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Volume 66 MAY Number 1
1911
BULLETIN OF THE
LAGRANGE COLLEGE
Established 1833 Chartered 1846
LaGrange, Georgia
The Academic Department
The Collegiate Department
The Expression Department
The Department of Pedagogy
CONTENTS:
Calendar for 1911-12
The Board of Trustees
The Officers of Administration
The Faculties
The Expenses
General Information
Requirements for Admission to the Freshman Class
Requirements for Graduation
Courses of Study in Academy and College
The Departments of Pedagogy and Expression
Certificates and Diplomas
The Alumnae
The Registration for 1910-11
Statistics
Programs of Recitals
Schedule of Recitations, etc., for 1911-12
The February issue contained a full outline of the work in Music and Art. If not
received, it will be sent upon request. The next issue will be in July, which will
contain various illustrations and any announcements for the next term not included
in this issue.
PUBLISHED FOUR TIMES A YEAR, IN MAY, JULY, NOVEMBER AND FEBRUARY
Entered as second-class matter June 2, 1910. at post-office at LaGrange, Ga.. under the Act
of July 16, 1594.
Billinyrhurat-Randall I'tg. Co., LaGrange, Ga.
CALENDAR FOR 1911-12
1911
May 30-June 2. Final Examinations.
June 2. Annual Concert.
June 3. Reception to Trustees and Alumnae.
June 4. Commencement Sunday.
June 5. Annual Meeting of the Board of Trustees.
Senior Day Exercises.
Annual Meeting of the Alumnae Association.
Baccalaureate Address and Graduating Exercises.
September 15. Next Session Begins.
September 16, 18. Examination and Classification of Students.
November 30. Thanksgiving Day a holiday.
December 21. Christmas holidays begin.
1912
January 3. Christmas holidays end.
January 27. End of the First Half of the year.
January 30. Beginning of the Second Half of the year.
April 9. Benefactor's Day the birthday of Mr. Wm. S. With-
am, founder of the Loan Fund.
April 26. Memorial Day half holiday.
May 18. Annual Debate between the Ireniau and Mezzofantian
Societies.
May 25, 26. Fall entrance examinations.
May 29-June 1. Final Examinations.
June 1-4. Commencement Exercises.
LaGrange College 3
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
William S. Witham, Atlanta, President; Arthur II. Thomp-
son, LaGrange, Secretary; John D. Edmundson, LaGrange;
Rev. A. Parks Jones, Rome; William V. Gray, LaGrange;
William L. Cleaveland, LaGrange; Cornelius V. Truitt, La-
Grange; Otis A. Dunson, LaGrange; Rev. George W. Duval,
Decatur; John M. Barnard, LaGrange; Walter W. Wisdom,
Atlanta; Joseph E. Dunson, LaGrange; Rev. J. Wiley Quillian,
D. D., Oxford; Rev. M. J. Cofer, Atlanta; Frank Harwell, La-
Grange; Rev. Beverley P. Allen, Cedartown; Rev. R. Frank
Eakes, Elberton; Rev. S. R. Belk, Atlanta; J. T. Neal, Thom-
son; John D. Walker, Sparta; Henry E. Kelly, Rome; Rev.
Walker Lewis, D. D., Atlanta; Ashton H. Cary, LaGrange;
Rev. William C. Lovett, D. D., Atlanta; Rev. Thomas J. Chris-
tian, Cartersville; James G. Truitt, LaGrange; Edward K. Far-
mer, Fitzgerald; D. W. Krauss, Brunswick; Rev. W.T.Irvine,
LaGrange; Rev. John S. Jenkins, Rome; J. S. Betts, Ashburn;
Rev. W. L. W T right, Sylvester; Rev. S. B. Ledbetter, Atlanta;
W. C. Jones, Elberton; Howard Candler, Atlanta; Frank M.
Ridley, Jr., M. D., LaGrange; and Rev. J. P. Wardlaw, Fort
Valley.
BUILDING COMMITTEE
John M. Barnard, Chairman; Ashton H. Cary, Secretary;
Joseph E. Dunson, Cornelius V. Truitt, Rev. R. Frank Eakes,
and John D. W 7 alker. Park A. Dallis, Architect; Pike Brothers
Lumber Company, Contractors.
ADMINISTRATION
I. Officers of Administration
Rufus Wright Smith, President.
Alwyn Means Smith, Director of Music.
Leon Perdue Smith, Dean and Registrar.
Miss Maidee Smith, Lady Principal and Librarian.
Rev. Walker Lewis, D.D., 239 Capitol Ave., Atlanta, Chap-
lain and Field Secretary.
Robert Elbert Burks, Bookkeeper.
Mrs. Minnie Moss, Housekeeper.
Miss Addie Frazier, Assistant.
4 LaGrange College
II. The College Faculty
Rufus Wright Smith, A. B., A. M., Professor of Metaphysics.
President Smith graduated at Emory College in 1856 with first hon-
or, and received the degree of A. M. from the same institution in 1873.
For several years before the war he, with the assistance of his wife,
conducted a large school in Sparta. From 1872 to 1879 he was Princi-
pal of the Academic Department of Emory College, and from that time
to 1885 President of Dalton Female College. He has presided over the
LaGrange College for the past twenty-six years.
Leon Perdue Smith, A. B., Dean, Professor of Sciences.
Graduated at Emory College in 1892; studied for four summers at
the University of Chicago and has taken correspondence courses from
the same institution for three years, completing one year's work in
Qualitative Analysis, one year in Quantitative Analysis, one-half year
in Geology, one-half year in Biology, and one-half year in Latin and
German. Instructor in Geology at the University of Georgia Summer
School in 1904. For three years Geologist and Chemist for the Indus-
trial Department of the Seaboard Air Line Railway.
Miss Marcia Lewis Culver, Lit. Grad., Professor of Latin
and French.
Normal College Diploma, '99, from Georgia Normal and Industrial
College. Studied at the Summer School of the South, Knoxville, in
1902, where she completed a course in Chemical Qualitative Analysis
and a course in French. Studied during the summers of 1904, 1905
and 1907 at the University of Chicago, completing their French Cour-
ses 3, 4 and 6, and one year's work in advanced Latin (3 majors), and
a major each in History and Psychology. Miss Culver is pursuing a
course leading to the A. M. degree.
Miss Margaret Elizabeth Shepard, A. B., Professor of His-
tory and German.
Graduated at Judson College in 1891; studied Methods of Teaching
at Monteagle during the summer of 1895; took a course in English at
Chatauqua, N. Y., in the summer of 1899, and completed three majors
in History at the University of Chicago during the summer of 1902.
Miss Shepard was Principal of the Academic Department of the La-
Grange College for a time, and subsequently was Professor in the Ken-
tucky Conference College during 1905-07. Since then she has been con-
tinuously at LaGrange. She is still pursuing post-graduate work.
Miss Maidee Smith, A.B., Mus. Grad., Professor of Greek
and the Bible.
Graduated at LaGrange College in 1887 and received a Diploma in
Music in 1891. Subsequently she took a course at the Valparaiso, Ind.,
Normal in the Department of Music; Missionary in Brazil from 1900
LaGrange College 5
to September, 1906; studied in the New York School of Philanthropy
during one summer; took work in Bible under Dr. Campbell Morgan
in New York; had two years of post-graduate work in LaGrange sub-
sequent to graduation. While in Brazil Miss Smith took an extensive
course, equivalent to three years' work, in the Portugese language and
literature.
Miss Buford Jennette Johnson, A. B., Professor of Mathe-
matics and Pedagogy.
Graduated at LaGrange College in 1905. Previously attended the
Georgia Normal and Industrial College, taking work in Pedagogy espe-
cially. Studied one summer at the Columbia University, New York,
doing work in History, Geometry, and Analytical Geometry. Comple-
ted a course in Calculus from the University of Chicago. Miss John-
son was an instructor in the Thomson High School for a time and sub-
sequently in the Brunswick High School; has been in the faculty of
the LaGrange College since 1907.
Miss Ernestine Dempsey, A. B., Professor of English.
Graduated at the LaGrange College in 1901; took two years of post-
graduate work at LaGrange, studied English at the Columbia Univer-
sity, N. Y., during the summer of 1906, and at the University of Chi-
cago during the summer of 1908. Was instructor in English and His-
tory at the Jackson High School and subsequently taught in the War-
then College for one year. Miss Dempsey was instructor in English
at the LaGrange College in 1908-09, and she became Professor of Eng-
lish in 1909.
Alwyn Means Smith, Mus. Grad. (Leipsic), Professor of the
Theory of Music.
The literary education of Prof. Smith was secured by a residence for
three years at Emory College and by subsequent work at the Valpa-
raiso University. Extensive work in music was covered in leading
American Conservatories and by a residence of two years and a subse-
quent summer at the Royal Conservatory of Leipsic, Germany. Prof.
Smith is a member of the College Faculty proper, and his theoretical
studies are with literary credit.
Miss Jane Allison, Director of Expression and Gymnastics.
Miss Allison is a graduate of the Curry School of Expression of Bos-
ton, Mass. She also studied at Sullins College, Bristol, Va.-Tenn., and
at Virginia College, Roanoke, Va. She was a private pupil of Mrs. Anna
Baright Curry and Mrs. Harry Otto Packard, and was instructed by
Dr. Samuel Silas Curry. She has been teacher of Expression in Wil-
lie Halsell College, Vinita, Okla., Columbia College, Milton, Ore.,
and McAlester City Schools, Okla.
Mrs. Jesse Thomas Carter, A. B., Instructor in Botany.
Mrs. Carter received the A. B. degree from the LaGrange College in
6 LaGrange College
1907. Since her graduation she was for two years Instructor in Eng-
lish and Physiography. During the last year she has spent considera-
ble time in the study of Art and in Botany. During the session of
1911-12 she will be succeeded by Miss Hallie Smith as teacher of Botany
and Physiography.
Miss Hallie Claire Smith, A. B. r Instructor in German and
Latin and Assistant in Chemistry.
Graduate of the LaGrange College in the class of 1909. During the
past two years she has been Instructor in the High School Latin, in
First Year German, and has been Laboratory Assistant in Chemistry.
Miss Smith has also received a Certificate and will receive a Diploma
in Voice this year.
Miss Effie Eugenia Etter, A. B., Instructor in Mathematics
and Assistant in Physics.
Miss Etter graduated from the LaGrange College in 1908. She had
previously graduated from the Sacred Heart Academy of Augusta, and
followed this by three years of work at LaGrange. During the sum-
mer of 1910 she studied Mathematics at the Summer School of the
South at Knoxville, Tenn.
Miss Estelle Lois Jones, A. B., Instructor in English.
Graduate of LaGrange College, 1907. She previously graduated
with honor at Tubman High School of Augusta. Previous to coming
to LaGrange she was Professor of English in Young Harris College.
III. Department of Music
A full account of the preparation and experience of the teach-
ers in Music and Art appears in the February issue, 1911, which
will be sent upon request.
Alwyn Means Smith, Mus. Grad. (Leipsic), Director, The-
oretics, Voice Culture, Musical History.
Mrs. Alwyn Means Smith, Mus. Grad., (Leipsic), Voice
Culture.
Miss Rosa Mueller, Mus. Grad. (Leipsic), Piano, Theory.
Mrs. Ethel Dallis Hill, A. B., Violin.
Miss Bertha Louise Burnside, A. B., Mus. Grad., Piano,
Pipe-Organ, Theory.
Miss Edith A. Poole, Mus. Grad. (N. Y.) Pipe-Organ, Piano,
Theory, Sight-Singing.
Miss Alma McDonald Bagby, B. S., Mus. Grad. (Cincinnati),
Piano, Theory, Sight-Singing.
LaGrange College 7
Mrs. Maude Parsons, Mus. Grad. (N. Y.), Voice, Piano,
Theory.
Miss Eleanor Caroline Davenport, A. B., Mus. Grad. (Leip-
sic), Piano, Theory, Guitar, Mandolin, Banjo. (1911-12).
IV. The Department of Art
Miss Rachella Killinger, (Corcoran School of Art, Wash-
ington), Instructor.
EXPENSES
These Rates Are for the College Year
Board, Laundry, Lights and Fuel $150.00
All rooms for two are at the rate of $5 per year extra for each occupant,
except the corner rooms for two, which are $10 per occupant extra, and
rooms in Hawkes Building, which are S15 per year extra.
Literary Tuition $50.00
Voice Culture under Prof. Alwyn Smith 60.00
Voice Culture under other instructors 50.00
Piano under any instructor 50.00
Pipe-Organ (with use of electric blower) 72.00
The rate for Pipe-Organ includes use of Organ for Practice.
Harmony or Counterpoint in class 12.00
Harmony or Counterpoint private lessons 50.00
Use of Piano for Practice 10.00
Students in Piano or Voice use Piano for one and one-half hours
per day at this rate and those in both Piano and Voice two and one-
half hours.
