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Swarthmore College
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CATALOGUE
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SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
3
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Swarthmore
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Title:
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Twenty-Sixth
Annual Catalogue
OF
Swarthmore
Collesfe
Swarthmore, Pa.
1894-9^.
PHILADELPHIA
:
FRANKLIN PRINTING COMPANY,
516-518 MINOR STREET.
1894.
Contents.
The Calendar,
3
The Corporation,
4
Board of Managers,
Officers and Committees,
...
The Faculty,
4
6
Requirements for Admission,
27
Admission without Examinations,
28
Examinations for Higher
Classes,
29
Partial Courses of Study, ... 29
.
8
Courses of Instruction.
Officers of Instruction,
....
9
List of Students.
Biology,
Chemistry,
Drawing and
Painting,
...
History of Art,
30
32
34
34
Senior Class,
Junior Class,
12
12
Engineering and
Sophomore Class
Freshman Class,
14
•
35
English Language and Litera-
15
Unclassified Students,
.
.17
.
Summary,
17
Mechanic
Arts,
'
•
38
ture,
French Language and Litera41
ture,
General Information.
German Language and
...
Buildings and Grounds,
Principal College Building,
Science Hall,
Astronomical Observatory,
Other Buildings,
.
.
.
.
Friends' Historical Library,
.
Libraries,
Reading-Room,
Literary Societies,
Gymnasiums,
18
18
18
19
19
19
20
20
20
20
ture,
Litera-
42
43
.
.
Greek,
History and Political Economy, 44
Latin,
46
47
48
48
48
49
Mathematics,
Pedagogics,
Philosophy,
Physical Culture,
Physics,
General Remarks on Courses
General Regulations.
Religious Exercises,
Leave of Absence,
OF Study,
51
21
....
21
Commencement and Vacations, 21
The Household,
.21
Expenses.
For Resident Students,
For Day Students,
Payments,
....
Fellowships,
Scholarships,
Pecuniary Aid,
23
23
23
24-
24
Arrangement
of
Courses
Course in
Course in
Course in
Course in
53
Arts,
Letters,
Science,
.
.
.
.
53
.
.
54
.
.
55
Engineering,
56
Graduation and Degrees.
Degree of Bachelor,
Degree of Master,
Degree of Civil Engineer,
.
25
of
Study,
.
.
.
.
57
57
57
Examinations for Admission.
Officers of the Alumni AssociIntroductory,
26
ation,
26
26
List of Graduates,
58
Time and Conditions of Admission,
Summer Examinations,
1895,
Fall Examinations, 1895,
.
.
.
.27
Honorary Degrees Conferred,
59
.
69
Calendar.
1894-95.
1894. Ninth Month, i8th,
"
Ninth Month, i8th,
"
"
"
Ninth Month, 19th,
Ninth Month, 20th,
Ninth Month, 21st,
"
Eleventh Month, 2Sth,
"
Twelfth Month, 3d,
"
Twelfth Month, 3d,
"
Twelfth Month, 4th,
"
Twelfth Month, 4th,
"
Twelfth Month, 21st,
1895. First Month, 2d,
''
First Month, 3d,
"
Second Month, 2d,
"
Second Month, 4th,
"
Third Month, 12th,
"
Third Month, 30th,
"
Fourth Month, 8th,
"
Fourth Month, 26th,
"
Fifth Month, 20th,
"
Fifth Month, 20th,
Fifth
Month, 27th,
Month, 3d,
Month, 7th,
Month, 8th,
Month, loth,
Month, loth,
Month, nth,
Ninth Month, 17th,
Ninth Month, 17th,
Ninth Month 1 8th,
Sixth
Sixth
Sixth
Sixth
Sixth
Sixth
,
-
Third-day,
Third-day,
Fourth-day,
Meeting of the Board of Managers.
New
Students arrive.
for Admission.
Fifth-day,
Old Students return.
Sixth-day,
Regular Exercises begin.
Fourth-day, Thanksgiving Recess begins.
Second-day, Regular Exercises begin at 8.30 A. M.
Second-day, Meeting of the Board of Managers.
Third day,
Annual Aleethig of the Stockholders.
Third-day,
Meeting of the Board of Managers.
Sixth day,
Winter Recess begins.
Fourth-day, Students return.
Fifth-day,
Regular Exercises begin.
Seventh-day, First Semester ends.
Second-day, Second Semester begins.
Meeting of the Board of Managers.
Third-day,
Seventh-day, Spring Recess begins.
Second-day, Students return.
Sixth-day,
Graduating Essays due from Senior Class.
Second-day, Senior Examinations begin.
Second-day, Engineering Field-work begins. Continues
three weeks.
Second-day, Senior Examinations completed, and the
Examinations
results announced.
Second-day, Final Examinations begin.
Sixth day.
I Examinations for Admission.
Seventh day
Meeting
Second-day,
of the Board of Managers.
Second-day, Class-Day Exercises.
Third-day,
Third-day,
Third-day,
Fourth-day,
Commencement.
Meeting of the Board of Managers.
New
Students arrive.
Examinations
for
Admission begin, and
old Students return.
Examinations for Admission completed,
and Regular Exercises begin.
Eleventh Month, 27th, Fourth-day, Thanksgiving Recess begins at noon.
Twelfth Month, 2d,
Second-day, Regular Exercises begin 8.30 A. M.
Twelfth Month, 2d,
Second-day, Meeting of the Board of Managers.
Twelfth Month, 3d,
Third-day,
Annual Meeting of the Stockholders.
Twelfth Month, 3d,
Meeting of the Board of Managers.
Third-day,
Twelfth Month, 20th, Sixth-day,
Wmter Recess begins.
First Month, 2d,
Fifth-day,
Students return.
First Month, 3d,
Regular Exercises begin.
Sixth-day,
Ninth Month, 19th,
Fifth day.
Corporation.
OFFICERS.
Clerks.
ROBERT
M. JANNEY,
112 Drexel Building, Philadelphia.
ABBY W. MILLER,
1203 Delaware Avenue, Wilmington.
Treasurer.
ROBERT BIDDLE,
507 Commerce Street, Philadelphia.
Board of Manaofers.
Term
expires Twelfth
Mary
Joseph Wharton,
P.
O.
Box 1332,
C. Clothier,
Wynnewood,
Philadelphia.
Mary Willets,
Manasquan
Month, i8g^.
Pa.
William M. Jackson,
P. O.,
N.
335 West i8th Street, New
Rachel W. Hillborn,
J.
Lydia H. Hall,
York.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Wilson M. Powell,
324 W. S8th Street, New
Edward Martin, M.
York.
415
S.
D.,
15th Street, Philadelphia.
Ter7n expires Twelfth Month, i8g6.
Edward H. Ogden,
314 Vine
Catharine Underhill,
Street, Philadelphia.
Jericho, L.
1432 McCulloh
I.
Edward Stabler,
Eli M. Lamb,
St.,
Baltimore,
Md.
Md.
Hannah H. Woodnutt,
Anna M. Hunt,
1732 Girard Avenue, Philadelphia.
Susan W, Lippincott,
Cinnaminson, N.
Jr.,
3 South Street, Baltimore,
J.
1816 Arch
Howard W.
Street, Philadelphia.
Lippincott,
613 Drexel Building, Philadelphia.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
Term
John
expires Twelfth Month, i8gy.
Jane
T. Willets,
303 Pearl
Street,
New
York.
Sarah H. Powell,
Charles M. Biddle,
507 Commerce Street, Philadelphia.
Daniel Underhill,
Jericho, L.
324 West 58th
West Chester,
Emmor Roberts,
New
York.
Pa.
Joanna W. Lippincott,
Logan
J.
Term
Street,
Elizabeth B. Passmore,
L
Fellowship, N.
Downing,
P.
1613 Race Street, Philadelphia.
Station, Philadelphia.
expires Twelfth Month, i8g8.
Isaac H. Clothier,
8th and Market Streets, Philadelphia.
James V. Watson,
718 Franklin Street, Philadelphia.
Herman Hoopes,
436 Drexel Building, Philadelphia.
Annie Shoemaker,
112 Carpenter Street, Germantown.
Fannie W. I.owthorp,
Trenton, N.
J.
Edmund Webster,
I156
S.
Broad
St.,
Philadelphia.
Emma McIlvain Cooper,
Riverton, N.
Rebecca
C.
J.
Longstreth,
Sharon Hill, Delaware Co., Pa.
Officers
and Committees of the Board.
President.
JOSEPH WHARTON.
Secretary.
HERMAN HOOPES.
Auditors.
Herman Hoopes,
John T. Willets.
Executive.
Emmor Roberts,
Mary Willets,
Daniel Underbill,
Charles M. Biddle,
Robert M. Janney,
Edmund Webster,
Jane
Howard W.
P.
Downing,
Anna M. Hunt,
Susan W. Lippincott,
Emma McIlvain Cooper,
Hannah H. Woodnutt,
Lippincott,
Eli M. Lamb,
Edward Martin,
Ex- Officio,
Mary C. Clothier,
Elizabeth B. Passmore,
Herman Hoopes.
Finance.
Charles M. Biddle,
James V. Watson,
Edward H. Ogden.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
7
Instruction.
Annie Shoemaker,
Lydia H. Hall,
Emmor Roberts,
Herman Hoopes,
Mary Willets,
Anna M. Hunt,
Susan W. Lippincott,
Edward Martin.
Fannie W. Lowthorp,
Rachel W. Hillborn,
Building and Property.
Edmund Webster,
Edward H. Ogden,
Emmor Roberts,
Rachel W. Hillborn,
Howard W. Lippincott,
Robert M. Janney.
Daniel Underhill,
Jane P. Downing,
Museum and
Mary
Laboratories.
Mary Willets,
Edward Martin.
C. Clothier,
William M. Jackson,
Friends' Historical Library.
LvDiA H. Hall,
Edward
Stabler,
.
Jr.,
Trusts,
Isaac H. Clothier,
Rebecca
C.
Longstreth.
Endowments, and Scholarships.
Edward H. Ogden,
Daniel Underbill,
Edmund Webster,
Trustees of
Isaac H. Clothier,
Emmor Roberts,
Susan W. Lippincott,
Rebecca C. Longstreth,
Endowed
Professorships.
Edward H. Ogden,
Emmor Roberts.
Library.
Lydia H. Hall,
Rachel W. Hillborn,
Edward
Stabler,
John T. Willets.
Jr.,
Secretary.
Faculty
."^
1894-95.
CHARLES De GARMO,
President.
ELIZABETH POWELL BOND,
Dean.
Prof.
EDWARD H. MAGILL.
ARTHUR BEARDSLEY.
WILLIAM HYDE APPLETON.
Prof.
SUSAN
SuPT.
Prof.
WILLIAM
WILLIAM
Prof.
FERRIS W. PRICE.
Prof.
GEORGE
Prof.
Prof.
J.
CUNNINGHAM.
J.
C.
A.
HALL.
DAY.
HOADLEY.
SPENCER TROTTER.
ESTHER T. MOORE.
Prof. MARIE A. KEMP.
Prof. RICHARD JONES.
Prof. WILLIAM I. HULL.
Prof.
—
* By-Laws.
" The President, Dean, and such of the resident Professors and others as may
be elected by the Board, shall constitute the Faculty. They shall hold regular meetings, arrange
the course of study, determine the qualifications for admission and for graduation, decide upon rules
of order, and determine all questions pertaining to the discipline or instruction, subject to the
approval of the Executive Committee, to whom they shall report monthly."
Officers of Instruction.'
CHARLES De GARMO,
President,
Ph. D.,
and Professor of Philosophy.
ELIZABETH POWELL BOND,
Dean.
EDWARD
H.
MAGILL,
Professor of the French
Language and
ARTHUR BEARDSLEY,
I.
A. M., LL. D.,
Literature.
C. E., Ph. D.,
V. WilHamson Professor of Engineering, and Director of the Workshops.
WILLL\M HYDE APPLETON,
A. M., LL. B., Ph. D.,
Professor of Greek and of Early English.
SUSAN
J.
CUNNLNGHAM,
Edward H.
IMagill Professor of
Sc. D.,
Mathematics and Astronomy.
WILLIAM CATHCART DAY,
Ph. D.,
Professor of Chemistry.
SPENCER TROTTER,
Professor of Biology
*
M. D.,
and Geology.
Arranged, with the exception of the President and Dean,
Professors, Assistant Professors, and other Instructors.
in the
order of appointment, as:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
10
GEORGE
A.
HOADLEY,
C. E., A. M.,
Professor of Physics.
FERRIS W. PRICE,
A. M.,
Language and
Isaac H. Clothier Professor of the Latin
MARIE ANTOINETTE KEMP,
Professor of the
I.
Literature.
A. M., Ph. D.,
Professor of the English
WILLIAM
A. M.,
German Language and
RICHARD JONES,
HULL,
Language and
Literature.
Ph. D.,
Joseph Wharton Professor of History and
MYRTIE
E.
Literature.
FURMAN,
Political
Economy.
M. O.,
Assistant Professor in charge of Elocution.
^BEATRICE MAGILL,
Instructor in
J.
K.
Drawing and
SHELL, M.
Painting.
D.,
Director of Physical Culture for the
EMILY
G.
HUNT,
Young Men.
M. D.,
Lecturer on Physiology and Hygiene to the
JOSEPH BAYLEY,
Jr.,
Assistant in Engineering,
J.
Young Women.
RUSSELL HAYES,
Shop
Practice.
A. B., LL. B.,
«
Assistant in English.
*In Europe on leave of absence
of Mabel B. Edwards.
for the year.
In her absence the department
is
in the
charge
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
HENRY
V.
GUMMERE,
A. M.,
Assistant in Mathematics.
MARY
MITCHELL GREEN,
V.
Director of Physical Culture for the
M. D.,
Young Women.
MARION HUNTER,
Assistant in Department of Physical Culture.
ESTHER
MOORE,
T.
A. B.,
Secretary to the President, and Registrar.
SARAH
M.
NO WELL,
Librarian.
.
H
Students
GRADUATE STUDENT.
Mary Underhill,
.
.
.
Glen Head, N. Y.
senior class.
Name.
Frank
Course.
Andrews
William S. Barker
Harry E. Bean
Frances W. Cheairs
Walter Clothier
C.
.
.
Engineering
.
.
Engineering
.
.
J.
.
Engineering
.
Letters
.
Letters
.
,
.
Letters
.
.
.
Arts
.
.
.
Pemberton, N.
.
Arts
...
.
Wilmington, Del.
.
Harrison
Hollingshead
B.
.
Woodstown, N.
Lansdowne, Pa.
.
R. H.
Roland G. Kent
.
.
.
.
Anna
Mary
Residence.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
.
Delaware City, Del
.
Wynnewood,
.
Xenia, Ohio.
Pa.
J.
.
.
.
.
.
Engineering
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
.
.
Engineering
.
Naples, N. Y.
.
Letters
.
.
.
Riverton, N.
.
.
Science
.
.
.
Joseph R. Lippincott
Elizabeth B. Miller
Arts
.
.
.
.
.
.
Arts
.
.
.
.
.
Media, Pa.
.
Arts
.
.
.
.
Concordville, Pa.
Engineering
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
John A. Lafore
Egbert P. Lincoln
Bertha Lippincott
.
Edgar Lippincott
.
.
.
