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i
College Bulletin
Vol. L, No. 3
Sixth
Month, 1903
Swarthmore College
CATALOGUE
I
902- I 903
Entered at the Post Office at Swarthmore,
Pa., as
second-class
iin'att'er
SWARTHMORE
COLLEGE, BUILDINGS
AND GROUNDS
3 1797 00399 265i
Swarthmore College
CATALOGUE
Thirty-fourth College Year
1
902- 1 903
Swarthmore, Pennsylvania
PUBLISHED BY THE COLLEGE
1903
PRINTED BY
FRANKLIN PRINTING COMPANY
514-520
Ludlow Street
Philadelphia
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
College Calendar
The Corporation
The Board of Managers
and Committees of the Board
The Faculty and Instructors
Officers of Administration
Officers
Faculty Committees
Register of Students
S
6
6
8
lo
15
16
17
Fellows and Scholars, 1902-1903
24
Swarthmore College:
Location and History
25
Buildings
25
Religious Culture
27
Social Life
27
28
Physical Culture
Students' Societies and Publications
28
Room
^o
The Museum
Expenses
Fellowships and Scholarships
Requirements for Admission:
31
Libraries and Reading
33
33
Examinations
37
Certificates
39
Requirements for Graduation:
Prescribed Studies
41
Major Study
42
Elective Studies
43
Irregular and Special Courses of Study
Preparatory Medical Course
Degrees:
The Bachelor's Degree
The Master's Degree
The Engineering Degrees
43
44
45
45
46
TABLE OF CONTENTS
4
Page
Departments and Courses of Instruction:
Biology and Geology
Chemistry
Engineering and the Mechanic Arts
English:
English Literature
World
47
49
52
59
60
Literature
Composition
Public Speaking
60
Oratorical Associations and Prizes
61
60
French
62
German
65
Greek
67
History and Political
History
Economics and
Economy
Politics
69
70
71
Social Science
72
History of Art
Studio Work
History of Religion and Philosophy
Bible Study
History of Religion
Psychology and Philosophy
Latin
72
Mathematics and Astronomy
Physics
Physical Training
Honorary Degrees Conferred
Graduates
Holders of Fellowships
The Alumni Association
Committee on Trusts, Endowments, and Scholarships
y^
y^i
7:^
74
75
75
78
79
80
82
83
108
no
in
COLLEGE CALENDAR
College year began.
1902,
Ninth
Mo.
18,
Fifth-day,
1903.
First
Mo.
31,
Seventh-day,
First semester ends.
"
Second Mo.
2,
Second-day,
Second semester begins.
"
10,
Third-day,
Meeting of the Board of Managers,
28,
Seventh-day,
Spring recess begins, 11 A. M.
Third
Mo.
"
Third
Mo.
"
Fourth Mo.
7,
Third-day,
College
"
Fifth
Mo.
18,
Second-day,
Senior examinations begin.
"
Fifth
Mo.
23,
Seventh-day,
Senior examinations completed.
"
Sixth
Mo.
1,
Second-day,
Final examinations begin.
work resumed,
8.30 A. M.
Sixth
Mo.
5,
Sixth-day,
"
Sixth
Mo.
6,
Seventh-day,
"
Sixth
Mo.
8,
Second-day,
Meeting of the Board of Managers.
"
Sixth
Mo.
8,
Second-day,
Class-day exercises.
"
Sixth
Mo.
9,
Third-day,
Commencement.
"
Ninth
Mo.
15,
Third-day,
Meeting of the Board of Managers.
"
Ninth
Mo.
16,
Fourth-day,
Examinations
"
Ninth
Mo.
17,
Fifth-day,
College
"
Twelfth Mo.
7,
Second-day,
Meeting of the Board of Managers.
"
Twelfth Mo.
8,
Third-day,
Annual Meeting
Third-day,
Meeting of the Board of Managers.
Fourth-day,
Winter
recess begins.
Third-day,
College
work resumed,
>
"
Twelfth Mo.
8,
"
Twelfth Mo.
23,
Mo.
5,
1904.
)
First
Examinations
for admission.
)
work
for admission.
begins, 8.30 A. M.
of Stockholders.
8.30 A. M.
OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION
CLERKS
ROBERT
M. JANNEY,
112 Drexel Building, Philadelphia.
HARRIETT COX McDOWELL,
960 Park Avenue,
New
York.
TREASURER
CHARLES
513
Commerce
M. BIDDLE,
St.,
Philadelphia.
THE BOARD OF MANAGERS
Term
expires Twelfth Month, ipo^
Joseph Wharton,
P. O. Box 1332, Phila.
William M. Jackson,
50 Beekman St., New
Mary
Rachel W. Hillborn,
Sea
Willets,
Girt,
N.
J.
Lydia H. Hall,
Swarthmore.
Mary
C. Clothier,
Wynnewood.
York.
Swarthmore.
Edward Martin, M.D.,
4^5 S. 15th
St.,
Phila.
Albert A. Merritt,
37
Columbus Ave., N. Y.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Term
expires Twelfth Months 1904
Edward Stabler,
Edward H. Ogden,
314 Vine
6 South
Phila.
St.,
Hannah
Eli M. Lamb,
1432 McCulloh
Baltimore,
Emma
C.
Md.
Bancroft,
Phila.
St.,
Howard W.
Lippincott,
509 Real Estate Trust Bldg.,
Phila.
Wilmington, Del.
Susan W. Lippincott,
Cinnaminson, N.
John
Jane
New
St.,
York.
Howard Cooper Johnson,
709 Walnut
Phila.
St.,
Daniel Underhill,
Jericho, L.
Emmor
& Market
Oxford.
Joanna W. Lippincott,
Emma
Sts., Phila.
Fannie W. Lowtitorp,
1
S.
6th
Rawson,
New York.
St.,
McIlvain Cooper,
715 Cooper
Rebecca
C.
St.,
Camden, N.
Longstreth,
William
C. Sproul,
Chester.
J.
William
Edmund Webster,
Broad
Station, Phila.
Haverford.
Swarthmore.
156 S.
Phila.
expires Tivelfth Month, ipo6
Annie Shoemaker^
1
St.,
Elizabeth B. Passmore,
226 E.
J.
Isaac H. Clothier,
Trenton, N.
Downing,
Marianna
Roberts,
Term
8th
P.
1613 Race
Logan
I.
Fellowship, N.
Station, N. Y.
expires Twelfth Month, igo^
T. Willets,
303 Pearl
Mary W. Albertson,
Westbury
J.
Term
Md.
H, Woodnutt,
Arch
1816
St.,
Jr.,
Baltimore,
St.,
St.,
Phila.
1
133 S.
G.
Underwood,
Broad
St.,
Phila.
J.
OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES OF THE
BOARD OF MANAGERS
PRESIDENT
JOSEPH WHARTON.
SECRETARY
REBECCA
C.
LONGSTRETH.
AUDITORS
John
Isaac H. Clothier,
T, Willets.
EXECUTIVE
Emmor Roberts,
Isaac H. Clothier,
Edmund Webster,
Howard W. Lippincott,
Jane P. Downing,
Susan W. Lippincott,
Emma McIlvain Cooper,
Hannah H. Woodnutt,
John T. Willets,
Edward Martin,
Elizabeth B. Passmore,
Mary
Clothier,
Joanna W. Lippincott,
Robert M. Janney,
William C. Sproul,
Rebecca
C.
C.
Emma C. Bancroft,
Longstreth, ex-oMcio.
FINANCE
Edward H. Ogden,
Robert M. Janney,
Edmund Webster.
INSTRUCTION
Edward Martin,
Marianna S. Rawson,
Fannie W. Lowthorp,
Mary Willets,
Susan W. Lippincott,
Rebecca
Lydia H. Hall,
Rachel W. Hillborn,
Howard Cooper Johnson.
Harriett Cox McDowell,
William
G.
C.
Longstreth,
Underwood.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
9
BUILDINGS AND PROPERTY
Edmund Webster,
Rachel W. Hillborn,
Howard W. Lippincott,
Edward H. Ogden,
Emmor
Roberts,
Robert M. Janney,
Jane
Downing,
John
P.
T. Willets.
MUSEUM AND LABORATORIES
Mary
Edward Martin,
Willets,
Eli M. Lamb,
Mary W. Albertson,
Daniel Underhill.
FRIENDS' HISTORICAL LIBRARY
Lydia H. Hall,
Isaac H. Clothier,
Rebecca C. Longstreth,
Albert A. Merritt.
TRUSTS, ENDOWMENTS, AND SCHOLARSHIPS
Edmund Webster,
Edward H. Ogden,
Susan W. Lippincott,
John T. Willets,
Emmor
Rebecca
Roberts,
C.
Longstreth,
Sec'y,
trustees of endowments and professorships
•Isaac
Edward H. Ogden,
H. Clothier,
Emmor
Roberts.
LIBRARY
Lydia H. Hall,
I?.achel W. Hillborn,
Joanna W. Lippincott,
Albert A. Merritt.
THE FACULTY AND INSTRUCTORS.
Joseph Swain, President of the College.
B.L., Indiana University, 1883; M.S., 1885; LL.D.,
Wabash
Student of Mathematics and Astronomy, UniInstructor in Mathematics and
versity of Edinburgh, 1885-86.
Zoology, Indiana University, 1883-1885 Assistant U. S. Fish
Commissioner, 1884; Professor of Mathematics, Indiana UniProfessor of Mathematics, Leland Stanford,
versity, i886-gi
College,
1893.
;
;
Junior, University, 1891-1893
1893-1902;
Member
;
President of Indiana University,
of National Council of Education; Presi-
dent of Swarthmore College, from 1902.
Elizabeth Powell Bond, Dean.
A.M., Hon., Swarthmore College, 1897.
College,
from
Dean, Swarthmore
1886.
Edward Hicks Magill, Emeritus
Language and
Professor of the French
and Lecturer on French Lit-
Literature,
erature.
A.B., Brown University, 1852; A.M., 1855; LL.D., Haverford College, 1886; Professor of Latin and French, Swarthmore College, 1869-1870; President, 1870-1890; Professor of
French Language and Literature, from
Arthur Beardsley, Emeritus
1890.
Professor of Engineering,
and Librarian of the Friends' Historical Library.
Hon.,
Mathematics and
C.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1867; Ph.D.,
Swarthmore
College,
Engineering,
University
of
Engineering,
Civil
Swarthmore
1889.
of
Instructor
in
1869-1870; Professor
Professor of Engineering,
Minnesota,
1870-1872;
College, 1872-1898.
William Hyde Appleton,
Professor of Greek and Early
English.
A.B.,
Ph.D.,
Harvard University, 1864; A.M., 1867; LL.B., 1869;
College, 1888. Tutor in Greek,
Hon., Swarthmore
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
II
Harvard University, 1868-1870; Professor of Greek and German, Swarthmore College, 1872-1888; Acting President and
President, 1889-1891; Professor of Greek and Early English^
from i8gi.
Susan
Cunningham, Edward H.
J.
Magill Professor of
Mathematics and Astronomy.
ScD., Hon., Swarthmore College, 1888. Student of Mathematics and Astronomy Harvard University, Summers of 1874,
:
Summer of 1881 Williams College,
Newnham College, Cambridge, Summers
of 1877, 1878, 1879, 1882; Cambridge Observatory, Summer of
1887 Greenwich Observatory, Summer of 1891 University of
Chicago, first half of Summer Terms, 1894 and 1895. Instructor
Princeton College,
1876;
Summers
of 1883, 1884
;
;
;
;
in
Mathematics, Swarthmore College, 1869-1872; Assistant Pro-
fessor, 1872-1874; Professor,
from
1874.
Spencer Trotter, Professor of Biology and Geology.
University
M.D.,
Philadelphia
of
Academy
Pennsylvania,
Jessup
1883.
Fellow,
of Natural Sciences, 1878-1880; Resident
Physician and Surgeon, Pennsylvania Hospital, 1883-1885; Pro-
and Geology, Swarthmore College, from
fessor of Biology
George A. Hoadley, Professor of Physics.
Union
C.E.,
College,
fessor of Physics,
Ferris
W.
1874; A.B.,
Swarthmore
College,
1874; A.M.,
from
1877.
Pro-
1888.
Price, Isaac H. Clothier Professor of the Latin
Language and
Literature.
Swarthmore
A.B.,
College,
Latin, University of Berlin,
1874; A.M.,
1887.
Student of
Assistant Professor of
i88g-i8go.
Latin and English, Swarthmore College, 1885-1889; Professor
of Latin,
from
1890.
William L Hull, Joseph Wharton
and
Political
A.B., Johns
dent
of History,
fessor
of
Professor of History
Economy.
Hopkins University, 1889; Ph.D.,
University of Berlin,
History
and
Economics,
1891.
1892.
Stu-
Associate
Pro-
Swarthmore
College,
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
12
1892-1894; Professor of History and Political Economy, from
1894.
Wilbur M.
Stine,
V. Williamson Professor of En-
I.
gineering.
Ph.B., Dickinson College, 1886; M.S., 1889; D.Sc, 1893;
Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering, Ohio University, 1886-1893; Director of Electrical Engineering, Armour
Institute of Technology, 1893-1898; Professor of Engineering,
Swarthmore College, from
1898.
Jesse H. Holmes, Professor of the History of Religion and
Philosophy.
Nebraska, 1884; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins
Student in University of Nebraska, 1884-1885;
B.S., University of
University, 1890.
Harvard University, Summer of 1895 Oxford University, 1899Professor in Swarthmore College, from 1900.
1900.
;
Benjamin
F. Battin, Professor of the German Language
and Literature.
A.B.,
Swarthmore
College, 1892; Ph.D., University of Jena,
1900; Joshua Lippincott Fellow
and Athens, 1893-94.
(Swarthmore College), Berlin
Student of German and Philosophy, Uni-
versities of Berlin, 1898-99,
and Jena, 1899-1900.
Instructor in
Rhetoric and Composition, and in Greek, Swarthmore College,
1892-93 Assistant Professor of German, 1900-1902 Professor of
;
;
German, from
1902.
Isabelle Bronk, Professor of the French Language and
Literature.
Ph.B., Illinois Wesleyan College, 1892; Ph.D., University
Student of French and German Wellesley
Germany and France, 1883-1884 University
College, 1880-83
of Chicago, 1900.
:
;
of
Leipzig,
;
Sorbonne and College de France, 1889-91
versity of Chicago, 1897-1900.
UniFellow in Romance Languages,
University of Chicago, 1898-1900; Assistant, 1900-1901
;
;
Assistant
Professor of the French Language and Literature, Swarthmore
College, 1901-1902; Professor,
from
1902.
3
;
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
1
Gellert Alleman, Professor of Chemistry.
B.Sc, Pennsylvania College, 1893; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins
Instructor in Chemistry, University of Maine,
1897-98; Instructor in Chemistry, V/ashington University, 18981902; Professor of Chemistry, Swarthmore College, from 1902,
University, 1897.
Assistant Professor of English and
John Russell Hayes,
Secretary of the Faculty.
A.B.,
Swarthmore
LL.B.,
1889;
College, 1888; A.B.,
University
of
Harvard University,
Pennsylvania,
1892.
Student
of
Oxford and Strasburg, 1892-93. Asin English, Swarthmore College, 1893-95 Assistant Profrom 1895.
English, Universities of
sistant
;
fessor,
Paul Martin Pearson,
Assistant Professor in Rhetoric
and Public Speaking.
A.M., 1895. Student of Engand Oratory: Northwestern University, 1894-95; Harvard
A.B., Baker University, 1891
lish
University, 1901-1902.
versity,
from
;
Assistant in Oratory, Northwestern Uni-
1902.
GusTAV A. Kleene,
Instructor in Economics and Politics.
A.B., University of Michigan,
Pennsylvania,
Student
1896.
Berlin and Tiibingen,
1893-94
1891
J
Swarthmore
Mary Corwin Lane,
A.B.,
Latin,
Cornell
Swarthmore
Ph.D., University of
:
Assistant in Economics,
Economics
from 1902 (January).
Instructor in
;
Politics,
;
Economics Universities of
Columbia University, 1894-95
of
University of Pennsylvania, 1895-96.
University of Wisconsin, 1900-1901
and
Swarthmore College,
Assistant Professor,
1895-1902;
College,
Assistant in Greek and Latin.
University,
College,
1898.
from
Assistant
in
Greek and
1901.
Harriet Sartain, Lecturer on the History of Art and
Director of the Studio.
Graduate of the Philadelphia School of Design for Women.
Student of Art in Europe, 1890; student of Engraving under
John and Samuel Sartain. Lecturer in Swarthmore College,
from 1902.
;
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
14
Thomas W. Heslin,
Superintendent
Assistant in Engineering.
Shops
of
Swarthmore College, from
Henry
Haverf ord
:
N. Benkert, Assistant
E.
Hannum,
1902.
Assistant
Laboratory Assistant
Pennock M. Way, Laboratory
Mary
Assistant in Engineering,
Assistant in Physics.
B.S.,
Swarthmore College,
Swarthmore College, from 1902.
William
1888-89 >
in Engineering.
B.S., Swarthmore College, 1901.
Swarthmore College, from 1902.
Lewis Fussell,
College,
1901.
in
Physics,
in Biology.
Assistant in Chemistry.
V. Mitchell Green, Director of Physical Training
for the
Women
Students.
M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1884.
Student of Physical Culture in Stockholm, Berlin, London,
Ziirich.
Director of the Gymnasium, Woman's College of Baltimore, 1892-93
;
Director in Swarthmore College, from 1894.
W. SiNNOTT CuMMiNGS,
the Men Students.
Director of Physical Training for
M.D., Tufts College, 1896.
for the
Men
Students,
M. Elizabeth Bates,
the
Women
Director of Physical Training
Swarthmore
College,
from
1899.
Assistant in Physical Training for
Students.
Graduate of the Boston Normal School of Gymnastics, 1893
Graduate Student, 1901-1902. Assistant in the Gymnasium,
Bryn Mawr
from 1902.
College, 1893-96; Assistant in
Swarthmore
College,
OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION
JAMES
D.
HULL,
Superintendent.
SARAH
NOWELL,
M.
Librarian.
CAROLINE
L.
HAWKE,
Registrar and Secretary to the President.
more
A.B.,
Swarth-
College, 1900.
MARY R. SATTERTHWAITE,
Housekeeper.
SARAH
COALE,
D.
Matron of Parrish
Hall, West.
ELLA MICHENER,
Matron of Parrish
CAROLINE
Matron
A.
Hall, East.
LUKENS,
of Parrish Hall, Center.
lege, i8g8.
ELLEN ROBERTS,
Director of the Laundry.
EDWIN
J.
DURNELL,
Director of the Farm.
B.L.,
Swarthmore Col-
STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE
FACULTY
Athletics: Professors
Hoadley, Trotter.
Catalogue: Professors Hull, Stine, Holmes.
College Publications: Professors Hayes, Stine, Bronk.
Diplomas and Commencements: Professors Trotter, Price.
Entrance Examinations : Professors Price, Battin.
Library: Professors Appleton, Hayes, Stine.
Preparatory Schools: Professors
Magill, Cunningham^
Price,
Public Lectures: Professors Appleton, Holmes.
Receptions:
The
President and the Dean.
Students' Societies: Professors
Secretary of the
E acuity:
Cunningham, Hoadley,
Professor
J.
Russell Hayes.
GRADUATE STUDENTS
NAME
RESIDENCE
Ely, Rebecca Mulford,
B.L., Swarthmore College,
Fussell, Lewis,
B.S.,
igoa.
Media.
Swarthmore College,
John, Edith Heywood,
B.L.,
SUBJECT
History.
Philadelphia.
Swarthmore College,
Physics,
igoj.
Mathematics.
Media.
1897.
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
The number of hours of credit is based on
work accomplished at the end of 1901-1902.
the
amount
of
Students in Engineering in the Class of 1903 are required to
do one hundred and twenty-eight (128) hours of work.
SENIOR CLASS
RESIDENCE
Beans, Byron,
Warminster.
Lansdozvne.
West
MAJOR
CREDIT
SUBJECT
99>^
Bond, Walker McClun, Winchester, Va.
Chester.
Booth, Elizabeth M.,
Wynnewood.
Clothier, Caroline,
Cornwall, N. Y.
Cocks, Edmund,
Emley, Helen Nesbitt, Philadelphia.
Ervien, John Horace,
Ogonts.
Evans, Howard Sterr, Yeadon.
Gleim, Margaret,
Hall, Albert Paxson,
HOURS OF
Chester.
Hannum,
History.
106^ *Engineering.
102^ History.
105
English.
Biology.
English.
*Engineering.
114
104^ ^Engineering.
I07J^ Biology.
92H *Engineering.
98 J^
95
Chester Heights.
William,
Jackson, Elizabeth W., Bartville.
g8y2
Physics.
99y2
English.
Jenks, Herbert Emery,
Byberry.
92^
Kilgore, Fannie B.,
Kiigore, Carrie B.,
Philadelphia.
Lamb, Robert
E.,
,
Philadelphia.
Baltimore,
Lease, Helen Elizabeth, Salem, 0.
Lord, Inez Helen,
Charleston,
*
t
,
Md.
Ill
112^
III.
*Engineering.
97y2 tGreek
10214 tGreek
&
&
Latin.
Latin.
*Engineering.
German.
9(>
Taking the course as formerly arranged and receiving the degree of B.S.
Taking the course as formerly arranged and receiving the degree of A.B.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
RESIDENCE
Meredith,
Edward Roy,
Newport, Clara
Calcium.
Price,
Anna J.,
Passmore, Norman
Nicliols,
Peirce,
Marion
S.,
V.,
99
I05
Chester.
New
New
Md.
91
goYz tGreek
& Latin.
& Latin.
101^2 ^Engineering.