Use of Piano for extra time for each additional hour per
day 5.00
Violin (students furnish their own instruments) 50.00
Pencil, Charcoal or Crayon Drawing 40.00
Pastel, Water Color, Oil or China Painting 50.00
Expression for private pupil 50.00
Expression in class of four or five 20.00
Sight-Singing, Free-Haud Drawing, Theorv, Musical His-
tory FREE
FEES
Certificate in any department $3.00
Drplonia in any department 5.00
8 LaGrange College
Laboratory fees in Chemistry, Physics, Biology 5.00
Library fee 1.00
Gymnasium fee 1.00
STIPULATIONS
Students in Literary Departments who enter for less than full
work will be charged to the amount taken, but this rate will not
be diminished for subsequent changes before the expiration of a
half year.
Students in Voice Culture under Prof. Alwyn Smith are re-
quired to pay $1.00 per lesson, if they enter for less than one-
half year. Students under other music instructors will pay 75
cents per lesson, if they enter for less than one-half year. In no
case will charges for less than one month be made.
Visitors to the College will be charged Board at the rate of
$1.00 per day, unless they are the invited guests of the President.
Those who invite guests will be responsible for their board.
The extra charges for certain rooms specified above are to be
paid in advance of entrance.
All charges for the First Half of the College Year must be paid
or suitably secured at entrance and for the Second Term at the
beginning of the Second Term. In case of providential causes
which necessitate the student to leave College, such amount as
may have been paid in excess of date of leaving will be remitted
within four weeks after the student withdraws.
New students are charged from time of entrance to the end of
the year or term, except that a fee of $5.00 extra is charged for
the trouble of special examinations, etc. If former students en-
ter late, the tuition rate for the year will be charged. However,
no deduction is made for absence during the First Two or the
Last Three weeks of the session.
Daughters of clergymen living by the ministry are charged no
tuition, but are assessed an incidental fee of $5.00 per year.
All dues must be settled in cash or by note before students can
receive certificates or diplomas.
Students absent from class examinations during the year with-
out excuse satisfactory to the Registrar will be charged a fee of
$1.00, credited to the instructor, but charged on regular account,
for a special examination. For examinations on work done in
LaGrangk CollhCxK 9
private under instructor otlier than here there will be a like fee.
All dues should be in ade payable to RufusW. Smith, President.
BOOKS, SHEET MUSIC, Etc., are sold for Cash. Board-
ers, on entering, should deposit sufficient money to pay for these
articles. Books and Stationery for a College student will cost
from $5.00 to $15.00.
UNIFORM, DOMESTIC ARRANGEMENTS
Students wear black skirts, black or white waists and black
cloaks on Sundays and other similar public occasions during the
colder part of the year, and Oxford caps during the whole year.
Plain cloaks in the prevailing style, costing at retail about $10,
should be secured, as more costly clothing is not allowed. These
may be secured here or at home. The caps cost $2.00 each and
should be secured at the College. In the spring the uniform will
be the cap, black skirt and white waist. The Senior class wear
Oxford gowns in the graduating exercises. For ordinary wear,
parents are requested to dress their daughters plainly, and to
furnish them with corset waists instead of corsets. At com-
mencement plain white dresses are worn on the stage by all ex-
cept as mentioned above.
Each boarder, teacher or student, is expected to furnish her
own sheets, covering, pillow-cases and towels.
LAGRANGE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Students who are not prepared for the courses in High School
work of the LaGrange College may board at the College Dormi-
tories and attend the Public Schools of LaGrange. They will
be able to attend a school about four blocks away from the Col-
lege, which maintains all the Grammar and High School Grades.
The tuition rates there for non-resident students will be from
:M.00 to $20.00 per term, dependent upon grade. Students who
are less advanced than the Ninth Grade will find this an excel-
lent plan. They will have the supervision of the College admin-
istration and may take music, art or expression at the College.
THE LOAN FUNDS
Students may be able to borrow from certain special funds of
the College enough money to defray a large part of their expen-
10 LaGrange College
ses. This money, when loaned to a student, begins to bear in-
terest at 6 per cent at the end of the year in which it was used.
Mr. William S. Witham, Chairman of the Board of Trustees,
and a well known banker living in Atlanta, donated to the Col-
lege the sum of $10,000 (which has since increased to over
$24,000), to be loaned to poor or dependent girls.
Mrs. J. C. Davidson, of West Point, Ga., gave the sum of
$1,000 in memory of her husband, to be used in a like manner.
Mr. Hatton Lovejoy, a prominent lawyer of LaGrange, loans
$50 per year upon similar conditions.
Circulars of Information concerning these funds can be se-
cured from President Smith. The decision as to who will be
accepted is vested entirely in a Committee of the Board of Trus-
tees, to whom all applications will be referred.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Location
LaGrange is seventy-one miles from Atlanta on the Atlanta
and West Point Railway, one hundred and five miles from Ma-
con on the Macon and Birmingham and about half way between
Brunswick and Birmingham on the Atlanta, Birmingham and
Atlantic Railway.
The city of LaGrange has about 8,000 population, with five
churches of the Methodist Church, South, three regular Baptist,
one each of the Presbyterian, Episcopal, Christian and Primitive
Baptist Churches all for white people. Five large cotton fac-
tories and several other large manufacturing enterprises are sit-
uated on one side of the town, while fine homes and other scenes
of architectural beauty, such as the Ferrell Gardens and the
McLendon Park, both near the College, make the city quite at-
tractive.
The College is situated upon a hill 142 feet above the depots,
one-half mile from the business portion of town, and twelve acres
in extent. The Campus is 832 feet above the sea-level in a re-
gion on the upper side of Pine Mountains, with natural drain-
age in all directions. The extreme cold of the higher mountains
and the heat of the lower country are both avoided.
LaGrange College 11
Sixteen passenger trains enter the city daily and this number
will soon be increased by additional facilities on the A. B. & A.
R. R. Through tickets may be bought from LaGrange to all
points and the students can reach College or go home to any
point in this section in a few hours.
Buildings
There are three principal buildings, called respectively the
College, the Oreon Smith Memorial Building, and the Hawkes
Building. The College Building contains eleven large rooms,
one of them being used exclusively as a Laboratory for Physics,
another as a Laboratory for Chemistry, another for Botany and
Physiography, one as an Expression Studio, one for Art Studio,
and the others for various literary departments. Besides these
there is a large storage room for Scientific apparatus and sup-
plies, the College Auditorium with an extensive gallery, in
which is the Pipe Organ (one of the largest in the state), and 40
music rooms. This building is three stories high and is heated
by steam.
The Oreon Smith Memorial Building is exclusively for dormi-
tory purposes. It contains the Hardwick Assembly Hall, used
for the Y. W. C. A. and religious services, double parlors, a
large Dining Hall, and 50 bed rooms, about half of which rooms
are for two students and half for three and four. During the
last session, pending the completion of the Hawkes Building,
there were also a reading room and a part of the College Library
(the rest of the Library was placed by sections in various reci-
tation rooms). This building has electric lights, water works,
and is heated by steam.
The Harriet Hawkes Memorial Building is just completed and
is one of the finest College buildings in the South. It contains
a large Library and Reading Room, office room for the Libra-
rian, offices of the President, Bookkeeper, and Registrar, each
separate, two large rooms, one to be used for Geology, and the
other as recitation room, and there is a reception room. These are
on the floor opening upon the inner court yard. The upper floors
contain dormitory rooms for about 80 students, nearly all of them
for two. Each room has two closets and two windows. All floors
have wide verandas. The lower floor is extra high and con-
12 LaGrange College
tains one of the largest gymnasium rooms in the south, and ad-
joining, a swimming pool, which holds 30,000 gallons of water.
There are numerous rooms for shower baths and lockers. It
also contains an office room for the Gymnastic Director and an
apparatus storage room. This building is steam heated, lit by
electricity and has water works with handsome tiled bathrooms
throughout. The building cost $50,000.
Grounds
The College Campus occupies twelve acres. The grounds for
basket ball and tennis were taken up by the new building, but
about two acres will be given over to this, which will be made
ready during the present summer. There will be available sev-
eral tennis courts and a suitable ground for basket ball. These,
with the large gymnasium, will afford an abundance of exercise
and diversion for the students for the next year.
Equipment
The Chemical Laboratory is well provided for two years' work
in Chemistry and to a large degree for a third year's work. The
Physical Laboratory has apparatus for teaching one year's work
in College Physics. The equipment of the Biological Labora-
tory is more limited, but several compound microscopes are
available and other suitable supplies. In Geology there are am-
ple supplies for laboratory work.
The Library contains about 4,000 books. It will be placed
before summer in the new handsome Library Hall, and will be
arranged into suitable sections for the various departments.
There are special libraries in English, Science, History, Mathe-
matics, Pedagogy, Reference, Fiction, and the Y. W. C. A. Re-
ligious Library. It is enlarged every year and is becoming one
of the most effective arms of the educational work of the College.
Societies
Secret societies are not allowed, as they tend toward extrava-
gance and an exclusiveness, which is based upon wrong princi-
ples. There are two literary societies, the Irenian, established
during the early 70's, and the Mezzofantiau, established in 1887.
They meet weekly on Monday, and have exercises consisting of
readings, recitations, debates, essays, criticisms, music, practice
LaGrange College 13
in parliamentary usages, etc. Monthly one of the societies or
jointly they give a public debate on Saturday evenings,
The Young Women's Christian Association, affiliated with
similar organizations all over the United States, holds weekly
services on Sunday afternoons and is developing among the stu-
dents a zeal for the cause of religion at home and abroad. Un-
der its auspices Mission study classes are regularly conducted.
The following were the officers of the Association for the year
1910-11: President, Miss Estelle Jones, Augusta; Vice-President,
Miss Ruby Newsom, Union Point; Recording Secretary, Miss
Kthel I. Smith, Rochelle; Corresponding Secretary, Miss Susie
W. Brown, Pinehurst; Treasurer, Miss Sara Mayo, Social Circle;
Chairman Missionary Committee, Miss Ruth Walker, Carters-
ville; Chairman Social Committee, Miss Mildred Rakes, Elber-
ton; Chairman Devotional Committee, Miss Martha Hamilton,
Brazil; Chairman Temperance Committee (W. C. T. U.), Miss
Mattie Sharpe, Ogechee; Chairman Poster Committee, Miss
Katherine Ripley, Odessadale.
Health
A close supervision is exercised over the health of boarding
pupils. All cases of sickness are required to be immediately re-
ported to the Lady Principal. In case of serious sickness a phy-
sician is called. The perfect sanitary arrangements, good water,
elevated country free from malaria, and close supervision over
the health of boarders have prevented serious sickness to a de-
gree unsurpassed by any similar institution in the state.
Regulations
Pupils must receive their visitors only in the reception rooms,
must make no debts at the stores, must pay for damage done
College property, arrange rooms before leaving in the morning,
be neat, promptly obey rising, prayer, study and school bells.
They must observe the Sabbath and attend Sunday-school and
church. They are not permitted to spend the night out in town,
communicate with young gentlemen without permission of the
President, leave the grounds without permission, send or receive
anything by means of day pupils, visit sick or exchange rooms
without permission, borrow money or jewelry, or clothing from
14 LaGrange College
each other, leave pianos open, or visit music and art rooms
without permission.
Reports
Formal reports, based upon semi-annual and final examina-
tions, together with the daily record of work, will be issued as
soon as practical after January 27th and Commencement. It
usually takes about two weeks to prepare and to issue these
grades. Upon these the system of credits for finished work is
based.
The instructors will endeavor to help students make up work
from which they were absent because of sickness. Unnecessary
and unexcusable absences seriously affect the standing of stu-
dents.
Conditions
When a student does unsatisfactory work in any study or
class, she is said to be conditioned in that study or class. A
student may be conditioned because of so much time lost by
sickness or other cause that she is unable to remedy her defi-
ciencies. To be conditioned does not, therefore, necessarily im-
ply any lack of industry or intelligence.
To Patrons
When you enter a pupil, it is clearly implied that you sub-
scribe to the conditions herein contained. Pupils are expected
to observe the rules prescribed, and patrons should not ask us to
permit a violation of the same.
Discourage visits home, since such absence impairs scholar-
ship and class standing. Absence of one day each week is a
loss of twenty per cent. What business can sustain such a loss
and prosper? When necessary for pupils to go home, patrons
should communicate directly with the President. The Presi-
dent reserves the right to refuse all requests for pupils to visit in
the city or elsewhere during the session. Pupils should not re-
main after Commencement free from College restrictions. Such
a course is usually damaging. Parents, consider the interests of
your children and do not allow it. The association of College
Home, together with the musical and literary entertainments
given, afford as many social advantages as are good for them
LaGrange College 8.5
while in school. Pupils are not allowed to receive visitors, ex-
cept in rare cases, and then at the discretion of the President.
Write your children encouraging- letters. If any complaints
are made, write us promptly. If your daughter is sick, she will
be properly cared for; if seriously ill, you will be promptly noti-
fied. The health record of the College should remove all solici-
tation in regard to this matter. Do not send your daughters
boxes of eatables, such as sweetmeats, cakes, etc. Most sick-
ness arises from this cause. The fare of the College is ample
and the same for pupils and teachers.
Boarders keeping money in their own rooms do so at their
own risk. Money should be deposited with the President, who
will then be responsible for it.
To succeed we must have prompt payments. As long as dues
are unpaid, we, not you, are bearing the burden of your child's
education.