Samuel C. Palmer
Alfred E. Pfahler
M. Elizabeth Pownall
.
.
.
,
Arthur H. Scott
Jane C. Shaw ....
Helen B. Smith
.
.
Willits
Christiana, Pa.
.
.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Lrregular
.
.
Williamsport, Pa.
Arts
.
.
Media, Pa.
.
Altoona, Pa.
.
.
Engineering
.
.
Arts
.
.
Engineering
.
.
Arts
.
.
.
.
.
Letters
.
.
.
Yeadon, Pa.
.
Norristown, Pa.
.
.
.
.
.
Edmund Strattan
William H. Wanzer
Howard White, Jr.
P.
.
Science
.
.
G.
Alice
.
.
.
.
Albert T. Yarnall
Letters
J.
Cinnaminson, N. J
Moorestown, N. J.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Hurstville, N. Y.
.
Lansdowne, Pa.
Syosset, N. Y.
JUNIOR CLASS.
Name.
Course.
Elizabeth M. Baily
Mary
S.
Charles
Bartram
P.
(12)
.
.
.
Science
.
.
.
Arts
Beistle
.
.
Science
.
Residence.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
London Grove,
Swarthmore, Pa.
Pa.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
13
Residence.
Course.
Name.
Clement M. Biddle, Jr
Engineering
.
Lansdowne, Pa.
Mellie E. Bishop
HiLDEGARD BrOOKS
Albert L. Buffington
Carolien H. Chambers
Bouic L. Clark
Irregular
.
.
Normal,
Irregular
.
.
Newburg, N. Y.
.
.
Rising Sun, Md.
.
Unionville, Pa.
,
Sligo,
.
.
.
.
Isaac H. Clothier, Jr.
Arts
.
.
Frances Darlington
AiDA T. Evans
Arts
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Hallie H. Haines
VioLETTE T. Haines
Charles G. Hodge
Iolene M. Hollenshead
Emma S. Hutchinson
Charles Kaighn
.
Philip
S.
Knauer
C. Irvine Leiper
S.
Moorestown, N.
Engineering
.
East Williston, N. Y.
.
.
.
Swarthmore, Pa.
May's Landing, N.
Arts
.
.
New
Rising Sun, Md.
.
.
.
,
Rising Sun, Md.
.
Irregular
,
Washington, D. C.
Irregular
.
Belvidere,
Letters
.
New
.
.
111.
York, N. Y.
Emporia, Fla.
Warwick, Pa.
.
.
.
Engineering
.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Irregular
.
Media, Pa.
Arts
.
,
,
.
.
,
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
New
Letters
.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
York, N. Y.
.
.
May's Landing, N.
Irregular
.
El Paso,
Arts
.
.
.
Hainesport, N.
Arts
.
.
.
Arts
.
Letters
.
Engineering
Irregular
.
.
,
111.
J.
Wilna, Md.
Media, Pa.
Sparta, Canada.
Wayne,
Pa.
Arts
.
.
.
Concordville, Pa.
Arts
.
.
.
Willistown Inn, Pa.
Engineering
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
.
Letters
.
Shenandoah, Pa.
.
Engineering
.
Sylmar,
.
Letters
.
Easton,
.
J.
York, N. Y.
Engineering
.
J.
Irregular
Arts
.
Wasley
Hanson Z. Wilson
Keturah E. Yeo
A.
Paoli, Pa.
.
.
.
Emma
.
.
.
.
Pa.
Mills, Pa.
Arts
Lucy B. Price
Charles A. Schooley
M. Gertrude Scott
J. Chauncey Shortlidg
Lauretta T. Smedley
Albert H. Taylor
.
.
Glen
Letters
McDowell
L. Price
.
.
Arabella E. Moore
Charles S. Moore
William J. Morrison
Lydia M. Parry
Frank
.
.
Marian W. Little
Mary
Md.
Wynnewood,
.
Engineering
Science
May Gifford ....
Ellen Gunton
.
.
.
Irregular
,
George B. Ferrier, Jr.
E. Harper Firth
Sylvester S. Garrett
.
.
.
Irregular
.
.
.
Arts
Letters
111.
Md.
Md.
J.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
14
SOPHOMORE class
Mary
S.
Ash
.
.
Brown
J.
,
Thomas Cahall
Charles Chandler
.
.
William
Mary
Chapin
B.
Clark
Alice V. Corson
Daisy R. Corson
J.
T.
Roberts Cox
.
.
.
.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
.
.
Wilmington, Del.
.
Science
.
Engineering
.
Dover, N.
.
E^igineering
.
Sandy Spring, Md.
.
Letters
.
.
.
.
Irregular
.
.
.
Letters
.
.
.
Engineering
.
Efigineering
.
J.
Lancaster, Pa.
.
Lincoln, Va.
Frederica, Del.
.
Bushnell,
.
Washington, D. C.
111.
Md.
.
Letters
.
.
Ellicott City,
.
Science
.
,
Norristown, Pa.
.
Norristown, Pa.
Science
.
.
.
Irregular
.
.
.
Sarah Bancroft
Leopold W. Bierwirth
William S. Brooke
Grace A. Brosius
Martha
Residence.
Course.
Name.
.
.
Md.
Irregular
.
Baltimore,
Letters
.
Woodside, Md.
M. Louise Curtiss
Jared W. Darlington
Engineering
.
De Garmo
Engineering
.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Letters
.
Walter
C.
Jessie D. Ellis
.
,
George S. Essig
Harrie H. Fouse
George Gleim, Jr.
T. RussEL
Gleim
.
Darling, Pa.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Engineering
.
Wallingford, Pa.
Irregular
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
.
.
.
Engineering
.
Cornwall, Pa.
E,ngineering
.
Cornwall, Pa.'
Godfrey
Annetta Hall
S. Warren Hall
Mabel A. Harris
Marietta Hicks
Clarence B. Hoadley
Edith H. Johns
Letters
Irregular
.
Media, Pa.
Howard
Letters
.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Arts
.
Sarah
P.
.
.
.
,.
Johnson
Kexderdine
Harry W. Lewis
Mary M. Lewis
Nellie Lodge
Robert E. Manley
Richard B. Marshall
Walker Matteson
Edith
C.
F.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Passaic, N. J.
.
Irregular
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Irregular
.
Dover, Del.
Letters
.
.
Letters
.
.
Etna, N. H.
Westbury Station, N. Y.
Science
.
.
Swarthm.ore, Pa.
.
.
Germantown, Pa.
Engineering
.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Irregular
.
Media, Pa.
Science
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
.
Washington, D. C.
.
Engineering
Arts
.
.
Media, Pa.
Arts
.
.
Roslyn, N. Y.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
Name.
Residence.
Course.
Mary McAllister
Laura C. Miller
Herbert L. Noxon
Percival Parrish
.
.
.
Ellwood C. Parry
N. WiLMER PlUMMER
Robert Pyle
Samuel Riddle
.
.
.
.
.
Arts
.
Arts
.
.
New
.
Ingersoll, Canada.
Irregular
.
Engineering
Arts
.
Channing Way
John E. Wells
Edith Wilder
Arts
.
Lancaster, Pa.
Philomont, Va.
Lincoln, Va.
Irregular
.
Felton, Del.
Letters
.
London Grove,
.
West Chester,
•
Letters
Letters
.
Letters
Arts
.
freshman
.
.
.
.
Heman B. Callender
M. Helen Catlin
Helen P. Cheairs
.
.
Philadalphia, Pa.
.
Johnson City, Tenn.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
.
Port Chester, N. Y.
,
Holicong, Pa.
class.
Residence.
.
Arts
.
.
.
Letters
.
.
.
Irregular
.
.
Arts
Engineering
.
Bayside, N. Y.
.
Letters
.
,
Middletown, Del.
.
Arts
.
.
West Chester,
.
Irregular
.
Sheffield, Mass.
.
Arts
.
.
.
.
.
.
Margaret Eves
.
.
Letters
.
.
.
Irregular
.
Bessie H. Eves
.
Thurlow, Pa.
Omaha, Neb.
Omaha, Neb.
.
Heulings Coles
Robert J. Crawford
William W. Curtiss
J.
Pa.
Pa.
.
Course.
Susan W. Atkinson
Mary E. Bartleson
Nancy M. Battin
William L Battin
Brinton C. Bell
William H. Brady
Charles T. Brown
Pa.
Media, Pa.
.
.
.
Name.
Md.
London Grove,
Letters
.
.
Frederick,
,
.
.
.
Letters
.
Lydia p. Williams
Luessa Wright
Newport, R. I.
Wyncote, Pa.
.
.
York, N. Y.
.
.
.
Engineering
Letters
.
.
Letters
.
Colorado Springs, Col.
.
Engineering
Miriam Sener
Mary T. Shoemaker
Bertha J. Smith
Grace W. Stevenson
Franklin D. Walton
.
15
.
.
.
.
Pa.
Lexington Mass.
Delaware City, Del.
.
Science
.
.
Camden, N.
Science
.
.
Williamson School, Pa.
Engineering
.
Woodside, Md.
Irregular
.
Chester, Pa.
.
.
Millville, Pa.
J.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
16
Name.
Course.
Elmer O. Fisher
.
LUCRETIA M. GaSKILL
Ada
V. Gillespie
,
Samuel P. Green
Marietta Hicks
Edith Lamb
Clarence Lippincott
.
.
Harold
B.
.
.
Little
.
.
William B. Miller
Albert C. Myers
Edna M. Nicholl
M. Ida Palmer
Annie Parrish
Rengier
,
.
.
.
.
Residence.
Letters
.
.
Letters
.
,
Swaithmore, Pa.
Arts
.
.
Allegheny, Pa.
.
Lrregular
.
Kennett Square, Pa.
Irregular
.
Westbury Station, N. Y.
Letters
.
.
Baltimore,
Letters
.
.
£ngineerin.
,
,
Rutledge, Pa.
.
Irregular
.
Irregular
.
Md.
Riverton, N.
J.
Media, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Media, Pa.
Engineering
.
.
Letters
.
.
Kennett Square, Pa.
.
Letters
.
.
Scotch Plains, N.
,
.
Arts
.
Doe Run,
.
.
Letters
.
.
Woodbury, N.
Letters
.
.
Washington, D. C.
Lancaster, Pa.
Mary W. Pierce
Eva
,
.
Caroline A. Lukens
LiLLA MeRRITT
.
.
.
J.
Pa.
J.
Letters
.
.
Edna H. Richards
Letters
.
.
M. Louise Richards
Irregular
.
Edward R. Rockwell
H. Mary Sharples
Engineering
.
W. Frederick Sims
Marshall P. Sullivan
Emma Thomas
Frederic L. Thomas
Irregular
.
Irregular
.
Engineering
Georgiana Titus
Albert T. Verlenden
Letters
.
.
Old Westbury, N. Y.
Science
.
.
Darby, Pa.
Guy T. Viskniskki
Arthur H. Walker
Henrietta F. Wanzer
Howard J. Webster
Lrregular
.
Carmi,
Engineering
.
S.
Elizabeth S. Williams
Mary J. Williams
Irregular
.
Holicong, Pa.
Arts
.
.
Trenton, N.
Joseph A. Willis
Frederic F. Wilson
Alice Witbeck
.
Irregular
.
Fowling Creek, Md.
Engineering
.
Jersey Shore, Pa.
.
,
Letters
.
.
Belvidere,
Mary
.
.
Irregular
.
Morton, Pa.
T.
.
.
.
.
.
.
J.
Young
Letters
Science
.
.
-.
.
.
Salem, O.
New
York, N. Y.
Cleveland, O.
West Chester,
Pa.
Washington, D. C.
Moorestown, N.
Moorestown, N.
J.
Ashton, Md.
111.
Charleston, O.
Irregular
.
Hurstville, N. Y.
Irregular
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
.
J.
J.
111.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
17
UNCLASSIFIED STUDENTS.
Residence.
Name.
Eva E. Foster
Mabel C. Gillespie
Sabina K. Green
Jonathan Y. Higginson
Effingham Lawrence, Jr
Allegheny, Pa.
Wynnevvood,
Bayside, N. Y.
Riverton, N.
Darlington,
.
.
J.
Md.
Lancaster, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Sarah A. Shreve
Elizabeth L. Stroh
Mary P. H. Thomas
J. Athol Udall
Joseph E.
Pa.
Pine, Col.
Alice Lippincott
Henry S. McIlvain
Mabel G. Miller
Harry A. Sapp
•
Lancaster, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Kingston, Pa.
Baltimore,
Md.
Thomaston, N. Y.
Way
Kennett Square, Pa.
summary.
Graduate Student
i
Seniors
25
Juniors
41
Sophomores
Freshmen
54
.
52
Unclassified
.
'
Total
....
14
187
_
;
General Information.
Buildings and Grounds.
Swarthmore
College
was founded in 1864 by members of the
ligious Society of Friends, to provide the children of the Society
re-
and
others with opportunities for higher education under guarded care.
With
this object in view, a
property of two hundred and forty acres
was secured, ten miles from Philadelphia, on the Central Division of
It is accessthe Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railroad.
by trains from the Broad Street Station, twenty-four times daily.
About half the land is used for farming purposes, providing milk and
vegetables for the College ; the remainder is devoted to lawn and
Crum Creek, which forms the western boundary of
pleasure grounds.
the property, affords facilities for boating, bathing, and skating. The
ible
portion of the grounds bordering the stream
The building
and commanding a
beauty.
site is
air
fine
is
of great picturesque
high, securing perfect drainage
and pure
view of the surrounding country for
many
miles.
The Principal
feet long.
It
College Building
is
a massive stone structure 348
consists of a central building, five stories high, con-
taining public rooms, such as lecture-rooms,
rooms, parlors, dining-hall,
this building
high.
The
etc.
from the two wings.
museum,
library, reading-
Fire-proof compartments separate
The
latter are
each four stories
ground-floors are devoted to lecture and recitation rooms
the remaining floors in the east wing contain the dormitories of the
young women, and
in the west
wing those of the young men.
A num-
ber of the instructors reside in the same building with the students,
and the
relations
dom from
between them are such that there
is
comparative
free-
the dangers and temptations ordinarily incident to college
The buildings are heated throughout by steam, lighted by gas,
and thoroughly ventilated.
The Science Hall is constructed of stone, in the most durable
manner, and was planned with special reference to the work of stuIt has a frontage of
dents in Engineering, Physics, and Chemistry.
life.
(18)
B
7i
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
and a depth of 64
162
feet,
and
boiler rooms,
The basement
feet.
the blacksmith
the
first
floor are the
contains engine
and the foundry of the
laboratory, and store-rooms.
shop,
engineering department, the electrical
On
19
machine shop and engineering lecture-room,
and the chemical and physical laboratories,
the engineering laboratory,
and on the second floor are the draughting-rooms, the wood-working
shop, and the chemical and physical lecture-rooms.
The Astronomical Observatory
is
The plan embraces
of instruction.
especially arranged for purposes
a central building supporting the
There are four rooms
a transit-room, in
dome, and two wings.
which is placed an instrument of three-inch aperture, also the meantime clock; a pier-room, at present utilized as a sidereal-clock room;
:
a work-room in which
is
placed a small library of reference books,
the chronograph and chronometer
equatorial of six-inch aperture.
ment, there
is
;
and the dome, containing the
In connection with this
a micrometer and a spectroscope.
equatorial were constructed
by Warner
&
latter instru-
The
transit
and
Swasey, of Cleveland, O.,
and the spectroscope by Brashear, of Allegheny, Pa. The equipment
Connected with the observatory is the Signal
is ample for class-work.