99
German.
103
English.
Flushing, N. Y.
100
French.
New
York.
9sy2
English.
QS'A
German.
Economics.
96K2
English.
104
Penn's Park.
III^
Vernon, Norman D.,
Way, Asa Pound,
Pomeroy.
St. Thomas, Ontario,
III
Way, Pennock M.,
Fairville.
Ely,
tGreek
Hope.
Cleveland, 0.
Latin.
French.
York.
Souder, Helen Dewees, Woodstown, N. J.
Sandy Spring. Md.
Stabler, Nora Leland,
Thompson, Louis
*Engineering.
West
Baltimore,
Sutton, Elizabeth,
SUBJECT
iiiH tOreek &
Price, Marriott,
Stewart, Samuel T.,
MAJOR
CREDIT
Swarthnwre.
Wilmington, Del.
Oxford.
Ramdohr, Lulu von
Roberts, William Ely,
Ross, Annie,
HOURS OF
115
97
History
*Engineering.
^Engineering.
Chemistry.
JUNIOR CLASS
Ash, Elva Lulu,
61
Coatesville.
Mary Louise,
Thomas Christy,
Md.
Bartlett,
Baltimore,
Bell,
Bayside, N. Y.
New
Bogert, Charlotte R.,
Bradlej^ Floyd Henry,
York.
Camden, N.
J.
Brown, Blanche Estell &, Cornwall, N. Y.
Honey Brook.
Buyers, Martha K.,
Swarthnwre.
Campion, Marguerite,
Chandler, Gertrude F.
Curtis, Anna Louise,
,
*
t
Mott
,
73
62
64
64
Bethlehem.
64
61
New
74
York.
Darlington, Margaret S\., Concordia.
Fahnestock, Louise C, Harrishurg.
Gaskill, Lucretia
73
62
Swarthmore.
History of
Religion and
Philosophy.
French.
Engineering.
Latin.
History of
Religion and
Philosophy.
Greek.
French.
Greek.
English.
60^
Biology.
History.
73
German.
65
Taking the course as formerly arranged and receiving the degree of B.S.
Taking the course as formerly arranged and receiving the degree of A,B.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
NAME
RESIDENCE
19
HOURS OF
MAJOR
CREDIT
SUBJECT
Ginn, Jessie Bartlett,
Swarthnwre.
623^
History of
Religion and
Philosophy.
Green, Dorothy F.,
Greene, Edgar T.,
Griest, Frederick E.,
Bartow, Fla.
Gennantown.
Flora Dale.
61
Latin.
60^
Gti-ernscy.
68^-2
Chemistry.
Engineering.
Engineering.
61
Latin.
65
History of
Religion and
Philosophy.
Maurice
Griest,
Gutelius,
E.,
Mary Amelia, Nezv
York.
Hansell, Maurice Tracy, Bougher, N.
J.
Hulburt, Hallie G.,
Swarthmore.
85/2
English.
Jackson, Halliday R.,
Lewis, Mary Elma,
West
75
Lukens, Brittain Ely,
McCain, Millo Marie,
Merriman, Alice P.,
Pryor, Mabel,
Rice,
Maud
Esther,
Satterthwaite, George,
Sibbald,
Agnes
H.,
Sullivan, Alice R.,
Philadelphia.
6sy2
Philadelphia.
64
Greek.
History.
Engineering.
English.
South Bethlehetn.
Langhonie.
61
English.
S6y2
English.
Newtozvn.
SiVi
Greek
Swarthm-ore.
86
Engineering.
70
62
German.
70
Chemistry.
Chester.
Baltimore,
Fox
Md.
71
Chase.
Mooresto-am, N.
J.
Taylor, Caleb Marshall West Chester.
J. Hibberd,
Wilbur, Aldus,
Wilson, William West,
Taylor,
Anna K.,
Wood, Sarah Eastburn,
Wolff,
West
&
Latin.
Latin.
81^
Chester.
Neiu York.
61
Bridgeport.
76y2
History.
Engineering.
Philad-elphia.
64
German.
Linzvood.
61
English.
30
Engineering.
Engineering.
Biology.
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Baldridge, James Reede.Charlestozvn,
W.
Frederick Gunby, Salisbury. Md.
Avondale.
Brosius, Arthur,
Elfreth, Anna Elizabeth, Media.
Bell,
Foulke, Lydia,
Garwood, Esther C,
West
Va.
50
51
30
Chester.
Salem, O.
Geddes, F. Bramwell R., Swarthmore.
Media.
Hall, Elizabeth,
West Chester.
Heed, Helen,
3iy2
4oy2
3oy2
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
20
HOURS OF
RESIDENCE
Hicks, Philip M.,
Hoopes, Percy Marion,
Hoyt, Elsie Phebe,
Leiper, Margaret Dale,
CREDIT
Avondale.
36
West
zoy2
Chester.
Seven Oaks, Fla.
Swarthnwre.
Leonard, Frank Henry, Lansdowne.
Linton, William H.,
Moarestown, N. J.
303^
Lippincott, James
40
J.,
Philadelphia.
30^
55^
30>4
McFarland, Eliza W.,
30^
Helen
30J4
2oy2
Gulf Mills.
Merritt, Lynne Lionel, Swarthmore.
Miller,
E.,
Pottsville.
Miller, Serena Helen,
Germantown.
33^/2
Montalvo, Marie de,
Mowery, Harold W.,
Myers, Edith Cook,
New
ZV/2
Marietta.
47
Kennett Square.
3(>y2
Paul, Alice,
Moorestown, N.
York.
Trappe,
Price, Frederic Newlin,
Solebury.
Price,
Henry
Ferris,
ZZ
Swarthmore.
Z0V2
'
Thatcher, Herbert
30
Wilmington, Del.
Md.
36K2
44
History of
Religion and
Philosophy.
Turner, Joseph Archei
West, Edith Maddock,
Betterton,
Chester
Chester.
46
Wilson, Edith^
Salem, 0.
303^
31!^
FRESHMAN CLASS
Adams, Gertrude M.,
Camden, N.
Angell, Caroline B.,
Philadelphia.
I.
24H
Barth, Carl Geo. hange, Swarthmore.
Barth, Jacob Christian, Swarthmore.
Beatty, Emma Cooke, Morton.
* Special Student.
Newberry, S. C.
Baltimore,
Greek.
30^
AZV2
Beddoes, Margery,
Bosee, John K., Jr.,
* Bower, Chester B.,
'
2>lV2
Robinson, Edmund G., Wilmington, Del.
Tunkhannock.
Robinson, Louis N.,
Duncannon.
Scheibley, Phebe E.,
Sensenderfer, Robert P., Philadelphia.
S.,
Engineering.
Biology.
Engineering.
'
J.
Md.
Powell, Edith N.,
MAJOR
SUBJECT
Md.
Camden, N.
J.
French.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
NAME
21
HOURS OF
CREDIT
RESIDENCE
Boyle, Clara Louise,
Coatesville.
Bramble, Anna D.,
Philadelphia.
6
Gertrude, Philadelphia.
10
Bricker,
Mary
Broomell, Grace G.,
Philadelphia.
Bunting, Howard Keen, Chester.
Calkins, Hugh Gilman, Portland, Ore.
Carter, Elizabeth K.,
Buffalo,
Cheyney, Mabel,
Media.
Clifford,
Frank Daniel,
9
i8
N. y.
Philadelphia.
Close, Ethel Brooks,
New
Cocks, William Bull,
Cornwall-on-Hudson,
Comly, Harold
N. Y.
Horsham.
29^4
Philadelphia.
23^
Iredell,
Craig, Margaret,
Crow, John Harold,
Crowell,
Wilmer
York.
17
Uniontown.
Philadelphia.
G.,
Darlington, Jessie,
* Denton, Grace M.,
Woodside, Md.
Media.
New Hyde Park,
Dice, Elizabeth M.,
New
Diebold, William,
Nezvark, N.
Curtiss,
Arthur D.,
21%
21
N. Y.
6
Castle.
J.
Hazel 'Barhara,Paterson, N. J.
Douglass, Edith Alanson./i^&Mrj) Park, N. I.
Downing, Richard, Jr., East Norwich, N. Y.
Eastwick, A. Maurice,
Philadelphia.
Eisenhower, Esther L., Norristown.
* Elmore, Alfred Robert,A^eze; York.
Philadelphia.
Faltermayer, Rose,
Norristown.
Fornance, Lois,
Philadelphia.
Fowler, Clara Keen,
Dillistin,
*
Gunby, Charlotte,
23
6
6
6
2
Lancaster.
Swarthmore.
Hadley, Caroline,
Philadelphia.
Haines, Elma Laura,
Halkett, Adelaide Bruce Ridley Park.
Hamilton, Alice Edna, Gladzvytt.
* Hill, Emilie,
Short Hills, N.
6
!,
* Special Student.
MAJOR
SUBJECT
J.
Engineering.
'
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
22
RESIDENCE
Humbert, William A.,
Hunt, Sarah P.,
* Hurley, James P.,
Jackson, Ralph G.,
John, Chad Launcelot,
Kent, Homer Simmons,
Kille, Herbert S.,
Nine Points.
6
Balsinger.
Kleinstiick, Irene M.,
Baltimore,
Bridgeton, N.
Leinau, Roberts, Jr.,
Lewis, Helen Ruth,
Lewis, Lydia Cooper,
Philadelphia.
Maris, Alice Hart,
Maule, Philip Kent,
McKee, Emily C,
Monaghan, Florence
Edward
6
J.
Kemiett Square.
Lansdowne.
Woodstown, N.
Swarthmore.
21
J.
27
12
Chester.
Kennett Square.
West ConshoJwcken.
J.,
Gilpin,
* Post, Lillian Estelle,
6
12
6
J.
Wilmington, Del.
East
V/illiston,
Price, Reginald Cooper, Baltipiore,
6
26^2
N. Y.
Md.
Tobyhanna.
Rhoads, Alfred N.,
Richards, Ruth Emily, Toughkenamon.
Lansdowne.
Ridings, Alice May,
Roberts, Walter 'Ernest, Glen Ridge, N. J.
Wilmington, Del.
Robinson, Rachel,
Rogers, Esther Lewis, Pendleton, hid.
Rooks, William Willard,FrMzY/a«d Park, Fla.
Philadelphia.
Rosenbluth, Lillie,
Swarthmore.
Ryder, R. Leslie,
Philadelphia.
Sabsovich, Marie G.,
* Special Student.
6
Swarthmore.
New York.
Nobles, George S.,
West Chester.
Palmer, Edward P.,
Passmore, John Walttr, Nottingham.
Peirce, Bertha Carolyn, West Chester.
Perkins, T. H. Dudley, Moorestown, N.
Poole,
6
Md.
Lang, Arvilla, M.,
Lukens, Gertrude,
SUBJECT
Uniontown.
Lamb,
Lippincott, Jane H.,
MAJOR
CREDIT
Chappaqua, N. Y.
Charleston, Mass.
Swarthmore.
Mt. Holly, N. J.
Kalamazoo, Mich.
Philip,
HOURS OF
15
27^
6
6
24J/2
20j4
g
6
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
RESIDENCE
Sclioeneman, Emily,
Schwenk, Grace A.,
Minersville.
Emma,
Seaman, Anna
Swarthmore.
Glen Cove, N.
L.,
Seaman, James P.,
Sherwood, Lawrence
Woodbury
MAJOR
CREDIT
SUBJECT
6
Samuel, 4th,
Smith, Lemuel David,
Smith, William D.,
Smith, William T.,
Y
Falls,
T., Waynesville,
N. Y.
0.
Ketinett Square.
Sinclair,
Strode, Laura
HOURS OF
Philadelphia.
Seal,
23
283^
Spokane, Wash.
Rutledge.
I2J^
Lincoln, Va.
West
J.,
Chester.
9
Terrell, Frederick B.
San
Thatcher, Richard C,
Tyler, Caleb R.,
Sezvell,
I.
3
18
Underhill, Caroline,
Philadelphia.
8
Antonio, Texas
Wilmington, Del.
N.
Wm.
Cooper, Baltimore, Md.
Washburne, Caroline A. Chappaqua, N. Y.
Washburn, Mary Stuart Chappaqua, N. Y.
Watters, Geo. Laurence Media.
Selma, 0.
Wilson, Edith,
Walker,
12^
,
243^
SUMMARY BY STATES
Pennsylvania
128
New York
New Jersey
Maryland
Delaware
Ohio
24
18
13
6
:
Florida
Virginia
5
3
2
Illinois
Indiana
Massachusetts
Michigan
Ontario, Dominion of Canada
Oregon
South Carolina
Texas
Washington
West Virginia
Total
209
FELLOWS AND SCHOLARS,
Joshua Lippincott Fellow:
1902-1903
Bird T. Baldwin,, B.S.,
1900; student in Harvard University.
Lncretia Mott Fellow:
Margaret H. Taylor,
B.L.,
1902; student in the University of Berlin.
Deborah Fisher Wharton Scholar: Annie Ross, 1903.
Samuel
J.
Underhill Scholar:
1904.
Mary
A.
Gutelius,
.
Anson Lapham Scholar: Louis N. Robinson,
1905.
Westbnry Quarterly Meeting Scholar: Aldus Wilbur,
1904.
Rebecca M. Atkinson Scholar: William Ely Roberts,
1903.
Barclay G. Atkinson Scholar:
Shoemaker Scholar:
Annie
Mabel Pryor,
1903.
Caroline A.
Under-
hill, 1906.
/.
V. Williamson Scholars:
Rachel Robinson,
T.
Friends' School, Wilmington, Del.
H. Dudley Perkins, Friends' School, Moorestown,
N.
J.
Richard Downing,
Jr.,
Friends'
Academy, Locust Valley,
N. Y.
Emma
Seal, Swarthmore Public High School.
Philip Kent Maule, Martin Academy, Kennett Square,
Pa.
Reginald
C. Price, Friends' School, Baltimore,
Friends'
Seminary Association Scholar:
MoNTALVO, Friends' Seminary, N. Y.
Md.
Marie de
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
LOCATION AND HISTORY
The Borough
of
Swarthmore
is
situated southwest of
Philadelphia on the Central Division of the Philadelphia,
Wilmington and Baltimore Railway.
It is
eleven miles dis-
tant from Broad Street Station, with which
it
is
connected
by frequent trains it is also connected with Philadelphia by
two trolley lines.
The College buildings and the campus occupy a commanding position. The view includes many miles of the
Delaware River, whose nearest point is about four miles
distant.
The College property comprises over two hundred
acres of land, including a large tract of woodland and the
;
beautiful rocky valley of
Crum
The College was founded
Creek.
1864 through the efforts of
-members of the Religious Society of Friends, and for the
purpose of securing to the youth of the Society an opportunity for higher educational training under the guarded supervision and care of those of their own religious faith.
Other applicants are admitted upon the same terms as
Friends, and nothing of a sectarian character appears in the
instruction or in the
The
intention of
in
management
its
of the College.
founders was to
of Christian character the
first
make
the promotion
consideration, and to provide
opportunities for liberal culture while maintaining a high
These aims have been
standard of scholarship.
faithfully
-observed in the administration of the institution.
BUILDINGS
Parrish Hall, 348 feet
is
a massive stone
which is separated from the
compartments. The central build-
in
length,
structure, the central portion of
two wings by
firc-proof
^5
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
26
ing
is
five stories in height,
and with an extension
at the rear
provides for assembly room, lecture rooms, museum, library,
The wings are four
devoted to lecture and
recitation rooms; the remaining floors in the east wing contain the dormitories of the women students, and in the west
reading room, parlors, dining
stories high.
wing those
structors
The ground
of the
students.
and matrons reside
Science Hall
ment, 162 by 64
istry,
men
is
hall, etc.
floors are
The Dean and
several in-
in the building.
a two-story stone building with base-
feet,
devoted to the departments of
Physics, and Engineering.
Chem-
It contains, besides lec-
ture and recitation rooms, electrical, physical, engineering,
and chemical laboratories; machine shop, and draughting
rooms; foundry, forge, and wood-working rooms; engine
and boiler rooms. All departments are well equipped, and
new apparatus and machinery are added as occasion demands.
The Swarthmore College Astronomical Observatory is especially arranged for purposes of instruction, and contains
an equipment suitable both for class work and the prosecuThis includes a transit of three-inch aperan equatorial telescope of six-inch aperture, with micrometer and spectroscope attachments a chronograph and
chronometer, mean-time and sidereal clocks, and a reference
Connected with the Observatory is the local Signal
library.
Service Station of the State Weather Bureau, fully provided
tion of research.
ture,
;
with the necessary meteorological apparatus. The latest
addition to the building accommodates a seismograph of the
most approved construction, which records by photographic
process any vibration of the crust of the earth.
Other buildings upon the campus are the Meeting-house,
Somerville Hall (the
the JVm.
J.
gymnasium
President's House, the
women students),
men students), the
for the
Hall Gymnasium (for the
Benjamin West House (birthplace of
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
2/
Benjamin West, P. R. A., erected in 1724), Cunningham
House (the residence of the Professor of Astronomy and
Mathematics), the necessary farm buildings, etc.
Parrish Hall, Science Hall, and the two gymnasiums are
heated by steam from a central plant. A new heating system for the dormitories in Parrish Hall was recently installed; it consists of two 72-inch fans at the extreme ends
of the building, which force the air over coils of steam pipe
and through conduits accurately graduated in size, to the
various rooms, thus insuring proper heat and ventilation.
RELIGIOUS CULTURE
The
daily sessions of the College are
semblage of students and instructors
opened with an
as-
for the reading of the
Bible, or for other suitable exercises, which are preceded
and followed by a period of silence. The students attend
Meeting on First-day mornings, with the College officials
and Friends of the neighborhood. By these means, and particularly by individual influence, and by the constant effort
to maintain in the institution a spirit in
purpose of
its
exercised to
founders,
it
is
harmony with the
believed that a proper care
mould the characters
is
of the students in con-
formity with Christian standards.
SOCIAL LIFE
Swarthmore, as a co-educational
to provide College life in a
home
institution,
undertakes
setting; to supply
an atwhich manly and womanly character may
develop naturally and completely. It provides that freedom
which places upon each individual the responsibility of self-
mosphere
in
demanding the right exercise of his judgment,
making provision for the correction of errors, supplementing his judgment and will, when necessary, by the
control,
while
direction of those in
whom
his confidence
may be
justly
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
28
placed.
The
students meet in the dining-hall as in their
homes, and for a social hour in the reception parlor before
evening work begins. There are other social occasions in
the class receptions that occur during the year, and the
more public College receptions to which friends of the instiThis intercourse of the students is under
tution are invited.
the care of the Dean and her assistants, and it is the aim of
the College to
make
it
a
means
of social culture.
PHYSICAL CULTURE
The
Wm.
erected in 1899,
J.
is
Hall
Gymnasium for the men students,
new and complete outfit of
supplied with a
apparatus after the Sargent System, and affords facilities
for the required class and individual work, as well as for
various in-door games.
women
students was
Literary
Somerville
The Somerville Gymnasium
for the
erected through the efforts of the
Society.
It
is
furnished
with
ap-
A
statement of
paratus adapted to the Swedish System.
of Physical
department
the
in
requirements
methods and
Training will be found on page 80.
The extensive and beautiful grounds invite to out-door
exercise, which is encouraged in every reasonable way.
Whittier Field, the athletic ground for young men, provides
a quarter-mile cinder track, a well-graded field for athletic
Upon the campus are
sports, and seats for spectators.
facilities
for tennis,
golf,
basket-ball,
and other out-door
both sexes. Cross-country running, bicycle
on Crum Creek are favorite forms of
skating
and
riding,
recreations for
exercise.
STUDENTS' SOCIETIES AND PUBLICATIONS
Three
maintained by the students:
Eunomian by the men, the Somerville by
Regular meetings are held for literary and
literary societies are
the Delphic and the
the women.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
29
Other exercises, which afford opportunity to acquire
They
parliamentary practice and in debate.
valuable auxiliaries in the
ciety has,
work
accessible to
all
students,
its
The
is
so-
but
and a reading room
a library
containing periodicals and daily papers.
of books in these libraries
Each
own members,
of the College.
under the management of
skill in
are regarded as
The
total
number
nearly four thousand.
Joseph Leidy Scientific Society has for
its
object to
keep in touch with the results of modern investigation in
Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and Engineering.
At its meetings, held monthly, announcements of recent
discoveries are made by the various instructors, and their
meaning and importance are briefly discussed. Papers are
also prepared and read by the student members.
The Szvarthmore Audubon Club is designed to promote
The
interest in the study and protection of our native birds.
use of the camera in securing good pictures of live birds
and their nests is a very desirable aid in the pursuit of the
The region about Swarthmore, especially the
study.
wooded ravine through which Crum Creek flows, affords
unusual opportunities for observation. In a walk of eight
miles along this stream fifty-eight different varieties of birds
have been noted, most
of
them being
species nesting in the
locality.
Seminars are held
in the
departments of English, HisStatements concerning
tory and Economics, and Latin.
their
to
work may be found under the respective departments.
The Cercle Franfais holds weekly meetings and is open
all
the
students in the French Department after the middle of
first
year.
Its object is to afford
increased opportunities
knowledge of the French language.
The Deiitschcr Vcrein holds weekly sessions for the purpose of affording its members a greater ease and facility in
expressing themselves in idiomatic German. Students are
for acquiring a practical
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
30
thus brought into more positive acquaintance with
customs, amusements, music, and literature.
German
The Swarthmore Young
Friends' Association meets
open to students, members of
the Faculty, and others interested in the testimonies and ac-
monthly
tivities
in the College;
it is
of the Society of Friends.
The
students
is an organization of the men
encouragement of physical culture and
Athletic Association
for the
athletic sports.