Entrance Examinations
All students, old and new, are examined in Grammar, Geog-
raphy and Arithmetic, The graduates of the accredited high
schools are otherwise admitted without examination upon such
courses as the certificates show that they satisfactorily com-
pleted. Students from other schools are examined at entrance
so far as may be needful.
Certificate for Entrance
Every student who enters, for music, art, literary or otherwise,
is expected to present a certificate from the last school attended,
covering her work. This rule may be abated for students in
music or art only, who do not enter the College Dormitory and
are not seeking any certificate. Students should secure from
their Principals the formal certificate usually sent out by the
University of Georgia or the form sent out by the LaGrange
College, which should best be sent to the Registrar, Leon P.
Smith, before the summer vacation. Credit cannot be granted
upon printed Diplomas or the like, which do not show fully the
amount and character of the work done by the student with full
details.
Accredited High Schools
All the Accredited High Schools of the University of Georgia
16 LaGrange College
are accredited to LaGrange as well, by express agreement with
Prof. Joseph S. Stewart, Professor of Secondary Education of
the University. This embraces nearly all the better graded
High Schools of the state. We also accept the work of the Col-
leges which grant degrees, and the certificates of Young Harris,
Piedmont Institute, and Reinhardt. For College units of credit
but few of these institutions offer any work that equals in
amount what LaGrange College requires as a minimum year's
work in the given course.
Requirements for Admission to the Freshman Class
Students are admitted to college on the system of en-
trance units, a unit meaning a subject of study pursued in an
academy or high school, through a session of nine months; rec-
itation periods being not less than forty minutes in length, pre-
ferably five times a week, and the total amount of time devoted
to the subject throughout the year being at least 120 "sixty-
minute" hours. On the average, a full year's high school
course should represent four units of work.
The required number of entrance units is to be selected from
the following list of subjects, to which is attached their value as
entrance units:
Those in ''Small Caps" are conducted in the Academy of
LaGrange College.
Mathematics
1. College Algebra.
(a) To Quadratics. 1 unit.
(b) Quadratics through Progressions. Y* unit.
2. Plane Geometry. 1 unit.
3. Solid Geometry. Y* unit. (Given as a Freshman study).
4. Trigonometry. Y* unit. (Given as a Freshman study).
Latin
1. Grammar and Composition. 1 unit.
2. Cesar (any four books on the Gallic War). 1 unit.
,3. Cicero (six orations). 1 unit.
4. Virgil (six books of the yEneid). 1 unit. (Three books
given in Academy. }i unit).
For the work in Caesar or Cicero an equivalent amount of Ne-
EaGrange College 17
pos and Sallust, and for the work in Virgil an equivalent
amount of Ovid, may be substituted.
Greek
1. Grammar and Composition. 1 unit.
2. Xenophon (first four books of the Anabasis). 1 unit.
3. Homer's Iliad (the first three books), with Prosody, and
translation at sight. 1 unit. (Given in Freshman class).
French
1. One-half of Elementary Grammar, and 100 to 175 pa-
ges of approved reading. 1 unit.
2. Grammar completed and 250 to 400 pages of approved
reading. 1 unit.
Spanish
The same requirements as in French.
German
1. One-half of Elementary Grammar, and 75 to 100 pages of
approved reading. 1 unit. (Given in Freshman or Soph-
omore).
2. Elementary Grammar completed, and 150 to 200 pages of
approved reading. 1 unit. (Given in Sophomore or Ju-
nior with additional work).
History
1. General History. 1 unit. (A course in Ancient His-
tory given in Academy).
2. Greek and Roman History. 1 unit.
3. Mediaeval and Modern European History. 1 unit. (Fresh-
man).
4. English History. 1 unit. (Given as >2 unit).
5. American History (Civics may be a part of this course).
1 unit. (Given in Academy including Civics).
Credit in History must be based on the time devoted to each
course, not upon the ground covered. In estimating the value
of a particular course the definition of a unit must be rigidly ad-
hered to.
Science
1. Botany. 1 unit.
The preparation in Botany should include the study of at
least one modern text-book, such as Bergen's "Elements of
18 LaGrange College
Botany," together with an approved laboratory notebook.
2. Zoology. 1 unit. (Biological Zoology is given in Junior
year).
A course upon the same plan as that outlined for Botany.
3. Physics. 1 unit.
The study of a modern text-book such as Carhart and
Chute's "Physics," with a laboratory notebook covering at
least forty exercises from a list of sixty or more. (A course
in more advanced Physics is offered in Sophomore) .
3. Chemistry. 1 unit.
The preparation in Chemistry shall be upon the same
general plan as that prescribed for Physics. (A course in
more advanced Chemistry in Junior).
5. Physiography. 1 unit.
The course is upon the same general plan as that out-
lined for Botany. (Given as Y unit).
6. Physiology. Y unit.
Text, with notebook and drawings.
Other Subjects
Credit may be given for the following subjects based on the
requirement that each unit of credit shall be the equivalent of
the "sixty-minute" hour of high school work:
1 . One year in Mechanical Drawing. 1 unit.
2. One Year in Freehand Drawing. 1 unit. {% unit
given).
3. Two years in Domestic Science. 1 unit.
4. Three Years in Music. 1 unit.
5. One year in Agriculture. 1 unit.
English
1. Higher English Grammar. Y unit.
2. Elements of Rhetoric and weekly written compositions.
1 unit.
3. English Literature. \Y units.
The study of English Literature includes the special study of
some works, and the reading of others, as laid down in the re-
quirements of the National Conference on Uniform Entrance
Requirement in English, as follows:
Requirements for 1911. No candidate will be accepted in
LaG range College 19
English whose work is notably defective in point of spelling,
punctuation, idiom, or division into paragraphs.
(a) Reading and Practice. The form of examination will
usually be the writing of a paragraph or two on each of several
topics, to be chosen by the candidate from a considerable num-
ber perhaps ten or fifteen given in the examination paper.
The treatment of these topics is designed to test the candidate's
power of clear and accurate expression, and will call for only a
general knowledge of the substance of the books. In every case
knowledge of the book will be regarded as less important than
the ability to write good English. In preparation for this part
of the examination, it is important that the candidate shall have
been instructed in the fundamental principles of rhetoric.
Candidates should read the books prescribed for the year in
which they propose to present themselves for this part of the ex-
amination. These requirements are all offered in Academy.
In 1911 ten books, selected as prescribed below from the fol-
lowing list, are to be offered for examination:
Group 1 (two to be selected). Shakespeare's "As You Like
It," "Henry V.," "Julius Csesar," "The Merchant of Venice,"
"Twelfth Night."
Group 2 (one to be selected ). Bacon's "Essays;" Bunyan's
"The Pilgrim's Progress," Part I.; "The Sir Roger de Coverlev
Papers" in The Spectator; Franklin's "Autobiography."
Group 3 (one to be selected). Chaucer's "Prologue;" Spen-
cer's "Faerie Queene" (selections); Pope's "The Rape of the
Lock;" Goldsmith's "The Deserted Village;" Palgrave's "Gol-
den Treasury" (First Series), Books II. and III., with especial
attention to Dryden, Collins, Gray, Cowper, and Burns.
Group 4 (two to be selected). Goldsmith's "The Vicar of
Wakefield;" Scott's "I vanhoe" and "Quentin Durward;" Haw-
thorne's "The House of the Seven C rabies;" Thackeray's "Hen-
ry Esmond;" Mrs. Gaskell's "Cranford;" Dickens' "A Tale of
Two Cities;" George ICliot's "Silas Marner;" Blackmore's
"Lorn a Doone."
Groupe 5 (two to be selected). Irving's "Sketch Book;"
Lamb's "Essays of Elia;" De Quiucy's "Joan of Arc" and "The
English Mail Coach;" Carlyle's "Heroes and Hero Worship;"
20 LaGrange College
Emerson's "Essays" (selected); Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies.""
Group 6 (two to be selected). Coleridge's "The Ancient Ma-
riner;" Scott's "The Lady of the Lake;" Byron's "Mazeppa"'
and "The Prisoner of Chillon;" Palgrave's "Golden Treasury"
(First Series), Book IV., with special attention to Wordsworth,
Keats, and Shelley; Macaulay's "Lays of Ancient Rome;"
Poe's ''Poems;" Lowell's "The Vision of Sir Launfal;" Ar-
nold's "Sohrab and Rustum;" Longfellow's "The Courtship of
Miles Standish;" Tennyson's "Gareth and Lynette, Lancelot
and Elaine," and "The Passing of Arthur;" Browning's "Cav-
alier Tunes," "The Lost Leader," "How They Brought the
Good News from Ghent to Aix," "Evelyn Hope," "Home
Thoughts From Abroad," "Home Thoughts From the Sea,"
"incident of the French Camp," "The Boy and the Angel,"
"One Word More," "Herve Riel," "Pheidippides."
(b) Study and Practice. This part of the examination
presupposes the thorough study of each of the works named be-
low. The examination will be upon subject-matter, form, and
structure. In addition, the candidate may be required to answer
questions involving the essentials of English Grammar and
questions on the leading facts in those periods of English Liter-
ary History to which the prescribed works belong.
In 1911, the books set for this part of the examination will be:
Shakespeare's "Macbeth;" Milton's "Lycidas," "Comus,"
"L'Allegro," and "II Penseroso;" Burke's "Speech on Concili-
ation with America," or Washington's "Farewell Address" and
Webster's "First Bunker Hill Oration;" Macaulay's "Life of
Johnson" or Carlyle's "Essay on Burns."
Admission to College
The following units are prescribed for all degrees:
English. 3 units.
History. 1 unit.
Algebra. \ l /2 units.
Plane Geometry. 1 unit.
In addition to these, the candidate must present:
. f Latin. 3j4 units.
' ( Greek or French. 2 units.
From the list of entrance subjects (see previous pages) the
LaGrange College 21
candidate must present such further subjects as, added to those
prescribed, will bring the total of entrance units up to the re-
quirements for admission as full freshman.
Classification
Students are to be classified as:
1. Full Freshmen.
2. Conditioned Freshmen.
3. Special students.
1. Full Freshman. For admission as full freshman the
student must present fourteen (14) entrance units.
2. Conditioned Freshman.* Students who cannot enter as
full freshman may enter as a conditioned freshman when they
present ten (10) units, provided that the remaining four units
be removed within two years.
Students who may be allowed, in special cases, to carry Col-
lege courses, who have not complied with these requirements,
are classified with the Academy students.
3. Special Students. Under certain conditions students
who have not satisfied the minumum of entrance units required
of candidates for degrees may be admitted as "special students,"
provided they have satisfied the requirements in English, His-
tory, and one other subject, or be at least twenty years of age.
Requirements for Graduation
Degrees may be conferred only for the following amount of
College work, which shall be based on the requirements for ad-
mission as full freshmen.
The requirements for the A. B. degree call for a four years'
course, but in exceptional cases the work may be done in three
years.
A minimum year is seventeen recitation periods a week for
thirty-six weeks, or the equivalent, each one hour long. This
would be equivalent to 2,400 periods of recitations, lectures, and
laboratory work (two hours of laboratory work counting as one
*The phrase "Conditioned Freshman," for the present, may mean either
a student who has had the full four years of high school study and has
failed on some one or more of the subjects offered, or it may mean a stu-
dent who has attended a high school less than four years, and therefore
has not attempted the entire course.
22 LaGrange College
hour of recitation). Each recitation is expected to require, on
an average, two hours of the student's time in preparation for
the recitation.
The work of the four years shall be distributed among the
following four groups of study: (l) Languages and Literature;
(2) Pure Mathematics; (3) Sciences; (4) History, Social
Science, Philosophy, and the English Bible. The following
distribution of the 2,400 is required:
1. Languages and Literature, seven courses, including three
courses in English.
2. Pure Mathematics, two courses.
3. Sciences, College Physics and Chemistry, with regular
laboratory work.
4. History, Economics, Metaphysics, and English Bible, three
courses; the remaining hours to be elected from any or all of the
courses or groups above.
SUGGESTED OUTLNE OF STUDY
High School Work
These are the requirements of students who do the greater
part of their admission work in the Academy of the LaGrange
College. Graduates of other High Schools are allowed to de-
part from this arrangement just as far as the general require-
ments preceding allow. The possible variations from this out-
line are very few and infrequent. All High School students are
expected to offer the same amount of work.
Students in the LaGrange Academy complete:
Latin 1A, 2A, 3A, 4A 3}4 units, covering Elementary Latin,
four Books of Caesar, six Orations of Cicero, three Books of Ver-
gil, two years of Latin Prose Composition, and Latin Grammar.
English 1A, 2A, 3A, 4A three units, embracing Higher Gram-
mar, Composition, Rhetoric, and Literature (as shown elsewhere).
History 1A, 2A and Civics 2 units, embracing Ancient His-
tory and Advanced American History with Civics. They may
also take the History of England as an Elective }4 unit.
French I., II., or Greek I., II. 2 units. The one of these alterna-
LaGrange College 23
tive courses not taken may be taken as a College course later,
if desired.
Mathematics 1A, 2A, 3A, 4A 2 Y A units, embracing Advanced
Arithmetic, the completing of Algebra, and Plane Geometry
with all originals.