Service Station of the State Weather Bureau, fully provided with the
necessary meteorological and other apparatus.
Other Buildings are a meeting-house, the President's house, the
West house (birthplace of Benjamin West, now used as a professor's
house), the house of the Professor of Astronomy, the Farmer's
house and commodious farm-buildings, the laundry and bakery, the
boiler-house, containing the sectional boilers for heating
purposes, and the
gymnasium
for
young women.
and cooking
All these buildings
are constructed of stone.
Libraries
and Reading-Room.
The Libraries of the College collectively contain 16,273 bound
volumes, as follows
The General Library
3>23i
Friends' Historical Library
2,042
Members of
tions,
11,000
Literary Societies' Libraries
the Senior Class are permitted, under proper regula-
to consult the Philadelphia Library,
containing 145,000 vol-
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
20
umes, and the Mercantile Library, containing 150,000 volumes, as
and technical Libraries
well as the valuable special
The General Library
Philadelphia.
students.
and
The
is
at
all
in the city
of
times accessible
to
Librarian will aid students in consulting the Library
in arranging courses of reading.
Friends' Historical Library, founded by the late
of Skaneateles, N. Y.
Anson Lapham,.
consists of a valuable collection of Friends'
,
books, photographs of representative Friends, and manuscripts relat-
ing to the Society and
Custodian, accessible to
tory of Friends.
and
history,
its
is,
upon application
to the
persons interested in the doctrines and his-
all
This collection
stored in a fire-proof apartment,
is
and it is hoped that Friends and others will deem it a secure place in
which to deposit books and other material in their possession which
may be of interest in connection with the history of the Society. Such
contributions as well as additional funds for its growth and maintenance are solicited, and should be addressed to "Friends' Historical
Library," or to "Arthur Beardsley, Curator, Swarthmore, Pa."
The Readiiig-Room is supplied with the leading literary and
scientific journals and the prominent newspapers of the principal
cities.
Literary Societies are maintained by the students.
There are
young women. These hold regular
meetings for the reading of essays, etc., and for practice in debate.
Their Libraries, under their own management, contain over three
thousand volumes and are accessible to all students.
two
for
young men and one
for
The Gymnasiums.
The Gymnasium
for the
young men
is
supplied with a
apparatus for exercising according to the system of
Through the
efforts
friends, a separate
and equipped
are
of
for
are required of
Students are requested
if there is
all.
to
built
The exercises
young men and young
for
the
^
bring from home a physician! s
any cause that would make
in the exercises required.
their
under the Swedish system.
conducted in separate classes
women, and
and
young women has been
the
of
Sargent.
the Somerville Literary Society
gymnasium
for exercise
full set
Dr.
it
dangerous for them
certificate,
to
take part
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
The
extensive
and
beautiful grounds connected with the College
is
encouraged by the authorities.
the highest and driest part of the
campus a space has been pre-
invite to out-door exercise,
On
21
which
pared for athletic games, with a quarter-mile cinder running track, and
and
a well graded field for foot-ball
base-ball, whilst the surrounding
•country offers facilities for cross-country running.
General Regulations.
Religious Exercises.
trine that religion
is
— While care
is
taken to inculcate the doc-
a matter of practical daily
life,
and
is
not con-
fined to the observance of set forms or the promulgation of religious
tenets, the regular assembling
On
for religious purposes is carefully ob-
morning a religious meeting is held, attended
by students, teachers, members of the household, and Friends of the
neighborhood.
The meeting is preceded by First-day school exer-
served.
First-day
of the recitation of passages of Scripture prepared
cises, consisting
by members of the different classes, and the reading of a portion of
Scripture.
The daily exercises are opened by a general meeting
for reading selected
portions of Scripture or other suitable books,
seem
upon the
-and for imparting such moral lessons as circumstances
quire, followed
by a period of
silence before entering
to re-
duties
of the day.
Commencement and
—The
Vacations.
third Third-day of Ninth month,
and
College year begins on the
closes with
Commencement-
day, which occurs on the second Third-day of Sixth month.
Students are not admitted for a period
lege year
;
but,
when vacancies
exist,
they
less
than the current Col-
may
enter at
any time
during the year.
Besides the
summer
vacation there will be a recess of about ten
days at the close of the Twelfth month, one week in the Third month,
and
three days at Thanksgiving.
(See Calendar.)
Students are permitted to remain at the College, under care, dur-
ing the recesses, but not during the summer vacation.
The Household.
In the organization of this College unusual care has been extended
to the personal comfort
and the
social interests of the students.
This
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
22
department
is
She has
assistants.
and health of the young women,
communicate freely with her in regard to
in charge of the
Dean, with able
also special oversight of the conduct
and parents
are desired to
the welfare of their daughters.
The
several departments of the household are under the
diate charge of the following
imme-
:
Sarah D. Coale, Matron of West Wing.
Rachel
S.
Eves, Matron of East Wing.
Rachel
B.
Mary
Townsend, Housekeeper.
P.
Eves, Matron of Central Building.
Anna Eliza Worrall,
Director of Laundry.
Expenses.
The
is
Board and Tuition is $450 per year, of which $250
advance, and ^200 on the first of First month.
cost of
payable in
For Day
Students, the price
is
$200 per
year, of
payable in advance, and the remainder on the
The day
first
which ^100
students take lunch with the resident students.
at the lowest obtainable
own books, which the College
They also buy their own
rates.
drawing implements, and
certain tools
Students purchase their
shops,
is
of First month.
and pay
College.
at a reasonable rate
will furnish
stationery,
and materials used in the workfor laundry work done at the
Students taking laboratory courses will
make
a deposit of
;^io at the beginning of the course to cover the expense of the material used.
The unexpended balance
will
be returned
at the
end of
the course.
In case of
employed.
illness,
The above
made
unless a physician be
may be depended upon
as covering all neces-
no extra charge
figures
is
sary expenses.
Payments.
Payments
are to be
made by check
Robert Biddle,
No. 507
or draft to the order of
Treasurer,
Commerce Street, Philadelphia,
Pa.
(23)
:
Fellowships, Scholarships, and Pecuniary Aid.
FELLOWSHIPS.
The Joshua Lippincott Fellowship,
founded by Howard
Lippincott, A. B., of the Class of 1875, in
consists
memory
W.
of his father,
of a fund yielding an income of $450 per year, which
is
granted annually by the Faculty, with the concurrence of the Instruction Committee, to a graduate of this College engaged in advanced
study under the direction or with the approval of the Faculty.
The Lucretia Mott Fellowship,
ville Literary
founded by the Somer-
Society and sustained by the contributions of
its
mem-
an annual income of ^525, and is awarded each year by a
Committee of the Faculty selected by the Society, to a young woman
bers, yields
graduate of that year, for the purpose of pursuing advanced study at
some other
institution
approved by
this
Committee.
scholarships.
1.
pays
all
The Westbury Quarterly Meeting,
charges for board and tuition and
is
N. Y., Scholarship
awarded annually by a
Committee of the Quarterly Meeting.
2.
The Two Rebecca M. Atkinson Scholarships pay
all
charges for board and tuition and are awarded annually by the Board of
Managers of the College.
3.
uals,
There are nine other similar Scholarships owned by individ-
each entitling the holder to board and tuition
at
the College,
and awarded by the owner.
4.
Freshman
Honor
Scholarships.
— For the
year 1895-96
ten honor Scholarships of the value of $200 each for resident, and
^100 each
for non-resident students
One
have been established.
may be awarded to
the following named
these Scholarships
a candidate for the
Class by each of
schools
Friends' Central .School,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Friends' Seminary,
New
Friends'
High
School,
Friends' School,
Friends'
(24)
High School,
York, N. Y.
Baltimore,
of
Freshman
Md.
Wilmington, Del.
Moorestown, N. J.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
Friends'
25
Locust Valley, L.
Academy,
L
Friends' Select School,
"Washington, D. C.
Abington Friends' School,
Jenkintown, Pa.
George School
Chappaqua Mountain
Newtown,
Pa.
Chappaqua, N. Y.
Institute,
PECUNIARY AID.
The Committee on
and needy
students
Endowments, and Scholarships holds
income of which is used to aid deserving
Trusts,
in trust certain funds, the
who
are pursuing their studies at this College.
Full information as to the condition and
may be had on
amount of such pecuniary aid
application to
Rebecca
C.
Longstreth,
Secretary,
Sharon Hill, Pa.
Examinations
Admission.
for
Introductory.
The
Degree extend over four
studies required for a
years.
The
requirements for admission are intended to be such as Friends' schools
Owing
generally can meet.
study,
and the absence of
accomplished in four years
cient preparation in
to the
is
classics,
ordinary avocations of
life,
enforcement of regular hours for
opportunity for dissipation, the amount
all
and is believed to afford a suffiand general culture for the
the study of any of the learned pro-
large,
science,
for
fessions, or for the pursuit of special courses in the higher universities.
Time and Conditions
To
of Admission.
secure places, application for admission should be
early as possible
by
as
must submit satisfactory testimonials of good
applicants
All
made
letter to the President.
character from their last teachers, and students coming from another
college must present certificates of honorable dismissal.
The examinations
mer
for admission
may be
taken either in the sum-
at the close of the college year, or in the fall
The
follows for the year 1895.
Summer
Sixth-day, Sixth
month
"
"
"
•^
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
(26)
"
"
M. Mathematics.
M. English.
History.
2.00 P. M.
Latin.
3.00 P. M.
4.00 P. M. Greek.
Geography.
at 8.15 A. M.
German.
9.15 A. M.
French.
10.15 A. M.
7th, at 8.15 A.
"
Seventh-day,"
"
''
Examinations, 1895.
8th,
"
"
"
"
10.30 A.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
times are as
.
:
:
Fall Examinations, 1895.
Candidates should present themselves
month
afternoon of Third-day, Ninth
The examinations
will
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
"
'«
"
Fifth-day,
Ninth month
"
"
"
"
"
"
College on
the
the
occur as follows
Fourth-day, Ninth month iSth,
"
"
at
17th, 1895.
M.
M.
2.00 P. M.
3.00 P. M.
4.00 P. M.
8.15 A. M.
9.15 A. M.
10.15 A. M.
8.15 A.
10.30 A.
19th,
"
"
Mathematics.
.
Enghsh.
.
History.
.
.
Latin.
.
Greek.
.
Geography.
.
German.
.
French.
Students are also admitted at any time during the year, and are
charged
for the
unexpired time until the close of the year.
Requirements
for
Admission.
-
All candidates for admission to the Freshman Class will be ex-
amined
in the following subjects
:
—
—
the second
—
grade.
Geometry. — The whole of Plane Geometry.
English. —The candidate
be asked
Mathematics. Arithmetic.
Through Equations of
1
Entire.
Algebra,
to write a
will
2.
signed subject, or from dictation.
Grammar,
degree in a book of High-School
few pages upon some
as-
This exercise will be examined with reference to
Spelling, Paragraphing, Punctuation,
and the use of
Capitals.
An
exami-
nation will also be given in the principles of the grammar.
—
History. A thorough preparation in the outlines of the history of the United
and a thorough outline course in either the history of England or in general
history.
The amount required in each subject is equivalent to what is contained in
3.
States,
the following text-books
:
Eggleston's School History of the United States, Gardi-
ner's School History of England, Barnes's General History.
4.
Geography.
—The general
facts of Physical, Descriptive,
and
Political
Geog-
raphy, especially of the United States and Europe.
5.
In
addition to the above,
candidates will be examined
follows
(27)
as
^
;
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
28
(i)
For
* Latin.
—
the Classical Course in
Csesar's Gallic
War, four books
—
Virgil's
;
seven orations (including those against Catiline)
;
^neid,
six
books
Cicero,
;
Collar's Latin Composition.
Greek. Greek Grammar (Goodwin's recommended) elementary Greek ComXenophon four books of the Anabasis Homer three books of the
position
Iliad
;
—
;
General History of Greece
;
For candidates who pass a
elective after the
—
;
Sophomore
to the
death of Alexander.
satisfactory examination in the above,
Candidates for the Classical Course
who
in the
(2)
Freshman
For
will
be
present no Greek will be required to
pursue the study during the entire four years of college
formed
Greek
year.
—a
class for beginners
being
year.
the Literary Course in English Literature
or German, f as follows
and
French
in
:
—
English Literature. Candidates are expected to be familiar with LongWayside Inn, Lowell's Vision of Sir Launfal, Irving's Sketch
Book, Whittier's Tent on the Beach, Hawthorne's House of the Seven Gables, and
to write a short composition upon a subject taken from one of these works.
French. French Gratmnar. — Inflections of regular verbs and auxiliaries;
fellow's Tales of a
—
forms of
articles,
nouns, adjectives, and pronouns;
principles of Syntax.
common
Super's Preparatory French Reader
;
irregular verbs
general
;
varied selections (entire)
dict6es.
—
German. Elements
German prose.
(3)
For
the
For
German Grammar, and
ability to translate, at sight,
easy
Engineering Course, in English Literature and in
French or German, f
(4)
of
as above.
the Science Course, in English Literature
and
in
French
or German, f as above.
Admission without Examination.
— Graduates
of the
following
Schools are admitted to the Freshman Class without examination upon
presenting regular certificates properly
filled
up by the Principals of
the Schools named.
Friends' Central School,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Friends' Seminary,
New
Friends'
High School,
York, N. Y.
Baltimore,
Md.
* For three books of the jEneid, a corresponding amount of Ovid and of Virgil's Bucolics
be accepted as an equivalent.
t Latin will be accepted as an equivalent for French or German for admission to this course.
X Other Schools may on application be added to this list, if the Faculty and Instruction Committee shall be satisfied that they are taught by competent teachers and are furnishing the requisite
preparation for admission.
will
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
29
Woodstown Academy,
Woodstown, N.
Friends' School,
Wilmington, Del.
Friends'
High School,
High School,
Buckingham Friends' School,
Friends' Academy,
West
Friends'
Moorestown, N.
Lahaska, Pa.
Locust Valley, L.
Friends' Select School
Washington, D. C.
Sherwood School,
Friends' School,
Sandy Spring, Md.
Kennett Square, Pa.
Providence Preparative Meeting School,
Media, Pa.
Oakland Boarding School,
Fiiends'
.
"
Normal
Institute,
J.
Chester, Pa.
Fallston,
J.
Md.
Md.
Rising Sun,
.
Abington Friends' School,
Jenkintown, Pa.
Swarthmore Grammar School,
Swarthmore, Pa.
George School,
Newtown, Pa.
Friends' School,
Christiana, Pa.
Blank
certificates will
be furnished each year to the Principals of
these preparatory schools,
and
to
named
The
right
for the privilege.
I.
such private teachers as
draw from such school or teacher the
College on certificates.
is
reserved,
may be
however, to with-
privilege of sending pupils into
Pupils from these Schools intending to enter the College should
apply by letter for places as soon as convenient after the completion
of their preparation.
They should
present themselves at the College
on Fifth-day, Ninth month 19th, 1895.
who wish to have students admitted
recommendation, should correspond with the President con-
Principals of other Schools
on
their
cerning each case.
Examination for Higher
Classes.
