886 Joseph B. COLLINS. 1880 Noah M. L894 George P. CARY. CLAYTON. COMER. BYRD. L810 Armistead. 1804 Augustin s. 1852 John A. L843 John L. 1810 Peyton. 1821 August in s. 1867 George L. CABANISS. 1849 Charles W. 1827 George R. 1888 H. M. 1854 Thomas B. 1856 Joseph M. 1833 Philip. CONE. 1869 II. II. CARNES. 1838 Edward P. 1876 Richard W. J sic? E.Gerry, Jr. 1820 William W. 1861 Richard A. 1891 J. H. CALDWELL. CARR. CLEVELAND. CONLEY. 1826 Robert. 1842 Thomas W. 1860 J. M. 1883 W. N. CALHOUN. 1845 William W. (FINE. CONNELL. 1828 John A. CASE. 1860 John H. 1868 Eli Baxter. 1882 B. R. 1875 George D. CLOUD. CONYERS. CALLAWAY. CASSELLS. 1885 O. L. 1874 J. B. 1819 Morgan P. 1828 Samuel J. 1891 Joel. 1884 B. J. ls7* Richard D. 1886 Root, F. 1894 David L. 1886 Samuel T. 1881 E. H. 1892 Samuel J., Jr. COALSON. COOK. 1890 Frank E. CATER. 1822 Paul. 1836 Andrew J. 1892 F.Eugene. 1831 Edwin. COATES. 1842 James C. CALLEHAN, CHALMERS. 1877 Geo. W. P. 1860 V. C. 1811 David. 1836 James C. 1878 L. Robert. 1876 Joseph S. CAMAK. CHAMBERS. 1890 Jesse. 1886 Walter B. 1848 Thomas U. 1860 Robert A. COBB. COOPER. 1891 James W. CHANDLER. FS23 William B. 1837 George W. 1891 Louis. 1826 Daniel. 1828 Edmond B. 1850 Thomas L. (AMP. 1829 Gray A. 1834 Howell. 1853 John F. 1881 Joseph G. CHAPMAN. 1834 Thomas M. 1890 H. F. CAMPBELL, 1879 Carlton B. 1841 Thomas R.R. 1889 John R. 1825 John. CHARLTON. 1859 Lamar. CORKER. 1826 John A. 1853 Thomas J. 1860 Lamar. 1889 F. G. 1849 Edward F. CHASE. 1862 Howell. | COSBY. 1870 A. Sibley. 1856 William M. 1866 Howell. 1833 James C. .CANDLER. CHENEY. 1876 Andrew J. COTHRAN. 1854 Milton A. ls:» 7 Winslow D. 1877 Andrew J. 1852 James S. 1877 Charles M. 1880 W.T. 1885 William H. COUPER. L879 Ignatius L. 1883 William S. 1889 Thos. R. R. 1857 John L. L879 Samuel C. 1886 Joseph I). CHENAULT. L878 Nicholas B. COCKE. COURSON. 1882 Milton A. 1827 Nathaniel W. 1876 J. M. r.WNOX. COCHRAN. COUSINS. 1890 R.C. 1853 Allen E. L882 Robert B. CAREY. CHESTER. CODY. 1886 William E. 1884 Ashton II. L823 Norman. lsls Madison I). COWLES. CARLTON. CHRISTIE. COFER. 1826 John A. 1846 .lames. L892 William E. 1861 M. J. COX. 1868 William A. CHISHOLM. C01I FN. L808 Swepson. 1875 Thomas C. L855 Waller S. L888 Edward B. L868 Alfred II. 1876 .lame- M. ,1*87 Walters., Jr. 1889 Edward A. 1 886 J. W. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OE GEORGIA. COZAKT. 1875 S. W. CRANE. 1854 Ben ] am in E I860 William F. 1862 John R. 1869 Cicero A. CRANFORD. 1889 J. G. CRAWFORD. 1856 Bennett H. 1884 R. A. 1887 William B. 1889 T. Remsen. CRAWLEY. 1889 J. L. CRITTENDEN. 1890 H. O. CROSLAND. 1892 D. F. CRUM. 1889 D. A. R. CULBERTSON. 1841 John P. 1852 Wade A. CULLER. 1854 Jacob P. H. CUMMING. 1854 Joseph B. 1880 A. L. CUNNINGHAM. 1837 John R. 1871 Thomas H. 1888 T. Mayhew. CURRY. 1842 Jackson C. . 1843 Jabez L. M. 1888 Frank Z. CUYLER. 1829 John M. 1837 Telamon A. DABNEY. 1839 William H. DALE. 1824 Abram B. DALE IS. 1892 Roy. DALY. 1894 Augustin D. DANIEL. 1854 Thomas M. 1880 L. F. 1888 John W. DART. 1893 F. W. DAVENPORT. 1872 William R. DAVIS. 1808 Charles M. 1849 E phi-aim L. 1856 Jonat'n B. S 1872 M. C. 1876 Arthur W. 1878 Philip W. 1888 C. A. 1888 W. A. 1888 Oscar S. 1891 E.T. 1894 Edwin. DAY. 1888 J. B. H. DAWSON. 1816 William C. 1846 George O. 1849 Edgar G. DEAN. L855 Samuel J. 1883 E. W. 1887 Herbert H. 1893 J. H. 1893 S. C. DEARING. 1878 W. D. DeBRUYN kopps. 1881 J. DeGRAFFENREID. 1828 Lowry L. DELONY. 1846 William G. DeLEFFRE. 1858 Andrew. DENDY. 1846 Charles H. DENMARK. 1871 B. A. 1892 Edgar. DENNIS.. 1853 Leroy C. 1868 William L. DENT. 1868 Alexander T. DESSAU. 1870 Washington, DICKENSON. 1 875 H. G. DIOMATARI. 1835 John D. DOBBINS. 1831 John S. DODD. 1868 T. W. 1893 Eugene. DODSON 1882 William A. DOXALDSON. 1868 John E. DONALD. 1838 Robert. DOUGHERTY. 1825 William. 1826 Robert, DOUGHTY. 1875 William II. DOUGLAS. 1807 John 1848 Eugenius L 1848 Marcellus. 1852 John F. DORSEY. 1870 Edward H. 1893 HughM. 1894 Jasper N. DOWNING. 1888 Hugh R. DOZIER. 1890 James H. DREWRY. 1890 J. H. DUDLEY. 1886 James R. DUBOSE. 