The
women
Two
the
Girls' AtJiletic
Club
is
a similar organization of the
students.
periodicals are published
supervision
monthly,
is
of the
Faculty.
by the students under
The
Phoenix,
a
semi-
devoted to the interests of the College com-
munity and of the Alumni; the Halcyon
nually by the Junior Class.
is
published an-
LIBRARIES AND READING ROOM
The Libraries
bound volumes, as
of the College collectively contain 22,100
follows:
The General Library
in
15,600
Literary Societies' Libraries
3,95o
Friends' Historical Library
2,550
The Edgar Allen Brown Fund, established by
memory of Edgar Allen Brown, of the Class of
his family
1890,
and
the Alumni Fund, are at present the chief sources of income
for increasing the collection in the General Library.
Friends' Historical Library, founded
by the
late
Anson
Lapham,
of Skaneateles, N. Y., contains a valuable collec-
tion
Friends'
of
books,
photographs
of
representative
Friends, and manuscripts relating to the Society and
tory.
This collection
is
its
his-
stored in a fire-proof apartment, and
1
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
it
hoped that Friends and others
is
will
3
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
Such contributions
history of the Society.
are solicited,
and should be addressed to Friends' Historical Library, or
The
to Arthur Beardsley, Librarian, Swarthmore, Pa.
Library
accessible to
is
and history of Friends.
The Reading Room
leading literary,
all
persons interested in the doctrines
is
supplied with reference books, the
scientific,
and technical journals, and the
principal newspapers.
Besides the above, the great collections of books in the
its Ridgway Branch, the Mer-
Philadelphia Library, and
cantile Library, the Free Library of Philadelphia, and the
University of Pennsylvania, as well as those in the special
and technical libraries of the city, are open to the use of
students under proper regulations.
THE MUSEUM
The Museum
of the College
is
strictly
an educational
and the specimens from its cases are in constant
use in the lecture room and laboratory. It is growing
steadily, and always in the direction of rendering more perfect the means of illustrating the different departments of
Biology and Geology.
collection,
It includes the
The
following collections:
Joseph Leidy Collection of Minerals, the result of
thirty years' discriminating collection
sists
characteristic rocks
tems
by
its
founder, con-
of exceedingly valuable cabinet specimens of minerals,
and
ores,
and models
of the various sys-
of crystallization.
2.
The
Collection Illustrating
Comparative Osteology con-
sists of a large series of partial and complete skeletons, pre-
parer! at Prof.
Henry Ward's Natural History Establishment
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
32
in Rochester, N. Y.,
work
and
illustrates the structure
3.
The Wilcox and Farnham
prises stuffed specimens of native
all
and frame-
of vertebrates.
Collection of
and foreign
Birds com-
birds.
Nearly
the species visiting this State are represented.
4. The Frederick Kohl Ethnological Collection consists of
Indian implements, weapons, clothing, etc., mostly from
Alaska.
5.
The
C. F. Parker Collection of Shells
is
made up
of
choice typical land, fresh-water, and marine shells.
These
Dr. Joseph Leidy
specimens were all selected by the late
from the extensive collection of the founder, C. F. Parker,
who was for many years the Curator in charge of the Acad-
emy
of
6.
Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.
The
Robert R. Corson Collection of Stalactites and
composed of specimens from the Luray
Caverns, and illustrates the peculiar limestone formations of
Stalagmites
that
is
and similar
7.
The
districts.
Eckfeldt Herbarium contains over two thousand
specimens illustrating the flora of Pennsylvania. The
Annie Shoemaker Collection is a valuable addition to this.
In addition to the above, there is a large and constantly
increasing collection of specimens of vertebrates and invertebrates (including the U. S. Fish Commission -Educational Collection), of dissected specimens for demonstration
in the lectures on Physiology, of glass and papier-mache
models of invertebrates, and of special points in vegetable
and animal morphology, besides some three hundred classified diagrams and colored charts illustrating every branch
of natural history.
Students
wto
are unable to return to their
Vacation will be charged
College,
a
proportionate
homes
amount
for
for the Spring
board at the
EXPENSES
The charge for board and tuition is $400 per year,
which $250 is payable in advance, and $150 on the first
First Month.
The
of
tuition fee of non-resident students
which $125
the
first of
is
First
is
of
of
$150 per year,
payable in advance, and the remainder on
When
Month.
resident students there
is
luncheon is taken with the
an additional charge to non-resi-
dents of $50 per year.
The College is closed during the Christmas Recess.
Students
who desire to remain
may secure board
at that time
in
Swarthmore or
at
moderate charge
its
vicinity
in
homes
recommended by the Faculty.
Students purchase their
own
books, which the College
They also buy
and drawing implements, and pay a
reasonable rate for laundry work done at the College.
will furnish at the
own
their
A
lowest rates obtainable.
stationery
fee of three dollars per semester
is
charged
in
every
laboratory science, except in Chemistry; in Chemistry the
fee
is
proportioned to the quantity of materials consumed.
no extra charge is made unless a
is employed.
Payments are to be made by check or draft to the order
of Charles M. Biddle, Treasurer, 513 Commerce Street,
Philadelphia.
In case of
illness,
physician or trained nurse
FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS
FELLOWSHIPS
The Joshua Lippincott Fellowship, founded by
Howard W. Lippincott, A. B., of the Class of 1875, in mem33
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
34
ory of his father, consists 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 the College to enable him to pursue advanced
study under the direction or with the approval of the
Faculty.
The LucRETiA MoTT Fellowship, founded by the
Somerville Literary Society, and sustained by the contribuits members, yields an annual income of $525.
It
awarded each year by a Committee of the Faculty (selected by the Society), with the concurrence of the Life
tions of
is
Members of the Society, to a young woman graduate of that
who is to pursue advanced study at some other institu-
year,
tion approved
by
this
Committee.
SCHOLARSHIPS
1. The
Westbury Quarterly Meeting, N. Y.,
Scholarship pays all charges for board and tuition, and is
awarded annually by a Committee of the Quarterly Meeting.
The Rebecca M. Atkinson and the Barclay G.
Atkinson Scholarships yield $200 each, and are awarded
2.
annually by the Board of Managers of the College.
3.
The Annie Shoemaker Scholarship pays
charges for
board and
tuition,
young woman graduate
and
is
all
awarded annually to
a
of Friends' Central School, Phila-
delphia.
There are nine other similar Scholarships owned by
individuals, each entitling the holder to board and tuition at
These are awarded by the owners.
the College.
4.
V. Williamson Scholarships for Preparatory Schools. Fifteen scholarships of the value of $150
each for resident, and $75 each for non-resident students,
5.
The
I.
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
are offered to
members of
35
classes graduating in 1903 in the
following schools
2 to Friends' Central School
Philadelphia, Pa.
New
Seminary
I
to Friends'
I
to
I
to Friends' School
Park Avenue Friends' High School.
.
to Friends'
to Friends'
I
to Friends' Select School
1
to
Abington Friends' School
2 to George School
I
to
I
to
Chappaqua Mountain Institute
Swarthmore Preparatory School
Swarthmore Public High School
I
to
I
to Martin
York, N. Y.
Baltimore,
Md.
Wilmington, Del.
Moorestown, N. J.
Locust Valley, N. Y.
Washington, D. C.
Jenkintown, Pa.
George School, Pa.
Chappaqua, N. Y.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Kennett Square, Pa.
High School
Academy
I
I
.
Academy
These scholarships will be awarded upon competitive
examination under the direction of the College Faculty.
None will be awarded to applicants who fail to be admitted
without condition to the Freshman class, and every holder
of such
scholarship
must pursue
College the studies
in
leading regularly to the degree of Bachelor of Arts.
6. The three scholarships named below are offered
work done in the College in 1902- 1903. They are of
for
the
value of $200 each for resident, and $100 each for nonresident students,
and are awarded
member
of the respective classes
without
conditions,
scholarship
and
shall
in
each instance to that
who
shall
be promoted
have the best
upon the regular work of the
record
The Deborah Fisher Wharton Scholarship
be awarded to a member of the Junior class.
a.
b. The Samuel J. Underhill Scholarship
awarded to a member of the Sophomore class.
The Anson Lapham Scholarship
member of the Freshman class.
c.
to a
of
year.
will be
will
will be
awarded
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
36
7,
The twenty-six
scholarships
named below
are offered
whose previous work
earnestness and their ability. About
to the students needing pecuniary aid,
has demonstrated their
one-fourth of them will be available for
They
new
students for
awarded at the discretion
of the Committee on Trusts, Endowments, and Scholar-
the year 1903-1904.
will be
Application should be
ships.
made
to the President of the
College.
a.
The Samuel Willets Scholarships
Ten
:
scholar-
ships of $150, and ten scholarships of $100, per year.
h.
The Isaac Stephens Scholarships
:
Four
scholar-
ships of $50 per year.
c.
The Mary Wood Scholarships
:
Two
scholarships
of $50 per year.
If any of the scholarships under 5 and 6 are not
awarded, the funds thus released will be applied to scholar-
ships similar to those under
7.
:
:
REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION
Application for admission should be
possible
by
made
as early as
Students are not ad-
letter to the President.
mitted for a period less than the current College year, but,
vacancies exist, they may enter at any time during the
when
year.
must present satisfactory testimonials of
good character from their former teachers, and students
coming from other colleges must offer certificates of honAll applicants
orable dismissal.
Students admitted to the College are exfrom the use of tobacco.
pected to abstain entirely
EXAMINATIONS FOR ADMISSION
Examinations
Summer,
for admission
may
be taken either in the
Autumn.
at the close of the college year, or in the
(See the Calendar on page 5 for the dates.)
Candidates for admission who do not present
cates in accordance with the conditions laid
certifi-
down on page
39 will be examined as follows
(a) on the -first four of the fourteen subjects for examination enumerated below and
;
(&) on four of the remaining ten.
The
fourteen examination subjects are as follows
1.
Mathematics.
(a) Algebra.
—To
High-School grade.
text-book
is
Permutations and Combinations in a book of
(Hall and Knight's, or C. Smith's, elementary
suggested.)
(b) Geometry.
—The whole
of Plane
Geometry.
2.
English Grammar and Composition.
3.
English Literature.
(a)
thors:
A general knowledge of the following works and their auShakespeare's The Merchant of Venice and Julius Cxsar; the
37
;
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
38
Sir Roger de Coverley Papers in
The Spectator; Goldsmith's The
Vicar of Wakefield; Coleridge's The Ancient Mariner; Scott's Ivanhoe; Carlyle's Essay on Burns; Tennyson's The Princess; Lowell's
George Eliot's Silas Marner.
knowledge of the subject-matter, form, and structhe following: Macaulay's Essay on Milton and Essay on Ad-
The Vision
(b)
ture of
A
of Sir Launfal;
special
dison; Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Shakespeare's
Macbeth; Milton's Paradise Lost, Books I and II.
History. Preparatory work in any two of the following fields
of History will be accepted, provided at least one year's work has
been devoted to each of the two fields selected: (a) The History of
the United States; (b) The History of England; (c) The History of
Mediceval and Modern Europe; (d) The History of Ancient Greece
—
and Rome.
Elementary Latin.
5.
Grammar, the
Latin
— First Latin
essentials,
Book;
Caesar, four books;
paradigms and ele-
particularly
mentary syntax.
Advanced Latin.
6.
—^neid, six books;
Cicero, seven orations
(including those against Catiline; Pro Milone or Pro Lege Manilia
will be counted as two); Latin Composition,* the accurate trans.lation into Latin of easy sentences involving words and construcof
tions
frequent
occurrence
in
Cicero's
first
Oration
against
Catiline.
—
Grammar (Goodwin's recommended);
7. Elementary Greek.
Elementary Composition; Xenophon's Anabasis, Book I.
8.
Advanced Greek—Anabasis, Books
11, III,
IV;
Iliad,
Books
III; General History of Greece to the death of Alexander.
I, II,
9.
Elementary German.
—Thomas's
Practical
German Gram-
mar, Part I; Grimm's Mdrchen (twelve selections); Eichendorff's
Aus deni Leben eines Taugenichts (Chapters VII and VIII omitted);
F. S. Buchheim's Elementary Prose Composition, Part I; Schiller's
Wilhelm Tell (first three acts). Equivalents will be accepted.
—
Thomas's Practical German Gram10. Advanced German.
mar (reviewed and continued) Schiller's Wilhelm Tell (completed)
;
one
of
Riehl's
Culturgeschichtliche
Novellen;
Freytag's
Die Jour-
*The attention of teachers is especially called to the importance of Latin Composition as a foundation for College work.
.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
39
Buchheim's ElemenGerman ballads and
Equivalents will be accepted.
nalisten; Goethe's Iphigenia aiif Tauris; E. S.
tary Prose Composition (Parts II and III);
lyrics (seven to be
11.
memorized).
Elementary French.
—Ability to
read easy prose at sight,
and to answer ques(Grandgent's The Essentials
to put into French simple English sentences,
tions
on the elements of the Grammar
Grammar is recommended). About six hundred pages
modern prose should have been read, from the works of at least
of French
of
Candidates should be able to pronounce
French to questions on simple subjects.
The preparation should occupy two years, with not less than three
recitations per week.
four different authors.
correctly and to reply in
Advanced French.
—Ability
more
diffi-
cult French, including plays of the classic period, to put easy
Eng-
12.
to read at sight
prose into French, and to answer questions involving an advanced knowledge of the syntax as presented in the French Grammar of Bevier, Edgren, or Whitney. About fifteen hundred pages
should have been read, from the writings of at least eight standard
authors. Candidates should also be able to use the French language in the class-room with some fluency, both in writing and
speaking. The preparation is expected to occupy four years, with
not less than three recitations per week. Teachers preparing students for College are urged to ground them thoroughly in the grammatical principles, and to devote much attention to the pronuncialish
tion of the language.
—
Two of the following: Botany, Chemistry,
13. Science.
Physical Geography, Physics, Zoology, as presented in the better
class of high-school text books.
14.
Solid Geometry, and Plane Trigonometry as presented in
the text-book of Crockett, Murray, or Crawley.
ADMISSION BY CERTIFICATE
Graduates of Friends' Schools and of public High
Schools approved by the Faculty and Instruction Committee will be admitted to the
Freshman Class on
certificate of
the Principal, but this privilege does not secure in every
case admission without condition.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
40
Students admitted by certificate are received on
trial,
and the Faculty reserves the right to change their classification or to decline to continue their connection with the
College,
if
they are found not properly prepared.
privilege of sending students on certificate
drawn from any school whose
pupils
may
The
be with-
are
found to be
to
have students
deficient.
Principals of other schools
who wish
admitted on their recommendation, should correspond with
the President concerning each applicant.
The College will accept for admission the certificates
issued by the College Entrance Examination Board which
was organized in 1899 by the Association of Colleges and
Preparatory Schools of the Middle States and Maryland.
Information as to the examinations held by this Board may
be obtained from its secretary. Professor T. S. Fiske, Station
84,
New York
City.
—
:
REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATION
After
Commencement
degree of Bachelor
in 1903, the
of Arts alone will be conferred for the completion of the un-
dergraduate course.* This course is based upon uniform requirements for admission, and upon certain studies which
are prescribed for all matriculates. In addition to securing
this fundamental uniformity, it provides for the varied needs
and capacities of individuals by permitting a wide range of
selection on the part of the student or his advisers; and it
seeks, also, to provide a thorough training, extending over
three or four years, in some one department of study.
Candidates for graduation are required to complete one
hundred and twenty "hours," in addition to the prescribed
Physical Training. An "hour" signifies one recitation or
lecture per week throughout one college semester, or its
equivalent.
A
recitation or lecture
is
regularly fifty-five
minutes in length, and the outside work of the student is estimated at an average of two hours for each class exercise.
In laboratory work, each exercise is two hours in length,
and the outside work
is
designed to
make
the exercise as
demands to the "hour"
defined above. A student's regular work during each
semester is fifteen "hours." Thus in regular course the
work of eight semesters constitutes the minimum amount
one hundred and twenty "hours" for graduation.
The distribution of the work is as follows
nearly as possible equivalent in
its
—
I.
all
Prescribed studies.
students
who
These studies must be taken by
are candidates for graduation, unless per-
mission to substitute some other work
*
pa^e
For the degree
of
is
Bachelor of Science
obtained, for spein
Engineering, see
58.
41
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
42
cial
reasons, from the proper Faculty committee.
to devote the
whole
Freshman year
of the
It is
best
to five of the pre-
scribed studies; but the time and order in which they are
may
taken
The
vary according to the needs of each student.
prescribed work, amounting to forty-two "hours," ex-
clusive of the Physical Training,
includes the following
studies:
—
Nine "hours," three of which must be
1. English.
taken in English Composition, and six in English Literature
or Public Speaking.
—
Twelve "hours," all
2. Greek, Latin, French, German.
which may be done in any one of these languages, or six
"hours" in each of two.
of
3.
Bible
History,
Study,
Economics.
— Nine
"hours,"
three of which must be taken in Bible Study, and six in
any one of the three
4.
studies.
Astronomy,
Biology,
Chemistry,
Physics.
—
'Six
"hours," to be done in any one of the four sciences, and to
include laboratory work.
5.
Mathematics,
Engineering,
Astronomy.
— Six
"hours," to be done in any one of the three studies.
6.
work
— For
Physical Training
in this department, see
IL Major
study.
required to select the
the prescribed
amount
of
pages 80-81.
Every candidate for graduation is
work of some one department as his
major study. In most cases the selection may well be postponed until the beginning of the second year. In the department thus chosen the student must complete three full
years of college work, or eighteen "hours," and the professor in charge
may
at his option determine the
work of
six years, or thirty-six "hours," providing one year shall
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
own
43
If the major study is one
one year of the prescribed work
must be taken in another language from that chosen as the
major study. No matter how much credit may have been
given on entrance, no student is allowed to graduate who
has not had in the College at least one year in his major
not be in his
department.
of the languages, at least
study.
III. Elective
for graduation
studies.
may be
The remaining work required
selected
from any department or
departments of the College.
The following
studies are
as the exigences of the College
open
to election, in so far
programme
will permit
Astronomy,
History of Art,
Bible Study,
History of Religion,
Biology,
Latin,
Chemistry,
Mathematics,
Economics,
Engineering,
Philosophy,
English,
Politics,
French,
Psychology,
Geology,
Public Speaking,
German,
Social Science,
Greek,
Studio Work,
History,
World
Physics,
Literature.
IRREGULAR COURSES OF STUDY
Irregular courses of study, not including in due proportion the prescribed,
major, and elective, studies,
may
be
pursued only in special cases and by approval of the Faculty.
SPECIAL COURSES OF STUDY
Teachers, and other persons of sufficiently mature age,
who may wish
to devote themselves to
one or more particu-
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
44
be received without examination, and will
be permitted to elect such studies as they may be able to
lar studies, will
pursue to advantage
in
any of the regular
classes.
PREPARATORY MEDICAL COURSE
In the departments of Biology, Chemistry, and Physics,
is planned to prepare students for the study of medi-
work
Several leading Medical Schools of Philadelphia and
elsewhere will admit to the second year of their courses
cine.
students
tificates
who
present, with their diplomas, satisfactory cer-
of undergraduate
the medical course.
work
Students
equivalent to the
who
first
year of
desire to take advantage
of this arrangement should confer with the professors in
charge of the departments of science not later than the end
of their
Sophomore
year.
;
DEGREES
The degree of Bachelor of Arts
Commencement in 1903 and annuupon students who have complied with the
Bachelor of Arts.
be conferred,
will
ally thereafter,
at the
requirements for graduation as stated above. Until 1874
this degree was the only baccalaureate degree conferred by
the College, and will be the only one conferred after the
Commencement in 1903.* The degree of Bachelor of Letters,
or Bachelor of Science, will be conferred at the
mencement
Senior Class
upon those members
in 1903
who
of
the
Com-
present
prefer such degree and are entitled to
it
in
accordance with the former undergraduate courses.
The
Master's Degree. All candidates for the Master's Degree (A.M., M.L., and M. S.) must have taken
They
the corresponding Bachelor's Degree at this College.
or
Swarthmore,
are required to pursue a course of study at
Faculty,
and
to
pass
elsewhere, under the direction of the
examination on the same. Graduates residing at the College may reasonably hope to complete the work in one year
non-residents, engaged in other work, must devote to it not
Courses of study will be assigned to
less than two years.
candidates upon application to the Faculty stating the subA fee of $5
ject, or subjects, which they desire to pursue.
is charged when the course of study is assigned, and an
when the degree is conferred.
The examinations for the Master's Degree will be both
additional fee of $20
and written, and will be conducted by a committee of
the Faculty. An extended thesis, bearing upon some part
oral
of the
*
page
work
assigned, will be required in
For the degree
(
f
Bachelor of Science
in
all
cases.
The
Engineering, see
58.
45
46
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
candidate should apply to the Registrar for a more detailed
statement of the requirements.
The Engineering Degrees. The Degrees of Civil
Engineer (C.E.), Mechanical Engineer (M.E.), and Electrical Engineer (E.E.), will be conferred upon graduates
Swarthmore College who have made Engineering their
major study, who have been engaged for not less than three
of
years in successful professional practice in positions of responsibility,
and who have pursued prescribed courses of
reading and presented acceptable theses upon subjects pertaining to their branch
of Engineering.
Candidates
these Degrees should apply to the Registrar for a
tailed statement of the requirements.
charged as for the Master's Degree.
The same
more
for
de-
fees are
DEPARTMENTS AND COURSES OF
INSTRUCTION
BIOLOGY AND GEOLOGY
Spencer Trotter, Professor
The
and
courses in Biology are designed to give a broad
view of the facts and problems of life as a part
liberal
of the
Though
system of general culture.
of especial value
in preparation for the medical profession, the profession of
teaching, and for various fields of commercial activity, a
knowledge
man
or
of the general principles of
woman
to appreciate
the individual and social
life.