— Candidates
for classes higher
than the Freshman Class must pass satisfactorily in
pursued by the lower class or classes
colleges must present letters
the subjects
all
and students coming from other
of honorable dismissal, and must show
;
that they have pursued courses of study equivalent to those taken
by
the classes they wish to enter.
Partial Courses of Study.
—A
limited
number of
teachers
other persons of fair education and of sufficiently mature age
and
who may
wish to improve themselves in particular studies, will be received without examination, and allowed to elect, in any of the regular classes,
such work as they can pursue to advantage.
correspond with the President in advance.
They should
in all cases
Courses of Instruction.
ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED.
For required and elective studies, and the number of exercises per week in each,
see pages 53-56.
Biology.
Spencer Trotter,
The purpose
of biological studies
Professor.
is
to train students in the right
methods of thinking and the interpretation of the
continually presented to them by natural objects.
Lectures, demonstrations,
nection with
field
and text-books
and laboratory work.
are
facts
and problems
employed
The Course
in con-
is
required of all
Students.
—Elements of
Science students.
The Course
is
arranged as follows
:
Class. — Required of Science
Freshman
Biology.
stract
— Orton's
" Comparative Zoology 3" Trotter's " Abof Zoology;" Colton's "Practical Zoology."
Text-books.
Sophomore Class.
Junior Class.
2.
books.
—
i.
— Sanitary Science,
elective for Engineers.
Physiology of Plant Life.
Morphology and Physiology of a high form of animal. Text"The Cat;" Huxley & Youman's "Physiology."
— Mivart,
—
Vertebrate Morphology, Economic
Class.
Text-book, " Le Conte's Elements " (elective).
Senior
Geology.
Independent Work.
— Preparation and writing of a
biological subject.
Time
for
(30)
work
to
be arranged with the Professor.
thesis
Botany,
on some
j^t^mMi^
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
31
The Museum.
The Museum of the College
the specimens from
its
is
strictly a
teaching collection, and
cases are in constant use in the lectures
laboratories in Natural History
the direction of rendering
;
more
it is
growing
and
steadily, but always in
means of illustrating the
and with no intention of
or miscellaneous articles, however
perfect the
different departments of natural history,
making
it
a collection of curiosities
interesting they
may be
in their way.
following collections
It includes the
Tht Joseph Leidy
1.
Collection of Minerals, the result of thirty
years' discriminative collecting
double
cases,
:
by
its
occupies four large
founder,
consists of exceedingly choice cabinet specimens of
and
crystallized minerals, characteristic rocks
and
opaque models of the various systems of
crystallization.
The
2.
series
of
Collection of
partial
ores,
and transparent and
Cotnparative Osteology consists of a large
and complete
skeletons, prepared at
Henry
Prof.
Ward's Natural History Establishment in Rochester, N. Y.; and
trating the structure and framework of backboned animals.
The Wilcox and Farnum
3.
Collection of
Birds comprises four
large double cases of stuffed specimens of native
Nearly
all
4.
illus-
and foreign
birds.
the specimens visiting this State are represented.
The Frederick Kohl Ethnological
of two
Collection consists
cases of Indian implements, weapons, clothing, etc., mostly from Alaska.
5.
The
C. F.
Parker
Collection of Shells
cases of choice typical land, fresh water,
specimens were
all
tion of the late C.
made up of
six large
shells.
by the Curator from the extensive
Parker, and render further additions
selected
F.
is
and marine
These
collecto this
The founder of this collection was for many years
charge of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Phila-
branch needless.
the Curator in
delphia.
6. The Robert R. Corson Collection of Stalactites, Stalagmites,
and Helictites, represents the celebrated Luray Caverns, and illustrates
the limestone formations which render these caverns the second in
magnificence in the world.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
32
7.
The
£ck/e/ci^ Iferi^anum consists of over
two thousand
-plsiTits,
illustrating the flora of Pennsylvania.
is a large and constantly increasand alcoholic specimens of vertebrates and
invertebrates (including the U. S. Fish Commission Educational Collection), of dissected specimens for demonstration in the lectures on
Physiology and Hygiene, glass and papier-mache models of invertebrates and of special points in vegetable and animal morphology, besides some three hundred classified diagrams and finely colored charts
In addition to the above, there
ing collection of stuffed
illustrating every
branch of natural history.
Chemistry.
William
The
C.
Day,
Professor.
course of instruction in this subject extends over a period of
four years,
and aims
essential facts
thorough understanding of the most
to impart a
and principles of the science, while
special attention
is
given to the cultivation of systematic habits of manipulation, so that,
besides possessing value as part of a liberal education,
dation for such pursuits in
Those who may
require this
life as
desire to continue their
forms a foun-
it
knowledge.
work beyond the
limits
of the regular course will have suitable work assigned them, and will
find every facility for carrying
on.
it
The Che7nical Laboratory occupies rooms in Science Hall. It
includes a room for work in general Chemistry and Qualitative Analysis, one for Quantitative Analysis, and a basement room for Assaying
and Metallurgy. Near to these are store-rooms, a balance-room, and
a lecture-room.
The Laboratory
tables are covered with glazed tiles;
fum.e-closets, suction for filtration, water
and gas are provided.
lecture-room, with a seating capacity of one hundred,
is
The
furnished
with water, gas, fume-closets, and abundant apparatus for lecture purFor lecture illustration, there is an excellent collection of the
poses.
metals and their
Foulke)
;
salts,
and a cabinet of minerals (deposited by Hugh
in addition to these, there
arations for use in the course in
Chemical Library.
— In
all
is
a complete set of typical prep-
Organic Chemistry.
cases students are encouraged in the
habit of consulting for themselves the best authorities
;
and
in a
room
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
'
33
near to the Laboratory there will be found a number of standard
Chemistry
works on
besides there
;
are
numerous other works on
technical and analytical subjects, current chemical journals, including
some complete
sets
Text-Books.
of the
latter.
—As the student advances
in the course the follow-
" Elementary Chemistry," Remsen ; " Qualitative Analysis," Medicus; " Introduction to the Study of the Compounds of Carbon," Remsen; "Quantitative Chemical Analysis,"
Special works in
Fresenius; "Theoretical Chemistry," Remsen.
ing text-books are used
:
technical analysis are used as required.
FRESHMAN
Lectures {^Experimental').
a.
CLASS.
— General
Elementary Chemistry
(non-metals and metals), with examinations.
Laboratory Woj-k.
b.
— Special
exercises
on topics selected with
the object of stimulating intelligent experimentation.
SOPHOMORE
Lectures.
a.
—Theoretical
CLASS.
Chemistry, followed by Qualitative
Analysis.
Laboratory
b.
Work.
— Qualitative
followed
by Quantitative
Chemical Analysis.
JUNIOR CLASS.
— Chemistry of compounds of carbon.
Laboratory Work. — Quantitative Analysis, followed
the
Lectures.
a.
b.
number of
by a
exercises in important, typical, organic transformations.
SENIOR CLASS.
The
A
iQ,vf
course during this year consists largely of laboratory work.
special subjects are given to each student, with the understand-
and theoretical requirements of
and scholarly manner. Such
involve the study of technical works and a number of the
ing that he
is
to
fulfill
the practical
these subjects in a complete, exhaustive,
work
will
current chemical journals.
Meetings will occasionally be held for the
consideration of important researches, as they appear from time to
time in the journals.
3
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
34
Drawing and
Painting.
Beatrice Magill,
A
Drawing and Painting is open to all.
means of culture, it leads to habits
course of Freehand
Aside from
its
Itistructor.*
intrinsic value as a
of close observation, and
is
a very important adjunct to the other
and Science.
courses, especially to those of Engineering
It consists
of drawing from objects and casts, and painting from
still-life, flowers, etc., and a series of lectures on Practical Perspective
and the History of Painting. A Sketch Class is open to the students
It is held one afternoon a week for out-door
qualified to work in it.
sketching in the Spring and Autumn, and during the Winter-time
sketches are made in the studio from casts and still-life, in color and
light
and shade.
Freshman Class.
ornament,
from geometrical objects
;
cast,
still-life.
Sophomore Class.
ing from
— Drawing
— Drawing from
cast, details
of figure.
Paint-
still-life.
Junior Class.
—Drawing from
Painting,
of figure.
cast, details
flowers, out-door sketching.
still-life,
Senior Class.
—Drawing
from
cast,
head or
Painting,
figure.
flowers, out-door sketching.
still-life,
History of Art.
Junior Class.
—
two periods a week.
(^Elective),
the Renaissance.
—History of
— History of Art Germany, England, and
Spain.
two periods a week.
Senior Class. —
France Modern
Semester — History of Art
Second Semester — Grecian
Italian Art,
First Semester:
Second Semester:
in
{Elective),
First
in
:
The
subjects
;
Art.
Art.
:
students are required to present written sketches
under consideration and to
visit
held in PJiiladelphia during each season.
* For the present year
Mabel
B.
Edwards,
upon the
the different art exhibitions
Instructor.
:--|v
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
'
35
Engineering and Mechanic Arts.
Arthur Bexkosl^y
This department,
to
giv'e
come
a
in
,
Fro/essof / Joseph
Bayley,
connection with that of Physics,
good preparation
to those students
who
Mechanical Engineers, or
either Civil or
Jr., Assisfanf.
to
The
several specialties of engineering practice.
is
intended
are expecting to be-
engage in any of the
and exercises
become imme-
studies
are so arranged that the graduates will be prepared to
diately useful in the office, works, or field, in subordinate positions,
and, after a
fair
amount of such
practice, to design
and take charge
of important works.
The
location of the College
is
most favorable
for residence
and
study, combining the quiet of the country with ready access to Phila-
delphia and the
many important manufacturing
and permitting frequent
visits
cities in
its
vicinity,
and engineering works of
to industrial
every kind.
The department
ments,
transits,
is
well provided with the necessary field instru-
levels,
plane-table, etc., and each student is made
and management by practical exercises in the
familiar with their use
and draughting-room, carefully planned to illustrate the actual
Included in the work of this department is
a course in the Mechanic Arts, in which regular and systematic instruction is given in thoroughly-equipped workshops, and by skilled
instructors in the use of tools and machinery, and in methods and
field
practice of the engineer.
processes.
T/ie
Draughting- Rooms 2st large, well -lighted, and furnished with
adjustable tables, models, etc., are well ventilated
and warmed, and
are open for work during the greater part of the day.
The Engineering Laboratory contains a ten-horse power vertical
steam engine and boiler, an Olsen's testing-machine, arranged for
tensile, compressive,
apparatus
for
and transverse
hydraulic and
valuable instruments and appliances.
in
tests,
a steam-engine indicator,
steam-engine
It
experiments, and
other
includes, also, several shops,
which the students become familiar with the nature and properties
etc.), employed
by the engineer, and with the process of working them into the de-
of the materials of construction (iron, wood, brass,
sired
form
for their
intended
uses.
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
36
The Machine Shop contains an excellent and complete assortment
of tools, including 4 screw-cutting engine lathes, 3 speed-lathes (simple and back geared), an iron planer, a complete universal milling
machine, a
set
of milling cutters adapted for general purposes and for
making other cutters, a shaper, a twist-drill grinder,
an emery grinder, a mill grinder, a grindstone, 16
2
upright
drills,
(plain
vises
swivel), 14 lathe chucks (combination, independent, scroll,
and
and
drill),
a milling machine chuck, a rotary planer chuck, planer centres, a set
of Bett's standard gauges, surface plates (Brown & Sharpe), sets of
twist drills, reamers, mandrels, screw-plates, taps
and
dies, lathe centre
grinder, a complete set of steam-fitters' tools with pipe vise, ratchet
drill,
etc.,
many
together with the
necessary small tools, hammers,
x\dditions are constantly being
chisels, files, etc.
made
to this collec-
by
tion, as they are needed, either by manufacture in the shops or
Power
purchase.
is
furnished by a 10x24
Corliss steam engine
and
a 60 horse power return tubular boiler, the former fitted with an improved indicator, and the latter with the necessary attachments for
determining
sets
its
efficiency, etc.
The Wood- Working Shop contains 20 benches with vises, and 20
of wood-working tools, a grindstone, and 8 wooden -turning
lathes.
The Smith Shop contains
smith tools, bench, and vise.
7 forges,
10 anvils, and sets of black-
The Foundry contains a brass-furnace, moulders' benches, a
variety of patterns, and a full set of moulders' tools.
The details of the course vary somewhat from year to year ; but,
in general, are represented by the following arrangement of the
studies
FRESHMAN
Shop Practice.
ing and Foundry Practice.
scraping,
fitting,
Drawing.
—
CLASS.
—Wood- working and Pattern-making, BlacksmithVise work, chipping and
filing to line,
tapping, reaming, hand-turning in brass
and
iron.
Special geometric problems, working drawings, ortho-
graphic projections, shadows, brush work and tinting, machine drawing from copy and from measurements, gears, eccentrics, cams, pulleys, belting, etc.
Engineering.
materials, etc.
—Lectures
on use of
tools,
on the properties of
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
SOPHOMORE
37
CLASS.
—
Analytical mechanics of solids and fluids j descripEngineering.
careful construction of the more important prowith
geometry,
tive
with field practice and map drawing.
surveying,
land
blems ;
Machine-Shop Practice.
—Lathe
work, turning,
screw-
boring,
cutting, drilling, planing, milling, grinding, polishing, etc., construc-
Lectures on machine tools, on materials of con-
tion of a project.
struction, etc.
Dratuing.
for special
— Working drawings, sketches, drawings and blue prints
work and
projects, elements of machines,
shadows and in-
tersections.
JUNIOR CLASS.
Engijieering.
—Theory and
practice of road surveying
and engi-
neering, shades, shadows, and perspective.
Geodesy.
struments
—Theory, adjustment
farm surveying
;
and use of engineering
leveling
;
;
field
in-
topographical, triangular, and
hydrographical surveying.
— Friction and other
Mechanism. — Problems
Applied Mechanics.
resistances
;
stress
and
strength of materials.
Drawing and
perspective
;
in shades,
shadows, and
topographical, structure, and machine drawing
ples of mechanism
;
visits to
and sketches of
special
;
princi-
machinery and
structures; finished drawings.
Practical Exercises in the field in the Fall and Spring months,
and
and
management of steam-
in general laboratory practice, including the testing of metals
building materials, the setting up, testing, and
engines, boilers, and machinery, throughout the year
to
visits
works
;
with occasional
mechanical establishments, and to important engineering
in or near Philadelphia.
For the Electrical Work, see department of Physics.
SENIOR CLASS.
Engineering.
—Theory and practice of road surveying
neering, continued
;
building materials
dations and superstructures
contracts.
;
;
and engi-
stability of structures;
bridge construction
;
foun-
specifications
and
:
38
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
'
Applied Mechmiics.
—
Practical hydraulics
general theory of machines
turbines, etc.
;
practical pneumatics
;
y
theory of prime movers, steam-engines,
;
measurement of power.
—
Drawing. —
Mechanism.
Principles of mechanism, of
of the transmission of power
;
machine design, and
construction and use of tools.
Stone- cutting problems; topographical, structure,
machine drawing
and sections of road surveys
plans, profiles,
;
;
and
work-
ing drawings.
Practical Exercises.
building materials
j
— As
in
graduating
The Degree conferred
Junior year, continued
tests
;
of
thesis.
at the
completion of the course
Bachelor
is
of Science in Engineering.