1849 William E. 1868 Charles. 1870 A. M. 1879 R. Toombs. DUGGAR. 1883 Herschel V DUNHAM. 1836 Josiah W. hUNKLIN. 1880 Irby. DUNN. 1845 William A. 1856 J. Andrew. DUNSON. 1882 Walker. 1882 W. E. W. DUNWOODY. 1846 Henry M. 1848 Charles A. A 1884 Harry F. DUPONT. 1826 Charles H. 1879 T. Charlton, DUPREE. 1847 Ira Ellis. 1873 E. F. DURDEN. 1891 Frank R. D WIGHT. 1831 Theodore M. DYER. 1830 Thomas W. 1834 John R. EARLY. 1808 Henry. EBERHART. 1855 Samuel. 1888 Toliver P. ECHOLS. 1840 Joseph H. 1853 John H. EDWARDS. 1869 James M. 1879 B. Johnston . 1880 Charles H. 1883 Thomas R. 1890 M. C. ELDRIDGE. 1881 G.M. ELLIOTT. 1830 Abram R. ELLIS. 1890 William D. ELKAN. 1887 M. ELSTON. 1844 Joseph T. EPPS. 1852 William E. ERWIN. 1828 Elam A. 1829 Edward J. 1875 Marion. 1893 Alex. S. , Jr. ESTES. 1869 George H. 1888 Hubert. EVANS. . 1880 O. B. 1861 Thomas. 1888 J. R. 1890 George C. EVE. 1826 Paul F. EVERETT. 1874 H. B. FAIN. L886 John N. FALL. 1838 Abram B. FARMER. 1847 Sylvester J. CATALOGUE l'MVKR8ITY OF GEORGIA, 1888 L. M. L801 J. E, FELDER. L889 Jesse ?. L858 -John ).. r. B. ism Thomas S. FELKER. L879 Joseph II. FERRILL. 1847 Leonidas C FELTON. 1842 William H. FIELDER. 1873 Idus L. FINCH. ls<7 Clarence T I'lXLKY. 1835 David. 1869 William M FISH. L869 William H. FITZGERALD. 1870 D. B. L890 J. B. FLEMING. 1875 William II. 1889 Edward C. 1894 Paul L. FLORENCE. 1887 William A. FLOYD. 1827 Stewart L828 John J. 1878 Charles L. FLOYNT. 1861 s.J. FLOURN0Y. 1829 William B. FLOWERS. Iss7 John E. FONTAINE. 1891 Frank. FOOTE. 1823 George. 1891 Mord. FORD. Is.").") DeSaussure. FOREMAN. 1887 Robert L. FOY. 1888 W. M. FORSYTH. 1804 John H. FORT. 1867 William A. FOSTER. 1812 Thomas F. 1830 Nathaniel Q 1833 Adam G. 1861 J. Henry. is;.-) W. C. FOUCHE. L854 Morton. FRANKLIN. 1824 Benjamin C 1S27 Leonidas. 1830 Marcus A. 1883 Bedney. NSC Alfred L. 1892 Virgil E. FRAZER. 1877 W. W. 1882 A. H. 1890 Donald. FREDERH K. I860 James D. 1*79 Eugene J. FREEMAN. L833 James F. W, 1883 Davis. FREY. 1893 B. F. 1892 E. W. FRICKS. 1894 Lunsford I). FRIERSON. 1823 James A. FUDGE. 1855 Robert I). FILLER. 1894 William A. FULTON. L868 M.C. FEE WOOD. L829 William E. GAFFNEY. lss-2 I). J. GAHAGAN. 1847 Wemley P. GAIRDNER. L861 G ('. GALT. 1882 William. GANAHL. 1849 Joseph. 1851 Francis. 1876 Henry G. GANTT. 893 Robert J. GARBUT. Is9<) M. W. GARRARD. L884 W. T, GARDNER. I860 James. GARLAND. 1891 J. J. GARLINGTON L842 Albert C. GASTON. 1889 James M. GEIGER. 1889 J. B. GEORGE. 1833 James II. 1860 James 8. GERDINE. 1859 John. 1861 Joseph H. I 1891 Thomas G. 1894 Lynn Y. GHEISLING. 1879 J. H. G I BEET. 1834 James F. 1841 Joseph B. GIBSON. 1876 Thomas R. O ION ILL [AT. 1838 William K. 1860 William E. |1873 G. W. GILBERT. 1886 James J. (1887 Fred W. GILES. H838 John M. GILLIS. 11889 Donald. GLASS. l^^N W. M. GLENN. 1841 Luther J. 1863 John T. 1871 Gnstavus R 1872 Howell C. GLOVER. 1834 Henry S. 1844 Eli H. GLOWER. 1882 G. G. GOBER. 1S7o George F. GOETCHIUS. 868 George T. s7l Eenry R. /. GONEKE. L840 Lewis. GOODE. is:,:} Charles T. GOODMAN. ]s.;s < lharles M. GOODRICH. ls!>3 W. II. CORDON. L868 Walter S. 1890 William W. (J ORE. 1861 J. J. F. GORHAM. 1854 YVillis J. OOSS. L870 Jesse M. GOULDING. 1830 Francis E. GOYAN. 1898 F. (.. GRADY. 1868 Henry W. GRAHAM. 1840 Milton A. GRAMLING. 1892 W. X. GRANT. 1833 John T. 1844 James L. 1886 John W. GRATTAN. 1860 George G. GRAVES. 1825 George. 1842 James. GEAY. 1823 John H. 1*40 Claudius B. 1S7-J Arthur II. GREEN. 1840 James W, 1856 Francis M. 1868 Thomas F. ls77 Orville L. 1890 Daniel W. 1890 Thomas F. 1893 f:. P. GREER. 1893 Leon C. GRESHAM. 1808 Willis. 1833 John J. GRIER. 1807 Thomas. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. GRIFFIN". 1880 T. A., Jr. 1828 George 11. HEMPHILL. 1879 William T. 1887 William H. 1828 Sampson W. 1*61 William A. 1880 Joseph. HANCOCK. 1831 Bennett. 1879 Robert A. 1889 D. 1857 John W. is:tl James W. HENDERSON. GRIGGS. HAND. 1833 William H. 1830 Hugh L. 1888 A. W. 1871 J. L. l836Jeptha V. 1843 Robert. GRIMES. HANSON. L836 Stephen W. 1854 James C. 1868 Thomas. 