Biology enables the
more fully the conditions of
The method of work aims
awaken an interest rather than to equip the student as a
Those who desire to specialize in Biology after
specialist.
leaving College will find that these courses lead to the more
to
technical studies of the University.
The courses
ology and
in
Botany;
Biology embrace the subjects of ZoMammalian and Human Anatomy;
Physiology Vertebrate Morphology, and Normal Histology.
Three years of three hours per week in Course I, and six
hours per week in Courses H and HI is the total amount
;
of time involved.
—
Course I. (o) Elements of Zoology. Lectures and
work covering the practical study of the main
laboratory
types of animal
life
and the consideration
of the
problems of
and
distribution, environment, heredity, structure, function,
development.
{h)
First semester,
two hours.
Elements of Botany.
— Lectures
and laboratory
work, including the examination of the tissues of the plant,
and the consideration of the physiology of cell-life and of
47
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
48
Lectures on Economic Botany.
plant morphology.
semester,
Second
two hours.
—
Elements of Physiology. Lectures, demonstraand laboratory work in animal and human physiology.
One hour per week throughout the year.
Course I involves a knowledge of the use of the microscope in Zoology, Botany, and Physiology.
(c)
tions,
Mammalian and Human Anatomy.
Course IL
—
Dissection of the cat as a type, including studies in osteology, myology, visceral anatomy, the blood vessels, brain,
and nervous structures. Detailed study of the human
skeleton and the various structures of the human body in
comparison with those of the lower animals. Text book:
Anatomy of the Cat, Reighard and Jennings. Reference
books: Jayne's Mammalian Anatomy; Gray's Human
Anatomy. Six hours per week throughout the year, carrying a credit of three hours for each semester.
Advanced Work in one or more of the
Vertebrate Morphology; Physi-
Course IIL
following subjects:
ology; Normal Histology; Botany.
to subjects, time, books, etc., to be
fessor.
Arrangements as
made with
the pro-
Six hours per week throughout the year, carrying a
credit of three hours for each semester.
Course IV.
amination of
recitations
all
on
Geology.
—A
study and practical ex-
the important types of rocks; lectures and
structural,
dynamic, and historical geology.
from
an economic standpoint; construction of map. Open to all
students above the Freshman class. Two hours for each
Special features of the geology of the United States
semester.
The work
of the Biological Department
of the laboratory; lectures, demonstrations,
is
mainly that
and text-books
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
49
used in connection with the laboratory work. In
I and IV the method of recitation is largely employed.
Collateral reading is assigned, and short essays on
are
Courses
are required from time to time.
It is
hoped that students will interest themselves in independent
field observations and in the collection of specimens for
various subjects
study in the laboratory.
The Swarthmore College Museum is an adjunct to the
Department of Biology. An account of its collections may
be found on pages 31-32.
The Academy
of Natural Sciences,
Logan Square,
delphia, affords valuable matter for study
in its collections
and
Phila-
and reference, both
library.
CHEMISTRY
Gellert Alleman,
The
Professor
successful completion of the courses in Chemistry
will enable the student to enter
upon post-graduate work
any leading university, or
be of material assistance to
him
will
in various technical pursuits in
gaged.
at
which he may be en-
Those intending to prepare
fession will find
it
for the medical proadvantageous to follow several of the
elementary courses here offered.
Course I. General Inorganic Chemistry. Lectures,
demonstrations, written exercises and individual laboratory
practice on the general principles involved in elementary
This course includes work similar to that outRemsen's College Chemistry. Laboratory Experiments, by Remsen and Randall, is followed as a laboratory
guide; either Remsen's College Chemistry or Smith's Richter's
Inorganic Chemistry, is used as a book of reference. Required of all students who select Chemistry as their prescribed science.
Two lectures, and one laboratory period
chemistry.
lined in
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
50
of
two hours per week, throughout the
year, equivalent to
three hours for each semester.
Course
QuaHtative
II.
Demonstrations,
Analysis:
The
conferences and individual laboratory work.
text
book
Noyes' Qualitative Analysis. Students taking this
course must have completed Course I at this College, or its
used
is
equivalent at
some other accredited
lent of three laboratory periods of
institution.
The
equiva-
two hours each per week
throughout the year, carrying a credit of three hours for
each semester.
Elementary Quantitative Analysis. Complete analyses of Potassium Chloride, Copper Sulphate,
Calcite, Hematite, Apatite, Sphalerite, Clay, and Portland
Cement. For students taking Engineering as their major
This course may be selected in place of Course II,
subject.
during the second semester. The equivalent of three
laboratory periods of two hours each per week throughout
one semester, carrying a credit of three hours.
Course
III.
Course IV.
Quantitative Analysis.
and laboratory work involving methods
volumetric
and
The work required is a complete
following: Sodium .Chloride, Copper Sul-
analysis.
analysis of the
phate, Iron
Demonstrations
in gravimetric
Ammonium Alum,
Calcite, Magnesite, Apatite,
Zincite, Cuprite, Brass, Realgar, Niccolite, Clay, Feldspar,
Hematite, and Portland Cement. Required of students
Open as an
select Chemistry as their major subject.
elective to all others who have taken Courses I and II at
who
this
institution,
or
their
equivalents
elsewhere.
The
equivalent of three laboratory periods of two hours each per
week throughout the
year, carrying a credit of three hours
for each semester.
Course V.
Advanced
Quantitative
Analysis.
Ex-
1
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
5
amination of foods and food products, and their adulterants.
in toxicology, analysis of sewage, and the sanitary
analysis of water.
Required of students who select Chem-
Work
major subject; open as an elective to all other
sufficient knowledge of chemistry to
follow the course.
The work on sewage and water analysis
istry as their
students
is
who have had
particularly adapted to students in Engineering.
The
equivalent of three laboratory periods of two hours each
during the
first
semester, carrying a credit of three hours.
Course VI.
Physical Chemistry.
Laboratory work;
observations on the behavior of salts in solution; physical
methods
for the determination of
molecular weights.
H. C.
Jones's The Freezing-point, Boiling-point, and Conductivity
Methods is used as a guide. Required of students who seChemistry as their major study. Three laboratory
periods of two hours per week, carrying a credit of three
hours, during the first semester.
lect
Course VII.
Organic Chemistry. Lectures, demonand laboratory work. This
course includes the work as outlined in Remsen's Organic
Chemistry.
In the laboratory, students make and study the
various organic preparations as given in Gattermann's
Praxis des Organischen Chemikers. A knowledge of German is essential. Required of all students who select Chemistry as their major subject.
Three hours for each semester.
strations,
written
exercises,
Course VIII.
Engineering Chemistry. Lectures and
is devoted to a discussion of the chemical aspects of the Materials of Construcdemonstrations.
tion.
Considerable attention
Particular reference
is
made
to the various chemical
problems incident to the manufacture of Natural and Portlanfl cement; the manufacture of steel; the chemical treat-
ment
of timbers, to insure
lems which are
of
them against decay; various prob-
importance
in
connection with the selec-
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
52
tion of building stones; the
water supply, and
filtration.
modern treatment of sewage;
Twenty lectures, illustrated by
One hour, for one semester. This course
intended especially for students of Engineering, but is
open as an elective to all students.
lantern views.
is
ENGINEERING AND THE MECHANIC ARTS
Wilbur M. Stine, Professor
Henry N. Benkert, Assistant
Thomas W. Heslin, Assistant
The course in Engineering is designed to afford a
thorough general training for students who intend to
engage in the profession of Civil, Mechanical, or Electrical
Engineering.
The
location of the College
gineering students
;
is
most favorable for en-
the ready access to Philadelphia and to
the important manufacturing cities in the vicinity affords
opportunities
industrial
for
The course
of Engineering
its
instructive visits
to
a great variety of
and engineering works.
of instruction in both the theory and practice
is
arranged with the view of furnishing to
graduates a liberal preparation for immediate usefulness
in the office,
works, or
By adding
field,
in
more or
less
subordinate
demands
and practices to the theory and practice of the school, they
positions.
may
familiarity with commercial
successfully undertake the design of machinery, the
superintendence of works, or the conduct of engineering
enterprises.
The
instruction is given both by lectures and recitaand in the exercises in field, shop, laboratory, and
draughting-room there is constant opportunity for individual
Throughout the entire course the student is
instruction.
familiarized with the methods and processes of the Mechanic
Arts by systematic instruction both in wood and metal
tions;
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
working.
The
object
is
to avoid
53
mere manual routine
in
such exercises, and to make them a means for the development of the powers of observation and judgment, as well as
for the acquisition of mechanical
skill.
The Held equipment of the department is ample for
and locations, and opportunity is given
the student to become familiar with the use and adjustment
practice in surveying
of the apparatus.
The Draughting Rooms are
large,
furnished with adjustable tables, models,
for
work during
and
and are open
well-lighted,
etc.,
the greater part of the day.
The Engineering Laboratory contains a ten-horsepower vertical steam engine, an Olsen's testing machine,
arranged for tensile, compressive, and transverse tests,
steam engine indicators, apparatus for hydraulic and steam
engine experiments, and other valuable instruments and
appliances.
A
friend of the College has recently presented an Olsen
testing machine to the Laboratory.
This
machine has an ultimate capacity of 100,000 pounds for
tension and compression tests.
Other additions to the
equipment are micrometers for tension, compression, and
deflection strains
and attachments to the smaller Olsen
machine for testing specimens of cement.
screw-gear
;
Shop Work.
This portion of the work holds
an
important place in the general engineering course, being
pursued through the first three years. It is not desired to
impart the skill of the trained workman, but rather to lay
a foundation in the elements of shop practice upon which
mature judgment and observation may establish successful
practice.
The course
in
woodzvorking covers instruction
in join-
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
54
ing, framing,
and woodturning.
This preliminary work
is
followed by the elements of pattern making.
The work
in forging
is
based on a set of exercises
involving drawing, bending, upsetting, welding, and tem-
This course
pering.
is
followed by a short one in foundry
practice.
Machine practice is pursued through two years of the
During the first year, practice is given in bench
and vise work, followed by lathe work, and exercises on
course.
The
the planer, shaper, and universal milling machine.
various exercises also involve tapping, screw-cutting, and
work to standard gauges.
During the second year,
after completing the design
and draft of a machine, such as a
engine, the project
is
pump, or
lathe, small
completely constructed, affording the
student some experience in shop construction.
The Machine Shop contains an
excellent assortment of
tools, including screw-cutting engine lathes, speed lathes
(simple and back geared), an iron planer, a complete universal milling machine, a set of milling cutters, a shaper,
a twist-drill grinder, upright
drills,
an emery grinder, a
mill grinder, lathe centre grinder, vises (plain and swivel),
lathe chucks
(combination, independent,
scroll,
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, a complete set of steam fitters'
tools, with pipe vise, ratchet drill, etc., together with the
many
necessary small tools, hammers, chisels,
Additions are constantly being
made
files,
etc.
to this collection as
they are needed, either by manufacture in the shops or by
purchase.
Power
is
furnished by a lo
engine and a sixty horse power
x 24
Corliss steam
return tubular boiler, the
:
;
SVVARTHMORE COLLEGE
former
55
with an improved indicator, and the latter
fitted
with the necessary attachments for determining
its
effi-
ciency, etc.
and
The Woodworking Shop contains benches with vises
sets of woodworking tools, grindstone, and wood-
turning lathes.
The Smith Shop contains
forges, anvils,
and
sets of
blacksmith tools, bench, and vise.
The Foundry contains a brass
furnace,
moulders'
benches, a variety of patterns, and full sets of moulders'
tools.
The
details of the course
vary somewhat from year to
year, but in general are represented by the following ar-
rangement of the studies
FRESHMAN YEAR
Drawing
—Use
Instruments and Elements of Structural and
Machine Drawing; Standard Cross-sections; Pen Lettering;
Projections; Drawing from Objects; Tracing and Blue
Printing.
(First and Second semester.)
of
—
Use of Woodworking Tools; Joining; Turning;
Pattern-making. (First semester.)
Pattern-making; Sand Moulding and Casting; Forging and
Welding; Tool Shaping and Dressing; Tempering. (Second
Shop Practice
semester.)
SOPHOMORE YEAR
Geometry
—
The Point, Right Line and Plane;
Figures of Revolution; Intersections; Shades and Shadows.
Text-book: Church, Descriptive Geometry. (First semester.)
Descriptive
— Plates
Drawing
plete
for the course in Descriptive
Geometry; ComPrint from a
Working Drawing, Tracing, and Blue
Simple Machine or Structure. (First semester.)
Pen Topography
Conventional Topographical Symbols
Tinting; Color Topography.
(Second semester.)
;
;
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56
Stereotomy
—
The Application of Descriptive Geometry to the
Shaping of Stone for Masonry Construction. Text-book:
Warren, Stereotomy. (Second semester.)
Surveying
—The
Theory
Instruments
Practice.
:
(Second semester.)
Surveying.
Shop
Use and Adjustment of
Text-book
Raymond, Plane
of Surveying;
Field
;
—Vise
Work;
Practice
and
Chipping
(First
Filing.
semester.)
Machine Practice and Tool-making.
(Second semester.)
JUNIOR YEAR
Mechanics of Materials
—The
Resistance
Mo-
Materials;
of
Mechanics of Beams, Columns, and
Shafts; Combined Stresses, Impact and Resilience. Textbook: Merriman, Mechanics of Materials. (First semester.)
ments
Inertia;
of
Graphical Statics
—The
Elements of the Graphical Calculation of
of Simple Roof Trusses and
Similar Structures. (The latter half of the first semester and
the first half of the second,) Text-book: Merriam, Roofs
and Bridges, Part II.
Structures;
Field Practice
the
Calculation
— Precise
Practice with the Level, Transit and Plane-
Stadia Surveying;
table;
book:
Pence
and
Field Notes
Ketchum,
and
Surveying
Profiles.
Text-
Manual.
(First
semester.)
—Hydrostatics
Mechanics of Fluids Flow of Water
Flow of Water through Orifices and Pipes
Measurement of Water-power; Water-wheels and Turbines.
Text-book: Merriman, Hydraulics. (Second semester.)
Hydraulics
over Weirs
;
;
;
Mechanical Laboratory
— Quantitative
Determinations
Mechanics of Materials, especially Iron and
in
the
Steel.
(Second
Working Drawings and
the Con-
semester.)
Shop Practice
— Preparation
struction
of
some
of
Simple
Machine.
(First
and
second
semester.)
SENIOR YEAR
—
Engineering Surveys and Construction; Railway
Economics and Operation; Theory of Curves, Switches,
Nagle, Manual for
Turnouts, and Crossings. Text-books
Railway
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Railway
Webb,
Engineers;
Railroad
57
Construe fioti.
(First
Semester.)
Materials of Construction
— Physical
Properties of Structural
Materials; the Metallurgy of Iron and
Methods of Testing.
Cements;
Location of a Section of Railway; Curves;
and Embankments; Profile and Location
(First semester.)
Laboratory Practice
cating.
Mechanical
Bricks.
Ma-
—The
Excavations
Maps.
Johnson,
(First semester.)
terials of Construction.
Field Pr.\ctice
Timber and
Steel;
Text-book:
—The
Steam Engine; Valve Setting; Indi-
(The second
half of the first semester.)
Laboratory
—Testing
(The
Map Drawing—A Map
will
of
Cement,
Timber,
and
of the second semester.)
first half
be drawn from the
from a Topographical Survey.
field
notes taken
(First Semester.)
—
and Pavements Paving Materials; Foundations and
Drainage; Construction and Maintenance; Cost and Economics; Specifications. Text-book: Byrne, Highway Construction.
(Second semester.)
Roads
Masonry
Construction
Arches.
—
Materials;
Foundations; Structures;
Text-book: Baker, Masonry Construction. (Second
semester.)
Power Plants — Steam and
and Power
Volume
I.
Stations.
:
(Second semester.)
Structural Design
Trusses.
Hydraulic Plants; Electric Lighting
Text-book Crocker, Electric Lighting,
—Theory
Text-book:
and Design of Roof and Bridge
Merriman, Roofs and Bridges, Parts
I and II.
(The course will begin during the first semester,
but will be given principally through the second semester.)
—
Thesis Students will be met at assigned hours for consultation
and supervision in the preparation of the thesis required for
graduation.
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
58
A
summarized statement of the course of study
consti-
tuting the major in Engineering, for which, together with
seven additional hours in elective studies, the degree of
Bachelor of Science in Engineering
may
be awarded,
as
is
follows
FRESHMAN YEAR.
FIRST SEMESTER.
4=2
4=2
Drawing
Wood-working
SECOND SEMESTER.
Drawing
4=2
Forging
4=2
Mathematics or Elective.
.3
Mathematics, Algebra
2
Chemistry
3
Mathematics or Elective. .. .3
2
Mathematics, Algebra
Chemistry
3
Assigned work for summer vacation.
.
.
SOPHOMORE YEAR
Descriptive Geometry
Machine Practice
3
4=2
Mathematics
3
3
Physics
6=3
3=1
Chemistry
Drawing
Geology
2
Surveying
2
Drawing and Stereotomy.4.^2
Machine Practice
Mathematics
Physics
Chemistry
Geology
4=2
3
3
6=3
2
JUNIOR YEAR
Mechanics
3=1
Hydraulics
Laboratory Practice
4=2
Machine Practice
of Materials
Field Practice
Machine Practice
3
Physics
3
Physics
Electricity
2
3
Electricity
Mathematics
Graphical Statics
3^1
Mathematics
Graphical Statics
3
2=1
4=2
3
2
3
3=1
SENIOR YEAR
Railway Engineering
3
Masonry Construction
Field Practice
6=3
Materials of Construction. .2
2=:i
Drawing
Structural Design
Economics
Roads and Pavements
Thesis
.
3
i
Power Plants
Economics
.2
6=3
2
3
2
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
59
ENGLISH LITERATURE AND LANGUAGE
William Hyde Appleton, World Literature
John Russell Hayes, English Literature and
Advanced Composition
Paul M. Pearson,
Public Speaking and Rhetoric
English Literature
The course
in
English Literature aims to give a sym-
pathetic acquaintance with the
Anglo-Saxon period
great authors,
The following Courses are
offered
Course
lectures
I.
from the
to the present.
Introductory
Roman mythology and
literature.
on
Greek
Essays of
and
Lamb and
Emerson; poetry of Wordsworth, Scott, Shelley, Keats,
Tennyson, Browning, and Whittier. Lectures. Three
hours for each semester.
Course IL The Religious Drama; Marlowe; Lodge's
Rosalynde; selected plays of Shakespeare; Milton; minor
poets and essayists of seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Lectures on Elizabethan and following periods.
Private
readings and reports throughout the year. Three hours for
each semester.
Course IIL
Arnold.
Representative authors from Chaucer to
Offered to Sophomores
ing as a major subject.
Course IV.
Two
who
are taking Engineer-
hours for each semester.
Anglo-Saxon: Sweet's Primer; Beowulf.
Lectures on the development of the language.
Spenser.
periods.
Three hours
Course V.
American
Chaucer:
Lectures on the Transition and Middle English
for each semester.
Studies in special periods of English and
literature.
Development
of
the Essay and of
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
6o
Lyric and Nature poetry.
Literary biography.
Specimens
of Friends' classics.
During the year each student will make a particular study
life, writings, and influence of two assigned authors.
Three hours for each semester.
of the
Course
VL
World
Literature.
This
is
a course in
the study of great classics, other than English, belonging to
ancient and
modern
literature.
Homer
—the
The
first
semester
is
de-
—
and the Odyssey and to
the Greek Drama; the second semester mainly to Dante.
The course is conducted through the medium of standard
English translations, together with lectures by the instructor, and oral discussions and written abstracts by the
students.
Three hours for each semester.
voted mainly to
An English
Seminar
questions and of the
will
work
of
Iliad
be held for the study of literary
chosen contemporary authors;
open to advanced students.
The College Library
literature,
generous
biography,
gift of
is well equipped with works in
and criticism chiefly through the
—
the late
Edgar Allen Brown
of the class of
1890.
Composition
Practice in clear and ready expression.
Critical study
and style of representative English and American authors.
Study of invention and versification; writing
of theses.
Lectures and illustrative readings.
of the diction
Public Speaking
Course L
acquire purity,
easy, natural
ture.
The aim of the course is to
and strength of voice, and an
Declamation.
flexibility,
manner
in
reading the different forms of
litera-
Students are required to commit selected passages,
which they
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
6l
The
classes are organ-
recite before the class.
may have
ized in small sections, so that the students
the
personal criticisms of the instructor.
of
Course II. Oratory. In this course the masterpieces
modern oratory are studied as models for original ora-
tions,
while the best passages are committed and used as a
acquiring a natural and effective delivery.
During a part of the year students are required to give
each week, an extemporaneous talk on subjects assigned in
advance. Each student in the course is required to write
and deliver four orations.
drill in
Course
Argumentation.
III.
For the
first
few weeks
argumenwhich students have weekly practice in debate,
written arguments, and the drawing of briefs.
Elective for
students who have completed Courses I and 11.
of this course the instructor presents the theory of
tation, after
Course IV.
is
Interpretation.
The purpose
of the course
to acquire the best possible expression of the literature
studied.
After learning the spirit of the author and of his
time, an attempt
is
made
to give his writings such expres-
sion as will reveal the thought and emotion for which the
covers the field of
Amer-
ican literature; one writer being studied each week.
Two
words are but
The course
signs.
plays of Shakespeare are also studied.
who have completed
ture
Public Speaking
Elective for students
I
and English Litera-
I.
Oratorical Associations and Prizes
The Swarthmore
College Oratorical Association con-
ducts an annual contest, open to
all students, the winner
which represents the College in the annual contest of
the Pennsylvania Inter-Collegiate Oratorical Association.