Science. Botany and Physiography are both offered, but the
student is allowed to omit one, if enough units for admission are
offered otherwise to make up 14. Each of the Science courses
is one unit.
Three Grades of Music with the accompanying Theory com-
pleted count as one Admission unit. Three years of Art Work
of one hour per day may count as one unit.
Of these courses every student must offer for Admission to
Freshman: Three units of English, 2^ units of Mathematics, at
least one unit of History, two units of French or Greek (though
they may be admitted as Conditioned Freshmen and make up
these two years of work), and at least three units of Latin. The
total is then brought up to 14 by the other courses.
If the student wishes to take no College Latin, all Latin Admis-
sion units are required. If she wishes to take no College His-
tors, all the High School History courses are required.
COLLEGE WORK
Recommended Courses by Classes
Freshman. Mathematics I., II. Latin I. English I. French
III. or Greek III. History I. or Pedagogy. Bible I. IS hours
per week.
Sophomore. Mathematics III., IV. Latin II. English II.
German I. or Greek I., if not already taken. Physics. Bible II.
18 hours per week.
Junior. Metaphysics. Bible III. German II. (or Greek).
English IV. or Latin III. Chemistry I. or Mathematics V. and
Astronomy. Logic. Biology or Geology 18 hours per week.
Senior. Bible IV. Chemistry I., if not already taken.
Enough Electives to make the total work for the four years
equal 2,400 hours.
X. B. The student must offer three units of English, at least
24 LaGrange College
three of Latin (3j4 if no further Latin is taken), and two units
of another Language in Admission work, and seven other cour-
ses in language in College work for graduation.
OUTLINE OF COURSES OFFERED IN 1911-12
PHILOSOPHY
College
Metaphysics. Steele's Rudimentary Ethics; Baldwin's Psy-
chology and Education; Candler's Christus Auctor. Three
hours per week, required for graduation. Taken preferably in
Junior year. President Smith.
Prerequisites: College Admission Requirements.
Logic. Creighton's Logic. Two hours a week during the Ju-
nior Year. Required for graduation. Miss Ernestine M.
Dempsey.
SCIENCE
Academy
Botany A. Field, Laboratory and Text study; Microscopical
work; Practical Herbarium work in plant analysis and classifi-
cation; the Cultivation of flower-yard plants. Admission Unit.
Four hours per week. Mrs. Jesse T. Carter.
Physiography B. Field and Laboratory course in Physical
Geography. Acquaintance with soils and common rocks and
climatic changes are studied by actual observations by the stu-
dent and recorded in note book. Text: Hopkins' Elements of
Physical Geography; Hopkins-Clark Laboratory Manual in
Physical Geography. Three hours per week for the year, with
supplemental field trips on afternoons and Mondays. An Ad-
mission unit. This course was not conducted in 1910-11, but
will be provided again for 1911-12.
College
Physics I. Millican and Gale's Physics; National Physics
Note Book. The student is given a considerable amount of La-
boratory work, which takes up about two-thirds of her time.
The Roentgen Ray and the practical utilization of electricity in
LaGrange College 25
tclie treatment of disease, with a general study of the static elec-
tric machine is given by Henry R. Slack, A. B. (Harvard),
Ph. M., M. D., at the LaGrange Sanatorium. None but well
equipped Colleges offer courses which are the equivalent of this
-course. Laboratory fee, $5,00. Required unit. Four hours
Laboratory and two hours recitation and lecture per week.
This course is preferably taken in Sophomore year. Prof.
Leon P. Smith and Miss Effie E. Etter.
Prerequisies: All Admission work.
Chemistry L Hessler-Smith: Essentials of Chemistry; Atlas
Laboratory Note Book. Four hours of laboratory work and two
hours of recitation or lecture each week. Required Unit. La-
boratory fee, $5.00. Taken in Junior or Senior year. Prof.
Leon P. Smith and Miss Hallie C. Smith.
Prerequisite: Required Admission work.
Chemistry H. Steiglitz' Qualitative Analysis. The first half
of the year will be spent in the study of methods of Qualitative
Analysis, with considerable reading matter, largely from the
Science Library, with considerable laboratory work. The second
term will be almost entirely confined to laboratory work, and
the student will be required to analyze 20 unknown compounds
and mixtures. Six hours a week. A Senior and Post-Graduate
Elective. Laboratory fee, $5.00. Prof. Leon P. Smith.
Prerequisite: Chemistry I. and Physics I.
Chemistry III. A course in Quantitative Analysis, devoted
largely to experimental work in both Volumetric and Gravime-
tric Analysis. The work will be essentially courses 8 and 9 of
the Department of Chemistry of the University of Chicago. The
course will not be open in 1911-12, as there are no applicants
probable. Post-Graduate Elective. Laboratory fee, $5.00.
Prof. Leon P. Smith.
Prerequisite: Chemistry II.
Geology. A course in Geology which embraces laboratory
and field work, with numerous collateral readings. Various
texts, largely found in the Science Library, are used for refer-
ence. The vicinity of LaGrange is rich in minerals of the crys-
talline belt. While this is an advanced course, it will be helpful
to those who may desire to teach Physical Geography. Two
26 LaG range College
hours ^a week during the Junior or Senior year. Prof. Leon P,
Smith.
Prerequisites: Chemistry I., but both may be taken at same-
time.
Biology. A course in Biology, two hours a week y taken during:
the Junior or Senior year. Either this course or the Geology
should be taken in the Junior year. The work is mainly micro-
scopical, with collateral readings from the Science Library.
Laboratory fee, $2.50. Prof. Leon P. Smith.
Prerequisites: Chemistry I., but both may be taken at the
same time.
Astronomy, Young's Elements of Astronomy. The course
will be largely mathematical, as the College is not supplied with
a satisfactory telescope for observations. Yet a general knowl-
edge of the heavenly bodies will be gained by learning the posi-
tions of the constellations, etc. Three hours a week during the
Second Term. Miss Buford J. Johnson.
ENGLISH
Academy
English 1A. A course in Grammar without admission credit,
designed for students who are deficient in the principles of
grammar. This course is not intended for elementary
students, who are not received at LaGrange College, but
for students who have, upon examination, been found lacking
in the fundamentals of English. Three hours a week. Miss
Estelle L. Jones.
English 2A. Sykes' Elementary English Composition, Spell-
ing. Parallel Readings: Hawthorne's House of Seven Gables;
Scott's Ivanhoe, episodes reproduced; Eliot's Silas Marner,
crude character sketches, and its plot indicated. Weekly com-
positions. Three hours per week. Required for Admission to
College. Miss Estelle L. Jones.
English 3A. Gardiner, Kittridge and Arnold's Composition
and Rhetoric. Parallel Reading: Shakespeare's Merchant of
Venice, plots, characters, incidents, quotations, etc.; Coleridge's
Ancient Mariner, outlined, parts memorized, and its ballad fea-
tures pointed out; Lowell's Vision of Sir Launfal; Milton's Mi-
LaGrange College 27
nor Poeins, words, figures, scansion. Three hours a week. Re-
quired for Admission to College. Miss Estelle L. Jones.
English 4A. Application of the working principles of Rheto-
ric to theme writing and standard classics. Parallel Readings:
Weber's Southern Poets; Bellamy's Twelve English Poets:
Burke's Conciliation; Carlyle.'s Essay on Burns, Two hours
per week. Required for Admission. Miss Estelle L. Jones.
Advanced English Grammar. Emerson and Bender, Modern
English, Book II. A review of Grammar from an advanced
standpoint. Students who pass this course must have a thorough
knowledge of paragraphing and punctuation. All students in
English 4A are expected to take both this and the Literature
course, paralleling it. Xo student will be admitted to College
English who is not thorough on this course or one of similar
character, taken in the last year of their High School work.
Two hours per week. Required for admission. Miss Estelle
L. Jones.
Prerequisites to English 4A: Completion of two years of text
study of Composition and Rhetoric, and at least four texts for
Parallel Reading taken in school. The identical texts named
as being used in the above classes are not insisted upon, but the
texts must be within the limits named in the Entrance Subjects
and Their Value in Units, which may be seen on previous pages.
Special English. A class intended for those whose advance-
ment in English is otherwise up to one of the courses above, but
who lack the Parallel Readings required, or have not taken
them in a manner fairly equivalent to their study in this insti-
tution. Hours adapted to student's needs. Miss Estelle L.
Jones.
College
English I. Manual of Composition and Rhetoric, Gardiner.
Kittredge and Arnold; American Literature, Pancoast; Selec-
tions from American writers studied; Elements of Literary Crit-
icism, Johnson. Weekly and monthly themes and exercises in
connection with text work. Three hours per week in the Fresh-
man year. Miss Ernestine M. Dempsey.
Prerequisite: English 4A, and a thorough knowledge of Gram-
mar, paragraphing and punctuation.
2S LaGrange College
English II. History of English Literature, Pan coast; English
Poetry 1170-1892, Manly; Selections from English Prose writers
studied critically. Monthly themes. Three hours per week in
Sophomore year. Miss Ernes-tine M. Dempsey,
Prerequisite: English I.
English III. Anglo-Saxon Grammar; Selections from Old Eng-
lish, Bright; History of the English Language, Emerson. Ta-
ken on alternate years. Two hours per week in the Junior year.
This course will not be given in 1911-12. Miss Ernestine M.
Dempsey.
Prerequisite: English I. and II., but the course may be taken
at the same time as English II,
English IV. Principles of Argumentation, Baker; Oral debates
weekly; Written debates monthly; Study of the Essay Form:
Representative Essays read and studied. Taken on alternate
years. Two hours per week in the Junior year. This course
will be given next in 1911-12. Miss Ernestine M. Dempsey.
Prerequisite: Same as English III.
English V. Study of the Narrative. "The Age of Tennyson, "
Walker; "Introduction to English Fiction/' Symonds; "Devel-
opment of the English Novel/' Cross; Critical Study of Repre-
sentative Novels; Themes in connection with study. Three
hours a week, intended primarily for Seniors and Post-Graduate
students, but open to all who have completed two College cour-
ses in English. This course, offered on alternate years, will be
open in 1911-12. Miss Ernestine M. Dempsey.
English VI. -Study of the Drama. "Elizabethan Literature,"
Saintsbury; "The Drama: Its Law and Technique," Wood-
bridge; Shakespeare: Primer, Dowden; Study of Representa-
tive Plays. Three hours a week, intended primarily for Seniors
and Post-Graduate students, but open to all who have comple-
ted two courses in College English. Offered on alternate years,
next in 1912-13. Miss Ernestine M. Dempsey.
LATIN
Academy
Latin 1A. Potter's Elementary Latin Course. The work for
the year is mainly intended to give the student a good fouuda-
LaG range College 29
tion in the paradigms. Three hours a week. Admission re-
quirement. Students should complete this course, if possible,
before entering the LaGrange College. The work is under the
charge of Miss Hallie C. Smith, but will probably be assigned
to a tutor.
Latin 2A. Potter's Elementary Latin Course reviewed and
completed, and at the same time a careful drill in Latin form,
using Caesar's Gallic War, Book I., which is completed. Three
hours a week. An Admission requirement. Miss Hallie C.
Smith.
Latin 3A. Three additional books of Caesar (the first book
already completed for entrance); Three Orations of Cicero;
D'Ooge's Latin Composition, Part I. (based on Caesar), weekly;
Allen and Greenough's Latin Grammar for reference. A re-
quired admission subject. Miss Hallie C. Smith.
Latin 4A. Three additional Orations of Cicero (three already
completed); D'Ooge's Latin Composition, Part II. (based on
Cicero) once a week; Three Books of Vergil's Aeneid; Study of
the Dactylic Hexameter; Allen and Greenough's Latin Gram-
mar. Four hours a week during the last year in the Academy.
A required admission course. Miss Hallie C. Smith.
College
Latin L Livy, Books XXI. and XXII.; Cicero de Senectute
or de Amicitia; D'Ooge's Latin Composition, Part III, once a
week. Gayley's Classic Myths. Four hours a week during the
Freshman Year. Miss Marcia L. Culver.
Prerequisite: Latin 4A. But the Latin Prose 4 A may be
taken at the same time as Latin I., and Latin Prose I. may be
taken later. A deficiency of one-fourth of a year's work in La-
tin for those entering from other High Schools will not prevent
a student from entering Latin I, though the deficiency must be
made good before Latin II is entered.
Latin II. Shorey and Kirkland's Horace's Odes, Epodes, Sa-
tires and Kpistles; Lyric Metres of Horace; D'Ooge's Latin
Prose Composition, Part III, for 1911-12, but omitted thereafter,
as this course has been placed in Latin I. Three hours a week.
Sophomore. Miss Marcia L. Culver.
30 LaGrange College
Prerequisite: Latin I., but the Prose of Latin I. may be taken
in this year, and a shortage of not more than one-fourth of a
year's work in text matter may be made good later.
Latin HI. Tacitus's Germania or Agricola; Terence's Phor-
mio; Plautus' Captivi; Mackail's Latin Literature; Sight Read-
ing based upon more elementary texts. A Junior Elective,
three hours a week. Miss Marcia L. Culver.
Prerequisite: Latin II.