1847 Alexander C. 1839 Elijah W. 1889 W. O. GRINNAGE. HARALSON. 1842 Stephen W. HENRY. 1880 Alexander. 1825 Hugh A. 1846 Eugene W. 1876 William M. GROOVER. 1825 Kinchen L. 1849 William T. HERON. 1873 Daniel R. 1875 Frank L. 1851 William T. 1830 Edward N. 1879 F.R. HARBIN. 1S57 Sampson W. HERTY. 1882 C. T. 1885 R. M. 1860 Hugh N. 1886 Charles H. 1885 A. L. 1885 T. W. 1868 Francis H. HENLEY. GROSS. 1894 William P. 186^ George I). 1884 Albert P. 1878 Benj. M. HARDEE. 1870 Nathaniel E. HENRY. 1881 John E. 1848 Charles S. H. 1878 T. W. H. 1892 J. E. 1885 Joe L. 1851 Thomas S. 1893 Clarence P. HERRI NGTON. GUESS. HARDEMAN. HARRISON. 1861 S. M. 1878 James M. 1853 Isaac S. 1838 William P. HESTER. GUNBY. 1862 S. H. 1869 Edward S. 1861 Thomas J. 1832 Robert M. 1871 John L. HART. HEYMAN. 1866 Robert B. 1889 B. Frank. 1848 Lucius M. 1888 Arthur. GUYTON. 1854Cincinnatus S 1891 R. N. 1890 T. C. 1875 John C. 1890 Ebb. J. HIGHTOWER. 1874 T. D. 1869 Moses. HARDEN. HARTRIDGE. HABERSHAM. 1833 Edward R. 1873 J. E. HILES. 1833 Bernard E, HARDWICK. HARTSFIELD. 1893 W. W. HALE. 1870 Robert W. 1889 A. M. HILL. 1876 Samuel J. 1888 Thos. R. HARWELL. 1806 Reuben. 1890 John. 1893 Thos. W. 1891 Frank. 1827 Abram S. HALES. HARDY. HARVARD. 1827 Henry P. 1874 William F. 1875 D. H. 1893 W. V. 1844 Benjamin H. HALL. 1875 Rufus. HATTAWAY 1845 Alex. A. F. 1831 Boiling. 1841 Samuel. 1881 Walter H. HARGRAVES. 1879 John B. HA WES. 1860 Alex. A. F. 1849 John M. 1849 Robert C. 1836 Elijah. 1827 George. HARMON. 1888 W. M. HAWKINS. 1849 William W. 1852 James A. 1853 Burwell P. 1859 William G. 1876 Benjamin M. 1872 C. E. 1886 Benj. F. 1890 B. W. HARPER. HAYES. 1869 Benj. H., Jr. HALSEY. 1842 John H, 1811 James. 1871 Benj. H., Jr. 1893 A. 0. 1860 James E. 1828 John R. 1869 Osborne C. 1893 E. L. 1889 Donald. 1852 Leroy W. 1870 Walter B. HAMILTON. 1890 Alfred S. 1890 Zach. C. 1871 Walter B. 1807 Thomas N. HARRINGTON. HEAD. 1870 A. W. 1836 James S. 1890 Alfred T. 1860 James J. 1871 Charles D. 1842 Thomas A. 1894 John M. HEARD. 1876 Robert P. 1854 David E. B. HARRIS. 1829 George F. 1877 Daniel P. 1877 James S., Jr. 1804Jeptha V. 1852 James L. 1880 W Albert, HAMMOND. 1805 Stephen W. 1854 George E. 1890 Thos. L. l852^Nathaniel J. 1806 Early. 1857 Robert W. HILLYER. 1853 Edward S. 1828]Iverson L. 1871 J. T. 1825 John F. 1869 William R. 1825 James W. HEIDT. 1828 Junius. 1870 John D. 1825 William L. 1861 John W. 1829 Shaler G. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1866 Carlton. BORTON. BUMPHRIES. JACOBS. 1893 George. 1892 M. <'. 1861 Robert. sm; Eugene J. 1II\ ES. 1892 0. B. 1861 Samuel. JANES. 1824 Richard K. 1IOSKIXSOX. 1893 John I). L886 David IF HINTON. 1876 .lame- L. 1893 Joseph *\ . !s:$7 Palsemon L. 1X71 W. B. HOUGHTON. BUNNICUTT. JARRELL. 1^77 James C. 1830 Robert B. L883 George F. !^^ Joseph <;. 1884 k. k. HOUSER. BUNT. JARRETT. BIXSON. L880 Onan M. 1825 John J. 1886 William A. L888 James A. HOWARD. 1830 William H. JEFFERSON. BODGSOH . 1 SI 1 John II. IIFXTER. 1S74 Wesley. 1868 Roberl B. 181 1 Milton. 1872 Edward. JENNINGS. 1852 William C. 1875 Joseph M. 1880 Charles W. BURT. 1892 E. K. L846 Robert R. L846 George M. T. 1893 Barry. 1 >>.">:: Robert X. 1856 John T. JENKINS, BODGE. 1860 W. c. 1871 Joel. 1>7<) Hudson A. 1875 R. M. is7.") Robert s. 1891 G. L. JOHXSOX. L876 M. T. 1877 William M. BUTCHINGS. 1832 James. BODGES. 1887 David. 1870 John. 1834 Hersehel V. 1887 Walter L. HOWELL. HUTCH I XS. 1839 Paul. HODO. 1871 C A. 1S86 X. L. 1846 Abda. L858 Augustus P. 1881 James J. HUTCH IX SOX. 1848 Calvin E. L859 D.C. 1883 Clarke. 1882 Joseph J. 1848 Woodford A. HOGAN. 1888 Albert. HUTCHISON. 1852 Jdlien T. 1857 Ridgewav W. HOWZE. L870 J. B. 1853 Andrew J. HOGG.' 1869 Augustus C. I LEGES. I860 Winder F. 1876 Jarrell X. BOYLE. 1874 G. A. 1867 Malcolm. 1876 John W. 1870 Samuel R. INGLES. 1870 Robert 11. 1892 R. X. HOYT. 1833 F)aniel. 1871 J. G. HOLLAND. 1846 Thomas A. IXGRAHAM. 1873 J.L. L883 R. X. 1850 William D. 1875 J. 1. 1874 William E. HOLDEX. L853 Henry F. IRVIX. 1884 R. Harvey. 1885 Horace M. 1877 Thomas. 1838 Isaiah T. 1887 Green S. HOLDER. HUFF. IRWIX. 