The Presidenfs Prize of fifty dollars is contested for by
in
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
62
Sophomore and Freshman Classes,
some permanent memento of the successful
representatives of the
and invested
in
class for presentation to the College.
The Delta Upsilon Prise
of twenty-five dollars
is
com-
peted for in the College Oratorical contest.
The Sproul Testimonial of twenty-five dollars, ofifered by
Hon. William C. Sproul, of the Class of 1891, is awarded
in an oratorical contest open to members of the Junior Class.
Prizes
for
extemporaneous
speaking:
two
twenty-five dollars each, one contested for by the
prizes
of
young men
and one by the young women, have been offered during the
four years by a friend of the College.
last
The Hicks Testimonial of fifteen dollars, given annually
by Frederick Cocks Hicks, of the Class of 1893, is contested
for by members of the Eunomian Literary Society.
The Underzvood-Ponder Testimonial, a silver cup given
by William G. Underwood, of the Class of 1887, and James
W. Ponder, of the Class of 1890, is annually contested for
by the literary societies of the College.
FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
Edward H. Magill, Professor Emeritus and Lecturer
IsABELLE Bronk, Professor
The aim
of the instruction in this department is to afdegree
of literary culture, as well as to impart
high
ford a
thorough training in the grammar and linguistics of the
language. Until the middle of the second year, the authors
studied are all selected from those of modern times, and the
greatest attention is given to colloquial French. The student is then ready to be brought into contact with the more
artificial
(rhetorical)
forms of expression constantly oc-
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
63
curring in the higher grades of literature.
French
is
a Hving tongue
English
is
The
kept ever in view.
fact that
For
this
used in the class-room.
In the later years a series of lectures is given on the
reason but
little
is
more prominent French
In these lectures, the
writers.
biographical element purposely receives especial attention;
no attempt
to
make
is
made
at
exhaustive treatment, but the aim
is
the student familiar with the leading works of the
authors chosen.
Course
I.
Elements
of
Grammar, with Composition.
Beginners' Reader, followed by narrative prose (Sarcey's
Le Piano de Jeanne, or Mme. de
Witt's
Sur
la
pente,
Merimee's Colomha, George Sand's La Mare au diable) and
by modern plays. Three hours for each semester.
Course
II.
Grammar
continued, with prose Composiand Grandgent's Selections, Parts
Prose selected from the writings of A.
tion (Marcou's Exercises
II, and III).
France (Vol. Ill, Magill's
I,
J.
Claretie (Vol. IV,
series), Balzac,
Magill's
series),
Daudet, P. Loti,
Victor
Hugo, and
others, with private reading; Corneille (one play), Racine
(one play), Hugo's
and
Le Bourgeois
Ruy
Bias or Hernani, Moliere's L'Avare
gentilhomme.
Three
hours
for
each
semester.
Course
tions,
Prose Composition (Grandgent's SelecFrench Literature in the seventeenth
III.
completed).
century, special attention being given to the social as well
as to the literary tendencies of the time: Voltaire's Le Siecle
de Louis
XIV
(aise ail
XVlie siecle;
(ed.
Hachette
et Cie)
;
Crane's La Societe fran-
Moliere's Les Precieuses ridicules and
Les Femmes savantes; Corneille's Le Cid; Racine,
taine, Boileau, etc.
The
La Fon-
literature in the eighteenth cen-
tury: Voltaire's Prose (extracts, edited
by Cohn and Wood-
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
64
ward); Beaumarchais' Le
Manage
de Figaro, etc.
Three
hours for each semester.
Course IV.
Advanced Prose Composition. Prose au-
thors of the seventeenth century (Descartes, Pascal, Bossuet,
La Bruyere, Mme. de Sevigne, and
others)
;
Harper's Se-
lected Essays of Sainte-Beuve, with illustrative readings;
French Lyric Poetry, Canfield's Selections, with special atHugo, Lamartine, and more modern
Lectures on French Literature from the earliest
poets.
times to the present, accompanied by collateral reading.
Three hours for each semester.
Free composition, dictation, memorizing, and conversation in French are required, throughout all the four
tention to Victor
courses.
Course V.
If
circumstances demand
French
it,
students
who
be given an opportunity
for study, either in some restricted field of literature, such as
desire to specialize in
will
{a) literature of the sixteenth century, (h) classic letters
memoirs,
(c)
contemporary
literature,
etc.,
or
in
and
Old
French.
The following work
is
being done in
this course in
I 902- I 903:
Old
French
Phonology,
Morphology,
and
Syntax.
Translation into modern French of the selections in Con-
Chrestomathie de I'ancien fran^ais, with special regard to linguistic forms.
The reading of Extraits de la
chanson de Roland (ed. Paris), Aucassin et Nicolete (ed.
Suchier), and La Vie de St. Alexis (ed. Paris).
Three
hours for each semester.
stans'
International Correspondence:
year, an opportunity
is
Beginning
in the
second
given to students to carry on, under
direction, a correspondence with
French students.
SVVARTHMORE COLLEGE
65
GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
Benjamin
The course
of study in this department
afford grammatical
who have
culture.
not had a
It
F. Battin, Professor
and
linguistic training,
full classical
is
designed to
and
(for those
course) a degree of literary
brings the student into touch with the char-
acter and genius of the
German
people.
Emphasis is laid upon the relations of- the German to
the English and to the classical languages; upon etymology
and syntax; and upon social conditions and political events.
The courses, however, are literary rather than historical and
philological.
In the class-room, translation into English
is
discon-
tinued as soon as possible and expressive reading of the
German text is substituted; the students begin early to use
German in recitations.
The idiomatic sentence and
modern colloquial language form the basis of the work in
the
composition.
Reading and translating
at
sight are
cul-
tivated.
Other texts may
at
times be substituted for some of
those indicated.
Course I. Thomas's Practical German Grammar, Part
Grimm's Mdrchen (twelve selections); Eichendorff's Ans
dem leben eines Taugenichts (Chapters VII and VIII
I;
omitted)
;
E. S. Buchheim's Elementary Prose Composition,
Part I; Schiller's Wilhelm Tell
(first
three acts).
Three
hours for each semester.
is for those who have had no preliminary
German; it presupposes a discipline of several
years' language work in Latin and French; and prepares for
progressive and independent work.
It aims to give a
definite knowledge of German grammar; an ability to understand spoken German, to converse during the recitation, to
This course
training in
;
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
66
summarize in German the topics discussed in class, to write
easy German, to acquire a correct pronunciation, and to
memorize simple lyrics.
Course II. Thomas's Practical German Grammar (reviewed and continued) Schiller's Wilhelm Tell (completed)
one of Riehl's Cultiirgeschichtliche Novellen; Freytag's Die
Journalisten; Goethe's Iphigenia auf Tauris; E. S. Buchheim's Elementary Prose Composition (Parts II and III); German ballads and lyrics (seven to be memorized). Lectures
in German on literary characters and social conditions.
Three hours for each semester.
This course will prepare students to read such German text-books as may be used in the scientific and literary
;
departments.
Course
Schiller's
III.
Wallenstein
Aus dem
German on the
Heine's Harsreise; Freytag's
Lectures in
Grossen.
for each semester.
Course IV.
Goethe's Dichtung und Wahrheit; Les-
Nathan der Weise; Freytag's Doktor Luther;
Der Prins Friedrich
Private
reading:
Irrfahrten.
for
German
GerLiterature; Nevinson's Life of Schiller.
Composition, using texts and free composition.
Three hours
von Hamburg;
Sime's
Life
is
conducted
Grillparzer's
Goethe;
of
Lectures on Goethe.
This course
tion.
history of
German
man Prose
sing's
Carruth);
Private reading: Selections from Sherer's His-
Literature.
tory of
(ed.
Staat Friedrichs des
in
Kleist's
Sappho.
Gerstacker's
Free Prose Composi-
German.
Three hours
each semester.
Courses III and
of the
grammar and
IV
presuppose a systematic knowledge
the ability to converse readily.
students present summaries in
German
oral discussions of assigned topics.
of the texts read
The
and
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Course V.
(1902-1903.)
(a.)
(i'J
History of the Ger-
man Drama. (6.) German Scientific Readings, (c.) German Lyrics and Ballads. Three hours for each semester.
Course V. (1903-1904.) This course is for those intending to teach German. The method is largely that of the
seminar.
The grammar
is
studied from the pedagogical
standpoint; lectures are given by the students, on the gram-
mar and on
Methods of German
and verse comconducted entirely in German,
literary or social topics.
literary criticism are studied as well as prose
position.
This course
is
and the number of students
tion
The
Detitscher Verein
and
social
is
limited.
meets once a week for conversa-
enjoyment.
International Correspondence : Students who desire
it
are
given an opportunity to carry on, under direction, corre-
spondence with students
in
German
institutions.
GREEK LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
William Hyde Appleton, Professor
Mary Corwin Lane, Assistant
The primary aim
in this department is to give thorough
Greek language through the careful study
of selected works. At the same time, attention is also paid to
the Greek literature as a whole, and students are encouraged to acquaint themselves with the most important works
of representative authors by large reading of the best trans-
instruction in the
lations.
Six courses are offered, each of which continues throughout the college year.
An
opportunity
is
Courses
I
and
II are for beginners.
here offered for students
who may
not
previously have studied the language to gain at least an
elementary knowledge through a course of one or two years.
;
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
68
Students
Courses
who upon entrance to
and II may elect the
I
order, and,
work
if
College have already done
following courses in their
they desire, obtain four years of advanced
in the language.
I.
The Grammar, with thorough drill on
and written Xenophon, Anabasis, Book I
some chapters of the Greek Testament.
Three hours for each semester.
Course
forms,
oral
;
Course II. Xenophon, Anabasis, Books
Homer, Iliad, Books I, II, III sight reading
;
II,
;
III,
IV;
Greek com-
position.
Three hours for each semester.
Course
III.
Thucydides, Book VII, with collateral
historical study of the
nesian
may
Empire of Athens and the Pelopon-
(Herodotus's History of the Persian Wars
Homer, Odyssey,
substituted in this course.)
War.
be
Books I-VI sight reading in other parts of the poem study
of early Greek life, and of various Homeric questions, to;
;
gether with inquiry into the merits of standard translations.
Three hours for each semester.
Apology and Crito, with parts of
Xenophon's Memorabilia; special study of character and work of Socrates;
^schylus, Prometheus ; Sophocles, Antigone; reading of
Course IV.
some
the Phcedo;
the
other
plays
Plato,
parallel reading in
in
English translation; lectures
on the
Greek Drama.
Three hours for each semester.
^schines, Against Ctesiphon; DemosCrown, with study of the history of the
Macedonian supremacy. Euripides, Alcestis. Other plays
Course V.
thenes,
On
the
in English translation.
Three hours for each semester.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
69
Course VI.
Aristophanes, The Clouds; Theocritus,
General review of Greek Literature, with
lectures by the Professor and special studies and reports in
selected Idylls.
class
from students.
A
short course in
Modern Greek
given, generally in
is
connection with Course IV, as follows
:
Gardner's Short
and Easy Modern Greek Grammar. Reading of modern
Greek Ballads. Sewell's Black Beauty in the Modern Greek
Version.
The Atlantis, published in New York, illustrating
newspaper Greek.
HISTORY AND POLITICAL ECONOMY
Wm.
I.
Hull, History
GusTAv A. Kleene, Economics and
Politics
The group of studies included within this department is
designed to cultivate an interest in social problems of the
and the present, to furnish information necessary
citizenship, and to provide a preliminary
training for those who intend to engage in the practice of
law, journalism, business, charitable work, or the public
past
for intelligent
service.
The work
and
is
conducted by means of lectures, text-books,
and oral and written reports by the
A Historico-Political Conference meets at frequent intervals for the purpose of reviewing books and discussing topics germane to the work
collateral reading,
students on assigned topics.
work of the Conference is conducted
by the instructors, and by the students making History, or
Economics and Politics, their major subject. A series of
visits are made to neighboring points of historic interest,
and to mercantile, charitable, and correctional institutions
of the department; the
in the vicinity.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
70
History
Four of the following courses are offered each
year.
In
1903-1904, Courses II, IV, VI, and VIII will be offered,
and will alternate annually thereafter with the other four.
Course
I.
The History
of Greece, from the earliest
times to the conquest by the Romans, 146 B. C.
The following
text-books are used
Swayne's Herodo-
:
Thucydides ; Grant's Xenophon; Abbot's
Pericles; Wheeler's Alexander the Great; Gulick's The Life
of the Ancient Greeks. Three hours for each semester.
tus;
Collins's
Course
II.
The History
of
Rome, from
the earliest
times to the beginning of the Barbarian Invasions, 375 A. D.
The
following text-books are used
Collins's
:
Livy;
Donne's Tacitus; Morris's Hannibal; Froude's Julius Caesar;
Empire; Abbot's Roman Politics.
Keightley's Roman
Three hours for each semester.
Course
III.
The History
of Medieval Europe, from
the beginning of the Barbarian Invasions to the beginning of
the Reformation,
The
Emerton's Intro-
following text-books are used:
Middle Ages (375-814 A. D.) Emerton's
Mediceval Europe (814-1300 A. D.) Lodge's The Close of
Symond's A Short
the Middle Ages (1273-1494 A. D.)
History of the Renaissance in Italy. Three hours for each
duction
to
the
;
;
;
semester.
Course IV. The History of Modern Europe, from the
beginning of the Reformation to the rise of Napoleon.
The following
text-books are used
:
Hausser's
The
Period of the Reformation (i 517-1648) Putnam's William
the Silent; Hassall's Louis XIV ; Hassall's The Balance of
Power (1715-1789) Smith's Frederick II; Morley's Chat;
;
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
ham; Mignet's History
7I
of the French Revolution.
Three
hours for each semester.
Course V. The History of Europe in the Nineteenth
Century, from the rise of Napoleon to the Peace Conference
The Hague.
Morris's NapolThe following text-books are used
Headlam's
eon; Phillips's Modern Europe (1815-1899)
Bismarck; McCarthy, The Story of England (1800-1S98)
Woodward's Outline History of the British Empire (1500at
:
;
;
1870).
Three hours for each semester.
Course VI.
The History
of England, from the earliest
times to the end of the Revolution of 1689.
The following text-books are used
Gardiner's
:
H
Student's History of England, Vols. I and
Three hours for each semester.
Cromzvell.
;
A
Firth's Oliver
Course VH. The History of the American Colonies,
from the earliest times to the formation of the Union.
Fiske, Parkman,
The following text-books are used
Franklin;
Morse's
Benjamin
editions)
Helps (abridged
for each
Three
hours
Vol.
L
Washington,
Lodge's George
:
;
semester.
The History of the United States, from
Union to the accession of President
Course VHI.
the formation of the
Roosevelt.
The following
Washington, Vol.
ham
text-books are used
H
;
Schurz's
:
Lodge's George
Henry Clay; Morse's Abra-
Lincoln; Wilson's Division and Reunion; Wilson's His(1875-1900). Three hours for
tory of the United States
each semester.
Economics and
Course L
Politics
Elements of Economics. First semester,
Current Economic Problems, Labor Questhree hours.
Second semester, three hours.
tions, and Monopolies.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
72
Course II. Money and Banking.
Three hours for each semester.
(Not offered in 1902- 1903.)
Course
Politics
III.
:
A
Finance.
general view of political insti-
tutions, with special reference to
semester, three hours.
Public
American
conditions.
Municipal Problems.
First
Second sem-
ester, three hours.
Course IV. Social Science. A study of social ideals
and fundamental social factors. A special study of practical problems, including pauperism and charity, criminology,
race problems, tenement houses, and intemperance.
Three
hours for each semester.
HISTORY OF ART, AND STUDIO
WORK
Harriet Sartain, Lecturer and Director of Studio
These courses aim to develop
artistic appreciation
familiarizing the student with the finest works of art
by
and
the principles which govern their production.
Instruction
is
given by illustrated lectures, which ex-
tend over a period of two years and trace the development
of art from the earliest historical epoch.
lateral reading,
rials, will
and
critical analysis
Recitation, col-
of the illustrative mate-
be required.
I.
(a) The growth of early art (painting,
and architecture) in Egypt, Assyria, Persia, and_
Greece the development of Roman and early Italian art.
First semester, two hours.
Course
sculpture,
;
(b) Later Italian Art.
Second semester, two hours.
Course II. (a) The evolution of Northern Art:
German, Flemish, and Dutch. First semester, two hours.
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
73
(b) Spanish, French, and English Art.
ester,
Course
in
I
Second sem-
two hours.
I is
given in 1902-1903
;
Course
II will
be given
903- I 904.
Freehand Drawing and Painting
These courses are
from the courses in the Hisbe combined with advantage
if desired.
In training the hand and leading to habits of
close observation, they are an important adjunct to the
distinct
tory of Art, although they
may
courses in Physical Science.
Instruction
is
altogether indi-
vidual, being adapted to the special needs of each student,
but the following order of work must be observed
Course III. Studio Work. Charcoal and pencil drawing from geometric objects, still life, and casts (ornament,
animals' heads, figures).
Five hours per week throughout
the year, carrying a credit of two hours for each semester.
Course IV. Painting in oil, water colors, or pastel,
from
still
life
or flowers
;
outdoor and studio sketching.
Five hours per week throughout the year, carrying a credit
of two hours for each semester.
HISTORY OF RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY
Jesse H. Holmes, Professor
This department aims to give the student an introduction to the principal religious and philosophical systems
of the world, together with a study more in detail of a few
of them.
The courses
offered as electives cover three years.
All students are required to take a course of a half year
in the study of the Bible.
I,
•tenflcd
Bible
to
Study.
Required of
students.
is
in-
give such general knowledge of the Bible,
its
all
It
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
74
origin,
contents,
possessed by
all
and
as literature, as should be
qualities
The work
intelligent people.
dent
will consist largely of indicated
and
New
Testaments.
The
class
of the stu-
readings in the Old
work
will
include lec-
maps, pictures, etc.
One-half year, three hours per week. The course will
probably be extended through the year without increasing
tures, recitations, study of
the
number
II.
of hours.
History
of
Religions.
An
introduction
to
the
study of the principal religions of the East.
One-half year (Second semester), three hours per week.
III.
The Religion
existing between
tion
The close relaHebrew religion and
of the Hebrews.
the
ancient
This
Christianity gives the former a special importance.
course includes
a
detailed
study of the history
of
the
Hebrews, their social and religious customs, their prophets,
and their literature. It is based upon the study of the books
of the Old Testament, Kent's History of the Hebrews being
used to direct such study. In the early part of the study
attention is given to the origin of the Semites and their
early movements. Babylonia, Assyria, and other allied
topics.
One-half year (First semester), three hours per week.
IV. The Origin of Christianity.
A
study of the
social,
and religious conditions prevailing at the beginning
of the Christian era, followed by the life, work, and teaching
of Jesus and the Apostolic age of the Christian church.
The New Testament and other contemporary literature is
used, together with Rhee's Life of Jesus and some conpolitical,
venient text-book dealing with the career of the Apostle
Paul.
One-half year (Second semester), three hours per week.
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
75
V. Psychology. An elementary study of the physiology of the brain and organs of special sense, followed
by an inquiry into states of consciousness. James's PsyIt is
chology (Briefer Course) is used as a text-book.
supplemented by reviews of important books on various
phases of the subject, by preparation of specially assigned
by experiment, and by lectures.
One-half year (First semester), three hours per week.
topics,
VI. History of Philosophy.
After a brief introductory
glance at the early Greek philosophies especial attention
is
given to Socrates and the systems of Plato and Aristotle.
Some
attention
is
given to the movements of
in the period centering
human thought
about the Christian era, the growth,
culmination, and decline of scholasticism, are studied, and
the appearance of the
modern
critical spirit.
Special atten-
tion will be given to the evolutionary philosophy.
One
year, three hours per week.
The work
recitations,
of each course will be varied by lectures,
and preparation of
hundreds of lantern
slides
special
themes.
illustrating various
Several
phases of
the subject-matter are available, as are also charts, maps,
pictures,
greatest
enough
and a carefully-selected
archaeological
to be
made use
collections
of,
and
library.
visits to
tions, etc., are frequently possible.
Some
of the
of the world are near
museums,
exhibi-
Lectures by the greatest
scholars of the world are often within reach and are brought
to the attention of students.
LATIN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
W. Price, Professor
Mary Corwin Lane, Assistant
Ferris
The work in Latin includes
I. The regular consecutive
courses of the four college
:
SVVARTHMORE COLLEGE
y6
years.
These, in connection with the Greek and other allied
studies, are believed to constitute,
now
as in the past, one of
the most important means of intellectual discipline and of
general culture, and to be an excellent preparation for useful
and
intelligent life in
A
II.
done
any of
who have
This course was
special beginners' course for students
or no previous
little
its fields.
work
in Latin.
man
know something
woman,
established in the belief that every educated
or
whatever
at least of
Latin.
his vocation, should
Further,
it is
intended to supplement and strengthen
the linguistic knowledge gained from the study of modern
languages, to give some conception of the intimate connection
between the institutions and
life
of the present day and
those of the ancient Romans, and especially to serve the
who
needs of students
expect to enter the professions of law
and medicine.
Sight reading and other collateral work are required in
all
the courses.
The Latin department
ment of books of
is
provided with the usual equip-
reference, texts, maps, photographs
of these constant use
is
;
and
made.
an especial effort made to supplement the reguand grammatical and philological drill, with
references to the life, manners, and achievements of the wonderful race whose literature is being studied.
As far as possible, these are brought into some comprehensible relation
There
is
lar readings,
with our modern
in
life,
and given a
reality
and value as guides
understanding and solving present-day problems.
The
courses in detail are as follows
Course
position
Epodes;
I.