English Language and Literature.
Richard Jones, Professor.
William H. Appleton, Early English.
Myrtie E. Furman, Elocution and Oratory.
J.
The
Russell Hayes, Assistant
in English.
course in English Literature extends through four years, in-
by
struction being given
the English Language
recitations
and
lectures.
During
this
time
studied in connection with the Literature
is
from the Anglo-Saxon period down to the present day.
lar feature of the course is
The
particu-
the critical reading in the class-room of
representative authors, such as Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Pope,
Tennyson.
Peculiarities of style
sions are looked up,
sion of the
work
in
and every
The
hand.
to the history of the time,
his contemporaries.
will
By
and
and language are considered, allumade for a thorough comprehen-
effort
author's
his
life is
studied in
its
relation
works are compared with those of
this course
it
is
be enabled, from his own observation,
expected that the student
to
form an intelligent
esti-
and merits of the great authors of English Literature.
So far as practicable, the work in Literature, in Rhetoric and ComThe subposition, and in Elocution and Oratory is co-ordinated.
jects for essays are largely suggested by the work in Literature, and in
Elocution and Oratory the study, as literature, of the literature read
mate of the
is
style
considered fundamental to an intelligent oral expression.
The
courses offered are as follows
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
Literature.
a.
I.
A
39
FRESHMAN YEAR.
'The nineteenth century authors of England and America.
few authors are selected for more exhaustive study, with the
design of making the work in literature contribute toward intellectual
appreciation of
discipline and spiritual insight, no less than toward an
literary values.
The
authors selected for this
more minute study
semester of the present year are Whittier and Tennyof other authors are read, and a short historical survey
Portions
son.
illustrate
of the Greek and the Roman literatures is given, in order to
literatures.
great
earlier
the
to
Literature
English
of
debt
the
during the
II.
first
Independent of the above, there
is
of Freshmen
in
required
course,
students
given a special one-year
Engineering.
In
this
course there are given lectures on English Literature, prefaced by lecCritical reading is
tures on the Greek and the Roman literatures.
required in Pope's Homer's
Milron, and Tennyson.
Iliad,
Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare,
Essay writing throughout the course.
SOPHOMORE YEAR.
The work of
the year
is
and Milton, with
and poetry).
largely Shakespeare
readings, however, of other authors (prose
JUNIOR YEAR.
First Semester:
Anglo-Saxon (Sweet's Primer and Selections),
Lectures on the development of English.
Second Semester Chaucer, Spenser
:
contemporary authors by students.
;
outside reading of
minor
and
Lectures on the Transition
Middle English Periods.
SENIOR YEAR.
A
course in
the Senior year.
World Literature in English translation is given in
The design is to give students who have not read
the great works of other literatures in the original an opportunity to
become to some extent familiar with the thought, at least, of some of
" eternal records of eternal truth," even though somewhat of
The emphasis is, as a
the beauty of form be lost in the translation.
matter of course, placed upon the content of the poem, upon the
these
view of
life
therein enshrined.
40
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
'
In addition to the required class-work, there
ditional reading suggested for
selves of the opportunity offered for conference
and
Rhetoric
b.
This course
is
is
in all classes ad-
such members as choose to avail them-
and personal advice.
Composition.
required of
all
regular students.
FRESHMAN YEAR.
study of model orations, as to form and content, and prac-
The
tice in writing orations.
SOPHOMORE YEAR.
The
son's
principles
and practice of
versification.
Text-book, Cor-
"Primer of English Verse."
JUNIOR YEAR.
Advanced Rhetoric
—the
study of style and authorship.
books, Genung's "Practical Elements of Rhetoric," and
Text-
"Hand-
book of Rhetorical Analysis."
SENIOR YEAR.
Graduating
essays.
Elocution
c.
Inasmuch
as
and Oratory.
natural
and
potent factors for success in
life,
effective speech
is
one of the most
the subjects of Elocution and Oratory
have been combined, and the student is given practice in expressing
The aim in this
his own thought as well as the thought of an author.
course
is
to stimulate to a broader mental grasp,
cultivate the imagi-
nation, and arouse the sensibilities, the theory accepted being that
effective
expression
the student
is
is
a result of vivid mental impressions.
given exercises whereby he learns to
ences, to vivify his thought,
and thus be able
Hence
utilize his experi-
to enter into the spirit
of the literature read and to make it a part of himself.
A sound and flexible body being the medium through which the
soul
must express
itself,
due attention
given to physical training,
is
voice culture, and enunciation.
The
course in Elocution and Oratory extends through four years.
First year, original work, reading
and
recitation of typical orations
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
41
work required under Rhetoric and Composi" and *' Julius
tion, the critical reading of the " Merchant of Venice
characters of
of
the
description
Csesar," with imaginative study and
Second
training.
physical
enunciation,
Voice culture,
the dramas.
in connection with the
work continued, extemporaneous speech, voice culture,
etc., continued, the critical reading of "Twelfth Night" and other
Third and fourth years, the work continued
standard selections.
year, original
more fundamentally.
During the college year there are several contests in oratory and
declamation, open to all students, which stimulate oratorical zeal.
The members of
the Senior Class give a Shakespeare evening in char-
which they receive instruction.
made to make the work in this department a
acter, in preparation for
Every
effort
is
stimulus to thought.
A
read, so that the course
careful study
is
to
is
required of the literature
some extent a course
in English litera-
ture.
French Language and Literature.
Edward H. Magtll,
The
Pi-ofessor.
objective points in the study of the French language will be
wide and extensive reading, making the student as familiar as the time
will allow with as many as possible of the best works in French Literature.
To this end a minimum of grammar will be required, and rapid
While the classical
reading at sight encouraged early in the course.
authors of the seventeenth century will receive careful attention, as
much of the literature of the present generation as is found practicable
will
be introduced into the course.
name
It is
not possible nor necessary to
the various works used, as they will be changed from year to year,
as circumstances
Course
I.
and the condition of
Time, one year.
regular verbs and auxiliaries
pronouns
Super's
;
common
Preparatory
;
seem
to require.
French Grammar
forms of
irregular verbs
French
classes
;
Reader;
articles,
—
inflections of
nouns, adjectives, and
general principles of syntax.
Magill's
"Modern French
Series," Vol. I; Dictfees.
for entrance to Freshman Class by those who offer a
also first year's work for those who must
work in French
begin French after entering the Freshman Class.
Required
year's
;
;
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
42
Course
II.
Time, one
tions (entire)
French Grammar reviewed and
year.
"Modern French
completed; Magill's
Series," Vol. II; varied selec-
from modern French writers
Dictees
;
;
Conversations.
Required of students of French who have completed Course
have passed an entrance examination upon
Course
Time,
III.
one year.
I
or
it.
"Modern French
Magill's
Cid and Polyeucte; Racine's Athalie
and Esther; Moliere's Misanthrope and Les Precieuses Ridicules Victor Hugo's Hernani and other selections (entire) from modern French
Series," Vol. Ill;
Corneille's
;
writers; Dictees;
Mme. Delphine
Duval's
Litterature
Fran^aise
Conversation and Correspondence.
Required of students of French who have completed Courses
and
I
II.
Course IV.
ence in French;
Conversation and Correspond-
Time, one year.
Dictees,
''Modern
Critiques; 'Magill's
Essays,
French Series," Vol. IV, and varied selected works
(entire) of authors
of the nineteenth century.
Note.
— Students
in Letters
and Science who complete French
during their Freshman and Sophomore years will take German during
their Junior
and Senior
years,
and
vice versa.
German Language and
Marie A. Kemp,
The
course in
four years.
as possible
German language and
Its object
is
Literature.
Professor.
literature extends
to give the student a reading
and
—
through
in so far
—speaking knowledge of modern colloquial German
a general acquaintance with
tures, private reading,
and
German
critical
literature, to
;
be gained from
study of some of the
German
Selections from
German Grammar
(Part
I).
Grimm's Mdrchen.
Riehl, two Novelleji.
Lessing, Min7ia von Barnhelm, or Freytag,
Prose composition.
Memorizing of
lyrics
and
ballads.
lec-
classics.
FIRST YEAR.
Joynes-Meissner's
also
Die JournaUsten.
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
43
SECOND YEAR.
Joynes-Meissner's
German Grammar
Aus don Siaat
Freytag,
(continued).
Friedrichs des Grossen.
Goethe, Gotz von Berlichingen.
Schiller, Historische Skizzen.
Private reading from Scherer's History of
German
Literature.
THIRD YEAR.
Schiller,
Wallenstein.
Heine, Harzreise (ed. Buchheim).
Goethe, Iphige7iia auf Tauris.
Lectures on History of
German
Literature.
Private reading from Buchheim' s Deutsche Lyrik.
FOURTH YEAR.
Goethe, Egmont (ed. Buchheim).
Briefwechsel Zwischen Goethe
Goethe,
Von
/^azfji-/
Scheffel,
(ed.
und
Schiller (ed.
Ekkehard (first part).
Ekkehard {coxioXw^^d^
Private reading
Gotta).
Thomas).
:
,
Sime's
Zz/^^
of Goethe.
Greek.
William H. Appleton,
L
Students
who
Professor.
present the usual College requisition in Greek
be required to continue the study for two years, with
the privilege of electing it thereafter, in accordance with the following
(see
page 28)
will
scheme
FRESHMAN YEAR (REQUIRED).
— Homer: The
or Odyssey
Prose — The Greek Historians Herodotus and Thucydides
Poetry
(Selections).
Iliad
:
(Selec-
tions).
SOPHOMORE YEAR (REQUIRED).
Poetry
— Greek
Tragedy
:
^schylus, Sophocles.
One
play of
each.
Prose
—
(A study of
Plato's
Apology and
Socrates.)
Crito,
Xenophon's Memorabilia.
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
44
JUNIOR YEAR (ELECTIVE).
—Euripides Several
—Demosthenes The Oration on the Crown.
Poetry
Prose
plays.
:
:
SENIOR YEAR (ELECTIVE).
—Aristophanes, Lyric
Modern
Dialogues.
—
Poetry
Prose
poets.
Plato's
Greek.
Readings in Vin-
cent and Dickson's Hand-Book, with colloquial exercises.
on the History of Greek
Note.
with
— All
much
the
classes
have exercises in
Greek Composition
practice in sight-reading.
n. Students who present no Greek
will
Lectures
Literature.
at the
admission examinations
be required, in order to graduate with the degree of A. B., to
take the language for the entire four years as follows
FRESHMAN YEAR.
White's Beginner's Greek Book; Xenophon's Anabasis, Book I;
Greek Testament.
SOPHOMORE YEAR.
Xenophon's Anabasis, Books
II, III,
IV;
Plato's
Apology and
Crito.
JUNIOR YEAR.
Homer: The
Iliad or
Odyssey
(six books).
Greek Historians (Selections).
SENIOR YEAR.
Greek Drama Two plays. Greek Prose, Modern Greek, Lecon Greek Literature.
Greek Composition and sight-reading in all the classes.
Note.
:
tures
—
History and Political Economy.
William
I.
Hull,
Professor.
The group of studies included within
Economics, Political and Social Science
—
this
is
department
—History,
designed to furnish in-
formation necessary for intelligent citizenship, and to provide a pre-
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
who intend
liminary training for those
to
45
engage in the practice of
law, journalism, business, or the public service.
Instruction
is
given
by means of lectures, recitations, and oral and written reports by the
students on assigned topics.
In the upper classes each student is required to
made an independent and
For
or chosen subject.
this
detailed study of
some assigned
purpose the library contains a good
working collection of public documents and reports, both Federal and
State, in addition to standard treatises.
The
following
a statement of the courses
is
HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE.
FRESHMAN YEAR.
First Semester
History of the Oriental Nations and Greece.
:
Second Semester
:
The History
of
Rome.
SOPHOMORE YEAR.
First Semester
History of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance,
:
including a study of the Barbarian Invasions, Primitive Christianity
and the History of the Church during the Middle Ages, the Crusades,
the Medieval Empire," Feudalism, the Rise of Free Cities, and the
Revival of Learning.
Second Semester
:
The Reformation and
the French Revolution,
including a study of the Protestant Revolution, the Old Regime, the
Establishment of Democracy, and the Napoleonic Age.
JUNIOR YEAR.
The History
of England and the Nineteenth Century.
SENIOR YEAR.
History,
Constitution,
and
Civil
Government of
the
States.
POLITICAL
ECONOMY AND SOCIAL
SCIENCE.
JUNIOR YEAR.
First Semester
:
Second Semester
Elements of
:
Socialism
Political
;
Economy.
Money and
Banking.
United
;
.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
46
SENIOR YEAR.
Protection and Free Trade
Social Problems.
Social Problems ; Taxation.
Second Semester
The course in
Social Problems includes such topics as Pauperism and Charity, Crime
and Penology, the Tenement House Question, the Child Problem,
Woman as a Social Factor, Intemperance, University and College
First Semester
:
;
:
Settlements.
Latin.
Ferris W. Price, Professor.
FRESHMAN
CLASS.
Horace, Odesj Cicero's Letters; Latin Composition ; Mythology.
SOPHOMORE
Horace, Satires and Epistles
lectures
and study of
;
CLASS.
Livy
;
History of Latin Literature,
characteristic passages from all the
most import-
ant authors.
JUNIOR CLASS.
Remnants of Early Latin
mio
Cicero,
;
De
Senectute
;
;
Trinummus
Hymns.
Plautus,
Latin
;
Terence, Phor-
SENIOR CLASS.
Selections from Lucretius
Tacitus, Agricola
;
and Catullus Juvenal, three Satires
and ^neid (Books VII-XIIj.
;
Virgil, Georgics,
Sight-reading throughout the course.
A
room,
Latin Seminary, designed to supplement the work of the classis
The
held monthly, in two sections.
object of the Seminary work this year will be, primarily, to
familiarize
the
members with
recent^ of the study of
ciani's
Ancient
Rome
Roman
will
the history
antiquities.
and current
results
(particularly
be read and commented upon by carefully
prepared papers and round-table
Other features of
and
Becker's Gallus and Lan-
this
talks.
year's meetings will be reviews of books
literature of interest to classical students, metrical trans-
lations, sight-reading of Pliny's letters,
and answers
to queries.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
47
Mathematics.
Susan
J.
Cunningham,
Professor ;
Henry
FRESHMAN
V.
Gummere,
Assistant.
CLASS.
Charles Smith's Treatise on Algebra;
Elements of Geometry
(Halsted); Plane Trigonometry (Loney).
SOPHOMORE
Halsted's Geometry, finished;
CLASS.
Byerly's Differential
Calculus;
Charles Smith's Conic Sections.
JUNIOR CLASS.
,
Byerly's Integral Calculus; Chauvenet's Spherical Trigonometry.
ELECTIVE COURSES.
1.
etry
;
Modern Pure Geometry. An advanced course in pure geomHarmonic Ranges and Pencils, the theories of
subjects treated
:
Involution, Perspective, Similar Figures, Reciprocation, Inversion, etc.
2.
Higher Algebra, beginning with the Theory of Equations
(Burnside and Panton) and continuing with Invariants,
3.
Plane Analytic Geometry, including
etc.
Higher Plane Curves;
the course will be a continuation of Conic Sections and will be based
on Clebsch-Lindemann's Geometrie.
4.