1887 Robert L; 1890 John X. 1873 Thomas D. 1804 Jared. 1888 Albert S. 1889 T. L. BUGGINS. 1804 Thomas. 1888 Barton B. HO L LEY. 1862 Alsev. 1815 John. 1890 A. E. 1877 Robert M. BOLLIS. HITCHES. 1888 F. M. HUGULEY. IVERSON. 1835 Robert. 1893 Green F. JOXES. 1812 Richard. 1868 Benjamin P. 1875 William T. JACK. 1812 Weldon. HOLMES. 1878 John J. 1822 William H. 1822 Robert A. 1836 Adam T. HULL. JACKSON. 1826 William E. BOLT. 1814 Asbury. lsoi William H. 1836 John. 181 1 Thaddeus G. 1815 Benry. 1804 James. 1338 John H. 18-20 Pulaski 8. 1838 William H. 1834 Henry M. 1839 Joseph B. 1824 Bines. 1842 Benry, .)v. is:;; James. 1841 Charles B. 1854 Pe vi on C. 1847 George G. 1866 Henry. 1844 Henry IF 1854 Thaddeus G. 1854 John II. lsc,s Davenport. L845 William L. 1854 William F. 1856 James M. 1870 William E. 1846 Elijah C BOLTZCLAW. 1872 Robert X. 1866 August ii- F. 1869 Robert T. 1878 Jane- M. ls7(» Walter M. 1870 R. M. 1872 J. F. L847 William B. is:, 2 Andrew M. 1853 JohE E. HOOD. 1*85 Asbury. 1874 W. M. 1854 Randal. 1881 C. J. 1891 Marion MeH. 1876 Jam.- F. 1856 Samuel J. BORSLEY. BUMBER. Is7^ George H. isr>7 Benoni F. 1892 J. s. 1858 Robert O. 1886 Tom Cobb. 1868 Otis. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1879 T. J. 1876 Bartee W. 1879 AlexK. 1879 Lewis H. 1885 Chas.E. 1885 N.B. 188(5 Arthur W 1890 8. Percy. 1891 W.R. JORDAN. 1844 Benjamin. 1852 Walton G. 1857 Augustus H. 1861 J. T. 1869 S. KEITH, 1875 D. R. KELLY. 1892 W. Troy. 1893 J. V. KENDALL. 1840 Jeremiah. KENDRICK. 1838 Jones J. 1854 William G. KENNEDY. 1884 Jasper J. KENNEY. 1828 Joseph A. KENNON. 1888 W.A. KERR. 1841 Samuel E. 1853 William H. 1871 James L, O. KETCHUM. 1833 Golden R. KEY. 1870 C. A. 1871 C.T. KNEELAND. 1831 Hugh W. KIMBALL. 1860 N. C. 1892 John C. KING. 1841 Ulysses B. 1843 James F. 1845 Charles B. 1850 William. 1853 William H.M. 1860 Roswell. 1871 Stephen C. 1891 Walker. KINNARD. 1888 W. C. KIN NE BREW. 1859 E. C. 1852 J, II. 1883 O. E. KIRK PATRICK 1843 Samuel D. KITCHENS. 1885 T. N. KLINE. 1894 Charles D. KNEECE. 1881 William L. KNIGHT. 1888 Lucien L. KNOX. 1841 William W. KNOTTS. 1877 Darling J. KOLLOCK. 1868 William W. 1868 J. F. KONTZ. 1887 Ernest C. L'ACEE. 1827 Erasmus. LAMAR. 1806 Thomas. 1826Ezekiel. 1828 John. 1843 LaFayette. 1852 Lucius M. 1856 John. 1872 Andrew J. 1886 George W. LAMB. 1889 J. H. LAMBDIN. 1878 W. W. LAMKIN. 1882 Ebb.T. LAMPKIN. 1848 William L. 1848 Winfield S. LANDRUM. 1851 George T. 1876 L. M. LANE. 1859 L. A. 1878 Samuel T. 1888 William T. 1892 Julian. LANGDO. 1885 P. D. LANGSTON. 1816 Ethelred. LANKFORD. 1861 E. T. LANIER. 1891 Reuben R. 1894 Jefferson D. LaROCHE. 1843 James. LARY. 1850 Wash'gt'n T LAW. 1836 Joseph. 1846 Henry M. 1855 Eben S. LAWRENCE. 1829 Samuel T. 1893 Sam. 1890 A. A. 1892. R. DeT. LAWSON. 1889 Hal O. LAWTON. 1877 Alex. R., Jr. LEA. 1828 Henry C. LeCONTE. 1832 William. 1838 John. 1841 Joseph. 1841 Louis. 1853 James N. 1868 Louis E. LeHARDY. 1874 Henry. LEE. 1836 William H. 1860 William H. LENOIR. 1854 Madison L. LESTER. 1880 Thomas V. 1894 Pharos R. LEWIS. 1823 John S. 1828 Aaron L. 1837 David W. 1892 J. Fred. 1893 M. A. LILLIBRIDGE. 1834 John O. H. LINTON. 1869 Henry H. 1878 Wyche W. LIPSCOMB. 1866 Francis A. 1873 Andrew A. LITTLE. 1882 Walter H. 1888 John D. LLOYD. 1872 W. PI. 0. LOFTON. 1846 William A. 1883 J. T. LONG. 1835 Crawford W. 1845 Henry R. J. 1854 Nimrod E. 1870 Edward C. LOWE. 1881 R. Fletcher. LOWRY. 1836 William S. 1838 William R. 1878 A. C. LUMPKIN. 1828 William B. 1832 John W. 1848 William W. 1854 Edward P. 1860 Frank. 1860 Robert C. 1866 Samuel. 1871 Edward K. 1875 Joseph H. LUNDY. 1843 William. LUTES. 1886 ,lacob M. LYNDON. 1893 Lamar. LYON. 1869 Thomas R McALPIN. 1883 Henry McBRIDE. 1834 William H. 1836 Thomas L. McOALL. 1883 S. A. McCALLA. 1841 George R. 1872 John W. McCARROLL. 1888 Arthur. McCARTER. 1842 James R. Mccarty. 1870 William S. McCAY. 1861 Robert, C ITALOGUE DN1VBRSITY OF GEORGIA, SfcLEOD. L848 Richard II. McCLESKEY. 1866 James R. McCORD. 1874 Charles Z. 1879 Lewis I'. IfcOOY. 1837 George W. M« ( I I.I.oll. 1858 Antonv. McCURDY. 