Cicero, Letters
(selections)
;
Latin
Com-
on Cicero's Letters; Horace, Odes and
Mythology. Open to students who offer ele-
based
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
']']
mentary and advanced Latin for admission.
Three hours for each semester.
I,
See page 38.
Course II. Horace, Satires and Epistles; Livy, Books
XXI, XXII; History of Latin Literature; lectures with
illustrative
Open
readings
to students
from
the
who have
most important
completed Course
authors.
I.
Three
hours for each semester.
Course
III.
Inscriptions and other remains of early
Trimmimus and Captivi; Terence, Phormio;
Cicero, one or more of the philosophical essays Hymns and
other late Latin.
Open to students who have completed
Latin; Plautus,
;
Course
II.
Three hours for each semester.
Course IV. Catullus, a brief course Tacitus, Agricola
and Germania; Juvenal, four or five satires Lucretius and
Pliny the Younger, selections. The second semester is de;
;
voted to a study of Virgil, with special attention to the
books of the ^neid. Open to
III, and sometimes by
special arrangement to those who have completed only
Course II. Three hours for each semester.
Georgics and to the
students
who have
last six
completed Course
Course V. A rapid study of the essentials of Latin
grammar, followed by the reading of a large number of
selections from Latin authors of various periods.
Emphasis
is laid upon those features of the Latin language and of
Roman life which are of especial interest to mature students,
already familiar with French and German, and able to appreThis beginciate the deeper meaning of the literature read.
ners' course is open to Juniors and Seniors who oflfered for
entrance either no Latin or less than our elementary requirement. Three hours for each semester.
Course
architecture,
VI. Roman Archzeology
and remains of the ancient
—the
city.
topography,
Open
to all
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
78
students
who have completed Course
I.
Two hours
for each
Offered in 1902-1903.
semester.
MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY
Susan
Course
J.
Cunningham, Professor
(a) Solid
I.
Geometry
Plane Trigonometry (Loney).
(Phillips
and Fisher)
;
Each, three hours for one
semester.
Algebra
(5)
XXXII,
(C.
Smith's
with omissions).
Course
Two
Treatise,
XIX-
Chapters
hours for each semester.
Conic Sections (C. Smith) Differential
Each, three hours for one semester.
II.
;
Calculus (Edwards).
Course
tial
Integral Calculus
III.
The following
1.
(Edwards)
;
Differen-
Each, three hours for one semester.
Equations.
Elective Courses are offered
Modern Pure Geometry. An advanced
Harmonic Ranges and Pencils, the
Subjects treated
:
course.
theories
of Involution, Perspective, Similar Figures, Reciprocation,
Inversion, etc.
2. Higher Algebra, beginning with the Theory of
Equations (Burnside and Panton) and continuing with In-
variants, etc.
3.
Plane Analytic Geometry, including Higher Plane
The course
Curves.
tions
and
will
will be a continuation of Conic Secbe based on Clebsch-Lindemann's Geometrie.
4.
Solid Analytic Geometry (C. Smith).
5.
Curve Tracing.
6.
Trigonometric Series,
Spherical
Harmonics,
(Byerly).
7.
Elementary Quaternions (Kelland and Tait).
8.
Advanced Trigonometry (Loney).
etc.
:
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
9.
10.
79
Young's General Astronomy.
Chauvenet's Spherical and Practical Astronomy.
11. Theoretical
Astronomy (Orbit Determination).
PHYSICS
George A. Hoadley, Professor
The
following courses are offered
Course
This course
is
designed
can spend but one year on the subject, and
recommended to those who wish to teach in preparatory
for students
is
General Physics.
I.
who
schools.
Recitations and laboratory
work
are supplemented by
experimental demonstrations with occasional lectures.
Open
Three hours for each semester.
to Sophomores.
Course II. This course is for those who have taken
Course I and wish to supplement it by additional work in
Heat, Magnetism, Electricity, and Light. Open to Juniors.
Three hours for each semester.
Course
sued in the
III.
first
Analytical Mechanics
is
the subject pur-
semester of this course, while the second
semester takes up the consideration of Gases, Liquids, and
Sound.
Open
to
Sophomores.
Three hours for each sem-
ester.
Course IV. A course in Heat, Magnetism, Electricity,
and Light. Open to those only who have completed Course
III.
Three hours for each semester.
Course V. Practical Measurements in Magnetism and
The work of this course is largely experimental,
Electricity.
the design being to familiarize the student with the practice
and methods of measurement.
hours for each semester.
Open
to
Juniors.
Two
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
8o
Course VI
V by the
Course
Applied
.
electric current to the telephone, telegraph,
light,
supplementing
Electricity,
practical study of the application of the
motor, transmission of power,
dynamo,
Work
etc.
electric
in
the
manufacture and use of these various appliances, as well as
in the measurements of electrical quantities, is accompanied
by text-book work and by reading and class-discussion of
current electrical journals.
Visits to the electrical plants
and cities are made at convenient times, for the purpose of studying the machinery
in actual use.
Open to Seniors. Three hours for each
of
neighboring
villages
semester.
PHYSICAL TRAINING
W. S. CuMMiNGS, M.D., Director
Mary V. Mitchell Green, M.D.,
for the
men
students
Director for the
women
students
M. Elizabeth Bates, Assistant
The system of Physical Training
ough and careful examination of each
is
based upon a thor-
student.
of measurements and other tests afford a
The
records
means of noting
progressive development, and are, in large part, the basis
upon which exercises are prescribed. Particular attention
is given to all individuals whose physical development is
below the normal, special work being prescribed for such, in
order to produce, as far as possible, an evenly developed and
healthy organism.
All athletic sports are under the immediate supervision
of the Directors, and only those students
who
physical condition are allowed to participate.
are in proper
Great care
games and athletic contests within such
limits as will make them only a proper means of exercise
and recreation, and thus of real assistance to the work of
is
also taken to keep
the College.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Two
8l
hours of exercise per week for two years, in the
gymnasium, are required
of the
men
students.
Six hours of exercise per week, two of which must be
class-work in the gymnasium, are required of the women
students throughout their residence at College.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
82
HONORARY DEGREES CONFERRED
1888
William Hyde Appleton, Ph.D.
(A.B., Harvard, 1864; A.M.,
Acting President and President of Swarthmore
College, 1889-1891), Professor of Greek and of Early English.
Susan J. Cunningham, Sc.D., Professor of Mathematics and
Astronomy.
1867; LL.B., 1869;
1889
Arthur
Ph.D.
Rensselaer Polytechnic
(C.E.,
Institute, 1867; Professor of Engineering and Director of Mechanic
Arts, 1872-1898), Emeritus Professor of Engineering and Librarian
Beardsley,
of Friends' Historical Library.
Isaac Sharpless, LL.D. (B.S., Harvard, 1873; Sc.
D.,
Univ.
of Pa., 1883), President of Haverford College.
1890
Olivia Rodham, A.B. (Assistant Librarian and Instructor
Botany,
1 881 -1888).
1897
Elizabeth Powell Bond, A.M., Dean.
in
GRADUATES
CLASS OF
Sarah H. (Acton) Hilliard,
1873
A.B., 8
Oak
Salem, N.
St
J.
Helen
(Magill) White, A.B. (Ph.D.,
Boston University, 1877), care U. S.
Embassy
Berlin,
(Miller) Holcomb, A.B
Esther T. (Moore) Appleton, A.B
*Maria C. (Pierce) Green, A.B
Lowndes Taylor, A.B., Box 1990
Elizabeth
CLASS OF
Swarthmore, Pa.
1877.
West
West
Alfred
1874.
Swarthmore, Pa.
'
T. Haviland, B.S
(Hibbard) Thatcher, A.B.,
Delaware Ave
Chester, Pa.
1874
Ellen H. (Evans) Price, A.M.,1884
Amy W. (Hall) Hickman, A.B.
Mary
Germany.
Charlestown, N. H.
C.
Chester, Pa.
1415
Wilmington, Del.
Herman
Hoopes, C.E., 1879, 506 Real Estate
Trust Bldg
Philadelphia, Pa.
Ferris W. Price, A.M., 1887
Swarthmore, Pa.
Elizabeth S.
(Woolston) Collins,
A.M., 1901
Swarthmore, Pa.
CLASS OF
John
B.
Booth, A.B., care
& Co
J.
B.
1875
Booth
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Helen (Comly) White, A.B
Lansdowne, Pa.
*Franklin H. Corlies, B.S
1898.
Herbert G. Dow, A.B. (and Harvard,
1877)
1878.
Elizabeth (Hanes) Taylor, A. B., Kurfursten St., 112, Techenschnen
Berlin, Germany.
Edith R. (Hooper) Roberts, A.B
Titusville, Pa.
Barton Hoopes, Jr., B.S., 1330 Buttonwood
St
Oliver Keese,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Jr.,
B.S
1879.
* Deceased.
83
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
84
*J.
Reece Lewis, B.S
Howard W.
1898.
Lippincott,
A.B.,
509
Real
Estate Trust Bldg
Philadelphia, Pa.
Martha (McIlvain) Eastwick^
St. and Elmwood Ave
A.B., 59th
Philadelphia, Pa.
John K. Richards, A.B. (and Harvard,
Washington, D.
1877), Solicitor-General of U. S
William H. Ridgway,
CLASS OF
Frank
L.
Bassett, B.S.
(D.D.S.,
1876
Phila.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Dental College, 1878)
Arthur W. Bradley,
C.
Coatesville, Pa.
C.E., 1879
A.B., 63 Adalbert St.
.
Cleveland, Ohio.
Frances (Linton) Sharpless, A.M., 1881
(M.D.,
Woman's
Medical
College,
West
Phila, 1886)
Elizabeth L. (Longstreth) Boyd, A.B.
James T. McClure, B.S., Broad
.
.
Chester, Pa.
.Haverford, Pa.
St.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Station
Emma
(McIlvain) Cooper,
Cooper St
Edwin Mitchell, Jr., A.B.
A.B.,
715
(B.L.
and
Camden, N.
J.
Paris, France.
B.S.R., Sorbonne, Paris, 1877)
Lucy
R. (Price) McIntire, A. B., 1880. Cynwyd, Pa.
*Isaac G. Smedley, B.S. (M.D., Hahne.
mann Medical College, 1879)
1899.
Herbert W. Smyth, A.B. (and Harvard,
1878, Ph.D., Gottingen, 1884)
Harvard
Cambridge, Mass.
Univ
*Mary
Willits,
A.M.,
1881
Woman's Medical College,
(M.D.,
Phila.,
1902.
1881)
William
P.
Worth, B.S
Coatesville, Pa.
CLASS OF
1877
Joseph T. Bunting, B.S. (LL.B., Univ of
Philadelphia, Pa.
Pa., 1880), 526 Drexel Bldg
Norristown, Pa.
Norman B. Corson, A.B
EuDORA Magill, A.B., 128 W. 43d St
New York, N. Y.
* Deceased.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
*Jesse
R.
Norton,
A.B.
(and
85
Harvard,
1900.
1879)
Carroll R. Williams, A.M., 1882 (LL.B.,
Univ. of Pa., 1880), Stephen Girard
Philadelphia, Pa.
Bldg
M. Florence Yeatman, A.M., 1897
Norway, Pa
CLASS OF
Caroline E. (Burr) Hall, A.B
Maybell P. (Davis) Foster,
Waterman
1878
Swarthmore, Pa.
A.B.,
78
Providence, R.
St
Hov/ARD Dawson, A. M.,
1882,
Somerville, Mass.
St
Tacy a. (Gleim) Dunning,
A.B., Stimson
Los Angeles,
Block
Hall, B.S
(Hallowell) Hough, A.M.,
*WiLLiAM
Mary
I.
70 Albion
P.
Woman's
(M.D.,
Medical
Cal.
1900.
J.
1881
College,
Ambler, Pa.
Phila., 1881)
York, Pa.
Charles A. Hawkins, A.B
William Penn Holcomb, M.L., 1882
.Charlestown, N. H.
(Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Univ., 1886)
Rebecca S. (Hunt) White, A.M., 1881
.
Woman's
(M.D.,
Phila.,
Anna
1881
Medical
.
College,
Lansdo wne, Pa.
)
(Jackson) Monaghan, B.L
Swarthmore, Pa.
Redlands, Cal.
Llewellyn H. Johnson, B.S
Edward Martin, A.M., 1882 (M.D., Univ.
E.
of Pa., 1883), 41S S. 15th St
Philadelphia, Pa.
J. Palmer, B. S., 108 Fulton St... New York, N. Y.
Francis
Israel Roberts, B.S., 211^ Market St
Camden, N.
*William Seaman, C.E., 1884
C. Harry Shoemaker, B.S
1892.
J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
CLASS OF
1879
Isaac R. Coles, C.E., 1880, 39 Cortlandt St.. New York, N. Y.
William P. Fender, A.B., 448 Market St. Williamsport, Pa.
.
William Lea
Room
8
* Deceased.
Ferris,
A.B.,
Mills
Bldg.,
San Francisco,
Cal.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
86
New York, N. Y.
Joseph Fitch, A.B., 302 Broadway
Ruth Anna Forsythe, A. B., 330 Orange
Media, Pa.
St
Waynesville, Ohio.
Elizabeth (Furnas) Bogardus, B.L
P. Lesley Hopper, A.B. (LL.B., Univ. of
Havre de Grace, Md.
Maryland, 1881)
Marie Antoinette (Kemp) Hoadley, A.M.,
Swarthmore, Pa.
1892
Gallitzin, Pa.
Elisha E. Lippincott, B.S
*Samuel Craig McComb, C.E., 1882
1891.
Charles R. Miller, B.L. (LL.B., Univ. of
Wilmington, Del.
Pa., 1881), 1203 Delaware Ave
Cheyenne, Wyo.
Josephine (White) Breckens, A.B
Abby W, (Woodnutt) Miller, B.L., 1203
Wilmington, Del.
Delaware Ave
CLASS OF
Anna
1880
E. Constable, A.B., 325 Vine St
Arthur Coleman
Dawson,
Lake Forest Univ
Florence
(Hall)
B.L.,
Lake Forest,
Hillman, A.B., 227 3d St
Emily L. (Hough) Savidge, A.B.
(and
Boise,
Univ. of Minn., 1881)
Keiser,
M.S.,
1881
111.
Wilmington, Del.
Washington, D. C.
T.
Edward H.
J.
Rock-
Phillips, A.B.,
ford
Myra
Camden, N.
1882,
Idaho.
(Ph.D.,
Johns Hopkins Univ., 1884), Washington Univ
St.
Louis,
Mo.
Georgine (Kurtz) Muhlenberg, A.B., 34
Reading, Pa.
N. 4th St
Chappaqua, N. Y.
Albert R. Lawton, A.M., 1885
Syracuse, N. Y.
Robert J. Marcher, B.S., C.E., 1901
Thomas L. Moore, A.B., 102 E. Grace St.. .Richmond, Va.
Millersville, Pa.
Ellen S. (Preston) Griest, A.B
New York, N. Y.
John Turton, B.S., 133 Maiden Lane
Fannie (Willets) Lowthorp, A.B., 321
Trenton, N. J.
Greenwood Ave
Henry S. Wood, C.E., 1883, 106 World
New York, N. Y.
Bldg
*
Deceased.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
CLASS OF
Martha Bunting,
B.L. (Ph.D., Bryn
W.
College, 1895), 219
William Canby,
i88i
Mawr
New
80th St
B.L.,
Jr.,
616
Mary
J.
St.
Doron,
B.
York, N. Y.
Pioneer
Press Bldg
Charles
"B"
87
Paul, Minn.
Park
B.L., 23 Vick
Rochester, N. Y.
Elliott, B.L., 3204
Summer
St.
.
.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Emma
Ithan, Pa.
Kirk, B.L
Lancaster, Pa.
Gertrude B. Magill, A.B
Eugene Paulin, Jr., A.B. (and Harvard,
Philadelphia, Pa.
1883), care North American
Martha E. (Rhinoehl) Osborn, A.B.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
1329 Jefferson St
Edward
bia,
Henry
C.
Rushmore, B.S. (M.D., Colum-
Tuxedo Park, N. Y.
1886)
B.
Seaman,
C.E., 1884, 44
Union
New York, N. Y.
Sq
Charles E. Sharpless, C.E., 1884, care
Berwind White Coal Mining Co
Wimber, Pa.
Alvin T. Shoemaker, B.L., 146 Broadway.. New York, N. Y.
*L Byron Thomas, B.S
1891.
Ernest F. Tucker, A.B. (M.D., Harvard,
1884),
Marquam Bldg
Portland, Ore.
CLASS OF
1882
William Llewellyn Baner, A.B. (M.D.,
Columbia, 1885), 72
W.
45th St
New
York, N. Y.
New
York, N. Y.
Blackwell,
A.B.
(M.D.,
Woman's Med. Col., N. Y. Inf., 1891),
Edith
139
B.
W.
64th St
Charlote E.
,
(Brewster)
Jordan,
Lansdowne, Pa.
1886
William Butler,
M.L.,
Jr.,
A.B
West Chester,
Pa.
Herbert Cochran, A.B., 1426 N. 52d St.. Philadelphia, Pa.
Bertha (Cooper) Brewer, B.L., 215 E.
C.
Jacoby St
P.
Frances Foulke,
* Deceased.
A.B., 1709
Norristown, Pa.
Race St... .Philadelphia, Pa.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
55
Mary
E. (Gale) Hibbard, A.M., 1891, 176
Pleasant
Laconia, N. H.
St
1886.
*Sarah S. (Green) Pierce, A.B
Margaret E. (Hallowell) Powell, A.B .. Lansdowne,
Pa.
*Elizabeth E. Hart, B.L
1891.
Elizabeth Haslam, B.L., 213 N. 33d St.. .Philadelphia, Pa.
Los Angeles, Gal.
Elizabeth M. Ogden, B.L
Chester, Pa.
Charles Palmer, A.M., 1885, Box 218
*George C. Phillips, B.S
1883.
Horace L. Rossiter, A.B., 42 Lohengrin
Cleveland, Ohio.
St
Turton, B.S
1896.
Gerrit E. H. Weaver, A.B. (and Harvard,
*Charles
B.
1884), A.M.,
1886,
916 Farragut TerPhiladelphia, Pa.
race
Emily E. (Wilson) Lawton, A.M.,
Edgar M. Zavitz, A.B
1885.
CLASS OF
Charles A. Bunting, B.S
*John L. Cochran, B.S
Edgar Conrow, B.L
Lydia S. (Green) Hawkins, A.B.,
.
Chappaqua, N. Y.
Coldstream, Ont., Can.
1883
Allentown, Pa.
1885.
Moorestown, N.
J.
Idle-
Media, Pa.
wild
*Florence N. Hanes, A.B
1897.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Alice W. Jackson, A.B
William A. Kissam, Jr., B.S., 18 ExNew York, N. Y.
change PI
Bertha (Matlack) Rue, B.L., 578 Wash-
Camden, N.
ington St
Guion Miller, A.M., 1888 (LL.B., 1885,
Easton, Md.
and LL.M., 1886, Columbian Univ.)
.
.
J.
.
Duffield Mitchell, A.B. (LL.B., Univ.
Pittsburg. Pa.
of Pa.), Carnegie Bldg
Chatham, Pa.
Edward A. Pennock, A.B
Lansdowne, Pa.
George L. Pennock, B.S
Rising Sun, Md.
Charles S. Pyle, B.S
Allentown, Pa.
Helen C. (Pyle) Bunting, B.L
Madison, N. J.
Frederick A. Seaman, Jr., B.S
S.
* Deceased.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Annie
E. (Tylor) Miller, M.L., 1888
James
E. Verree, B.L., Boice
Emma
(Webb)
Price,
Easton, Md.
Chicago, 111.
Bldg
A.B
CLASS OF
Horace
89
Rose Valley, Pa.
1884
L. Dilworth, B.S., Friends' Cen-
School
tral
Philadelphia, Pa.
Rebecca M. (Downing) Bullock, B.L.,
Germantovvn, Pa.
6439 Greene St
Waynesville, Ohio.
John M. Furnas, B.S
Sarah L. (Hall) Stirling, A.B., 1913 E.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Cumberland St
Henry
J.
Hancock, A.B. (LL.B., Univ.
of
Real Estate Trust Bldg.. Philadelphia, Pa.
Edwin Haviland, Jr., B.S., 1885 (A.M.,
Potsdam, N. Y.
Cornell, 1899)
Hughesville, Va.
Mary E. Hughes, A.B
Pa., 1886), 801
Laura H. Satterthwaite, A.B., (MD.,
Woman's Medical College, Phila.,
Trenton, N.
1888), 45 W. State St
J.
Frederick J. Taylor, B.S., Northern Pacific
Headquarters
Tacoma, Wash.
Mary Willits, A.B. (M.D., Woman's
Medical College, N. Y. Inf., 1898), 227
New York, N. Y.
E. i8th St
CLASS OF
1885
Baker, A.B
Abigail Evans, A.B
Frederick P. Moore, A.B., 71 Broadway.
Mary D. (Pratt) Rhodes, A.B
*MiNNiE
F.
CLASS OF
Emma
S.
Arthur
George
J.
Helen
G.
..
Cinnaminson, N. J.
New York, N. Y.
Bowdle, S. Dak.
1886
New
(Bones) Stone, B.L
S. Cochran, B.S
Brighton, N. Y.
1899.
Freedley, B.S., 1900 E. Gary St. .Richmond, Va.
Johnson, A.B., 901 W. 4th St.. Williamsport, Pa.
Ella (Merrick) Tomlinson, A.B
*
1901.
Deceased.
.
Wrightstown, Pa.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
90
Edgar M. Smedley, B.S
Rowland
J.
Spencer,
Media, Pa.