German I. Collar's First Year German; Thomas' Practical
German Grammar; Elementary and Intermediate Standard Ger-
man Texts; Poetry Memorized. Three hours a week, prefera-
bly during the Sophomore Year. Miss Hallie C. Smith.
Prerequisite: Full admission work.
German II. Thomas' German Grammar; Bernhardt's German
Composition; Teusler's Outlines of German Literature. Read-
ing: Lessing's Minna von Barnhelm; Schiller's Wilhelm Tell;
Schiller's Das Lied von der Glocke; Goethe's Hermann and Do-
rothea; Sight Reading. German Conversation. Three hours a
week, preferably during the Junior Year. Miss Margaret
E. SllEPARD.
Prerequisite: German I. or its equivalent. (Two years of
High School German usually cover about the work of German I.)
A small deficiency in the text matter of German I. may be rem-
edied privately. The class of 1910-11 in German I. read Car-
men Sylva's Aus Meinem Koenigreich, Huss' German Reader,
and one other text.
FRENCH
Academy
French I. Aldrich and Foster's French Grammar; from the
beginning training in conversation; abundant written exercises;
memorizing French poetry; at least 200 pages of elementary text
matter selected from Musset, Daudet, Guerber and one comedy
from from Labiche and Martin. Three hours a week. An ad-
mission unit, unless Greek or other modern language is offered.
Miss Marcia L. Culver.
Prerequisite: At least four admission units must be completed.
French II. Study of the works selected from Dumas, Hugo.
LaGrange College 31
Loti, Gautier, Lainartine; work conducted largely in French;
original theme writing; French Prose Composition based on the
text read. Three hours a week. An admission unit, unless
other languages are offered. Miss Marcia L. Culver.
Prerequisite: French I. or its equivalent. If students lack
only a small amount of text matter, they may be admitted and
make the shortage good later for full credit on French I.
College
French ID. Canfield's Lyrics; French Versification; texts se-
lected from Racine, Corneille, Moliere; Composition, including
essays on literary subjects. Class conducted largely in French.
Four hours per week, preferably in Freshman year. Miss Mar-
cia L. Culver.
Prerequisite: French II.
BIBLE AND MISSIONS
College
Bible I. Steele's Bible Outlines, Part I. One hour per week,
taken preferably in the Freshman year. Miss Maidee Smith.
Bible II. Outlines, Part II. One hour per week, taken pref-
erably in the Sophomore year. Miss Maidee Smith.
Bible III. Outlines, Part III. One hour per week, taken
preferably in the Junior year. Miss Maidee Smith.
Bible IV. Outlines, Part IV. One hour per week. Presi-
dent Rufus W. Smith.
Missions. A course of study in the Rise and Development of
Modern Missions. This course is intended for mature College
students. It had not been fully outlined at the time of the issu-
ance of the Catalogue. The present purpose is to take Turkey
as a field of study next year, and to so vary the courses that a
student may take it in successive years without covering the
same work. Two hours a week with Elective credit. Miss
Maidee Smith.
GREEK
Academy
Greek I. White's First Greek Book; Translation of easy prose
based upon Xenophon's Anabasis. Three hours a week. An
32 LaGrange College
admission unit, unless French is offered in its place. Miss
Maidee Smith.
Greek II. The first four books of Xenophon's Anabasis;
Greek Prose Composition. Three hours a week. An admission
unit, unless French II is offered. Miss Maidee Smith.
College
Greek III. The first three books of Homer's Iliad (omitting
II, 494 end); the Homeric constructions, forms and prosody;
Sight translation; Prose Composition. Freshman year, unless
French takes its place. Three hours a week. Miss Maidee
Smith.
Prerequisite: Greek II.
MATEHMATICS
Academy
Mathematics 1A. Largely private and special work under the
direction of a teacher to complete portions of Arithmetic, for
students who are found to be defective in the basal principles.
Three hours a week. Miss Effie E. Etter.
Mathematics 2A. Wells' Algebra for Secondary Schools com-
pleted to Quadratics. Four hours per week. Miss Effie E.
Etter.
Prerequisite: Arithmetic completed.
Mathematics 3A. Wells' Algebra completed, Quadratic Equa-
tion, Binomial Theorem and Progressions. Completed in the
First Term.
Second Term: Stone-Millis Commercial Arithmetic. This
course will be required of all who have completed Arithmetic
and yet are unable to make 80 on Arithmetic examination. The
full unit is conducted three hours per week for the entire year.
Miss Effie E. Etter.
Prerequisite: Mathematics 2A.
Mathematics 4A. Wells' New Plane Geometry with all origi-
nals. Four hours per week. An admission unit required.
Miss Effie E. Etter.
Prerequisite: Mathematics 3A, but the two courses may be
taken in the same year.
LaG range College 33
Special Mathematics 4A. Deficiencies in Plane Geometry, espe-
cially in failure to complete all the originals. Two hours a week.
Miss Effie E. Ktter.
College
Mathematics I. Wells' Xew Solid Geometry, completed, with
original work. Four hours a week during the First Term of
the Freshman year, required for graduation. Miss Buford J.
Johnson.
Prerequisite: Mathematics 4 A with all originals of that course,
though the student may make up a small part of the originals
with a special class at the same time.
Mathematics II. Phillips and Strong's Trigonometry. Course
is begun in the Second Term of the Freshman year and recites
four hours a week. Required for graduation. Miss Buford J.
Johnson.
Prerequisite: Mathematics I.
Mathematics III. Hawkes' Advanced Algebra. Three hours a
week during the First Term of the Sophomore year. Required
for graduation. Miss Buford J. Johnson.
Prerequisite: Mathematics II. and an examination on Quad-
ratics and the general principles of High School Algebra, such
as is given in Mathematics 2A and 3A.
Mathematics IV. Smith and Gale's Analytical Geometry.
Three hours a week. Second Term of Sophomore year. Re-
quired. Miss Buford J. Johnson.
Prerequisite: Mathematics III.
Mathematics V. Osborne's Differential and Integral Calculus.
Three hours a week during the First Term. For Juniors and
Seniors. Students who take this course can conveniently take
Astronomy during the Second Term. (See Science). Miss
Bl'ford J. Johnson.
Prerequisite: Mathematics IV.
HISTORY
Academy
History 1A. Myers' Ancient History, Revised: Ivanhoe Xote
Book. Library work and the writing of topics: Collateral read-
34 LaGrange College
ing selected from such works as Lew Wallace's Ben Hur, Plu-
tarch's Lives, The Last Days of Pompeii, Stoddard's Lecture on
Rome, Kinsley's Hypathia. Three hours per week for the year.
Required admission unit. Miss Margaret E. Shepard.
Prerequisite: The completion of a Grammar School text on
United States History, such as Field's.
History 2A. General review of the entire period of American
History with special attention to the Continental Congress, the
Confederation, the making of the Constitution and growth of
political parties. Text: Montgomery's Students' American His-
tory; Hart's Source Book; Ivanhoe Note Book; Library refer-
ence work and the writing of topics. In connection with this
course Boynton's Civics; the American Federal State; Note
books kept containing written topics and reports on readings.
Three hours a week during the entire year. A required admis-
sion unit, but may be taken by Freshmen who enter conditioned.
Miss Margaret E. Shepard.
Prerequisite: History 1A.
History 3A. Walker's Essentials in English History; Ken-
dall's Source Book. Parallel Readings: Stoddard's Lecture on
London; Ireland; Scotland; Dickens' Tale of Two Cities; Bul-
wer-Lytton's Harold, the Last of the Saxon Kings; Yonge's
Prince and Page; Green's Legends of King Arthur and His
Court. Two hours a week. An Elective unit for admission to
College. This course will be required of those who may wish a
Certificate in History. Miss Margaret E. Shepard.
College
History I. Robinson's History of Western Europe; Robinson's
Readings in European History; Ivanhoe Note Book; Collateral
Reading; Selections from such works as Stoddard's Lecture on
Paris; on Berlin; Hodgkin's Charlemagne; Abbot's Cromwell;
Carlyle's Frederick the Great; Yonge's Marie Antoinette; Muhl-
bach's The Merchant of Berlin; Dickens' Tale of Two Cities.
Three hours a week. Freshman. Pedagogy may be taken in
place of this course. Miss Margaret E. Shepard.
Prerequisite: History 2A.
History II. Judson's Europe in the Nineteenth Century:
French History. Parallel Reading: Stoddard's Lecture on Pa-
LaGrange College 35
ris; Bartlett's Joan of Arc; Abbot's Napoleon; Yonge's Marie
Antoinette; Abbot's Madam Roland. Two hours a week. Open
to Juniors, Seniors and Post-Graduate students, as an Elective.
Miss Margaret E. Shepard.
Prerequisite: History I., though they may be taken simulta-
neously.
PEDAGOGY
College
The Theory and Practice of Teaching. A normal course for
those who desire to teach. Page's Theory and Practice of
Teaching (Branson); Roark's Method in Education; Froebel's
Education of Man; Hodge's Nature Study; Uinsmore's Teach-
ing of a District School; Dutton's School Management. Dis-
cussion of educational themes; review work in methods of teach-
ing common school branches. Four hours a week. An Elec-
tive, but may taken in place of History I. in the Preshinan Year
as a required course. Miss Buford J. Johnson.
Prerequisite: The student should be as advanced as a Condi-
tioned Freshman or be quite mature to make proper progress in
this course.
MUSIC
For a full account of the courses in Music, see February Bul-
letin, which will be sent on request. It has been sent already,
unless omitted by oversight.
Academy
The completion of the First and Second Grade of Theory, the
Third Grade in Piano and Voice Culture, and one year of Sight-
singing will entitle the student to a credit of one unit of Elec-
tive Admission work for entrance to the Freshman Class.
Two years of Sight-singing alone will give a credit of one-
fourth unit in High School work. Aiwvx M. SMITH, Director
of the Department.
College
The completion of a course in Music so that a Certificate is
granted will entitle the student to 144 hours of College credit
toward a degree.
36 LaGrange College
The completion of a course in Music so that a Diploma in
Music is granted will entitle the student to 2S8 hours of College
credit. Alwyn M. Smith, Director.
In the February Bulletin, under Fourth Grade Piano, "Kul-
lak's Octave Studies," Book II. should be "Book I."
The sixth year's work in Piano was unintentionally omitted
from the course in the February Bulletin, and is inserted here:
Sixth Grade
Tausig-Ehrlich's Exercises. Chopin, op. 10, 25. Bach's Suite
Anglaise. Reinecke, op. 121, Bk. II., III. Mendelssohn,
op. 104. Concertos of Hummel, Weber, Schumann, Field.
Pieces by Raff, Jensen, Moszkowski, Weber, Schumann,
Grieg, Liszt, Chopin. (Any of above studies may be omit-
ted or changed at teacher's discretion.)
ART
For a full account of the courses in Art, see the February
Bulletin, which will be sent upon request.
Academy
The completion of the systematic course in Art through the
Third Grade will entitle the student to an Admission unit for en-
trance to Freshman in the place of an admission elective.
The completion of two years of work in Free- II and Drawing-
will entitle the student to a High School credit of one-fourth
unit. Miss Rachella Killinger, Instructor.
College
The completion of a course in Art so as to receive a Certifi-
cate will give 120 hours of College credit.
The completion of a course so as to receive a Diploma in Art
will give an additional credit of 144 hours. Miss Rachella
Killinger, Instructor.
Note. Not over 288 hours will be allowed as elective credits
for both Music and Art, as the Educational Commission does not
permit over a definite amount of credit for these courses.
LaGrange College 37
DEPARTMENT OF EXPRESSION AND
PHYSICAL CULTURE
This department is in charge of Miss Jane Allison, a graduate
of the Curry School of Expression, Boston. In Physical Cul-
ture she will have during the next session an assistant.
EXPRESSION
When the course is taken by small groups of three, four or
five, the cost is $20.00 per year. Students do not make as rapid
progress in this less expensive way, but it is often a better
method for young students. This is called Class Expression.
When taken individually or in private, it is called Special
Expression, and mature students may usually expect to finish
one grade in one session. This method costs $50.00 per year.
Course of Study in Expression
The Department of Expression seeks to awaken the student
to the highest possibilities of soul, mind and body. The stu-
dent's imagination is aroused and her conception of herself and
her work is deepened and widened by the study of art. and the
awakening of her artistic ideals. Attention is given to the
harmonious training of voice, mind and body, stimulating the
cause of mental action, and training the means, voice and body,
to spontaneously respond to the conceptions of the mind and the
emotions of the soul.
First Year
Qualities of Voice; Speech and Articulation: Pantomimic
problems; Sight reading; Conversation; Vocal Expression; Lyric
and Narrative studies; Recitations from the best literature;
Harmonic Gymnastics; Normal adjustment. Text-books: Cur-
ry's Mind and Voice, from Part I to IV.
Second Year
Vocal training, elements of speech, vowels and consonants:
Pantomimic problems; Development of Imagination; Literature,
the Drama and studies from Shakespeare and other standard
writers; Study of comedy; Selections; Harmonic Gymnastics;
38 LaGraxge College
Poise. Text-books: Curry's Lessons in Vocal Expression;
Curry's Mind and Voice, from Part IV to VII.
