centennial_fund
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====== Centennial Fund ====== | ====== Centennial Fund ====== | ||
- | May 14, 1921, marked Trinity College’s 98th “[[charter_day|Charter Day]],” as well as the formal opening of a Centennial Fund for the purpose of raising money to support Trinity into its second century of existence. A truly massive show of effort was made to solicit funds for the College leading up to its Centennial anniversary in 1923. Undergraduates, | + | In preparation for the celebration of its 100th anniversary, |
- | A goal was established by the Centennial Fund Committee to raise $1,500,000 by June 1923: $1,200,000 would be allotted for a professors’ salary endowment and $300,000 for the construction of a new gymnasium. In 1919, the salary of a full professor at Trinity was only $2,500, and the fund was intended to allow Trinity to offer competitive salaries to its professors that would attract highly accomplished individuals to teach at the College. The new gym would accommodate an expanded [[athletics|athletics]] program that would provide all students with access to exercise space and equipment. | + | A goal was established by the Centennial Fund Committee to raise $1,500,000 by June 1923: $1,200,000 would be allotted for a professors’ salary endowment and $300,000 for the construction of a [[trowbridge_pool_squash_facility|new gymnasium]]. In 1919, the salary of a full professor at Trinity was only $2,500, and the fund was intended to allow Trinity to offer competitive salaries to its professors that would attract highly accomplished individuals to teach at the College. The new gym would accommodate an expanded [[athletics|athletics]] program that would provide all students with access to exercise space and equipment. |
- | Throughout | + | During |
- | [{{:: | + | [{{:: |
- | Throughout 1921, the // | + | Throughout 1921, the // |
Everett J. Lake, governor of Connecticut from 1920 to 1923 and member of the general organizational committee of the Centennial Campaign, expressed his support for the campaign and the endurance of Trinity as an educational institution in a speech delivered on May 24, 1921. Governor Lake praised Trinity as an "asset of great value to the city of Hartford and to the nation” and encouraged monetary support for the College, declaring that, “Our best insurance against radicalism is a well-developed educational system, and as an old, tested and living factor in that system Trinity College recommends itself to our active interest and support.” | Everett J. Lake, governor of Connecticut from 1920 to 1923 and member of the general organizational committee of the Centennial Campaign, expressed his support for the campaign and the endurance of Trinity as an educational institution in a speech delivered on May 24, 1921. Governor Lake praised Trinity as an "asset of great value to the city of Hartford and to the nation” and encouraged monetary support for the College, declaring that, “Our best insurance against radicalism is a well-developed educational system, and as an old, tested and living factor in that system Trinity College recommends itself to our active interest and support.” | ||
- | The campaign for support from Hartford citizens began in November 1921, with a committee of ten non-Trinity men who recruited around | + | The campaign for support from Hartford citizens began in November 1921, with a committee of 10 non-Trinity men who recruited around |
By the spring of 1922, the Centennial Fund had raised nearly 20% ($290,000) of its goal, and had been promised another $125,000 from the Rockefeller Fund once donations had reached the 25% mark. “A Half Million by [[commencement|Commencement]]” was the Centennial Fund’s slogan that spring, as efforts to reach $1,500,000 pushed on. Rhetoric warning against the recurrence of the horrors of World War I and disintegration of Christian values in society was aimed at procuring more support for the College, as Connecticut leaders made moral and religious appeals in favor of Trinity. One such proponent of the College’s moral mission in a post-war world was the Reverend E.C. Thomas, rector of St. James’ Church in Hartford; in a May 1922 sermon, he declared Trinity’s role in producing Christian leaders, the “greatest need of the world today.” More support was garnered, and by Commencement 1922, the first half-million of the final goal was raised. | By the spring of 1922, the Centennial Fund had raised nearly 20% ($290,000) of its goal, and had been promised another $125,000 from the Rockefeller Fund once donations had reached the 25% mark. “A Half Million by [[commencement|Commencement]]” was the Centennial Fund’s slogan that spring, as efforts to reach $1,500,000 pushed on. Rhetoric warning against the recurrence of the horrors of World War I and disintegration of Christian values in society was aimed at procuring more support for the College, as Connecticut leaders made moral and religious appeals in favor of Trinity. One such proponent of the College’s moral mission in a post-war world was the Reverend E.C. Thomas, rector of St. James’ Church in Hartford; in a May 1922 sermon, he declared Trinity’s role in producing Christian leaders, the “greatest need of the world today.” More support was garnered, and by Commencement 1922, the first half-million of the final goal was raised. | ||
- | The remaining $1,000,000 of the Fund was raised throughout the 1922-23 school year. The second phase of the campaign was more focused on raising money beyond the alumni. The effort was once again vigorously led by [[ogilby_remsen_brinckerhoff|President | + | The remaining $1,000,000 of the Fund was raised throughout the 1922-23 school year. The second phase of the campaign was more focused on raising money beyond the alumni. The effort was once again vigorously led by |
+ | President | ||
Just as in the previous year, poignant reflection on the previous war-torn decade and apprehension about an industrialized future were refracted through the enthusiasm garnered by the Centennial. Among the excited accounts in the //Trinity Tripod// of money raised for the Fund during the second phase of the campaign are nestled brief and moving reflections written by students poised before an uncertain future. One such article, published in the January 31, 1923 issue of the student newspaper, warns that “this civilization is rapidly approaching a peneplanation which will entirely eradicate individualism of thought and expression, and wipe out all peaks of personal achievement....” Trinity and colleges like it, the writer asserts, are “the only hope for successfully combating machine-made, | Just as in the previous year, poignant reflection on the previous war-torn decade and apprehension about an industrialized future were refracted through the enthusiasm garnered by the Centennial. Among the excited accounts in the //Trinity Tripod// of money raised for the Fund during the second phase of the campaign are nestled brief and moving reflections written by students poised before an uncertain future. One such article, published in the January 31, 1923 issue of the student newspaper, warns that “this civilization is rapidly approaching a peneplanation which will entirely eradicate individualism of thought and expression, and wipe out all peaks of personal achievement....” Trinity and colleges like it, the writer asserts, are “the only hope for successfully combating machine-made, |
centennial_fund.1732632015.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/11/26 14:40 by bant06