B.L.,
care
Oregon
Land Co
Salem, Ore.
Martha M. (Watson) Sutphen,
1891, 150 W. 14th St
C.
A.M.,
Holland, Mich.
Percy Willcox, B.S. (Ph.B., Yale Univ.,
1887; LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1891), Betz
Bldg
Philadelphia, Pa.
CLASS OF
1887
Alice T. (Battin) Lewis, A.B
Rumford Falls, Me.
Harriett J. (Cox) McDowell, B.S., 960
Park Ave
New York, N. Y.
Horace Darlington, B.S
Darling, Pa.
Harry B. Goodwin, B.S
Bordentown, N. J.
Anna M. (Jenkins) Webster, A.B., 808
S. 2d St
Mankato, Minn.
T. Atkinson Jenkins, A.B. (Ph.B., Univ.
of Pa., 1888; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins
Univ., 1894, 488 E. S4th Place
Chicago, 111.
Frederick K. Lane, B.S., 9215 Commercial
Ave
Chicago, 111.
Linda B. (Palmer) Jones, A.M., 1893, 802
Washington St
Wilmington, Del.
Horace Roberts, A.B
Fellowship, N. J.
Elizabeth B. (Smedley) Reynolds, A.M.,
1896
Malvern, Pa.
Elizabeth B. (Smith) Wilson, A.B
Purcellville, Va.
William
G.
Underwood,
B.S.,
1133
S.
Broad St
Philadelphia, Pa.
CLASS OF
Alice M. Atkinson, A.B.
1888
(and Cornell
Univ., 1889; Ph.D., Univ. of Pa., 1895) -Holicong, Pa.
T. Janney Brown, B.S., 1003 F
*Frank Cawley, C.E., 1891
Jessie L. Colson, B.S
* Deceased.
St.,
N.
W.
.Washington, D. C.
1896.
Woodstown, N.
J.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Sadie
(Conrow) Hutchinson,
Ave
ISI.
9I
A.B.,
Plainfield, N. J.
New York, N. Y.
Dudley, B.S
Clayton, N. M.
Robert P. Ervien, B.S
E. Lawrence Fell, B.S., 3639 N. 15th St. Philadelphia, Pa.
JoYEUSE L. (Fullerton) Sweet, A.B. (and
Denver, Col.
Cornell Univ., 1889), 1370 Gilpin St
Swarthmore, Pa.
Emma (Gawthrop) Hayes, B.S
Swarthmore, Pa.
Alice (Hall) Paxson, A.B
P. Sharples Hall, B.S. (M.D., Hahn. Med.
46 Westervelt
William
L.
.
Col., Phila., 1891), 1604
Arch St
Philadelphia, Pa.
Walter Hancock, B.S., 40th St. and LanPhiladelphia,
caster Ave
John Russell Hayes, A.B. (and Harvard,
Swarthmore, Pa.
1889; LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1892)
P. (Jones) Miller, A.B.,
Martha
21 17
Harrisburg, Pa.
N. 3d St
T.
Pa.
Montgomery
Lightfoot,
M.S.,
1890
(Ph.D., Univ. of Pa., 1893), S935 Greene
St.,
Hetty
Germantown
Ellis P. Marshall,
William
sic,
Aaron
Jessie
Philadelphia, Pa.
C. (Lippincott) Miller,
S.
Jr.,
A.B
Riverton, N.
Pa.
Marshall, B.S. (Ph.D., Leip-
1892)
,
1
16 E.
Gorham
Pancoast, B.S
Pyle, A.B. (and
Madison, Wis.
San Antonio, Texas.
St
C.
Cornell
Univ.,
1889)
Rhoads, B.S
Catherine M. Rider, B.L., 813 Franklin
William H. Seaman, B.S
Joseph
J.
London Grove,
B.S
J.
Amelia Skillin, A.B
London Grove, Pa.
Jamesburg, N. J.
St.. Wilmington, Del.
Glen Cove, N. Y.
Glen Head, L. L
Carroll H. Sudler, A.B., 1127 Monadnock
Chicago, 111.
Block
Charlotte M. Way, B.S. (A.B., Leland
Stanford, Jr., Univ.), 64 W. 109th St. .New York, N. Y.
Syosset, N. Y.
Annie E. Willits, A.B
Esther M. (Willits) Fell, B.L., 3639 N.
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
15th St
Franklin
N.
W
P.
Wilson, A.B., 1320
F
St.,
Washington, D. C.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
92
CLASS OF
1889
Dunlow, W. Va.
Justin K. Anderson, B.S
Alexander
G.
Cummins,
Columbia, 1898)
A. Dill, B.S.
Howard
Jr.,
A.B. (A.M.,
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
(and Mass.
Inst.
Richmond,
Tech., 1891 )
Horace
B.
Forman,
Jr., B.S.,
222
W.
Ind.
49th
New York, N. Y.
St
Ellis M. Harvey, B.S. (M.D., Univ. of Pa.,
Media, Pa.
1893)
Clara Haydock, B.L
Carroll Hayes, A.B.
J.
Locust Valley, N. Y.
(and
Harvard,
West
1890) (LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1893)
Chester, Pa.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Julia Hicks, B.S., 645 Carlton Ave
Mary Kirk, A.B., Bureau of the American
Washington, D. C.
Republics
Glen Cove, N. Y.
Margaret J. (Laurie) Seaman, A.B
George A. Masters, B.S., 3308 Baring St. .Philadelphia, Pa.
New York, N. Y.
Alice S. Palmer, A.B., 215 E. 15th St
Louella (Passmore) Hayes, A.B.
West Chester, Pa.
Frederick B. Pyle, B.S., 1345 T St.,
Washington, D. C.
N.
Ralph Stone, A.B., (LL.B.. Univ. of
Detroit, Mich.
Mich., 1892), 1305 Majestic Bldg
Elsie D. (Stoner) Wildes, B.L
Everett, Wash.
Gulfport, Miss.
Willis W. Vail, B.S
Salem, N. J.
Jennie F. Waddington, M.S., 1892
.
W
CLASS OF
Alvan W.
mann Med.
1890
Atkinson, A.B. (M.D., HahneCollege, Phila., 1893), 428
E. State St
Sara H. (Atkinson) Engle, A.B
George H. Bartram, B.S
Martha M. Biddle, B.L
Emma J. Broomell, B.S.
Trenton, N. J.
Mt. Holly, N. J.
Lenape, Pa.
Riverton, N. J.
(and Univ. of
Mich., 1893), 2128 Bolton St
Baltimore,
Morris L. Clothier, B.S., 8th and Market
Sts
Md.
Philadelphia, Pa.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Beulah W. (Darlington)
305 N. High St
Edward Darlington, B. S
Pratt,
93
A.B.,
West
'
Chester, Pa.
Chadd's Ford June, Pa.
East Orange, N. J.
George Ellsler, A.B., "The Alvord"
Caroline R. (Gaston) Barber^ A.M., 1895,
Philadelphia, Pa.
1625 N. 17th St
John C. Gifford, B.S., 1893 (D.CEc, Univ.
Ithaca, N. Y.
of Munich, 1899)
Abby M. Hall, A.B. (and Cornell Univ.,
Swarthmore, Pa.
1893)
Clara A. (Hughes) Marshall,
A.B., 324
Madison, Wis.
N. Carroll St
Samuel
R. Lippincott, B.S., 1021
Walnut
Philadelphia, Pa.
St
William D. Lippincott, B.S., 35 N. 2d St. .Camden, N.
*WiLLARD L. Maris, M.S., 1892 (B.S.,
J.
Univ. of Mich., 1891: M.D., Univ. of
Pa., 1895)
1895.
Robert S. McConnell, B.S., 21 12 Ontario
St., Tioga
Philadelphia, Pa.
Frances E. Otley, A.B., 1207 Jacinto St. .Austin, Texas.
*Mary D. Palmer, A.B
1892.
Mary E. Pancoast, B.L., 932 B St., S. W. .Washington, D. C.
James W. Ponder, A.B., 909 Market St
Wilmington, Del.
Ellis B. Ridgway, B.S
Coatesville, Pa.
.
Walter Roberts, A.B. (M.D., Univ.
of Pa.,
1893), 26 S. i8th St
Richard
Frances
Mary
F.
Philadelphia, Pa.
B.S
B. (Smith) Herr, A.B
(Soper) Pancoast, B.S
Swarthmore, Pa.
Moorestown, N. J.
San Antonio, Texas.
C. Sellers,
R. Barclay Spicer, A.B., Franklin College..
William
Alice W.
New
Athens, Ohio.
E. Sweet, A.B., 1370 Gilpin St. .Denver, Col.
Titus, M.L., 1892
Old Westbury, N. Y.
Mary H. (White) Bartram, A.B
CLASS OF
Emily Atkinson, A.B
Cosmelia J. (Brown) Hughes, B.L
* Deceased.
Lansdowne, Pa.
1891
Moorestown, N.
Hughesville, Va.
J.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
94
Louis P. Clark, B.S
Ridley Park, Pa.
Hannah H. (Clothier) Hull, B.L.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Eva M. (Daniels) Capen, B.S., 1892, 534
E. 4th St
East Boston, Mass.
Eliza R. Hampton, A.B
Waverly, N. Y.
Isaac O. Harper, B.S., 1608 Bolton St
Baltimore, Md.
Esther (Haviland) Cornell, B.L., 307
6th Ave
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Eliza G. (Holmes) Bennett, A.B
George School, Pa.
John W. Hutchinson, Jr., B.S., Mutual
New
Bldg
Life
Dora Lewis, B.L
*LucY S. Lippincott, A.B
Chester
Harry
Sarah
P.
York, N. Y.
Media, Pa.
1891.
Martindale, B.L
West
Chester, Pa.
McDonald, B.S., 1005 Locust St.. Kansas City, Mo.
T. (Moore) Adams, B.L
Sandy Spring, Md.
A. Mitchell Palmer, A.B
Stroudsburg, Pa.
Ellen (Passmore) Pyle, B.L., 1345 T St.,
N.
L.
W
Washington, D. C.
Marianna (Smith) Rawson,
B.L., 226 E.
New
i6th St
William C. Sproul, B.S
Edward B. Temple, B.S
Katharine L. (Tyler) Mehaffey,
York, N. Y.
Chester, Pa.
Lansdowne, Pa.
B.S.,
Boston, Mass.
52 Hereford St
Frances M. White, B.L., 823 Park Ave.
Baltimore, Md.
Edward C. Wilson, B.S., Friends' Central
School, 15th and Race Sts
Philadelphia, Pa.
Trenton Junction, N.
M. Lilian (Yarnall) De Cou, A.B
.
CLASS OF
.
.
1892
M. Ellen (Atkinson) Jenkins, B.L., 537
Maple Ave
Oak Park, 111.
Swarthmore, Pa.
M. Rosamond (Baker) Haines, A.B
Benjamin F. Battin, A.B. (Ph.D., Jena,
1900)
Josephine Beistle, A.B
Mary
E.
(Broomell) Hull, B.L
Frederic N. Carr, A.B., 215
St
* Deceased.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Shrewsbury
Charleston,
W.
Va.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Howard N, Eavenson, C.E.,
Henry H. Garrett, B.S
Howard B. Green^ B.S
Uniontown, Pa.
1897
Wallingford, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Youngstown, Ohio.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Charles Hart, B.S
Annie Hillborn, B.L
Edward A. Jenkins,
B.S., 537
Charles B. Ketcham, A.B.,
95
Maple Ave. .Oak Park,
111.
Broad-
1893, 80
way
New York, N. Y.
Phebe H. (Ketcham) McAllister, B.S. .Colorado Springs,
.
Henry McAllister,
Col.
B.L
Colorado Springs, Col.
Bernard S. McIlvain, B.L
Churchville, Md.
John S. Murray, B.S., 3703 Woodland Ave. Philadelphia, Pa.
Ellen Pyle, A.B
London Grove, Pa.
Mary E. Stebbins, B.L., 21 15 Maryland
Ave
Baltimore, Md.
Joseph J, Walker, B.S., 330 E. 17th St
New York, N. Y.
William E. Walter, B.S
Wallingford, Pa.
Florence N. Wolverton, A.B
Vancouver, Wash.
Mary L. (Wolverton) Green, A.B
Swarthmore, Pa.
Jr.,
CLASS OF
Jane Atkinson, A.B
George H. Brooke, B.S. (Ph.B.,Univ
1893
HoHcong,
Pa.
of Pa.,
1895; LL.B., Univ. of Pa., 1898), 807
Land
Title Bldg
Francis E. Broomell,
Philadelphia, Pa.
496
Monroe
Friends'
Central
B.S.,
Chicago,
St
John
L.
Carver,
B.L.,
111.
School, isth and Race Sts
Philadelphia, Pa.
Joseph T. Freeman, C.E., 1899, 18 Phelps
Ave
Rochester, N. Y.
Dora A. Gilbert, A.B., Broad St
Chester, Pa.
Charles S. Hallowell, B.S., 166 Remsen
St
New York, N. Y.
Clement Lodge, B.S
1895.
.
Matlack, A.B
West Chester, Pa.
Carlie McClure, A.B., Friends' Academy. Locust Valley, N. Y.
Lorena
B.
.
*
Deceased.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
96
Omar
B. Pancoast, B.S. (M.D., Johns
Hopkins Univ., 1897), Union Protestant
Infirmary
.
.
.
Baltimore, Md.
.
Jesse H. Rheinhardt, B.S., 120 N. 8th
Lebanon, Pa.
St
Esther
E.
Spicer,
B.L.,
Johns Hopkins
Baltimore,
Hospital
Md.
Chicago, 111.
Julius Staab, A.B
John B. Stetson, B.S. (M.D., Med. Chi.
Col., Phila., 1896), 1329 Spruce St
Philadelphia, Pa.
Frances B. (Stevenson) Pettus, A.B., 2']2,
Washington St
Atlanta, Ga.
Netherwood, N. J.
George H. Strout, A.B
Esther H. Sutton, B.L
Chappaqua, N. Y.
Henry C. Turner, B.S., 50 Pineapple St.. .Brooklyn, N. Y.
Carrie B. Way, B.L., Abington Friends'
School
Jenkintown, Pa.
LiLA K. WiLLETS, B.L
Roslyn, N. Y.
*E. Newlin Williams, B.S. (M.D., Univ.
of Pa., 1898)
S.
1902.
Ellen (Williams) Battin, B.S
Genevieve S. Zane, A.B.,
Miner St
1894,
West
CLASS OF
Mabel Alexander,
Swarthmore, Pa.
W.
342
Chester, Pa.
1894
B.L., 1434 N. i8th St.. .Philadelphia, Pa.
Anna
Swarthmore, Pa.
S. (Atkinson) Sellers, A.B
Lansdowne, Pa.
Lydia Biddle, B.L
New York, N. Y.
Edwin P. Bond, A.B., 70 Fifth Ave
Bertha L. Broomell, B.S., 808 Washington
Emma
Wilmington, Del.
St
(Chambers) White,
"Hotel Marlborough"
Elizabeth Conrow, A.B
Herman Conrow, C.E., 1897
Altha
S.
T. Coons, B.S., 1906
H
St.,
N.
A.B.,
Atlantic City, N.
W.
Esther L. Cox, B.L., 1516 Linden Ave
Joseph C. Emley, B.S., 3409 N. 17th St
* Deceased.
J.
Ithaca, N. Y.
.
Hempstead, Long Island.
.Washington, D. C.
Baltimore, Md.
Philadelphia, Pa.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
H. Gawthrop,
North Ave
Frederic
John W.
Gregg,
B.L.,
2515
B.S.,
97
W.
Baltimore, Md.
Friends'
School,
Park Ave. and Laurens St
Baltimore, Md.
George G. Griest, B.S., 195 Broadway
New York, N. Y.
Mary A. (Hayes) Gawthrop, A.B., 2515
Baltimore, Md.
W. North Ave
Helen R. Hillborn, A.B
Swarthmore, Pa.
Helen S. (Hutchinson) Caples, B.S
Overbrook, Pa.
Mary B. (Janvier) Pugh, B.L
Lansdowne, Pa.
Harriet M. (Kent) Hilton, A.B
Swarthmore, Pa.
Helen P. (Lamb) Hull, B.L., 232 Laurens
Baltimore,
St
M. Elizabeth Lamb,
B.L.,
1432
Md.
McCulloh
Baltimore, Md.
St
Owen Moon,
B.S
Trenton, N. J.
Marion D. (Perkins) Jessup, A.B
Moorestown, N.
Margaret D. Pfahler, B.S., 4046 Walnut
Jr.,
J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
St
David B. Rushmore (M.K, Cornell Univ.,
1895), C.E., 1897, care Stanley Electric
Co
Pittsfield, Mass.
Caroline P. (Sargent) Walter, A.B
Wallingford, Pa.
Philip Sellers, C.E., 1897
Meriden, Conn.
Cornelia J. Shoemaker, B.L., 226 E. i6th
St
New York, N. Y.
Edward A. Staab, A.B. (and Harvard,
1896)
Berlin, Germany.
Mary W. Titus, B.L
Old Westbury, N. Y.
Helen (Train) Tannehill, B.S., 1895. McConnellsville, Ohio.
Daniel Underhill, Jr., B.S
Jericho, N. Y.
.
Mary Underhill,
.
M.S., 1895, 227 E. i8th
New
St
Allen K. White,
B.
S.,
borough"
Stuart Wilder, B.S
John M. Willis, B.S
Mary E. Yeo., B.S., 414 W.
Susanna S. Yeo, B.L
Harry
P.
Young, B.S
* Deceased.
York, N. Y.
"Hotel MarlAtlantic City, N.
J.
Chestoa, Tenn.
Fowling Creek, Md.
Colton Ave. .Redlands, Cal.
1895.
Morton, Pa.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
98
CLASS OF
Frank
Andrews, B.S. (M.E.,
C.
1895
Cornell,
Woodstown, N. J.
Elizabeth M. Baily, B.S., 902 Swede St.. .Norristown, Pa.
William S. Barker, B.S
Lansdowne, Pa.
Henry E. Bean, B.S., 822 N. Illinois St. .Indianapolis, Ind.
Hildegard Brooks, B.S
Newburgh, N. Y.
Frances W. (Cheairs) Manning, B.L.,
1897)
.
1 10 Greenwood Ave
Walter Clothier, B.L
Trenton, N.
May Gifford, B.L
Anna R. H. (Harrison)
Mary
3720 Chestnut St
Emma
Roland
141 1
G. Kent, A.M.,
Van Buren
John A. Lafore,
1898;
B.L.,
.Hempstead, Long Island.
..
1896,
Wilmington, Del.
Overbrook, Pa.
St
C.E., 1898
;
E.E., 1901
Wallingford, Pa.
C. Irvine Leiper, B.S., 1896
Egbert
P.
Lincoln,
J.
Fla.
Philadelphia, Pa.
(Hutchinson) Conrow, B.L.
S.
Pa.
Princeton, N.
Whinfield, B.L..Sea Breeze,
(Hollingshead) Hancock, A.B.,
B.
J.
Wynnewood,
B.S.,
"The Loudoun,"
Washington, D.
314 E. Capital St
Bertha (Lifpincott) Parrish, B.L
Edgar Lippincott, B.S
Joseph R. Lippincott, A.B
Riverton, N.
J.
PJverton, N.
J.
Moorestown, N.
C.
J.
Media, Pa.
Elizabeth B. Miller, A.M., 1900
Charles S. Moore, B.L., 131 St. James PL. Atlantic City, N. J.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Samuel C. Palmer, A.B
Hainesport, N. J.
Lydia M. Parry, A.B
Alfred E. Pfahler, B.S., 4046 Walnut St. .Philadelphia, Pa.
M. Elizabeth (Pownall) Walton, B.L.. .Coatesville, Pa.
1896.
*Frank L. Price, A.B
Arthur H. Scott, B.S., care Scott Paper
Philadelphia, Pa.
Co
Avondale Pa.
Jane C. (Shaw) Hepburn, B.L
Helen B. (Smith) Brinton, A.M., 1899. .Media, Pa.
G. Edmund Strattan, B.S., 1427 nth Ave.. Altoona, Pa.
William H. Wanzer, A.B., Kyle Institute.. Flushing, N. Y.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Emma A. ( Wasley) Snyder, B.L
.
* Deceased.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Howard White,
Jr.,
C.E.,
1900
(M.S.,
Lansdowne, Pa.
Univ. of Mich., 1896)
Alice P. Willits, A.B
Albert T. Yarn all,
Jericho, N. Y.
Manor
B.L.,
School.. .Stamford, Conn.
CLASS OF
Mary
99
1896
Bartram, A.B
London Grove, Pa.
Battin, A.B., 640 426. St
Chicago, III.
Leopold W. Bierwirth, B.S
Dover, N. J.
Mellie E. Bishop, B.L., 608 E. Douglass
S.
William
I.
St
Bloomington, 111.
Albert L. Buffington, A.B
Rising Sun, Md.
Carolien H. (Chambers) Turner, B.L.,
404
Ward
Norfolk, Va.
Bushnell, 111.
St
Charles Chandler, B.S
William
B. Chapin, B.S., 122 Fort Green
Brooklyn, N. Y.
PI
Isaac H. Clothier, Jr., A.B
Frances Darlington, A.B
AiDA T. Evans, B.L
George B. Ferrier, Jr., B.S
Wynnewood,
Harper Firth, C.E., 1899
Harrie H. Fouse, B.S., 1898, 4335 Pine
1901.
*E.
Sylvester
S.
Pa.
Glen Mills, Pa.
Malvern, Pa.
Moorestown, N.
Garrett, B.S.,1137 N. 15th
J.
St. .Philadelphia, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
St..
Lansdowne, Pa.
T. Russell Gleim, B.S
Ellen (Gunton) Gunnison, A.B.,
Hallie H. (Haines) Hodge, B.L.,
Merchantville, N. Y.
829
S.
Philadelphia, Pa.
49th St
Rising Sun, Md.
Violette T. Haines, A.B
Philadelphia, Pa.
Charles G. Hodge, B.L., 829 S. 49th St
Kenwood, Cal.
loLENE M. (Hollenshead) Smith, A.B
Howard Cooper Johnson, B.L. (LL.B.,
Univ. of Pa., 1899), 709 Walnut St. .. .Philadelphia, Pa.
.
Charles Kaighn,
Dept., C. O.
&
B.S.,
G. R.
care
.
.
.
Engineers'
R
Mobeetie, Texas.
Knauer, A.B., 4 Weybosset St. Providence, R. I.
Mary C. McAllister, A.B., 419 N. CasColorado Springs,
cade Ave
Philip
S.
* Deceased.
.
Col.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
lOO
Mary
McDowell,
S.
A.B., 231
W.
i3Sth
New York, N. Y.
AiiABELLA E. Moore, B.L., 2013 Arch St. .Philadelphia, Pa.
William J. Morrison, B.S., 64 Prospect
Ave
Trenton, N. J.
Percival Parrish, B.L., 810 Pine St
Philadelphia, Pa.
N. WiLMER Plummer, B.S
Mount Pleasant, Md.
Charles A. Schooley, B.S
Dundas, Ont., Can.
Mary T. Shoemaker, B.L
George School, Pa.
J. Chauncey Shortlidge, A.B. (and HarSt
Concordville, Pa.
vard, 1898)
Lauretta T. (Smedley) Button,
"The Victoria," Lenox Ave. and
A.B.,
138th
New
St
A. Ella Spicer, A.B., 108
York, N. Y.
W. Huntingdon
Baltimore,
St
Albert H. Taylor,
B.S., 1745
Diamond
Md.
St. .Philadelphia, Pa.
London Grove,
Franklin D. Walton, B.L
John E. Wells, M.L., 1899 (A.M., ColumHiram, Ohio.
bia, 1900), Hiram College
Hanson
R.
Wilson,
Z.
C.E., 1899, care Erie
R
Keturah
Ave
Pa.
Bradford, Pa.
E.
Yeo,
B.S.,
414
W. Colton
Redlands, Cal.
CLASS OF
1897
Street, England.
Sarah (Bancroft) Clark, B.S
Normal, 111.
Frederic D. Barber, B.S
Mary E. Bartleson, B.L., 703 Highland
Ave
Reuben
Frank
Chester, Pa.
George School, Pa.
G. Bennett, B.S
Charleston,
G. Blair, B.S
Grace A. (Brosius) Biddle,
Pittsburg, Pa.
St
Thomas Cahall,
111.
B.L., 617 Ivy
B.L.
Pa., 1900), 1015
(LL.B., Univ.
Witherspoon BIdg.
Daisy R. Corson, B.S.
(M.D.,
of
..
.Philadelphia, Pa.
Woman's
Medical College, Phila., 1901)
Jared W. Darlington, B.S
Walter C. De Garmo, B.S
Gerry B. Dudley, A.B., 123 E. 28th St
Lansdowne, Pa.
Darling, Pa.
Ithaca, N. Y.
New
York, N. Y.
SV.'ARTHMORE COLLEGE
lOI
loLA K. Eastburn, B.L., Friends' Central
School, 15th and Race Sts
Philadelphia, Pa.
Jessie D. Ellis, B.L., 304 N. 3Sth St
Philadelphia, Pa.
George Gleim, Jr., B.S
Marietta Hicks, B.L
Lansdowne, Pa.
Westbury Station, N.
Clarence
B.
Hoadley,
B.S.,
206
San
Jacinto St
Redlands, Cal.
Media, Pa.
El Paso, 111.
Edith H. John, B.L
Frederic S. Larison, A.B
Nellie Lodge, B.S., 1623 Race St
Philadelphia, Pa.
Robert E. Manley, B.S
Walker Matteson, A.B
Laura C. (Miller) Curry, A.B., 62
New
W.
New
89th St
Herbert
L.
Noxon,
B.S.,
York, N.
Y
care Globe Oil
Co
Ell WOOD
Oxford, Pa.
Utica, N. Y.
Barkersville, Cal.
C. Parry, M.L., 1900
Wyncote, Pa.
Robert Pyle, A.B
Samuel Riddle, B.S
West Grove,
Pa.
Media, Pa.
Miriam Sener, B.L., 233 Charlotte St
Lancaster, Pa.
Bertha J. Smith, B.L
Lincoln, Va.
Marshall P. Sullivan, B.L
Moorestown, N. J.
Henrietta F. Wanzer, A.B
Westbury, N. Y.
Channing Way, A.B
West Chester, Pa.
Howard J. Webster, B.S., care Carnegie
Steel Co
Pittsburg, Pa.
Lydia p. (Williams) Roberts, B.L., 26
S. i8th St
Philadelphia, Pa.
Joseph A. Willis, B.S
Fowling Creek, Md.
CLASS OF
1898
Charles T. Brown, A.B. (and Harvard,
1899), care Morley Pharmaceutical Co.,
N. E. Cor. i6th and Chestnut Sts
Hiram D. Campbell,
Eva E. (Foster)
B.S., 317
Firth,
Ann
B.L.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Homestead, Pa.
St
"The
Hedges"
Lancaster, Pa.
A. Virginia (Gillespie) Viskniskki, B.L.,
205 W. 103d St
Mabel A. Harris, B.L
New
York, N.
Etna, N. H.
Y
Y
SV/ARTHMORE COLLEGE
I02
Jonathan Y. Higginson,
B.S., 215 E. 15th
New
York, N. Y.
Pasadena, Cal.
Somerton, Pa.
St
Mary
Howell, A.B
Rachel Knight, B.L
Edith Lamb, B.L
Caroline A. Lukens, B.L
William B. Miller, C.E., 1901
Cornell, 1899), 224 Walnut St
Albert Cook Myers, M.L., 1901
Edna M. Nicholl, B.L
S.
Arthur L. Patton, B.S
S. Edna Pownall, B.L
Edna H. Richards, B.L
Arthur C. Smedley, B.S.,
Govanstown, Md.
Swarthmore College.
(M.E.,
Sewickley, Pa.
Penna. University.
Scotch Plains, N. J.
Port Collins, Col.
Christiana, Pa.
Columbia University.
Friends' Semi-
New
nary, Rutherford Place
York, N. Y.
Ely J. Smith, B.L
Doylestown, Pa.
Levi S. Tayloir, B.S., Johns Hopkins
Univ
Baltimore, Md.
Frederic L. Thomas, B.S
Ashton, Md.
Abner p. Way, B.S. (M.D., Hahnemann,
'.
.
.
Malvern, Pa.
Decatur, 111.
1901 )
Alice Witbeck, B.L
CLASS OF
Mary
1899
E. Armstrong, B.L., Brooklyn Public
Library, 26 Brevoost Place
Mary
G. Ball,
B.L
Richard J. Bond, B.S., 18 E. Kinney
Levis M. Booth, B.S
Anna
Bradbury,
B.L., 308
John P. Broomell,
Emily W. Carter,
St.
.
.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Merchantville, N.
.Newark, N. J.
Plainfield, N. J.
N. 14th St
J.
Richmond, Ind.
32 Morningside Ave... New York, N. Y.
B.L., Penna. Hospital. .Philadelphia, Pa.
Calvin
F. Crowell,
Anna
B.
B.S
Eisenhower, A.B.
Moorestown, N.
J.
(and Rad-
cliffe, 1900), 802 DeKalb St
Norristown, Pa.
Edith Flitcraft, A.B
Woodstov>?n, N. J.
Helen M. Fogg, B.L., 1114 Mt. Vernon St. .Philadelphia, Pa.
Mabel C. Gillespie, B.L., 1310 Western
Ave
Gilbert L. Hall, A.B., Galiano
Allegheny, Pa.
Benguet, Luzon, P.
I.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
IO3
Anna
C. Holmes, B.L., 1930 Chestnut St. .Philadelphia, Pa.
Davis
Friends'
B.S.,
Jackson,
Academy
Locust Valley, N. Y.
M. Katharine Lackey, B.L
Atlantic City, N. J.
Mary G. Leiper, B.L
VVallingford, Pa.
A.
Jane
E. Linvill, B.L., 1931 Gratz
Ave
Philadelphia, Pa.
Alice (Lippincott) Booth, B.L
Plainfield, N. J.
Walter H. Lippincott, B.S
Riverton, N. J.
Annie Lodge, B.S
Kennett Square, Pa.
Helen S. Moore, B.L., 131 St. James PI
Atlantic City, N. J.
Marshall Pancoast, B.L., Friends' Academy
Locust Valley, N. Y.
Annie B. Parrish, B.L
Woodbury, N. J.
Mary
E.
Seaman,
A.B.,
Ave
Benjamin A. Thomas,
11 12
Bushwick
Brooklyn, N. Y.
A.B., 3445
Walnut
Philadelphia, Pa.
St
Emily R. Underbill,
emy
B.L., Friends^
AcadLocust Valley, N. Y.
Darby, Pa.
Glen Cove, N. Y.
Serrill Verlenden, B.S
Elizabeth E. Willits, B.L
J.
CLASS OF
1900
Bird T. Baldwin, B.S., Harvard Univ.
Lucy Bancroft, A.B
George L. Bean, B.S., 1729 N. 19th St
..
.
Cambridge, Mass.
Wilmington, Del.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Mary Brown, B.L
Cornwall, N. Y.
Robert L. Brownfield, Jr., B.S., zi W.
New York, N. Y.
32d St
Florence E. (Christy) Anglin, B.L., 423
Montreal, Quebec.
St. Urbain St
Caroline F. Comly, B.L., 3311 Arch St. .. .Philadelphia, Pa.
Darling, Pa.
Paul Darlington, B.S
Margaret Eves, B.L., 17th St. and Girard
A.
Ave
Roger B. Farquhar,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Jr., B.S., 9 E. 39th
New
St
Anna
Gillingham, A.B.
1901),
Friends'
Central
and Race Sts
Joseph C. Haines, B.L
York, N. Y.
(and Radcliffe,
School,
15th
Philadelphia, Pa.
Mickleton, N.
J.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
I04
Edmund A. Harvey, A.B
Mary S. Haviland, B.L.
Brandywine Summit, Pa
(A.B.,Radcliffe,
1901), 41 Union Park
Caroline L. Hawke, A.B
Anna K. (Himes) Manley, B.L
Otley E. Jackson, B.S
George M. Lamb, Jr., B.S., 106 South
Anna H. Lippincott, B.L
Alice M. Lukens, B.S
Jessie M. Lukens, B.L
Edna M.
Miller, B.L., 236
W.
Boston, Mass.
Swarthmore, Pa.
New Oxford, Pa.
Nine Points, Pa.
St.. .Baltimore,
Chestnut
Lancaster, Pa.
Mae
Langhorne, Pa.
Kennett Square, Pa.
Merchantville, N. J.
Myers, B.L
Georgia Cook Myers, B.L
Katharine Pfeiffer, B.L
London Grove,
Margery Pyle, A.B
Helen
J.
Swarthmore, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
St
E.
Md.
Riverton, N.
T. (Sullivan)
Brown,
Pa.
B.L., 1506
Philadelphia, Pa.
Pine St
William H. Thatcher, B.S., 1415 DelaWilmington, Del.
ware Ave
21
Maryland
B.L.,
Ethel
Thompson,
19
J.
Baltimore, Md.
Ave
CLASS OF
1901
V/oodbury, N. J.
Earlington, Ky.
Morton, Pa.
Media, Pa.
Emily M. Atkinson, A.B
Susan E. (Atkinson) Rash, B.L
Henry N. Benkert, B.S
Fanny B. Cheney, A.B
Elizabeth Dinsmore,
B.L., 424
W.
Chelten
Germantown
Edward Downing, B.L
Philadelphia, Pa.
Ave.,
J.
Deborah H. Ferrier,
B. S
May
East Norwich, N. Y,
Moorestown, N. J.
.New York, N. Y.
K. Flannery, B.L., 300 W. 7Sth St.
Percival M. Fogg, B.S., 1106 Mt. Vernon
.
Philadelphia, Pa.
St
Gertrude
F. Gilbert,
B.L
Flushing, N. Y.
Walter Gilkyson, A.B., Polo, Bulacan., Luzon, P. I.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Ethel Griest, B.L., 2231 Wallace St
CoUingswood, N.
W. Lyndon Hess, B.L
T.
Anna
Howard, B.L
Edith H. (Janney) Hildebrand, B.L
B.
J.
Media, Pa.
Mt. Crawford, Va.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
IO5
Arthur H. Jenkins, B.L
Gwynedd, Pa.
Amy W. Knickerbocker, B.L
New Lenox, 111.
Mabel W. Latimer, B.L., 1500 Delaware
Ave
Wilmington, Del.
Mary W. Lippincott, B.L
Riverton, N. J.
Moorestown, N. J.
J. Warner E. Love, B.S
Frank M. McVaugh, Jr., B.S., 15 Wall
New
St
Martha W. Moore, B.L
WiLMER Pancoast,
J.
York, N. Y.
Phcenixville, Pa.
B.S.,
Abington
Jenkintown, Pa.
Friends' School
Elwood Ramsey, Jr., B.S., 1900, 5321 WakePhiladelphia, Pa.
field St., Germantown
Toughkenamon, Pa.
Mary B. Richards, B.L
Moorestown, N. J.
L. Winifred Rogers, A.B
G. Arthur Seaman, A.B., care Hon. Burd
Washington, D. C.
Uwchlan, Pa.
Cassell
Ira Smedley, B.S
T.
Arthur Smith,
Philadelphia, Pa.
B.S,, 1902
Mark
Thistlethw^aite,
Press
William C. Tyson, B.S
B.L.,
care
The
Philadelphia, Pa.
Guernsey, Pa.
Holicong, Pa.
Edward Williams, B.L
Richmond, Ind.
Edith M. Winder, B.L
M, Florence Wynn, A.B., Temple ColPhiladelphia, Pa.
lege
M. Alma Young, A.B
Easton, Pa.
CLASS OF
Mary
1902
Ida Alley, B.S
Lagrangeville, N. Y.
Elizabeth Newlin Baker, B.L
Stephen Roscoe Bateman, B.L
Coatesville, Pa.
Ethel Beardsley, B.A
Swarthmore, Pa.
Edith Coale, B.L
Edith H. Cooley, B.A
Charles C. Corson, B.L
Riverton, N.
LiNA
Grenlock, N.
J.
J.
N. J.
Plymouth Meeting, Pa,
Plainfield,
B. Dillistin, B.L., Kurfurstin St. 112,
Tscheuschner
Helen McIlvain Eastwick,
Elmwood Ave
Berlin,
B.L.,
Germany.
5901
Philadelphia, Pa.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
Io6
Edith G. Elmore, B.L., 85 Hancock St
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Rebecca M. Ely, B.L., 302 N. 3Sth St
Philadelphia, Pa.
Marion Farquhar, B.L
Sandy Spring, Md.
Lewis Fussell, B.S
Media, Pa.
Ernest L. Green, B.A
Media, Pa.
Gertrude P. (Griscom) Barr, B.L
Escanaba, Mich.
University of Penna.
John Milton Griscom, B.S
Emma F. Hamilton, B.L
Gladwynn, Pa.
Edson S. Harris, B.S
Lansdowne, Pa.
Mary B. Hawke, B.A
Swarthmore, Pa.
Amelia E. Himes, B.L
New Oxford, Pa.
Ruxton, Md.
John Howard Hopkins, B.S
Elsie H. Koenig, B.L
Lewistown, Pa.
Lewistown, Pa.
Stella L. Koenig, B.L
Margaretta W. Lamb, B.L., 1432 McCuUoh
Baltimore, Md.
St
Swarthmore, Pa.
Alice R. Linvill, B.L
Swarthmore, Pa.
Marion Lukens, B.L
Nathan H. Mannakee, B.S., Friends'
Wilmington, Del.
School, 4th and West Sts
Camden, N. J.
Cyrus D. Marter, B.L., 213 Pearl St
T. Stockton Matthews, B.L., 1925 Park
Baltimore, Md.
Ave
Hockessin, Del.
Roy McVaugh, B.L
Langhorne, Pa.
Allen R. Mitchell, Jr., B.L
Margaret M. Patterson, B.S., 2214 N. 21st
Philadelphia, Pa.
St
Anna
R. Paxson,
B.L
Langhorne, Pa.
Fern Park, Pa.
Robert L. Pearson, B. S
Frances Preston, B.L
Elliott Richardson, B.S
Helen W. Speakman,
B.A., 1156 S.
Tayloria, Pa.
Torresdale, Pa.
Broad
Philadelphia, Pa.
St
Alice P. Tabor, B.L., Kleiststrasse 11, care
Berlin, Germany.
Miss S. Morgan
Tug River, W. Va.
Ernest J. Taylor, B.S
Margaret H. Taylor, B.L., Kurfursten St.
Berlin, Germany.
112, Tscheuschnen
Elmor
T. Temple, B.S
Clara -M. Thomas, B.A
Wn^LiAM W. Turner, B.L
Lionville, Pa.
West
Chester, Pa.
Betterton,
Md.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
IO7
Edith L. Verlenden, B. L
Darby, Pa.
Robert H. Walker, B.S., 2219 Maryland
Ave
Baltimore, Md.
Anna W. Waters, B.A., 215 E. isth St. ..New
Maude L. Watters, B.A., S. W. Konig-
York, N. Y.
strasse 44, III Etage
Berlin, Germany.
Albert M. Williams, B.S
Holicong, Pa.
George S. Worth, B.S
Coatesville, Pa.
Ida Wright, 141 Woodstock Road, care
Oxford, England.
Miss Emma Swann
HOLDERS OF THE JOSHUA LIPPINCOTT
FELLOWSHIP
1893- 1894
Atkinson Jenkins,
Benjamin F. Battin,
T.
A.B., 1887; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1894.
A.B., 1892; studied in Berlin; Ph.D., Jena,
1900.
1894-1895
David B. Rushmore,
B.S., 1894; M.E., Cornell, 1895; C.E.,
Swarth-
more, 1897.
1895-1896
Howard White,
Jr., B.S.,
1895; M.S., Michigan, 1896; C.E., Swarth-
more, 1900.
1896-1897; 1897-1898
John W.
Gregg, B.L., 1894; A.M., Cornell, 1899.
1898-1899
Ellwood
C. Parry, B.L., 1897
>
studied in Berlin
;
M.L., Swarthmore,
1900.
1899-1900; 1900-1901
John
E. Wells, B.L., 1896; M.L., 1899; A.M., Columbia, 1900.
Mary
G. Leiper, B.L., 1899; studied in Berlin.
1901-1902
1902- 1903
EiRD T. Baldwin,
B.S., 1900; studying in
Harvard.
HOLDERS OF THE LUCRETIA MOTT
FELLOWSHIP
1895-1896
Helen
B. Smith, A.B., 1895; studied in
Swarthmore,
Oxford University; A.M.,
1899.
1896-1897
Mary
McDowell,
108
S.
A.B., 1895
;
studied in
Oxford University.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE
IO9
1897-1898
Sarah Bancroft Clark,
B.S., 1897; studied in
Newnham
College,
Cambridge.
1898- 1899
Edna H. Richards,
B.L., 1898; studied in Berlin.
1899-1900
Mary
E.
Seaman,
A.B., 1899; studied in
Newnham
College,
bridge.
1900-1901
Anna
Gillingham, A.B., 1900; studied
in Radcliffe College.
1901-1902
L.
Winifred Rogers, A.B., 1901
;
studied in Berlin.
1902-1903
Margaret H. Taylor,
B.S., 1902; studying in Berlin.
Cam-
THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
The Alumni
Association was organized Fifth
Month
and incorporated First Month 16, 1882. Its object
is "to promote union and good feeHng among the Alumni,
and to advance in all proper ways the interests of Swarth-
8, 1875,
more
members of
The annual meeting and banquet are held
afternoon and evening of Commencement Day.
College."
All graduates are ipso facto
the Association.
in the
OFFICERS FOR
1902-1903
PRESIDENT
Benjamin
Swarthmore, Pa.
F. Battin^ '92
VICE-PRESIDENTS
Walter Roberts, '90
John L. Carver, '93
Helen R. Hillborn, '94
Philadelphia, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Swarthmore, Pa.
SECRETARY
Emma Gawthrop
Hayes,
Swarthmore, Pa.
'88
TREASURER
J.
Carroll Hayes,
West
'89
Chester, Pa.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Term Expires Sixth Month, ipo^
Elizabeth Woolston Collins,
W. Llewellyn Baner, '82
Samuel C. Palmer, '95
'74
Swarthmore, Pa.
York, N. Y.
Swarthmore, Pa.
New
Term Expires Sixth Month, 1904
Harriett Cox McDowell,
William D. Lippincott,
Emily Atkinson, '91
no
'87
'90
New
York, N. Y.
Camden, N. J.
Moorestown, N. J.
COMMITTEE ON TRUSTS, ENDOWMENTS,
AND SCHOLARSHIPS
EDMUND WEBSTER,
1156 South
EDWARD
Broad
H.
Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
OGDEN,
314 Vine Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
EMMOR
ROBERTS,
Fellowship, N.
J.
SUSAN W. LIPPINCOTT,
Cinnaminson, N.
JOHN
T.
J.
WILLETS,
303 Pearl Street,
REBECCA
C.
New
York, N. Y.
LONGSTRETH,
Secretary,
Haverford, Pa.
1X1
Swarthmore College Catalogue, 1902-1903
A digital archive of the Swarthmore College Catalogue
1902 - 1903
118 pages
reformatted digital