Third Year
Advanced principles of Vocal Training - and Vocal Expression;
Pantomimic problems; Shakespeare; Bible reading; Extem-
poraneous speaking; Original work in arranging short stories
and dramas for platform use; Advanced Study of Lyric and
Epic poetry; Dramatic scenes; Monologues; Text-books: Cur-
ry's Imagination and the Dramatic Instinct; Curry's Mind and
Voice, from Part VII to the end of the text.
Elective Credit
A credit of 72 hours is allowed for each Grade of work com-
pleted. Hence a graduate in Expression is allowed 216 hours
of credit in Expression. This may be counted as a language.
Recitals
Recitals are given in connection with the recitals of the
Music Department every two weeks throughout the year, and
are under the charge of the Director of Music.
Certificates and Diplomas
Candidates for Certificates in Expression must spend at least
one year in the institution, must offer all the work required for
admission to the Freshman Class, English I, II, and one other
course in English, and the Second Year's work in Expression
completed, and must give a public recital of four numbers.
Candidates for Diplomas must present all the foregoing work,
including the Certificate recital, and must complete one addi-
tional course in English, and the Third Year's course in Ex-
pression, and must give a public recital of four numbers. The
recital for Certificate and for Diploma must be given in different
years.
Physical Culture
A course in Harmonic Gymnastics is given to all students,
who are not specially excused by the President.
The new Gymnasium Hall is completed, but as yet is but
poorly provided with apparatus. At the time of the issuance of
this number of the College Bulletin, definite announcements are
LaGrange College 39
impossible. It is hoped that the 1 1 all may be splendidly equipp-
ed with apparatus before the beginning of the next session. It
will be one of the largest Gymnasiums of any Woman's College
in the South, When fully equipped.
The Gymnasium contains lockers, apparatus storage room,
inspector's private office, gymnasium hall proper, which is fifty
by seventy feet is size, and, immediately connecting with it,
several rooms for shower and stream baths, and a swimming
pool which will hold .30,000 gallons of water.
Xew tennis courts and a basket ball ground will be laid off
this summer immediately adjacent to the Gymnasium, which will
be under the charge of the Director of Gymnastic Training. An
assistant will be provided, and all students will be given some
form of exercise, as far as possible congenial to their tastes and
abilities.
Near the College are the Ferrell Gardens and the McLendon
Park. The latter has a large artificial lake and is provided
with boats. Students will be taken to walk under suitable es-
cort, to these and other places. Students in Botany, Physio-
graphy and Geology will make wider excursions under the guid-
ance of their instructors.
It is planned to make the exercise feature of the College of
greater importance and interest next session than has ever been
the case before.
CERTIFICATES AND DIPLOMAS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS
A certificate will be granted upon the completion of the work
specified in any one of the following departments.
Academic Department (offering the required 14 units). This
is equivalent to the High School Certificates in the accredit-
ed schools.
Science, requiring Botany, Physiography, Physics, Chemistry,
I, II, Biology and Geology Tor Chemistry III in place of
Biology and Geology).
Metaphysics, requiring the Metaphysics courses proper, Logic,
Bible, and the course in Missionary studies.
English, requiring four College courses in English.
Latin, completing the entire course.
40 LaGrange College
German and French, when both courses are entirely completed.
Greek and French, or Greek and German, all courses com-
pleted.
Mathematics, all courses through Mathematics V.
History, all courses completed.
Pedagogy, including all High School courses for admission,
History I, Bible courses, English I., Mathematics I. and
II., and the course in Pedagogy proper, with Sight-singing
and Free Hand Drawing for one year.
Music. Certificates in Piano, Voice Culture, Organ, with the
allied courses in Harmony, etc., for which see the February
Bulletin.
Art. For Certificates in this Department see February Bulletin.
Expression. The work for Certificate in Expression may be
seen in connection with the Course of Study in that Departmant.
General Literary. A Certificate will be granted upon the com-
pletion of all the High School work and 1,200 hours of College
work (that is, one-half of the College course).
These certificates do not indicate graduation, but are to give
the student some credit for for a distinct amount of work done.
Many students are prevented from completing courses leading
to diplomas, and are altogether deprived of any formal certifi-
cate for what they have done but for these.
DIPLOMAS
The following Diplomas, for which the courses are shown in
the proper places, are granted by the LaGrange College: A. B.
Degree, Piano, Voice Culture, Art, and Expression Diplomas.
The Master of Arts (A. M.) degree will be granted upon the
completion of five courses of study in College work not already
taken by the student, provided the student offered 14 units for
admission to College. In case of those who offered in 12 units,
six additional courses will be required subsequent to A. B.
Degree.
LaGrange College -*i
ALUMNAE
PLEASE inform us concerning marriages, deaths, omitted alum-
nae, or any errors in the names below. Information con-
cerning addresses, occupations, etc., will he thankfully re-
ceived. If married, state husband's name, title and ad-
dress. Send us catalogues issued prior to 1886. Deceased
alumnae are indicated thus ;: .
1846
Maiden Name Married Name Maiden Name Married Name
Elizabeth L. Burk* Sarah T. Cameron Mrs. Hill*
Sarah B. Cameron Mrs. Swanson*
1847
Adelaide E. Bigham* Sarah C. Morgan Mrs. Barber
Sarah II. Cooper Mrs. Newton Ophelia A. Osborne Mrs. Weeks
Tabitha E. Hill Mrs. Howard* Susan J. Presley Mrs. Buneley
Martha R. Hill Mrs. Potts* Mary A. Saunders*
Rebecca V. Marshall*
1848
Mary A. Broughton Mrs. Montgomery* Frances J. Greenwood Mrs. Perry*
Eliza J. Bryan Mrs. Martin Sarah J. Kidd Mrs. Camp 4
Amarintha C. Cameron__Mrs. Gibson* Sarah E. King Mrs. Rice*
S .rail Clayton Mrs. Jeter Pauline Lewis Mrs. Abererombie*
Catharine P. Dozier Mrs. Willis Elizabeth Parham Mrs. Tigner*
Jane B. Gilbert Mrs.
1849
Josephine H. Akin Mrs. Tatum* Mary P. Griggs Mrs. Neal*
Georgia C Bigham Mrs. Williams Susan A. Maddox Mrs. Johnson
rietta Broome* Nancy Meaders Mrs. Leak*
Sophronia S. Campbell__Mrs. Ferrell Acadia E. Mitchell Mrs. Dowell
Dorothy II. Chappel__Mrs. Matthews* Ann E. Pitts Mrs. Dozier
Amanda A. Dubose Mrs. Ivey Elizabeth A. Stinson Mrs. Radcliff*
Frances A. Favor Mrs. Goldsmith Mary A. Thompson*
1850
Frances E. Broughton Mrs. Long* Martha F. Harvey Mrs. Harper
Antoinette P. Burke Mrs. Gartrell* Ann E. McGeheel Mrs. Akers*
Martha E. Dixon Mrs. Glanton* Susan M. Meadors Mrs. Brown*
Isabella E. Douglass Mrs. Amoss Sarah C. Newton Mrs. Dozier
Narcissa W. Douglass Mrs. Bailey Cordelia A. Redding Mrs. Jones
Rebecca G. Forbes* Rebecca A. Slaton Mrs. Nicholson
Margaret A. Gilliam Mrs. Goodman Caroline S. Stevens Mrs. Banks
Mary E. Griffin Mrs. McGehee Catharine C. Stinson Mrs. Neal
Sarah C Griggs Mrs. Long Helen A. Tate Mrs. Mitchell
1851
Mary C. Alford Mrs. Hoard Mar/ M i
Tallulah Carter Mrs. Wells* Susan W. Douglass Mrs. Gunn
J. Cox Mrs. Kener Mary E. Drak" Mrs. P).
Ann Davis Mrs. Mary Graves Mrs. !- !
Jane A. Davis Mrs. Weston
1852
I. C. Hampton Mrs. Davis Ann Reid
Sarah Harris Mrs. Lockhart' Mary P. Reid*.
S. Celestia Hill Mrs. Means Rebecca A. Rutledge Mrs
42
LaGrange College
[1852 continued]
Susan McGehee Mrs. Hampton Roxana Sharp Mrs. Jones
Jane Newton Mrs. Hall Catherine Spicer Mrs.
Eliza J. Kidd ,,-Mrs. Lane*
1853
Lorine C. Acee Mrs. Smith
Sarah A. Avers Mrs. Potts*
Alberta V. Amoss Mrs. Heard*
Isabella Baldrick*
Louisa Bryan*
Anna Calhoun Mrs. Martin
Emma Cameron Mrs. Leonard*
Sarah B. Cameron Mrs. Waters*
Ellen Cline Mrs. Gaffney*
Catherine Colman
Mary Eliza Colquitt Mrs. Dix*
Caroline Craven Mrs. Sappington*
E. S. Edmondson Mrs. Maffel
Mary Fall
Sancy Hall Mrs. Hall
Missouri Jones Mrs.
Mary Lee Mrs.
Mary Loyd Mrs. Bradfield
Elizabeth Pace Mrs.
Marietta Peeples*
Susan Presley Mrs. Pearson
Harriet Spivey Mrs. Marcus*
Caroline Ware Mrs. Gay
Mary Whitfield Mrs. Boyd
1854
Sarah M. Barnes Mrs. Burney
Mary Colquitt Mrs. Green
Ann E. Cooper
Margaret Cunningham Mrs. Smith*
Amanda Edmondson Mrs. Newton
Harriet Edmondson Mrs. Anderson
Prances H. Harris Mrs. Kimball*
Mary A. King Mrs. Scott
Florida C. Key Mrs. Ward
Mary M. McKemie Mrs. Craven
T;ucy A. Morrow Mrs. Smith
Susan Newton Mrs. Bennett
Lucy Pace Mrs. Scaife
George Patrick Mrs. Allen
Missouri Pitts
Sarah F. Reed Mrs. Grant
Susan Skeen
Sarah O. Smith Mrs. Wilson*
Sarah .T. Stembridge Mrs. Herring*
Mary Stevens Mrs. Cary
R. T. Taliaferro
Cornelia Tyler
Mary Yancey Mrs. Young*
1855
Letitia J". Austell
Martha A. Coghill
Sarah .1. Dawkins Mrs. Pace
Virginia E. Edmondson Mrs. Field
Margaret E. Griffin
Sarah J. Harris
Mary H. Holland
Melissa N. Lancy
Phoebe G. Mabry*
Henrietta B. McBain, Mrs. Kimbrough
Margaret K. McDowell
1856
Melissa A. Appleby Mrs. McCraw
Martha F. Blackburn Mrs. Judge
Laura E. Cameron Mrs. Kirby*
Martha C. Carter Mrs. Weaver*
Sallie Craig
Lizzie W. Cunningham
Elizabeth A. DeLoach
Ellen B. DeLoach
M. J. Edward Mrs. Thompson
Louise D. Ellis Mrs. Herring
Susan E. Harrell Mrs. Smith
Anna M. Haynes Mrs. Renwick
Camilla P. Meadors
Margaret A. Moone Mrs. Ezzell
Blanche Morgan Mrs. Johnson
Mary E. Redwine
Sarah W. Reese Mrs. Lovelace
Kate I. Selleck Mrs. Edmondson*
Eliza O. Shepherd Mrs. Morgan
Mary F. Steagall Mrs. Dent
Susan E. Tooke*
Emma J. Tucker
Sarah E. Ward Mrs. Davidson
Nancy C. Hill Mrs. Morgan
Harriet N. Lipscomb Mrs. Kirby*
Martha P. McKemie Mrs. Craven
Anna H. Meadows
S. Indiana Pitts Mrs. Stowe
Mary A. Powell
Rebecca O. Powell
Sophia L. Saunders
Frances C. Tennison
Mary C. Tyler Mrs. Bynum
Philo Ware Mrs. Witherspoon
Margaret E. Alford Mrs
Frances Andrews
Mary Y. Atkinson Mrs. Mallory
S. A. Cameron Mrs. Colbert
Mary C. Cole*
Laura A. Garlington Mrs.
Susan V. Harrell Mrs. Mayberry
Addie R. Powell
Hattie A. Schumate
*Deceased.
1857
Heard G. A. Baldrick*
Mittie E. Berry Mrs. Oglesby
Haddessa Byrd Mrs. Traywick
Elizabeth Smith Mrs. Smith
Anna Steagall Mrs.
Mary J. Stinson Mrs. Tigner
Anna E. Swanson Mrs. Swanson
Martha Tooke
Fannie A. Ward Mrs. Johnson
L
LaGraxge College
4:>
1858
Georgia Bonner Mrs. Terrell*
Lvdia H. Brown Mrs.