1879 William J. McCUTCHEN. 1894 Cicero D. Mc DANIEL. 1886 Sanders. McELVEY. 1848 Lawson G. M< ■KLVOY. 1830 William. 1844 Archibald G M< FARFAND. 1878 T. Foster. McGEHEE. 1852 John B. 1887 Charles C. McGOUGH. 1855 Robert C. 1889 Robert. McGRUDER. 182(5 Thomas. McGregor. 1894 Thomas A. Mc IN TYRE. 1869 Archibald T 1869 Hugh J. 1877 W. Reiner. 1877 M. Lowrey. 1878 Daniel T. McIVER. 1848 Augustus M M< KIRRFN. 1868 Martin V. McKK.XKY. 1827 William R. M< KINFFY. 1828 Ebenezer D. 1880 William. 1834 Charles G. M( KIXXK. 1880 Felix G. 1857 Barna. M ( K 1 X X E X' . 1874 B.C. M< KITTRK K. L836 John. M< I- FAX. 1883 fm. Archer M. FFMAN. 1886 D. C M( FFXDOX. 1875 Samuel Gr. McMICHAEL. L869 John C. McMillan. 1852 John. Mc MULLEN. 1I888 James P. is;, [Alexander M 1861 Thomas X. 1870 R. T. McNFER. 1889 R.E.L. McRAE. 1881 A listen Lee. McTYER. 1857 William A. McWHORTER. 1836 William. 1851 William P. 1861 J. II. 1875 John A. 1877 Hamilton. McWILLIAMS. 1872 John L. MAO OX. 1861 G. E. MADDEN. 1894 John R. MALLARD. 1882 John R. 1886 Thomas S. 1841 John L. 1849 Robert Q. MAFFFTTE. IS 41 Gideon A. 1877 Eli M. MA LONE. 1881 John T. MALOY. 1881 John K. MARKS. 1858 James. MARSHALL. 1815 Jabez P. 1877 J. A. MARTIN. 1823 James ('. 1836 Martin II. 1890 Vwi\ R. is'.n Gabriel P. MASON. 1822 Wiley W. 1858 Valerius C. 1872 J. M. massfx<;aff. 1852 Henry T. MATTHEWS. L805 Gabriel. 1815 Archer F. 1888 Alexander II 1855 Jerome ('. 1876 W. J. '1881 John P. 11891 J. F. 1898 W. J. MATTOX. 1856 William IT. MAYER. ;1827 Serenus A. MAYNARD. 1890 Robt. L. HAYiXE. 1880 James M. MAYOR . 1825 Adrian N. MAXWELL. 1855 J. Audley. MEADOR. 1886 Richard D. MEADOW. 1881 David W. MEANS. 1825 'lenry H. 1833 Allen R 1849 George W. MFCHLIX. 1821 Robert W. MEIGS. 1807 Samuel W. 1809 Charles D. MELDRIM. 1868 Peter W. MELL. 1861 Renjamin. 1871 P. h. 1878 Thomas S. 1884 John D. 1886 Charles T. 1888 James C. MERCER 1888 George A. MERR1 WETHER. 1807 James. 1808 William. 1823 Tbomas J. 1826 Kichard H. 1826 James A. is;; | William L. L856 Matthew. MERRITT. 1S57 Thomas A. 1885 J. M. 1891 G. A. MERRILL. 1880 Jos. Hansell. MICHAEL. 1878 Moses G. MICOU. 1825 William C. MIKELL. 1871 T. K. MILBURN". 1873 Percy W. MILLEDGE. 1834 John T. MILLER. 1855 Elbert . 1877 G. T. 1888 Brick S. MILLS. 1891 M. M. MILNER. 1837 Richard A. 1873 T. C. 1880 Robert W. 1887 H Key. MILTON. 1849 William H. 1891 J. MIMS. 1868 William R. MITCHELL. 1810 William. 1825 William L. 1827 Giles. 1828 Archelus H. 1837 Thomas A. 1849 Hugh N. 1851 Cicero A. 1854 John F. 1854 Thomas H. 1858 William T. 1859 A . S . 1860 William D. 1860 S.C. 1868 A. L. 1869 O. E. 1875 Henry B. 1876 Robt.Emmett. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 1876 W. D. i MORTON. NEWTON. OVERSTREET . 1877 Henry B. 1824 John H . 1811 Ebenezer. 1893 E. K. 1885 Eugene M. MOSELY. 1820 Elizur L. OSBORNE. 1891 Frank. 1826 Benjamin T. 1828 George M. 1885 W. W. 1891 G. F. 1826 William H. R. 1841 Henry. OWEN. MOBLEY. 1836 Thomas H. 1841 John N. 1826 Augustin. 1875 J. H. 1838 Albert. 1841 William II. PACE. 1894 John H. 1840 William H. 1853 Edward P. 1861 James M. MOFFETT. 1848 Benjamin T. 1856 Edwin D. PAINE. 1851 Thomas G. 1848 AdielS. 1871 Thomas C. 1826 William H. MOLLOY. 1859 Thomas. 1871 Ebenezer. 28 Edward C . 1811 Joseph M. 1861 Benjamin R. NILES. PALMER. MONTGOMERY. 1878 Richard J. 1860 L . O . 1838 Benjamin M. 1832 Telemach's F. MOSS. 1873 C. A. 1845 Edward P . 1873 Edward W . 1846 Thomas B . NISBET. 1878 W. L. O. MOODEY. 1848 James 0. 1816 Miles C. 1881 James H. 1849 Sempronius. 1849 Tingnell L. 1821 Eugenius A . PARK. MOON. MOULTRIE. 1831 James A. 1851 John W. 1874 J. M. 1828 Briggs H . 1839 Thomas C . 1857 James F. 1888 John B . MO YE. 1876 Junius W. 1892 W. G. 1893 E . T. 1884 Robert L. 1876 D. B. 1893 Orville A. MOORE. 1894 T. Ralph. NIX. PARKER. 1827Benning B. MUNROE . 1884 Charlie M . 1873 M. L. 1829 Richard D. 1872 D. NIXON. 1879 Cadar S. 1831 Thomas J. MURDOCH. 1881 Gwinn H. 1879 John F. 1842 Peyton . 1869 Samuel S . NOBLE. PARKS. 1851 George. MURPHEY. 1880 B. H. 1861V. A. S. 1851 Charles D . 1869 Edward M. NORMAN. 1868 William F. 1856 James W. 1872 A. A. 1841 William H. 1874 J. G. 18/6 Henry P. 1877 O. A. 1849 George W. PARSONS. 188-2 John P. MURRAY. NORTH. 1869 William H. 1888 John B. 1860 Thomas A. 1858 John R. PAYNE . 1888 Wilmer L. MURROW. NORTON. 1872 Benjamin F. 1890 Eugene B. 1882 John. 1844 JohnR. PEACOCK. 1890 Robert L. MYERS. 1855 Joseph J . 1883 D. C. 1894 Noel McH. 1868 Herbert P. NORWOOD. 1887 Wesley. MOREL AND. 1874 Frederick T. 1882 Stephen N. 1891 J. H. 1829 Isaac N . MYNATT. NUCKOLLS. 1892 Z. Y. 1874 A. T. 1890 Pryor L . 1849 Thomas J . PEAVEY. MORENO. NABERS. NUNNALLY. 1860 George L. 1893 Hal. C. 1841 Zachariah L . 1859 Gustavus A. PEEPLES. MORGAN. 1847 Robert G. NALLY. OGDEN.. 1846 Reuben P. 1893 Rufus B . NAPIER. 1893 Monroe G. OLIVER. PENDLETON. 1870 J. A. MORRIS. 1870 J. A. 1874 VV . S . 1875 M. L. 1876 Martin L. 1877Sylvanus. 1885 John. 1879 Joseph H. NEAL. 1810 Henry. 1853- Thomas J. 1855 James H. 1871 R v W H. NEISLER. 1849 Shelton. 1849 Simeon. 1858 James M. 1870 J. T. O'KELLY. 1886 James W. PERDUE . 1840 William J . PERRY. I860 A. C. 1882 T. B. 1884 John P. 1886 Charles E. 1824 Hugh M. NESBITT. O'NEAL. PERSONS. 1893 N. A. 1807 Joseph. 1855 Henry. MORROW. 1827 Hugh W. 1810 Henry. 1893 G. O. 1836 HughE. NEV1TT. ORR. PETERS. 1843 James. 1868 John J. 1880 G. J., Jr. 1872 Ralph. CATALOGUE I'MVKRHITY OK GEORGIA. I'llARR. 1882 M. A., Jr. PHILLIPS. 1801 Benj Z. PHILPOTT. 1854 Peyton B. 1856 (ieor^e W. PHIXIZY . LSllJohn. 1838 Ferdinand . 1839 John. 1845 Thomas I',. 1851 James H . 1853 Charles H. 1868 Ferdinand B. 1872 Leonard. 1882 II H. 1883 J. H. 1884 John. PICKETT . 1891 B. F. PIEKCE. 1829 George F. PINKARD. 1833 James S. W. PINNEY 1828 John B . PITMAN. 1882 J. H. PLYER 1889 C.H. POLHILL. 1889 Hope C. 1890 J. G. POLLOCK. 1884 P. D. 1891 George D . POXD . 1845 Thomas G. POPE. 1825 Henry J . 1825 Benjamin C 1840 Joseph D . 1849 Franklin A . 1849 Benjamin H 1859 John D . 1881 M. Cooper. 1882 John D. 1889 William H. POTTLE. 1843 Edward H . 1884 J . E . 1887 Joseph. POTTS . 1850 Francis M . 10 POU. 1851 Edward W. POULLAIN. L890 X.Lamar. POUND. 1884 J . M . POWER. 1874 William R. POWERS. 1833 Abner P . 1886 Theodore D . 1887 William B. PURSE . 1S78 Robert L. PUTNAM 1807 George. QUARTERMAN 1841 John W. 1857 Keith A. 1888 William H. QUINX. 1885 H. C. RADNEY . 1881 William L. RAGAN. 1835 Erasmus L. RAGLAND. 11858 George G. RAGS DALE. 1870 William M RAINES . 11861 William J. RAMBO. 1860 John D . RAMSAY. 1886 M . F . RANDAL . 1860 H. J. RANDLE. 1871 George G. 1873 R. H. RANDOLPH. 1816 Richard H. RAY. 1888 L.L REDD. 1850 Charles A. RENEAU. 1883 R. R. REECE. 1860 J. H. REED. 1888 T. W. REESE . 1834 Augustus. 1852 Anderson W. 1860 Crawford J . REID. L832 JohnR. 1850 William A. 1855 John A. 1860 James M . 1873 S. Alonzo. 1876 Alexander H 1890 W. Dennis. RESPESS. 1852 JohnR. REYNOLDS. 1825 Reuben Y. 1826 William H. 1851 Reuben O. RHODES. 1868 J. W. RICE. 1826 Hezekiah W RICHARDSON. 1861 Cosmo B. 1870 M. M. 1880 C. C. RIDEN. 1850 M. W. RIDLEY . 1816 Charles C. RILEY . 1849 GeorgeS. ,1853 Jacob. 1877 Alonzo C . RIPLEY. 1884 T. J. RITCH. 1888 JohnL. ROBERTS. 1823 William. 1858 William R. 1859 Joseph M. ROBERTSON. 1851 Lemuel B. 1869 J . L . ROBINSON. 1831 Todd. 1861 John J . 1883 V. B. ROBSON. 1870 John A. ROCKWELL. 1889 W. O. D. ROXEY. 1870 Henry C . ROQUEMORE . 1870 J. W. ROSS. J1883 John P. ROUXTREE. 1875 Daniel W. 1890 B. L. ROWLAND. 1884 J. N. RUCKER. 1844 John. |1868 JepthaH. 1872 Tinsley W. RUDICIL. 1886 C. C. RUSH. 1861 George W. RUSK, 1876 Thomas R. RUSSELL. 1868 R. A. 1878 James G. 1879 R. B. 1890 Edward G. RUTHERFORD, 1804 Robert. 1804 Williams . 1823 John G. 1827 John 1831 Samuel . 1838 Williams. 1860 John C. 1893 Sam. RYALS. 1883 W. M. SAFFOLD . 1831 Joseph B. 1840 Thomas P. SALE. 1878 George G. SAMPLE. 1889 R. L. SANDERS . 1876 W. Olin. 1 881 James R . 1881 John R. SANFORD. lS38Shelton P. 1890 D. S. SAX^KEY. 1823 Richard T. 1825 John. S ATTERLEE . 1830 John. SAUNDERS. 1833 Henry. 1871 J. S. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. SAYE. 1834 James H . SCHELL. 1884 James W. SCHOF1ELD. 1868 J. E. 1874 Alonzo D . 1874 s. W. SCOTT. 1809 Robert. 1821 Alfred Y . 1823 James. 1829 Thomas F . 1855 Dunlap. 1873 Joseph D. SCREVEN. 1824 James O. 1844 William. 1846 Benjamin. 1852 Thomas F. SEALS. 1859 Richard D. SEIDELL. 1871 Charles W. SELMAN. 1886 Geo. C. SEMMES. 1828 Andrew G. 1830 Albert G. SEMPLE. 1826 Addison R. SEWELL. 1886 Henry L. SEYMOUR. 1861 W. D. SHACKLEFORD. 1890 F. C. 1891 Thos. J. SHANNON. 1873 J. R. SHARPE- 1838 James D. SHATTU< K. 1886 James P. SHAW. 1890 W. J. SHEATS. 1861 John N. SHEPPERD. 1889 W . W. SHEFFIELD. 1890 R. H. 1891 O. H. SHERRILL. 1827 David L. SHIELDS. 1838 Patrick H. 1878 James B SHORTER. 1837 John G. SIBLEY 1892 Samuel H. SIMMONS. 1871 Edward G. SIMS. 1823 James S . 1825 Ferdinand. 1853 Frederick W 1856 William H. SIMPSON. 1877 Robert A. SINGLETARY. 1889 John B. SINGLETON. 1848 Joseph J. SKELTON. 1839 J . H. SLADE. 1893 Lester C. SLAUGHTER. 1851 John N. SLATON. 1873 W. M. 1886 John M. SMALL. 1872 D. A. SMITH. 1829 William W. 1835 William G. 1857 John F. 1861 George G. 1870 Junius B. B. 1872 Abner T. 1875 P . G. 1877 Albert D. 1877 Moses M. 1879 William E. 1882 BurtOD. 1885 R L. J. 1887 W. Frank. 1888 Victor L. 1890 J. R. L. 1890 W. N. 1890 J. E. 1891 J. D. 1892 Harmon H. 1893 T. C. 1894 C. H. SMYTHE. 1830 James M. SNIDER. 1851 James I. SNOOK, 1886 P. H. SOLOMON. 1870 N. M. SPAIN. 1869 F. J. SPEER. 1839 Alexander. 1869 Emory. SPENCE. 1890 William P. SPENCER. 1867 Samuel. STAFFORD. 1894 E. J. STALLINGS. 1890 W. L. ! STANDIFER, jl876 W. B. STANFORD. 1889 L. W. STANLEY. 1855 Julius A. 1879 John G. 1882 Thomas P. STANSILL. 1885 W, K. STARNES. 1831 Ebenezer. 1875 Hugh N. STEED. 1888 W. E. STEELE. 1880 William H. STELLING. 1894 John D. STEPHENS. 1832 Alexander H 1843 Linton. 1860 John A. 1894 Alex. W. STERLING. 894 D. S. STEVENS, 1840 William C. STEWART. 1889 E. C. 1893 Nat B STOKES. 1843 William Y. 1848 William A, STONE, 1886 Frank L. STONE Y. 1828 John. STOVALL. 1847 Boiling A. 1821 Joseph H. 1854 George T. 1861 Francis M. 1875 Pleasant A. STRAHAN. 1883 C. M. STREET. 1885 George R. STRICKLAND. 1879 John J. STROHECKER. 1873 Henry F. STRONG. 1809 Creed T. 1835 Samuel M. 1842 Elisha. 1870 J. B. 1894 H C. STUBBS. 1894 John V. STURGES. 1875 William W. SUMMERLIN. 1834 Michael C. 1870 M.D. C. M. 1875 Robert L. SUMMERS. 1880 O. H. J. SWAIN. ■1888 R. V. SWANN. 1871 J. J. SWANSON. 1869 Benjamin G. SWEARINGEN. 1861 John H. SWEAT. 1893 L. L. SWIFT . 1872 Charles J. TABOR. 1871 Brittain H. TAIT. 1810 James. TALLEY. 1892 J. N. TANKERSLY. 1857 James H. TANNER. 1875 Henry P. TARVER. 1848 Frederick R CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. TAYLOR. 1831 William. 1847 Exekiel II. 1850 Richard D. B I860 Robert G . 185J James. is.')-- Joseph. 18i>3 James. TEXXILLE. 1860 William A. TERKY. 1875 Carlisle. THOMAS. 1808 Alexander. 1832 Henry P. 1832 Stephen. 1^'..~> James D. 1835 John J. A. 1839 Robert. 1852 John L. 1860 Edward J. 1860 John H. 1860 Robert J. 1868 W. Bailey. 1868 Wm AY. 1nT4 L. W. ]s7fi Geo Dudley 1888 AY. E. THIGPEX. 1882 J. L. THOMPSOx\ 1852 Benjamin F. 1859 Ivev F. lstil Wells. 1868 Edgar. 1872 Benjamin F. 1876 Eugene 1877 William H. 1.887 Ben Hill. THRASHER. 1876 Barton E. THORNTON. 1848. Beverly A. THURMOND. 1806 Roland. THWEAT. 1811 James. TIDWELL. 1894 Charles R. TILLEY. 1848 John M. TOLBERT. 1855 Joseph R. TOOLEY. 1872 John T. TOOMBS. 1868 Robert TOMPKINS. 1884 M. J. TORKENCE, 1S25 Albert P. TOWXES. 1844 James H. TRACY. 1S51 Edward D. TRAMMELL. 1S70 W. D. 1878 Paul B. TREX T CHARD 1879 George AY. TRIBBLE. 1891 Sam. J. TRIMBLE. 1870 A. E. TRIPPE. 1822 Turner H. 1829 John B. 1839 Robert P. 1873 R. B. TROUP. 1835 George M. TUCK. 1 Henry C. TUCKER. 1876 H. H., Jr. 1--:; William B, TUMLIN. 1860 Samuel S. 1872 George G, TURMAN 353 James M, TURNER. 1843 Joel L. 1861 Benjamin 1876 J. Harvey. 1885. W. W. F. 1889 John C . TUKNIPSEED. 1861 F. H. TURNBULL. 1866 J. J. TURPIN. 1854 Jesse M. TWIGGS. 1861 H. D. D. TWITTY. 1875 C. R. 1887 F. E. 1889 F. S. TYE. 1876 John L. M. UPSHAW. 1886 W. S. 1886 E. P. ri-sox. 1884 Frank L. 1890 Stephen C. USRY. 1876 P.M. VANCE. 1830 George McD VAN EPPS. 1869 Howard. VAN HOOSE. 1882 A. W. | VARNADOE. 1836 Samuel M . 11889 S. M. VASON. ,1829 AYilliam J. 1836 Jesse M. 1837 David A. 1842 John C . VERNON. 1840 Thomas O. P. YIXTSOXT. 1875 Thomas P. VINES. 1870 G. W. WADDELL. 1822 James P. 1823 Isaac AY . 1823 William W. 1829 John N . 1852 William H . 1853 James D . 1862 John O. 1870 Isaac W . WADE. 1854 Dennis Iff. 1883 E. M. 1883 Warner L . 1886 Pevton L. WAGGONER . 1885 D. W. WALKER. 1825 George J . S . 1825 James B . 1825 William E 1825 A\ r illiam X. 1826 Isaac R. 1828 Austin Iff. 1834 Francis J . 1844 Dickerson H 1848 James S. 1850 John AY 1850 ThackerA'. 1853 James W. 1854 Thomas W. 1855 David A. l.s.,1 George C 1872 William B. 1872 B. Saunders. 1876 Henry B. 1877 WilliamS. 1884 John G. 1885 O. L . J . 1887 Charles H. 1887 J. Henry. 1890 Joel P. AYALL ACE . 1894 James Q. WALLIS. 1888 AY. P. WALLER. 1871 J. E WALTERS. 1869 John W . WATERS. 1887 Glenn. WALTON. 1854 Jesse A. 1856 William T. 1861 R.J. 1861 W . S • 1878 Benton H J. A. AYARD . Benjamin F. Thomas A . C A. F M. 1882 1822 1867 1886 1889 1889 W. R. E. WARE. 1825 Edward R. L827 Robert A. 1846 John M. 1846 James W. 1861 James M. 11871 Henry E. 1881 George WARING 1849 William R WARREN. 1846 James W. 1852 Josiah L. 1871 George AY. R. 1893 AY. P. 1894 Louis B. WASH. 1855 William D. AVASHIXGTON 1882 Hugh A'. CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. WATKINS. 1842 JohnM. 1885 T. A. WOODBRIDGE. 1823 Claiborne A. 1843 Thomas W. 1886 J. L. 1835 Grafton D. 1824 Thomas A. 1869 James T. 1886 William P. WOODFIN. 1889 E. W. WHITEHEAD. 1886 James F. 1882 W. G., Jr., 1893 Newton. 1806 James. WILLIAMSON. WOODRUFF. WATTS. 1806 John. 1804 William. 1808 James. 1829 John B . 1830 Amos. 1861 W. W. 1869. Henry W. WAY. 1835 John H. 1886 George H. WOODWARD. 1845 Nathaniel J. 1836 Richard M. WILLIFORD. 1870 A. T. 1890 W. S. 1857 John P. C. 1888 Quincy L. 1877 Bliss. WEATHERLY. 1860 Grattan. 1890 J. H. WOOLFOLK. 18(50 John. 1873 James. WILLINGHAM. 1854 Richard F. WEAVER. 1888 G. A. 1870 Robert J. 1870 Richard S. 1877 Seaborn L. WHITFIELD. WILLIS. WOOTEN. WEBB. 1869 B. 1848 Thomas R. 1886 William E. 1870 John R. 1871 Robert. WILSON. WORRILL. WEEMS . WHITMAN. 1856 Lucien S. 1875 James H. 1892 E. F. 1868 Henry A. 1868 S. F. 1875 William C. WELLBORN. WHITNER. 1885 M. M. 1881 Williamson. 1889 C. J. 1839 Benjamin F. 1886 G. Neal. WRAY. WELLS. 1847 Joseph N. WIMBERLY. 1860 Thomas. 1855 EliabH. 1853 John C . 1830 Frederick D. WRIGLEY. 1861 Harrv. WHITTLE, 1887 Warren W. 1894 Arthur. WEST. 1872 A. P. WIMBUSH. WRIGHT. 1835 Charles W. 1873 William A. 1869 JohnT. 1849 John M. 1842 James N . WIGGINS. WINGFIELD. 1875 Boykin. 1874 Fort. 1831 William W. 1811 John L . 1885 M. R. 1862 Chas. N. WILCOX. 1825 Edward H. 1888 F. W. WETHINGTON. 1880 A. A. 1835 Junius A. WYATT. 1871 Fletcher P. 1880 C. DeWitt. 1831 AugustinS. 1882 E W. WHATLEY. 1883 Harris R. WINN. WYNNE. 1845 George C. 1886 Cecil H. 1838 Peter. 1872 William. 1886 Edgar T. WILCOXON. 1840 William W. YANCEY. WHEATLEY. 1885 P. S. 1841 Thomas S. 1836 Benjamin C. 1890 Walter K. 1889 A. C 1860 L. J. 1868 Hamilton. WHELCHEL. WILEY. WINSHIP. YOUNG. 1890 J. E. 1824 Oliver. 1893 Blanton. 1854 William H. WHIPPLE. 1877 Robert C. WITHERSPOON. 1869 A. C. 1885 W. H. WILKINS. 1877 John E. 1869 Thomas W. 1887 U. V. 1836 Joseph C. WITT. 1871 J. Ernest. WPIIGHAM. 1856 Joseph H. 1825 Middleton. 1871 Philip K. 1853 Roger L. WILLIAMS . WITTICH. 1822 Lucilius L. 1823 Ernest L. 1880 J. Walton. WHITAKER. 1837 Albert. 1894 George. 1893 D. B. WHITE. 1840 William. 1841 Jonathan W. YOUNGBLOOD. 1892 Dudley. 1827 Thomas B. 1848 William D . WOFFORD. YOW. 1827 William. 1872 A. M. 1842 John W. 1894 S. Ben. 1830 David. 1874 JohnC. WOOD. <3l 1831 William P. 1880 William J. 1849 Richard H. 1836 George O. K. 1884 James R. 1859 John Y. CATALOGUE DNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. SUMMARY. Graduates of all degrees at Athens 2,018 Doctors of Medicine 692 Whole Dumber of Alumni -2.70:, Recipients of Honorary Degrees 1 11) V. ^ ; ■:>\l