Solid Analytic
Geometry (Charles Smith's).
5.
Curve Tracing.
6.
Differential Equations.
7.
Trigonometric Series, Spherical Harmonics,
8.
Elementary Quarternions (Kelland and Tait).
ASTRONOMY
1.
etc. (Byerly's).
(ELECTIVE).
Young's General Astronomy.
2.
Chauvenet's Spherical and Practical Astronomy,
3.
Theoretical Astronomy (Orbit Determination).
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
48
Pedagogics.
President
The work
in this
De Garmo.
department consists of a fundamental study^
of the growing mind of the child,
first,
dencies, interests,
natural capacities, ten-
its
and methods of growth
then of the choice and
;
co-ordination of studies, together with the best methods of teaching
them
;
child
and, finally, of the methods whereby the character of the
may
The works
best be developed through school discipline
and
instruction.
of Herbert and his successors are thoroughly studied.
Philosophy.
President
De Garmo.
SENIOR CLASS.
Psychologv.
—
First Semester: (i) Lindner's Empirical Psychology.
Special attention paid to the processes of knowledge, feeling, and
volition;
to
also,
osophy.
The
psychological
the
(2) Rational Psychology
— Dr. Wm.
self-active, spiritual
basis
moral
of
character.
T. Harris's Introduction to Phil-
nature of
mind
is
herein exhibited,
also the essentials of logic.
History of Philosophy.
and Modern Philosophy
History of
Philosophy,
—Second Semester
is
from Thales
especial reference to Socrates, Plato,
from Descartes
:
The
history of Ancient
taught in alternate years.
The
to the present.
to
Leibnitz
and
Aristotle
First course,
with
inclusive,
;
second course,
ethical bearings of each
prom-
inent system are dwelt upon.
Physical Culture.
FOR YOUNG MEN.
Dr.
The system
J.
K. Shell.
of Physical Culture
is
based on a thorough examina-
and
and the ratio existing between the tested strength
and the muscularity ; and on these data formulating a course of exercises such as will meet the requirement of each individual, so as to
produce an evenly developed and healthy organism.
tion of each student, carefully noting all defects of development,
functional weakness,
;
:
"
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
The young men
49
are required to give three hours each
week
for
carrying out the prescription of the Director.
The
sports of
and athletics are under the
and only those who are physically
compete great care is taken that the games
foot-ball, base-ball,
direct supervision of the Director,
fit
are allowed actively to
be kept within proper
;
limits, so as
not to take too
much
of the students'
attention or energy.
FOR YOUNG WOMEN.
Dr.
Mary
V. Mitchell Green.
Marion Hunter,
A
tion,
careful examination
and the
is
made
Assistant.
of each student's physical condi-
exercises to suit individual needs are assigned according
to the Swedish system.
Tennis, golf, and other out-door exercises are provided for the
young women.
Physics.
Grorge a. Hoadley,
Professor.
The Physical Laboratory is already provided with apparatus for
determinations in the mechanics of solids and fluids, in heat, sound,
light, electricity, and magnetism
as also with a large amount for
lecture experiments.
Most of this has been selected with care from the
best American and foreign makers, but some is of home manufacture
and the co-operation of the Engineering Department and the increas;
ing
skill
of our students enable us
now
to
proportion for regular use in the Laboratory.
make each
It
is
year a larger
our aim to afford
students continued opportunities for instruction in the principles of
construction of ordinary and special apparatus.
dynamos and
for
other purposes
is
Power
near at hand.
The
for
running
instruction
begins in the Sophomore year, and extends through the course as
follows
FOR STUDENTS IN ARTS AND LETTERS
SOPHOMORE
General Physics.
—This
:
CLASS.
course consists of the investigation of
the general laws of Physics and the consideration of their practical
application.
4
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
50
The work of
the course
accompanied by experimental
is
done by
and
lectures
recitations,
veriiication of the laws discussed,
and
extends over the entire year.
JUNIOR CLASS.
During the Junior year the course
and Light.
is
an elective in Heat, Magnet-
ism, Electricity,
FOR STUDENTS IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING.
This course occupies two consecutive years, requiring two periods
per week in the Sophomore year, and four in the Junior.
It is in-
tended to be pre-eminently a practical course, consisting largely of
laboratory work, in the investigation and verification of the laws of
Physics.
The
work will cover the topics treated in Ganot's
some other text-book of equal rank, and will be supplemented by lectures on the various branches of the subject.
The division of the work is as follows
recitation
Physics, or
SOPHOMORE
CLASS.
Applied Mechanics and Dynamics, and Sound.
JUNIOR CLASS.
Heat, Magnetism, Electricity, and Light.
SENIOR CLASS.
Applied Electricity.
This
this the
an elective of eight periods -per week, counting
is
Junior work in Magnetism and Electricity
is
as four.
In
supplemented by
the practical study of their application to the telephone, telegraph,
dynamo,
electric light, motor, transmission of
Work
power,
etc.
and use of these various appliances, as
well as in the measurement of the electrical current, is accompanied
by text-book work in Thompson's Dynamo Electric Machinery, and
by the reading and class discussion of current electrical journals.
Visits to the electrical plants of the neighboring villages and cities
are
made
in the manufacture
at
convenient times, for the purpose of studying the ma-
chinery in actual use.
t>'
9^
General Remarks on the Courses of
Study.
In arranging the courses of study, while recognizing the fact that
the
domain of human knowledge
is
so vast that he
best must confine his attention chiefly to
who would succeed
some chosen
field, we have
endeavored not to lose sight of the equally important fact that those
are best equipped for work in any particular department who have the
most extended view of the realm of learning
To
as a whole.
secure in a measure both these results, minor courses in
of the subjects of the curriculum are required of
all;
many
while the more
extended courses in each subject are taken only by those whose
and inclination
lie in
In pursuing this poHcy for several years,
distinct lines, of study.
which are
essential
The
course.
four
and natural development of the
to the logical
:
THE COURSE
The
we have developed
In each of them are required those subjects
courses are as follows
,
taste
that particular direction.
IN ARTS.
characteristic feature of this course
is
the study of Classical
Antiquity, including the language and literature of the Greeks and
Romans, with their art, philosophy, religion, and political and social
Combined with this are courses in Modern Languages,
Mathematics, and Science, with some elective subjects.
While this
course affords that broad culture which should be the foundation of
any subsequent career, it may be made to afi'ord special preparation
for Law or Journalism by including electives in History and Political
Economy, or it may be shaped in the direction of Medicine by choosing electives in Biology and Chemistry.
This course leads to the de-
history.
gree of
^^(^/^(f/^'r (?/"^r/j-.
THE COURSE IN LETTERS.
This course
is
arranged to provide a liberal education for those
who do
not wish to pursue the study of the ancient languages, nor to
take
the science required in the Science Course.
all
Its
leading feat(51)
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
52
amount of English, French, and German, and of
Science.
It includes the amount of MatheHistory and
prescribed
in
college
course, with a fair amount of
usually
a
matics
elective
Latin.
This course
some
subjects,
including
and
Science,
ures are a liberal
Political
leads to the degree of Bachelor of Letters.
THE COURSE
The
IN SCIENCE.
characteristic feature of this course
is
more extended
instruc-
tion in science than in the preceding courses, together with a fair
amount of Mathematics and Modern Language study, including EngThe instruction in Physics, Chemistry, and Biology is of a twolish.
fold character;
first,
secondly, practical
systematic treatment in experimental lectures;
work
Thus the student acmore important facts and fun-
in the laboratories.
quires a familiarity, not only with the
damental principles of those sciences, but also with the correct
methods of work, so that his course may form a foundation for subsequent higher work in any department of science.
This course leads to
the degree of Bachelor of Science.
THE COURSE
This course
offers, in
its
IN ENGINEERING.
various studies and exercises, a training
which is believed to be well adapted to the needs of Civil and of
Mechanical Engineers, as well as of the large class who are to be concerned with the material interests of the country, with manufacturing,
with industrial pursuits, or with any of the many other occupations
and technical instruction
sciences, and their
in the mathematical, physical, and
in
the
arts of design and
applications, in practical field engineering,
construction, and in the use of tools, materials, and machinery, and in
allied to
Engineering.
It
embraces
liberal
graphical
processes.
This course leads to the degree of Bachelor of Science in
Engineering.
;
The Course
in Arts.
REQUIRED STUDIES.
Greek, 2 or 4 years; Latin, 3 years; Mathematics, i^ years History, I year;
year Psychology, Yz year
Biology, Chemistry, or Physics, i year Economics,
;
^
;
History of Philosophy, V^ year
;
Elocution, 2 years
;
;
Composition, 4 years.
COURSE ELECTIVES (TWO REQUIRED).
Physics,
\]/^
years
TQan,
I
I
year; Biology,
History,
;
i to
to 2 years; Chemistry,
I
2 years
;
to 2 years; Latin, I year;
English,
I
to 2 years
Mathematics,
I
;
I
year; Economics, y^ to
I to 2 years
Ger-
French,
;
to 2 years.
OPEN SEMESTER ELECTIVES.
Government Astronomy
Mineralogy Geology Mathematics
Civil
;
;
;
Drawing and Painting
;
Elocution
;
;
Botany
;
;
Pedagogy
;
Logic
;
Zoology ; Physiology.
Distribution of Studies.
Freshman Year.
FIRST SEMESTER.
SECOND SEMESTER.
PERIODS.
Greek,
4
Greek,
Latin,
4
4
4
Latin,
Mathematics,
Biology or
.
'
Historj-,
PERIODS.
Mathematics,
Biology or History,
,
.
4
4
4
4
Elocution and Composition.
Sophomore Year.
Greek,
4
Greek,
4
Latin,
4
Latin,
Mathematics,
4
Elective,
4
4
History, Physics,
French, or German,
")
History, Physics,
French, or German,
i
)
i
Elocution and Composition.
Junior Year.
Greek,
4
Latin,
4
4
Economics,
Elective,
.
,
4
I
Greek,
4
4
4
4
Latin,
Elective,
I
Elective,
Composition.
Senior Year.
Greek,
4
Greek
Psychology,
4
Philosophy,
Elective,
4
Elective,
Elective,
4
Elective,
4
4
4
4
Composition.
(53)
;
The Course
in Letters.
REQUIRED STUDIES.
French or German, 4 years
nomics,
I
year
;
and Philosophy,
History,
I
i
year
i^
Mathematics,
;
years; English, 3 years ; EcoI year ; Psychology
Biology, Chemistry, or Physics,
;
year; Elocution, 2 years; Composition, 4 years.
COURSE ELECTIVE (TWO REQUIRED).
Chemistry,
History,
4
i to
I
year
2 years
Biology,
;
English,
;
i
to 2 years
to 2 years
i
;
;
Physics,
year
i
Mathematics,
i
;
Economics,
to 2 years
;
I
year
Latin,
i
to
years.
OPEN SEMESTER ELECTIVES.
Government Astronomy
Mineralogy Geology Mathematics
Civil
;
;
;
Drawing and Painting
;
Elocution
;
;
Botany
;
Pedagogy
Zoology
;
;
;
Logic
;
Physiology.
Distribution of Studies.
Freshman Year.
FIRST SEMESTER.
PERIODS.
French or German,
4
4
Mathematics,
English,
....
Biology, History, or Latin,
SECOND SEMESTER.
I
French or German,
PERIODS.
•
.
Mathematics,
!
English,
4
4
....
Biology, History, or Latin,
4
4
4
4
Elocution.
Sophomore Year.
French or German,
4
4
4
Mathematics,
English,
History, Physics, French,
German, or Latin,
\
I
1
!
French or German,
4
English,
4
4
Elective,
History, Physics, French,
j
'
J
German,
1
or Latin,
\
i
Elocution.
Junior Year.
French or German,
4
Economics,
English,
4
4
4
4
4
Elective,
4
Elective,
French or German,
Economics,
English,
.
;
4
Senior Year.
French or German,
Elective,
4
4
4
Elective,
4
4
4
Elective,
4
Elective,
4
French or German,
Psychology,
Philosophy,
Composition
(54)
The Course
in Science.
REQUIRED STUDIES.
French or German, 3 years
years; Mathematics,
years
;
j^ years
i
Chemistry, 2 years
;
Biology, 2 years
;
Psychology and Philosophy,
;
I
;
Physics, 2
year; Elocution, 2
Composition, 4 years.
COURSE ELECTIVES (TWO REQUIRED).
Chemistry,
i
to
years
;
Economics,
years
;
Mathematics,
2 years
;
Biology,
to 2 years;
I
i
History,
year
i
Physics,
;
to 2 years;
year
i
English,
;
French or German,
I
to 2
2
I to
to 2 years.
i
OPEN SEMESTER ELECTIVES.
Government
Mineralogy Geology
Civil
;
;
;
Astronomy
Drawing and Painting
;
Mathematics
;
Elocution
;
Botany
;
;
Pedagogy
Zoology
;
;
Logic
;
Physiology.
Distribution of Studies.
Freshman Year.
FIRST SEMESTER.
SECOND SEMESTER.
PERIODS.
French or German,
4
French or German,
Chemistry,
4
Chemistry,
Biology,
4
4
Mathematics,
'
PERIODS.
Biology,
4
4
4
Mathematics, ..."
4
Elocution and Composition.
Sophomore Year.
French or German,
Chemistry,
Physics,
Mathematics,
French or German,
4
4
4
4
4
Chemistry,
4
Physics,
4
Elective,
4
Elocution and Composition.
Junior Year.
French or German,
4
French or German,
Physics,
4
Physics,
Biology,
4
Biology
Elective,
4
Elective,
4
4
4
4
,
Composition.
Senior Year.
Psychology,
4
Philosophy,
4
Elective,
4
Elective,
4
Elective,
4
Elective,
Elective,
4
4
4
j
I
Elective,
Composition.
(55)
;
The Course
in
Engineering.
REQUIRED STUDIES.
2^
years; Chemistry, 2 years; English, I
Draughting, 3 years; Mathematics,
Mechanics and Physics, 2 years ; Engineering, Theory, 2
year; shop work, 3 years
years; Engineering, Applications, 2 years.
;
COURSE ELECTIVES.
French or German,
Sanitary Science, y^ year;
year; English,
I
year; Astronomy,
i
I
year;
Physics, I
Electrical
year.
OPEN SEMESTER ELECTIVES.
Government
Civil
;
Astronomy
;
Drawing and Painting
;
Pedagogy
Logic
;
Mineralogy; Geology; Mathematics; Elocution; Botany; Zoology; Physiology.
Distribution of Studies.
Freshman Year.
FIRST SEMESTER.
Draughting and Shop Work,
SECOND SEMESTER.
PERIODS.
.
.
9=4
PERIODS.
Draughting and Shop Work,
.
9^^4
.
Mathematics,
7
Mathematics,
7
Chemistry,
4
Chemistry,
English,
4
English,
4
4
Sophomore Year.
Draughting and Shop Work,
.
.
9=4
Descriptive Geometry,
etc.,
.
.
.
9=4
Mathematics,
4
Mathematics,
4
Mechanics,
4
Physics,
Chemistry,
4
Chemistry,
4
4
Electives,
2
Electives,
2
Junior Year.
Engineering, Theory,
8
6=2
Engineering, Practice,
8
Engineering, Theory,
6=2
Engineering, Practice,
Physics,
6
Physics,
6
Mathematics,
4
Electives,
4
Senior Year.
8
Engineering, Theory,
Engineering, Practice,
Elective,
....
10=4
4
4
Elective,
(56)
8
Engineering, Theory,
Engineering, Practice,
....
10=4
Elective,
4
Elective,
4
Graduation and Degrees.
As a condition of graduation, each student must submit
to the
Faculty a satisfactory Oration or Essay, which he must be prepared to
deliver in public,
if
required to do so.
The -Degree
The degrees of Bachelor of
of Bachelor.
and of Science are
Arts, of Letters,
conferred on the completion of the corresponding courses.
The Degree
of Master.
Candidates for the Master's Degree (A. M., M. L., and M. S.)
are required to pursue a course of study at Swarthmore,
or else-
where, under the direction of the Faculty, and to pass examination
Persons residing at the College and devoting their
in the same.
whole time
work can accomplish a
amount in one
same time engaged
in other work, the course must occupy not less than two years.
year
;
to the
for non-resident candidates,
Application should be
made
who
sufficient
are at the
directly to the Faculty,
and should
state
the subject or subjects in which the applicants wish to present them-
Work
selves.
will then
The Examinations
and
will
be assigned to them by the Faculty.
for the
Degrees
will
be both oral and written,
be conducted by a Committee of the Faculty, upon whose
report the Faculty will decide
An
the Degree.
assigned, will in
extended
all
upon the
thesis,
fitness
of the candidate for
bearing upon some part of the work
cases be required.
The Degree
of Civil Engineer.
The Degree of C. E. will be conferred upon Bachelors of Science
of the Engineering Department who shall have been engaged for not
less
than three years, in successful professional practice, in positions of
responsibility,
and who
shall present
pertaining to engineering.
and the
an acceptable
thesis
upon a subject
Application for this Degree must be made,
thesis presented at least three
months before commencement.
(57)
Alumni
Officers of the
INCORPORATED
1
Association.
882.
m
m
OT
wt.
President.
William
J.
Hall,
Swarthraore^ Pa.
'78,
Vice-Presidents.
Alice Hall,
Mary
Swarthmore, Pa.
'88,
Syosset, N. Y.
Willits, '84,
Frederick A. Seaman,
...
'83,
Madison, N.
J.
Secretary.
Esther T. Moore,
Swarthmore College, Pa.
'73,
Treasurer.
Ferris
W.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Price, '74,
Board of Directors,
Lesley Hopper, '79,
Isaac G. Smedley, '76,
Alice W. Titus, '90,
William H. Ridgway, '75,
Charles Palmer, '82,
Alice S. Palmer, '89,
Havre de Grace, Md.
P.
(58)
Philadelphia, Pa.
Old Westbury, N. Y.
.
.
.
.
Coatesville, Pa.
Chester, Pa.
West Chester,
Pa.
Graduates.
Class of 1873.
Sarah H. (Acton) Hillard, A.B.,
Helen (Magill) White, A.B. (Ph.D.,
Salem, N.
Ithaca, N. Y.
1877),
Elizabeth
J.
Boston University,
C.
(Miller) Holcomb, A.B.,
Esther T. Moore, A.B.,
*MariaC. (Pierce) Green, A.B.
Lowndes Taylor, A.B.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Swarthmore College, Pa,
1877.
,
West
Chester, Pa.
Class of 1874.
Ellen H. (Evans) Price, A.M., 1884,
(Hall) Hickman, A.B.,
*Alfred T. Haviland, B.S.,
Mary (Hibbard) Thatcher, A.B.,
Swarthmore, Pa.
Herman Hoopes,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Amy W.
West
Chester, Pa.
1874.
Wilmington, Del.
C.E., 1879,
Ferris W. Price, A.M., 1887,
Elizabeth S. (Woolston) Collins, A.B.,
Swarthmore, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Class of 1875.
Booth, A.B.,
Helen (Co.mly) White, A.B.,
Franklin H. Corlies, B.S.,
John
Pittsburg, Pa.
B.
Herbert
G.
Dow, A.B.
Lansdowne, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
(and Harvard, 1877),
Lizzie (Hanes) Taylor, A.
Edith R. (Hopper) Roberts,
Barton Hoopes, Jr., B.S.,
*Oliver Keese, Jr., B.S.,
Reece Lewis, B.S.,
J.
1878.
Woodstown, N.
B.,
J.
Titusville, Pa.
A.B.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
1S79.
Waynesville, N. C.
Howard W. Lippincott, A.B.,
Martha (McIlvain) Eastwick,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Boston,
A.B.,
John K. Richards, A.B. (and Harvard,
WiLLLAM H. Ridgway, C.E., 1879,
1877),
iNIass.
Ironton, Ohio.
Coatesville, Pa.
Class of 1876.
Frank
L. Bassett, B.S.
(D.D.S., Phila. Dental College,
Swarthmore, Pa.
1878),
*Deceased.
(59)
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
QO
Arthur W. Bradley, A.B
Germantown, Pa.
,
Frances (Linton) Sharples, A.M., 1881 (M.D., Women's
West Chester, Pa.
Medical College, Phila., 1886),
Haverford, Pa.
Elizabeth L. (Longstreth) Boyd, A.B.
Philadelphia, Pa.
James T. McClure, B.S.,
Riverton, N. J.
Emma (McIlvain) Cooper, A.B.,
Edwin Mitchell, Jr., A.B. (B.L. and B.S.R., Sorbonne,
,
New
Paris, 1877),
McIntyre, A.B., 1880,
Isaac G. Smedley, B.S. (M.D., Hahnemann Medical
Lucy
Col-
Philadelphia, Pa.
lege, 1879),
Herbert W. Smyth, A.B.
(and
Harvard, 1878, Ph.D.,
Bryn Mawr College, Pa.
Gottingen, 1884),
Mary
York, N. Y.
Philadelphia, Pa.
R. (Price)
Willits, A.M., 1881 (M.D., Women's Medical ColNorristown, Pa.
lege, Phila., 1881),
William
P.
Worth,
Coatesville, Pa.
B.S.,
Class of 1877.
Joseph T. Bunting, B.S. (LL.B., Univ. of
Norman B. Corson, A.B.,
Eudora Magill, A.B.,
Pa., 1880),
.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Norristown, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Chicago,
Jesse R. Norton, A.B. (and Harvard, 1879),
Carroll R. Williams, A.M., 1882 (LL.B., Univ. of Pa.,
111.
Philadelphia, Pa.
1880),
Norway, Pa.
Florence M. Yeatman, A.B
Class of 1878.
Hall, A.B.,
Caroline
E. (Burr)
Maybell
p. (Davis) Foster, A.B.,
Howard Dawson,
Swarthmore, Pa.
Providence, R.
I.
Boston, Mass.
A.M., 1882,
Tacoma, Wash.
Tacy A. (Gleim) Dunning, A.B.
Swarthmore College,
William J. Hall, B.S
MaryP.(Hallowell) Hough, A.M., i88i(M.D., Women's
Medical College,
Ambler, Pa.
Phila., 1881),
Charles A. Hawkins, A.B.,
William Penn Holcomb, M.L., 1882
York, Pa.
(Ph.D., Johns
HopBrooklyn, N. Y.
kins Univ., 1886),
Rebecca
S.
(Hunt) White, A.M., 1881 (M.D., Women's
Medical College, Phila., 1881),
Anna
E. (Jackson)
Monaghan,
Llewellyn H. Johnson,
Edward Martin,
Francis
J.
B.L.
B.S.,
A.M., 1882 (M.D., Univ. of
Palmer,
B.S.,
Lansdowne, Pa.
West
Chester, Pa.
Orange, N.
J.
Pa., 1883), Philadelphia, Pa.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Pa.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
Israel Roberts,
61
Camden, N.
B.S.,
^William Seaman, C. E. 1884,
C. Harry Shoemaker, B.S.,
J.
1892.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Class of 1879.
Isaac R. Coles, C.E., 1880,
Glen Cove, N. Y.
William P, Fender, A.B.,
William Lea Ferris, A.B.,
Williamsport, Pa.
Joseph Fitch, A.B.,
Ruth Anna Forsythe, A.B.,
Elizabeth (Furnas) Bogardus, B.L.,
P. Lesley Hopper, A.B
New
Aspen, Col.
New
York, N. Y.
Havre de Grace, Md.
Swarthmore College, Pa.
,
Marie Antoinette Kemp, A.M.,
1892,
Elisha E. Lippincott, B. S
*Samuel Craig McComBj'C.E., 1882,
Charles R. Miller, B.L. (LL.B., Univ. of
Josephine (White) Breckens, A.B.,
Abby W. (Woodnutt) Miller, B.L.,
York, N. Y.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Gallitzin, Pa.
1891.
Pa., 1881),
.
Wilmington, Del.
.
Cheyenne, Wyoming.
Wilmington, Del.
Class of 1880.
Anna E. Constable, A.B.,
Arthur Coleman Dawson,
Camden, N.
Chicago,
B.L., 1882,
Florence Hall, A.B.,
Myra T. Hillman, A.B.,
Emily L. (Hough) Savidge,
Swarthmore, Pa.
Washington, D. C.
A.B., (and Univ. of Minn.,
Boise City, Idaho.
1881),
Edward H.
Reiser, M.
S.,
1881 (Ph. D., Johns Hopkins
Bryn
Univ., 1884),
Georgine (Kurtz) Muhlenberg, A.B.,
Albert R. La WTON, A.M., 1885,
Robert J. Marcher, B.S.,
Thomas L. Moore, A.B.,
Ellen S. (Preston) Griest, A.B.,
John Turton, B.S.
Fannie (Willets) Lowthorp, A.B.,
Henry S. Wood, C.E., 1883,
.......
Class of
Martha
J.
111.
Mawr
College, Pa.
Reading, Pa.
New
York, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Cedarville, Va.
New
York, N, Y.
Trenton, N.
J.
San Francisco, Cal.
1
88 1.
Baltimore,
Bunting, B.L.,
Md.
William Canby, Jr., B.L
Charles B. DorOn, B.L.,
St. Paul,
Mary
Emma
Philadelphia, Pa.
J.
*
Richmond, Va.
Minn.
Rochester, N. Y.
Elliott, B.L.,
Kirk, B.L.,
B. Magill, A.B.,
Ithan, Pa.
Gertrude
Boise City, Idaho.
^Deceased.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
62
Eugene Paulin,
Jr.,
A.B. (and Harvard, 1883),
Martha E. (Rhinoehl) Osborn, A.B.,
Edward C. Rushmore, B.S. (M.D., Columbia,
Henry B. Seaman, C.E., 1884
Charles E. Sharpless, C.E., 1884,
Alvin T. Shoemaker, B.L.,
*I. Byron Thomas, B.S.,
Ernest F. Tucker, A.B. (M.D., Harvard,
....
Bloomfield, N.
M.
Philadelphia, Pa,
1885),
.
Tuxedo Park, N. Y.
.
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Philipsburg, Pa.
New
York, N. Y.
1891.
Portland, Ore.
1884)
Class of 1882.
William Llewellyn Baner, A.B. (M.D., Columbia,
New
1885),
Edith B. Blackwell, A.B.,
Charlotte E. (Brewster) Jordan, M.L.,
William Butler, Jr., A.B.,
C. Herbert Cochran, A.B.,
Bertha (Cooper) Brewer, B.L.
P. Fannie Foulkk, A.B.,
Mary
York, N. Y.
El Mora, N.
1886,
....
J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
West
Chester, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Laconia, N. H.
Gale, A.M., 1891,
*Sarah S. (Green) Pierce, A.B.,
Margaret E. (Hallowell) Powell, A.B.,
E.
1886.
Lansdowne, Pa.
^Elizabeth E. Hart, B.L.,
Elizabeth Haslam, B.L.,
Elizabeth M. Ogden, B.L.,
Charles Palmer, A.M., 1885,
1891.
Philadelphia, Pa.
West Chester, Pa.
Chester, Pa.
*George C. Phillips, B.S.,
Horace L. Rossiter, A.B.,
Charles B. Turton, B.S.,
Gerrit E. H. Weaver, (A.B., Harvard,
1883.
Cleveland, Ohio.
New
1884),
York, N. Y.
A.M.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
1886,
Emily E. (Wilson) Lawton, A.M., 1885
Edgar M. Zavitz, A.B.,
New
York, N. Y.
Coldstream, Ontario, Can.
Class of 1883.
Charles A. Bunting, B.S.,
*JOHN L. Cochran, B.S.
Edgar Conrow, B.L.,
Lydia S. (Green) Hawkins, A.B.,
Florence N. Hanes, A.B.,
Alice W. Jackson, A.B.
William A. Kissam, Jr., B.S.
Bertha (Matlack) Rue, B.L.,
Guion Miller, A.M., 1888,
Steelton, Pa.
1885.
,
Moorestown, N.
J.
Media, Pa.
Woodstown, N.
J.
Swarthmore, Pa.
,
Little
Neck, N. Y.
Camden, N.
J.
Washington, D. C.
Deceased.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
DUFFIELD Mitchell, A.B., (LL.B., Univ.
A. Pennock, A.B.,
George L. Pennock, B.S.,
Charles S. Pyle, B.S.,
S.
of Pa.),
.
63
Pittsburg, Pa.
.
Edward
Helen
C.
Boston, Mass.
Lansdowne, Pa.
Rising Sun, Md.
(Pyle) Bunting, B.L.,
Frederick A. Seaman, Jr., B.S.,
Annie E. (Taylor) Miller, M.L.,
James E. Verree, B.L.,
Emma (Webb)
Steelton, Pa.
Madison, N.
J.
Washington, D. C.
1888,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Price, A.B.,
Class of 1884.
Horace
Philadelphia, Pa.
Dilworth, B.S.,
Germantown, Pa.
Rebecca M. (Downing) Bullock, B.L.,
Waynesville, Ohio.
John D. Furnas, B.S.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Sarah L. (Hall) Stirling, A.B.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Henry J. Hancock, A.B. (LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1886),
Salt Lake City, Utah.
Edwin Haviland, Jr., B.S., 1885,
Hughesville, Va.
Mary E. Hughes, A. B.,
Laura H. Satterthwaite, A.B. (M.D., Women's Medical
L.
.
.
.
.
.
'.
Trenton, N.
College, Phila., 1888),
Frederick
Mary
J.
Taylor,
Willits, A.B.,
.
.
J.
Helena, Mont.
B.S.,
Syosset,
•
N. Y.
Class of 1885.
Minnie
Baker, A.B.,
F.
Washington, D. C.
Abigail Evans, A.B.,
Cinnaminson, N.
Moore, A.B.,
Mary D. (Pratt) Rhodes,
Nevv York, N. Y.
Frederic
P.
Bowdle,
A.B.,
S.
J.
Dak.
Class of 1886.
Emma
S.
Arthur
Cochran,
Freedley,
S.
B.S.,
George J.
B.S.,
Helen G. Johnson, A.B.,
Ella (Merrick)Tomlinson,
Edgar M. Smedley, B.S.,
Rowland J. Spencer, B.L.,
Martha M. Watson, A.M.,
C.
New
(Bones) Stone, B.L.,
Percy Willcox,
Brighton, N. Y.
Westtown, Pa.
Richmond, Va.
,
Muncy,
Pa.
Brownsburg, Pa.
A.B.,
Media, Pa.
Salem, Ore.