Sallie Bull Mrs. Park-
W. H. Clayton
Julia A. Cooper Mrs. Van Bpps
Margaret A. Cox Mrs. Tuggle
Rebecca G. Crowder Mrs. Boddie
I. F. Gordon
1859
Mary L. Akers*
Susan E. Bass
Martha E. Beall Mrs. Ridley
Hattie Carlton Mrs. Dozier*
Mary J. Carlton
Alice R. Culler Mrs. Cobb
Fletcher Hardin Mrs. Flournoy
C. McKemie Mrs. Craven
Sue C. Means Mrs. Griffin*
A. Moreland Mrs. Speer*
Anna Morgan Mrs. Flournoy
R. M. Moss Mrs. Moss*
1860
Emma L. Bostick Mrs. Edmondson
M. Abbie Callaway
Claude V. Carlton
Eliza J. Cox Mrs. Akers
Mary E. Evans Mrs. Edwards*
F. C. Fleming Mrs. Dixon
E. Cornelia Forbes__Mrs. Waltermire
Augusta M. Hill Mrs. Thompson*
Fannie Jeter
M. Fannie Johnson Mrs. McLaw
N. A. Johnson Mrs. Maddox
Lizzie S. Laney
Janie M. Laney
1861
Lavina A. Bird Mrs. Craig*
Julia C. Bohannon Mrs. Witter*
George A. Broughton Mrs. Hayes
Cordelia C. Cooper Mrs. Fields
F.W& M. Cunningham Mrs. Smith
Frances M. Douglass Mrs. Lowe
Mollie J. Hunnicutt Mrs. Turner*
C. M. Ledbetter Mrs. Ellis*
Lucy M. Lipscomb Mrs. Harwell
Levecie G. Maddox Mrs. Kendrick
1862
Mary A. Baldrick
Frances A. Bass
Fletcher Birch
Yandalia E. Boddie*
Lizzie Burge
Anna E. Evins Mrs. Wisdom*
Mattie Field
Lucy A. Fleming
Bettie Howell Mrs. Bailey
Sallie A. Knight Mrs.
Sallie A. Little Mrs. Williams
Anna Lyon
C. P. McGehee*
Kate O. Merritt Mrs. Joiner
Mary Mooney
Lnu O'Neal
A. S. Greenwood Mrs. Slatter*
E. A. Hamilton
Mary A. E. Hamilton
Mary J. Hamilton
A. C. Hanks Mrs.
Mary C. Reese
May E. Speer Mrs. Winship*
Bettie Nelson
M. R. Pullen Mrs. Russell*
Mary Shepherd Mrs. Kirksey
Mattie B. Shepherd Mrs. Russell
Aley Smith Mrs. Boddie
Carrie Stinson Mrs. Ogletree*
Achsah Turner Mrs. Marsh
Ophelia Wilkes Mrs. Tumlin"
Tinsle Winston Mrs. Winston*
Sarah W<;m;:ck Mrs.
R. K. Woodward Mrs. Harris*
Alice Ledbetter Mrs. Revill
S. Cornelia LoVejoy
Mollie J. Miller Mrs. Mooty
Fredonia Raiford Mrs. McFarlin
Aline E. Reese Mrs. Blondner
Polly Robinson Mrs. Hammond
Edna M. Rush Mrs. Callahan
Sallie Sanges Mrs. Mullins
Laura J. Sassnett Mrs. Branham*
Sallie Shepherd Mrs. Shorter
Mollie J. Smith
Sallie Talley
Isabelle C. Winfrey
Nuda M. Ousley
Emma J. Page Mrs. Hunnicutt*
Ellen R. Pattillo Mrs. Callaway
E. C. Phillips Mrs. Jelks
L. C. Pullen Mrs. Morris
Charlotte E. Reid Mrs. Ware
Genie Reid Mrs. Cameron*
M. A. Story Mrs. McDonald
S. Elniira Wilkes Mrs. Shuttles
Emma C. Yancey Mrs. Bryant*
Mary F. Gilmer
Lizzie Goodwin Mrs. Cotton
Jennie Goodwin Mrs. Baik-y
Rebecca Harrison Mrs. Bookhart
Mary A. Havnes
Eliza Hill
Georgia Hodnett Mrs. Ward
Susan A. Hogg Mrs. Davidson*
Kransillian Owens Mrs. Tafft*
Clara O. Packard
Fletcher Pitts Mrs. Marshal'.
Mattie D. Pitts Mrs. Harris
Mattie O. Taylor Mrs. Wright
Mollie White
Mattie E. Wimbish Mrs. Abraham*
44 LaG range College
1863
Addie Bull Mrs. Tomlinson Annie Martin Mrs. Freeman
Kattie E. Callaway* Belle McCain
Lizzie Leslie Geraldine D. Moreland Mrs. Speer
Sallie Leslie Mrs. Beasley Anna Turner
Mattie Marshall Mrs. Turner
1864
Eliza Akers Mrs. Bowden Mary E. Curtright Mrs. Rakestraw
Ella Broughton Fannie Hall Mrs. Caudle
Ida Burk Mrs. Hay* Nora Owens Mrs. Smith
Mary Cunningham Fannie Pullen Mrs. Amis
1865
Kate Beall Mrs. Hornady Achsah Maddox. Mrs. Pace
Alice Bryant Mrs. Willis
1871
Janie Barber Mrs. Truitt Lula Culberson Mrs. McCoy
Xannie Callaway Mrs. Wylie* Mary Hill Mrs. Ficklin
1872
Mattie Strother Mrs. Barksdale
1873
Sallie Cotter Mrs. Reeves Willie Pitman Mrs. Bradfield*
Anna C. Curtright Mrs. McClure Mary L. Poythress Mrs. Barnard*
Carrie Pitman Mrs. Truitt*
1874
Maria O. Bass J. Lulu Ward
Dora Boykin Mrs. Maffet Maggie Whitaker Mrs. Foote
Mollie Belle Evans Mrs. Seals* Addie O. Wimbish Mrs. Anthony
Sallie Lou Haralson Mrs. Cobb
1876
Aldora Gaulding Mrs. Thomasson Jennie McFail Mrs. Warlirk
1877
Mary Alford Mrs. Hogg Emma Palmer Mrs. Williams*
Julia Connally Mrs. Rosser Clodissa Richardson Mrs. Connally
Annie Crusselle Mrs. Vaughan
1878
Lizzie Baugh Mrs. McDonald* Mattie T. McGehee Mrs. Park
Sallie F. Boykin Mrs. Cary Ola M. Simmons Mrs. Simmons
F. Virgie Buice Mrs. Morley Lizzie A. Traylor
Leila Hudson
1879
Lula Jones Fannie White Mrs. Clay
Mattie Traylor Mrs. Northen Sallie Williams Mrs. Reid
1880
Jennie M. Atkinson. Mission' y to China Ida Lee Emory Mrs. Trammell
Mattie Cook Mrs. Zellars Hattie Handley Mrs. Reade
Sallie Dowman Myrtle McFarlin Mrs. Russell
Fannie Dowman Mrs. Zuber Emma Stipe Mrs. Walker
1881
Lula A. Brannon Mrs. Knapp Augusta Vaughan Mrs. Matthews
Stella Burns Etta Vaughan Mrs. Fitzpatrick
Ella L. Crusselle Mrs. Baker Lula Walker Mrs. Ware
Mattie E. Driver Mrs. Smith* Loulie Watkins Mrs. Overstreet
Myrtle Gates Mrs. Smith Mollie R. Whitaker Mrs. Matthews
E. Baxter Mabry Mrs. Brooks
*Deceased.
LaGrange College
45
1882
Alice B. Boykin Mrs. McLendon Mary Fannie Turner
Li'.y Howard Mrs. McLarin Bertha Walker Mrs. Furher
Lla Palmer Mrs. McDonald Irene Ward Mrs. Lupo*
Mollie E. Stipe Mrs. Walker
1883
Helen Baldwin
Carrie D. Ballard Mrs. Sasser
Annie Bradley Mrs. Park*
May Candler Mrs. Winchester
Susie Candler
Ginevra Cholson Mrs. Cantrell
Carobel Heidt Mrs. Calhoun
Maude Howell Mrs. Brook
Carrie Parks Mrs. Johnson
Nellie Revill Mrs. O'Hara
Effie Thompson Mrs. Smith
Janie Wadsworth Mrs. Irvine
Lilarette Young Mrs. Matthews
1884
Beulah B. Arnold Mrs. Pringle
Ellen E. Barry Mrs. Carney*
Mary G. Broome Mrs. Gresham
Mary L. Revill Mrs. Atkinson
Eugenia A. Simms Mrs. Redwine
Mamie Spears Mrs. Wicker
A. S. Wadsworth Mrs. Copeland
Mary Lizzie Wright Mrs. Stevens
1885
Pauline E. Arnold Mrs. Wright
J. Bessie Barnettf Mrs.
Emma F. Bullard Mrs. Smith
Katie D. Cooper Mrs. Culpepper
A. Ethel Johnson! Mrs. Puckett
Daisy Knight Mrs. Abercrombie
Lollie E. Lewis Mrs. Harris
Olivia V. Macy Mrs. Crusselle*
Mattie May Morgan Mrs. Johnson
Mollie C. Simms Mrs. Ward
Annie K. Worley Mrs. Kimbrongh
Persia Wright! Mrs. Thomason
1886
Emma Barrett Mrs. Black
Willie Burns Mrs. Davies*
Mary Lou Dansby
Lizzie L. Dyer Mrs. Duke
Lucy L. Evans Mrs. Banks
Bessie Jackson Mrs. Boyd
Mattie Magruder Mrs. Amnions
Willie Miller Mrs. Cook
Mary Ruth Mixon Mrs. Dobbs
1887
Lssie G. Burnett
Glenn Camp Mrs. Carpenter
Annie L. Cole Mrs. Wolf
J. Winona Cotter
Lucy A. Heard Mrs. Jones*
Bertha V. Henry Mrs. Thomas
Susie H. Jarrell
K. May Johnson? Mrs. Harmon
Blanche McFarlin .Mrs. Gaffney
Maude McFarlin Mrs. White
Jessie Pitman! Mrs. Sutton
Xelie Smith Mrs. Dorsey
Belle Poer
Leman Poer Mrs. Lanier*
Ida B. Smith Mrs. Gay
Bunnie Trimble Mrs. Johnson
Ella Walker*
Minnie Ware Mrs. Woodyard
Clara L. Meriwether Mrs. McM.
Amy Moss
Lillian 0. Ridenhour Mrs.
Maidee Smith
Mary K. Strozier Mrs. Bar
Jimmie Lou Thompson__Mrs. Goodrum
Maude S. Tompkins Mrs. Perry
Carrie Y. Williams Mrs. Baker
Annie Wilson
Ora Wing Mrs. West
1888
Lizzie I. Arnold!
Dora H. Beckman Mrs. Schwettman
Lou G. Camp Mrs. Brannon
M. Jennie Cooper Mrs. Mabry
Fannie Covin Mrs. Shirah
Minnie L. Crawford Mrs. Jenkins*
P<arl Crawford Mrs. Maddox
Ollie Ellis Mrs. Trippe
M. Jennie Evans Mrs. Bradfield
Mamie H. Hardwick Mrs. Purvis
Lillie Jarrell Mrs. McClenny
N. Grace Johnson Mrs. Twyman
Fannie Bet Jones Mrs. Quillian
Cecile Longino
Annie M. Moate Mrs. Scott*
Minnie Moore Mrs. Lithgoe
S. Lizzie Parks Mrs. Bettert<>n
Maude M. Scroggins! Mrs. Dent
Lillie Sullivan
A. Lois Turner Mrs. Wilcox
Maggie Van Zandt! Mrs. Scott
Ruby Ware! Mrs. Searcy^
Pearl White Mrs. Barnes
Lallie A. Witherspoon Mrs. Johnson
1889
Annie H. Chambliss Mrs. Wooley
L. Abbie Chambliss
L. Dora Cline*
C. Lillian Moate Mrs. Rives
Julia P. Moate
Bettie D. Parker Mrs. Davenport
46
LaGrange College
[1889 continued]
Lula Dickerson? Mrs. Maxwell
M. Corrie Dickerson Mrs. Lee
Dona E. Haralson Mrs. Smith
Mary N. Hurt Mrs. Loyd
M. Lily Jackson Mrs. Tigner
A. Maude McDaniel
Minnie E. Mclntire Mrs. Tribble
Julia F. Ridley Mrs. Willett
F. Eugenia Shepherds
E. May Swindall Mrs. Logan
Fannie Teasley Mrs. Hutchinson
Kate Truitt Mrs. Young
Minnie B. Wilkinson! Mrs. Tatum
1890
Grace L. Aiken Mrs. Mitchell
Mira Will Brantley Mrs. Tye
S. Paralie Brotherton Mrs. Walker
Kate D. Daniel Mrs. Polhill
Maggie W. Dean Mrs. Morris
Maggie E. Evans Mrs. Riley
Clara N. Graves Mrs. Smith
M. Loulie Hardwick Mrs. Candler
Sallie Hodges
D. Newtie Ingram Mrs. Merrill
Willie E. Jones
Pearl Lee Mrs. Trimble
ituth T. Marsh Mrs. Lee
Mamie C. McGehee
Ada McLaughlin Mrs. Jones
Annie G. Robertson
S. Corinne Simril
M. Gladys Simsg Mrs. Ponder*
Claire L. Smith Mrs. Hill*
Minnie L. Smith Mrs. Wall
Una T. Sperry
Connie V. Stovall
Minnie Willingham
M. Emma Wilson Mrs. Turnipseed
1891
Frankie M. Arnold Mrs. Lyles
Rosa O. Atkinson
Myrtie G. Beauchamp Mrs. Dickerson
Lillie Brady Mrs. Fish
U. Quie Cousins Mrs.
Jennie Lou Covin Mrs. Wooding
Lucile Covin Mrs. Glanton
Mamie Zach Crockett Mrs. Haynes
Addie C. George
Ora A. Gray
Georgia O. Heard Mrs. Fields
Music
Rosa O. Atkinson
Maidee Smith
Hettie O. Hearn Mrs. McCalla*
C. Walton Hollinshead Mrs. Robie
Mattie E. Johnson Mrs. Dillard
Arizona B. Liles Mrs. Hines
E. Montana Liles Mrs. Summit
Pearl Long Mrs. Smith
Jennie Lou McFarlin Mrs. Mattingly
Florence Smith Mrs. Stone
Lizzie Tucker Mrs. Gale
Mattie E. Walcott
Leila Winn Mrs. Miller
Diplomas.
Minnie L. Smith Mrs. Wall
._ Mattie E. Walcott
1892
Effie S. Agnew Mrs. McCrary
Maud L. Bailey Mrs. Richardson
Annie F. Baxter Mrs. Smith*
Annie E. Bell Mrs. Shenck
Sallie S. Boyd Mrs. Sims*
Lady E. Boykin Mrs. Segrest
C. Lorraine Bradleyg Mrs. Jarreii
Ruth Camp
Clarabess Crain Mrs. Fambro
K. Maude Ellis
Jennie Smith
Talitha Speer Mrs. Ezzard*
Bonnell L. Strozier Mrs. Bivins
Forrest L. Strozier
Juliet Tuggle
Music
Clara N. Graves Mrs. Smith
Mary L. Park Mrs. Fowler
Jennie F. Foster Mrs. Mason
Maud Fr'eeman
Winnie V. Hearn
Clara E. Hodges Mrs. Linder
Lucie W. Hunt*
Ella R. Johnson Mrs. Sykes
F. Lillian McLau<?hlin Mrs. McGehee*
Lizzie M. Parham
Sallie M. Quillian Mrs. Jones
Rosa Sharpe*
T. Antoinette Ward
Edith West Mrs. Harris
M. Louise Wimbish Mrs. Beach
Mary Wooten Mrs. Moss
Diplomas.
Claire L. Smith Mrs. Hill*
1893
M. Bird Baxter Mrs. Gentry
B. Mae Brady Mrs. Bartlett
S. Amanda Britt Mrs. Lewis
Mattie Bulloch
Blonde B. Capps Mrs. Mason
Gene M. Covin Mrs. Farmer
Meta V. Dickinson Mrs. Daniel
Ledra Edmundson Mrs. Warner
*Deceased.
Mary Z. Latham Mrs. Cox
Mary F. Liles Mrs. Nelson
M. Lula Lovelace Mrs. Hogg
Lizzie S. Lupo Mrs. McGrew
Fredonia R. Maddox Mrs. Webster
M. Ora Martyn Mrs.
Angie L. Maynard Mrs. Sell
M. Kate Moss Mrs. Cleckler
L
LaGrange College
47
[1893 continued]
Ruth EvansS Mrs. Dallis
M. Edna Ferguson Mrs. Tate
Funnie Harrell
Maymie B. Hendrix Mrs. Anderson
Annie Gertrude rienryg Mrs.
Leila B. Kendrick
Doll j' Hooks
Nellie B. KirkleyS Mrs. Campbell*
Music Diplomas
Nellie B. KirkleyS Mrs. Campbell* T. Antoinette Ward.
M. Lula Lovelace Mrs. Hogg
1894
Annie F. Reid Mrs. Roberts
Lelia A. Shewmake*
Macie E. Speer
Estelle Strozier Mrs. Ravenell
Mary Tomlinson Mrs. Tuggle
Jennie W. Williams Mrs. Miller
Vela C. Winn Mrs. Hawkins
Louise Anderson Mrs. Manget
V. Eula Beauchamp Mrs. Meacham
Lula Belle Bird
Lina S. Brazell Mrs. Trimble
Mary L. Brinsfield Mrs. Rogers
Sadie Bess Bryan Mrs. Heard
Fannie H. Clark Mrs. Maynard
Etta I. Cleveland Mrs. Dodd
Edda Cook Mrs. Pitt
Clara M. DeLaperriere Mrs. Lanier
Susie Harrell
A. Estelle Harvard Mrs. Clements
Eula M. Hines Mrs. Johnson
B. Adella Hunter Mrs. Pike
Irma O. Lewis Mrs. McElroy
E. Lula Liles Mrs. Radney
Cora L. Milam
Mary E. Mitchell Mrs. Clower
Bessie G. Moseley
Minnie O. Moseley Mrs. James
Lizzie A. Moss Mrs. Cleckler*
Lucie M. Pattillo^_
Mamie W. Paulk Mrs. Bickerstaff
Amy I. White Mrs. Wisdom*
Pearl W. White Mrs. Potts
J. Kate Wilkinson
Nettie C. Howell Mrs. Lane*
Music Diplomas
M. Bird Baxter Mrs. Gentry Gene M. Covin Mrs. Farmer
1895
Myra L. Bruce Mrs. Glasure
Callie O. Burns Mrs. King*
Rosa E. Callahan
Hunter M. Carnes Mrs. Harvard
Lily Coggins Mrs. Jones
Lora Edmundson Mrs. Lovejoy
Alice I. Harp Mrs. Young
M. Evans Harris Mrs. King
H. Estelle Hutcheson Mrs. Harlan
Annie Kate Johnson Mrs. Parks
Buford J. Johnson
Lillian Johnson Mrs. Burkhalter
ADnie I. Key Mrs. Walker*
Julia Manning Mrs. Holmes
Eva J. Mashburn Mrs. Lamback*
Music
Lina S. Brazell Mrs. Trimble
Lizzie Avres Mrs
Morah T. Bailey Mrs. Martin
Clara J. Baker
Mary E. Beasley Mrs. Chenoweth
W. Belle Brantly Mrs. Rodenbury
Lula Bulloch Mrs. Bulloch
Annie R. Callahan Mrs. Hutchinson
F. Estelle Chappie Mrs. Chandler
Jessie R. Cotter Mrs. Richards
Josie H. Daniel Mrs. Hogan
Eleanor C. Davenport
Sallie F. DeLamar Mrs. Poer
Pattie H. Dixon
Mattie Lee Dunn Mrs. Sloan
Annie Clyde Edmundson__Mrs. Ridley
Beuna M. Plarris
M. Helen Hendrick Mrs. Mattox
Gussie R. McCutchen
Birdie Meaders Mrs. Dowda
Daisy L. Morris Mrs. Smith
Clara M. Parks Mrs. Featherston
Tallulah E. Quillian Mrs. Thrasher
Alice M. Robins Mrs. Cunningham
Mattie L. Schaub
Flora E. Seale Mrs. Thorpe
Effie J. Shewmake
Daisy C. Taylor Mrs. Rumble
Annie C. Thrasher
L. Kate Trimble Mrs. Davis
N. Romania Welchel*
Lula A. Welchel Mrs. Smith
Annie F. Wiggins Mrs. Meadows*
Diplomas.
Effie J. Shewmake
1896
Little E. Tallulah King Mrs. Norris
Bessie Longino Mrs. Vickers
Gussie Meriwether Mrs. Winn
Myra O. Meriwether Mrs. Bulloch
Ola E. Miller Mrs. Johnson
Blanche E. Murphy Mrs. Speer
L. Inez Murrah Mrs. Knott
Eoline W. Price
Hallie J. Quillian Mrs. Ashford
Mary Will Smith Mrs.
Cecelia E. Thompson? __Mrs. Wimberly
D. Florence Traylor Mrs. Orr
Nannie Ware
Evelyn Whi taker
A. Maude Williams Mrs. Trotter
Mary Lou Woodall
Mittie Wright Mrs. Harber
Lucy J. Hill Mrs. Anthony
Music Diplomas
W. Belle Brantley Mrs. Rodenbury Sallie F. DeLamar Mrs. Poer
48
LaGrange College
1897
Leah W. Baker Mrs. Moon
Julia H. Bradfield
Annie E. Campbell
Mary R. Carmichael Mrs. Lively*
Ila E. Chuppg Mrs. Carroll
S. Eleanor Cloud Mrs. Bryan
Etta Cookg Mrs. Pitts
Irene E. Florence Mrs. Green
Clara Freeman
Leila F. Hood*
Kate S. Ingram Mrs. Gordy
Kate Jenkins Mrs. Alonzo
Rena Mai Ledbetterg Mrs. Graves
Ruby L. McElroy Mrs. Born
Ozella B. Roberts Mrs. Ros>
Mary I. Seale
Henrietta O. Smith Mrs. Faust
S. Alma Stroudg Mrs. Hancock
Julia B. Tigner
Gussie M. Tignerg Mrs. Wiggins
Gertrude Touchstone
Cora Tuck Mrs. Morton
Alice J. Turner*
O. Lillian Venable Mrs. Shaw
Bertha H. Wilson Mrs. Upshaw
Montana M. Winter! Mrs. Hall
Willie C. Maddox Mrs. Holloway
Music Diplomas
Eleanor C. Davenport Mamie Dozier Mrs. Davis
Carrie Davidson Kate S. Ingram Mrs. Gordy
1898
Irene Adair
Lutie Blasingame Mrs. Sams
Mary Will Cleveland Mrs. Thompson
Nettie Lee Cook Mrs. Campbell
Clara Dallis Mrs. Turner
Emily C. Dickinson Mrs. Smith
Bessie Farmer Mrs. Lockhart
Emmie Ficklen
Annie Fulcherg Mrs. Turner
Sallie Myrt Gilliamg Mrs. Durham
Flora Glenn Mrs. Candler
Ward R. Hardwick Mrs. Gailey
Sallie Fannie Hodnett Mrs. O'Neal
Gordon Hudgins Mrs. Miller
M. W. Cleaveland Mrs.
Nona Harris
Laurie C. Lanier Mrs. Mallory
Eva Mann Mrs. Thomas
Mary D. Mann Mrs. Howell
Dana D. Marchman Mrs. Wooten
M. Hortense McClure Mrs. McCleskey
Evelyn McLaughlin Mrs. McGeliee"
Ruth Miller
Anna Belle Pendleton
Mary Ray Mrs. Shurley
Louise Rosser Mrs. Warren
May Story Mrs. Parker
Ruth TuggleS
Rosa Wrisht Mrs. Bo>d
Sophie Wright
Music Diplomas
Thompson Lillian Johnson__
Art Diplomas
Alma Nesbit Mrs. Willingham
.Mrs. Brown
.Mrs. Burkhalter
1899
Allie M. Beall
Idella Bellah
Annie Kate Bondurant Mrs. Jones
Aurena Evans Mrs. Burgess
Lillias Fleming Mrs. Graham
Lizzie A. Gray
Willie Hardy Mrs. Lovelace
Helen Huntley
Alice Jenkins Mrs. Sherman
M. R. Kimbrough Mrs. Guttenberger
Mattie Loflin Mrs. Smalley
Lillian Neal
Lela Newton*
Annie L. Bynum Mrs. Davis
Kola Dickinson Mrs. Wheeler
May Belle Dixon Mrs. McKenzie
Mary L. Park Mrs. Polhill
Leila Parks Mrs. Erwin
Anna Quillian Mrs. Dillard
Mary E. Quillian!
Mary Rosser
Pearl Sewell Mrs. Holbrooks
Carlie Smith Mrs. Dozier
Anita Stroud
Mabel Thrower Mrs. McDonnel
Sallie Tomlinson Mrs. Ivey
Mattie Byrd Watson Mrs. Chunn
Lila Park
Music Diplomas
Annie Cheatham (Voice) Mrs. Whiddon Marilu Ingram Mrs. Letcher
1900
E. Glenn Anderson Mrs. Boswell
.\hiry Lizzie Anderson Mrs. Watson
Estey Askew Mrs. Kelley
Clyde Bruce Mrs. Williams
Ethel Bryson Mrs. Thompson
Coral Capps Mrs. Stapler
Marion Clifton
Willie Crawford Mrs. Johnson
Rosebud Dixon? Mrs. Callahan
D( . ased
Ethel Lively Mrs.
Jessie L. Manning! Mrs. Sterne s
Lottie Maxwell S Mrs. Robertson
A Louise MoateS
Rebie Neese Mrs. Moore
Flora Quillian Mrs. VanHorn
Louise L. Ray Mrs. Burch
Ruby Sharps Mrs. Rosser
Mary Howard Smith Mrs. Johnsou
LaGrange College
49
Virgil Harris Mrs.
Marie Harrison Mrs. Wilson
Annie Lou Hood Mrs. Uobertson
[1900 continued]
Sadie Smith
Exa Stewart
Annie Stone Mrs. Powell
Eva Sutton Mrs. McLendon
Leone J. Tuckerg Mrs. Burton
Nellie Johnson Mrs. Wilkerson*
Clyde Lanier
Music Diplomas
Irene Denipsey* Fannie Smith Mrs. Ricks
Leila M. Irvin Mrs. Barnett
1901
Stella Benton . