centennial_celebration
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====== Centennial Celebration ====== | ====== Centennial Celebration ====== | ||
Trinity College celebrated its 100th year of existence in May 1923 with a variety of events and activities which took place over the course of several days. Students, faculty, staff, administrators, | Trinity College celebrated its 100th year of existence in May 1923 with a variety of events and activities which took place over the course of several days. Students, faculty, staff, administrators, | ||
- | The first events of the Commencement and Centennial Celebration were the [[class_day|Class Day]] exercises, held the afternoon of Friday, June 8. The speaker was chairman of the Centennial Drive Committee, Robert C. Buell, who was made an honorary member of the Class of 1923 that day. The history of the 1923 class was read aloud, favorite professors were elected, football was voted to be the best activity on campus, and the greatest worries outside of studies in college were voted to be “women, dates, the price of liquor and money.” Awards were given out to exemplary athletes in all sports represented by the class. There was also the revival of the [[lemon_squeezer|lemon squeezer]], presented to the freshman class of 1926 as a surprise event on behalf of the [[medusa|Medusa Society]]. | + | The first events of the [[commencement|Commencement]] and Centennial Celebration were the [[class_day|Class Day]] exercises, held the afternoon of Friday, June 8. The speaker was chairman of the Centennial Drive Committee, Robert C. Buell, who was made an honorary member of the Class of 1923 that day. The history of the 1923 class was read aloud, favorite professors were elected, football was voted to be the best activity on campus, and the greatest worries outside of studies in college were voted to be “women, dates, the price of liquor and money.” Awards were given out to exemplary athletes in all [[athletics|sports]] represented by the class. There was also the revival of the [[lemon_squeezer|lemon squeezer]], presented to the freshman class of 1926 as a surprise event on behalf of the [[medusa|Medusa Society]]. |
- | Saturday, June 9 was “Alumni Day,” starting with prayer in the [[chapel|Chapel]], | + | Saturday, June 9 was “Alumni Day,” starting with prayer in the [[chapel|Chapel]], |
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Sunday, June 10 was billed “Commemoration Day,” beginning with Holy Communion in the Chapel. Afterwards, an Open Air Memorial Service was held on campus. Among the military and veteran groups present were two ceremonial honor guards, the Governor’s Foot Guard and the Putnam Phalanx, as well as veteran groups from the American [[civil_war|Civil War]], the Spanish-American War, and World War I. | Sunday, June 10 was billed “Commemoration Day,” beginning with Holy Communion in the Chapel. Afterwards, an Open Air Memorial Service was held on campus. Among the military and veteran groups present were two ceremonial honor guards, the Governor’s Foot Guard and the Putnam Phalanx, as well as veteran groups from the American [[civil_war|Civil War]], the Spanish-American War, and World War I. | ||
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- | {Major General James G. Harboard, Chief of Staff to General Pershing during the Great War, delivered a piercing address on the subject of post-war apathy and communist sympathizing, | ||
The undergraduates performed the Presentation of Colors in memory of Trinity men who died in service during the century’s wars. Later in the afternoon, a memorial clock was presented to the College [[library|Library]] by the Alpha Chi Rho fraternity in honor of the Reverend Paul Ziegler, a graduate of the Class of 1872 and the founder of the fraternity at Trinity. A portrait of the Reverend Dr. John James McCook painted by James Goodwin McManus was also presented to the College that afternoon. | The undergraduates performed the Presentation of Colors in memory of Trinity men who died in service during the century’s wars. Later in the afternoon, a memorial clock was presented to the College [[library|Library]] by the Alpha Chi Rho fraternity in honor of the Reverend Paul Ziegler, a graduate of the Class of 1872 and the founder of the fraternity at Trinity. A portrait of the Reverend Dr. John James McCook painted by James Goodwin McManus was also presented to the College that afternoon. | ||
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- | There were also nine [[honorary_degrees|honorary degrees]] awarded at the Centennial Commencement, | + | There were also 10 [[honorary_degrees|honorary degrees]] awarded at the Centennial Commencement, |
Following the commencement ceremony, a parade of alumni, undergraduates, | Following the commencement ceremony, a parade of alumni, undergraduates, |
centennial_celebration.1725049671.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/08/30 20:27 by bant06