Trenton, N.
1891,
B.S. (Ph. B., Yale Univ., 1SS7
;
J.
LL.B.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Univ. of Pa., 1891),
Class of 1887.
Alice T. (Battin) Lewis, A.B.,
Harriet J. (Cox) McDowell,
Horace Darlington, B.S.,
Media, Pa.
New
B.S.,
York, N. Y.
Darling, Pa.
[
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
64
Harry B. Goodwin, B.S.,
Anna M. (Jenkins) Webster, A.B.,
Thomas A. Jenkins, A.B. (Ph.B.,
Bordertown, N, J.
Mankato, Minn,
Univ. of Pa.,
1888,
Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Univ., 1894),
Swarthmore, Pa.
Frederick K. Lane, B.S.,
Linda B. Palmer, A.M., 1893,
Lancaster, Pa.
Horace Roberts,
Fellowship, N.
West
A.B.,
Chester, Pa.
J.
Elizabeth B. Smedley, A.B.,
Elizabeth B. (Smith) Wilson, A.B.,
Lincoln, Va.
William G. Underwood,
Elizabeth City, N. C.
Malvern, Pa.
B.S.,
Class of 1888.
Alice M. Atkinson, A.
Thomas Brown,
Frank Cawley,
B. (and Cornell Univ., 1889),
Holicong, Pa.
.
.
Washington D. C.
B.S.,
C.E., 1891,
Montreal, Can.
.
Jessie L. Colson, B.S.,
Daretovsm, N.
Sadie M. Conrow, A.B.,
Cinnaminson, N.
William L. Dudley, B.S.,
Robert P. Ervien, B.S.,
E. Lawrence Fell, B.S.,
New
J.
J.
York, N. Y.
Clayton, N.
M.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Joyeuse L. (Fullerton) Sweet, A.B. (and Cornell Univ.,
Denver, Col.
1889),
Emma (Gawthrop)
Hayes,
Swarthmore College.
B.S.,
Alice Hall, A.B.,
P. Sharples Hall, B.S. (M.D., Hahn. Med.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Col., Phila.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
1891),
Walter Hancock,
J.
Minneapolis, Minn.
B.S.,
Russell Hayes, A.B. (and Harvard, 1889;
LL.B.,
Swarthmore College.
Univ. of Pa., 1892),
Martha
Miller, A.B.,
T. Montgomery Lightfoot, M.S., 1890,
Hetty C. (Lippincott) Miller, A.B.,
Ellis P. Marshall, Jr., B.S.,
William
Aaron
C.
Harrisburg, Pa.
P. (Jones)
S.
Marshall,
Pancoast,
B.S. (Ph.D., Leipsic, 1892),
Philadelphia, Pa.
Riverton, N.
J.
London Grove,
.
.
Pa.
Madison, Wis.
San Antonio, Texas.
B.S.,
Jessie Pyle, A.B. (and Cornell Univ., 1889),
London Grove,
Rhoads, B.S.,
J.
KatheRine M. Rider, B.L.,
William H. Seaman, B.S.,
Amelia Skillin, A.B.,
Pittsburg, Pa.
Joseph
Carroll H. Sudler, A. B.,
Charlotte M. Way, B.S.
Annie E. Willits, A.B.,
Esther M. (Willits) Fell,
Frank P. Wilson, A.B.,
Pa.
Brooklyn, N, Y.
Glen Cove, N. Y.
New Milford, Conn.
Chicago,
111.
LelandStanford,Jr.,Univ,
,
Syosset, N. Y.
B.L.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Locust Valley, N. Y.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
65
Class of 1889.
Justin K. Anderson, B.S.,
Breeden, Va.
Alexander
Paris, France.
Howard
Horace
G. Cummings, ]k., A.B.,
A. Dill, B.S. (and Mass.
Inst.
Tech., 1891)
.
.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Coeburn, Va.
Forman, Jr., B.S.,
Media, Pa.
Ellis M. Harvey, B.S. (M.D., Univ. of Pa., 1893)
New York, N. Y.
Clara Haydock, B.L.,
Hayes, A.B. (and Harvard, 1890, LL.B., Univ.
J. Carroll
West Chester, Pa.
of Pa., 1893),
B.
.
.
.
Old Westbury, N. Y.
Julia Hicks, B.S.,
Mary Kirk,
Rio Janeiro, Brazil.
Glen Core, N. Y.
A.B.,
Margaret J. (Laurie) Seaman,
George A. Masters, B.S.,
A.B.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Palmer, A.B.,
Louella (Passmore) Hayes, A.B.,
West
West
Frederick
Washington, D. C.
Alice
S.
B. Pyle, B.S.,
Ralph Stone,
A.B.,
Chester, Pa.
Chester, Pa.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
.
Elsie D. Stoner, B.L.,
Columbia, Pa.
Willis W. Vail,
Quakertown, Pa.
B.S.,
Jennie F. Wapdington, M.S., 1892,
Salem, N.
J.
Class of 1890.
Alvan W. Atkinson, A.B.,
Trenton, N.J.
Sara H. Atkinson, A.B.,
George H. Bartram, B.S.,
Milltown, Pa.
Martha M. BiDDLE,B.L.,
Emma J. Broomell, B.S. (and
Holicong, Pa.
Riverton, N.
Univ. of Mich., 1893),
.
.
Morris L. Clothier, B.S.,
Beulah W. Darlington, A.B.,
Edw^ard Darlington, B.S.,
George Ellsler, A.B.,
Caroline R. Gaston, A.B.
John C. GiFFORD, B.S., 1893,
Abby M. Hall, A.B. (and Cornell Univ., 1893), ....
Clara A. (Hughes) Marshall, A.B.,
Samuel R. Lippincott, B.S.,
William D. Lippincott, B.S
Willard L. Maris, M.S. 1892 (B.S. Univ. of Mich., 1891),
Robert S. McConnell, B.S.,
Frances E. Ottley, A.B.,
*Mary D. Palmer, A.B
Mary
E. Pancoast, B.L.,
Wynnewood,
Pa.
Locust Valley, N. Y.
Chaddsford, Pa.
Baltimore,
Md.
Philadelphia, Pa.
May's Landing, N.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Madison, Wis.
Cinnaminson, N.
J.
Cinnaminson, N.
J.
Newtown, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Austin, Texas.
1892.
Marple, Pa.
.
James W. Ponder, A.B.,
Wilmington, Del.
* Deceased.
5
J.
Newto\vn, Pa.
J.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
QQ
Ellis B. Rtdgway, B.S.,
A.B. (M.D., Univ. of
Walter Roberts,
Richard
Fannie
Mary
C.
Sellers,
Coatesville, Pa.
Pa., 1893),
.
.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Locust Valley, N. Y.
B.S.,
Newtown,
B. Smith, A.B.,
Pa.
Jersey City, N.
F. Soper, B.S.,
J.
Md.
R.
Barclay Spicer, A.B.,
William E. Sweet, A.B.,
Baltimore,
Denver, Col.
Alice W. Titus, M.L., 1892,
Mary H. White, A.B.,
Old Westbury, N. Y.
Lansdowne, Pa.
Class of 1891.
Emily Atkinson, A.B.,
Cosmelia J. Brown, B.L.,
Louis P. Clark, B.S.,
Hannah H. Clothier, B.L.,
Eva M. (Daniels) Capen, B.S., 1892,
Moorestown, N.
Haverford, Pa.
Wynnewood,
Pa.
Boston, Mass.
Eliza R. Hampton, A.B.,
Horsham, Pa.
Isaac O. Harper, B.S.,
Baltimore,
Esther Haviland, B.L.,
Eliza G. Holmes, A.B.
John W. Hutchinson, Jr.,
Moorestown, N. J.
New York, N. Y.
B.S.,
Media, Pa.
Lewis, B.L.,
*Lucy S. Lippincott, A.B.,
Chester P. Martindale, B.L.,
Harry L. McDonald, B.S.,
Sarah T. Moore, B.L.,
A. Mitchell Palmer, A.B.,
Ellen (Passmore) Pyle, B.L.,
Marianna (Smith) Rawson, B.L.
William C. Sproul, B.S.,
•
Edward
B.
Katharine
Md.
Langhorne, Pa.
.
Dora
J.
Lincoln, Va.
•
1891.
West
Chester, Pa.
City, Mo.
Sandy Spring, Md.
Kansas
Stroudsburg, Pa.
•
Washington, D. C.
New
York, N. Y.
Chester, Pa.
Ward,
Temple, B.S.,
L. Tyler, B.S.,
Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Landsdowne, Pa.
Frances M. White, B.L.,
C. Wilson, B.S.,
M. Lilian Yarnall, A.B.,
Washington, D. C.
Edward
Trenton, N.
J.
Class of 1892.
M. Ellen Atkinson, B.L.,
M. Rosamond Baker, A.B.,
Buckingham,
Benjamin F. Battin, A.B.,
Josephine Beistle, A.B.,
Newtown,
Mary
Jenkintown, Pa.
E.
Broomell,
Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
B.L.,
* Deceased.
swarthMore college.
Frederic N. Carr,
B.L.,
'
Penn's Grove, N.
,
Charles B. Ketcham, A.B.,
Phebe H. Ketcham, B.S.,
Mary
J.
Doylestown, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Gwynedd,
A. Jenkins, B.S.,
1893,
New
B.L.,
Pa.
York, N. Y.
Jericho,
Jr., B.L.,
Bernard S. McIlvain,
John F. Murray, B.S.,
Ellen Pyle, A.B.,
Va.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Charles Hart, B.S.,
Annie Hillborn, B.L.,
Henry McAllister,
W.
Charleston,
Howard N. Eavenson, B.S.,
Henry H. Garrett, B.S.,
Howard B. Green, B.S.,
Edward
(37
N. Y.
Colorado Springs, Col.
Darlington,
Md.
Wallingford Pa.
,
London Grove,
Baltimore, Md.
E. Stebbins, B.L.,
Walker, B.S.,
J.
William E. Walter, B.S.,
Florence N. Wolverton, A.B.,
Mary L. Wolverton, A.B.,
Joseph
Pa.
Pittsburg, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Quakertown, N.
J.
Quakertown, N.
J.
Class of 1893.
Jane Atkinson, A.B.,
George H. Brooke, B.S.,
Francis E. Broomell, B.S.,
;
John L. Carver, B.L.,
Joseph T. Freeman, B.S.,
.
Dora
A. Gilbert, A.B.,
Holicong, Pa.
University of Pa.
Chicago,
111.
Media, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y.
Chester, Pa.
Charles S. Hallowell, B.S.,
Clement Lodge, B.S.,
Lorena B. Matlack, A.B.,
Carlie McClure, A.B.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Omar
Johns Hopkins Univ.
B.
Pancoast,
B.S.,
Jesse H. Reinhardt, B.S.,
Julius Staab, A.B.,
John B. Stetson, B.S.,
Esther E. Spicer, B.L.,
Frances B. Stevenson, A.B.,
George H. Strout, A.B.,
Esther H. Sutton, B.L.,
Henry C. Turner, B.S.,
Carrie B. Way, B.L.,
LiLA K. WiLLETS, B.L.
E. Newlin Williams, B.S.,
S. Ellen Williams, B.S
Genevieve S. Zane, A.B., 1894,
Philadelphia, Pa.
West Chester,
Pa.
Girard, Pa.
Salem, N. J.
Harvard Univ.
Lansdale, Pa.
Baltimore,
Md.
Felton, Del.
Boston, Mass.
Chappaqua, N. Y.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Kennett Square, Pa.
Roslyn, N. Y.
New
Hope, Pa.
Holicong, Pa.
West
Chester, Pa,
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
gg
Class of 1894.
Mabel Alexander,
Anna
Philadelphia, Pa.
B.L.,
Locust Valley, N. Y.
Atkinson, A.B.,
Lydlv Biddle, B.L.,
Edwin P. Bond, A.B.,
Bertha L. Broomell, B.S.,
Emma S. Chambers, A.B.,
Elizabeth Conrow, A.B.,
S.
Lansdowne, Pa.
Ogontz, Pa.
Jenkintown, Pa.
Wilmington, Del.
West
Herman Conrow, B.S.,
Altha T. Coons, B.S.,
Hetty
Baltimore,
Joseph C. Emley, B.S.,
Frederic H. Gawthrop,
John W. Gregg, B.L.,
Mary
Flushing, N. Y.
,
L. Cox, B.L.,
George G. Griest,
Chester, Pa.
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Md.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Baltimore,
B.S.,
Md.
Moorestown, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
B.S.,
West
A. Hayes, A.B.,
Chester, Pa,
Helen R. Hillborn, A.B
Helen S. Hutchinson, B.S.,
Swarthmore, Pa.
Mary
Wilmington, Del.
,
B. Janvier, B.L.,
.
Baltimore,
.'
Harriet M. Kent, A.B.,
Helen P. Lamb, B.L.,
M. Elizabeth Lamb, B.L.,
Owen Moon, Jr., B.S.,
Marion D. Perkins, A.B.,
Margaret D. Pfahler, B.S.,
David B. Rushmore, B.S.,
Caroline
P.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Baltimore,
Baltimore,
J.
J.
Moorestown, N.
J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Cornell Univ.
Sargent, A.B.,
St. Paul,
.
Shoemaker,
Md.
Md.
Trenton, N.
•
Philip Sellers, B.S.,
Cornelia
Md.
.
Minn.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Baltimore,
B.L.,
Md.
Harvard Univ.
Edward A. Staab, A.B.,
Mary W. Titus, B.L.,
Old Westbury, N. Y.
N. Y.
Swarthmore College.
Daniel Underhill, Jr., B.S
Mary Underhill, B.S.,
Allen K. White, B.S.,
Stuart Wilder, B.S.,
Jericho,
JohnM.
WiUiamson School, Pa
Easton, Md.
Easton, Md.
Mary
Willis,
Atlantic City, N.
B.S.,
E. Yeo, B.S.,
Susanna
Harry
S.
P.
Yeo, B.L.,
Young,
B.S.,
.
.
J.
Johnson City, Tenn.
.
.
Morton, Pa.
Honorary Degrees Conferred,
I
William Hyde Appleton, Ph.D.
vard, 1869), Professor of
Susan
J-
(A.B., Harvard, 1864; A.M., LL.B., HarGreek and of English Literature.
Cunningham,
Sc.D., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy.
1889.
Arthur Beardsley,
Ph.D. (C.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute,
1867I,
Professor of Engineering and -Director of Mechanic Arts.
Isaac Sharpless, LL.D. (B.S., Harvard, 1873; Sc.D., Univ. of
Pa.,
President of Haverford College.
1890.
Olivia Rodham, A.B.,
late Assistant Librarian
and Instructor
in Botany.
(69;
1883),
Committee on Trusts, Endowments, and
Scholarships.
EDWARD
H.
OGDEN,
314 Vine
EMMOR
Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
ROBERTS,
Fellowship, N.
J.
DANIEL UNDERHILL,
Jericho, L.
I.
EDMUND WEBSTER,
1156 South Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
SUSAN W. LIPPINCOTT,
Cinnaminson, N.
REBECCA
C.
LONGSTRETH,
Sharon Hill, Pa.
(70)
J.
Secretary.
Swarthmore College Catalogue, 1894-1895
A digital archive of the Swarthmore College Catalogue
1894 - 1895
96 pages
reformatted digital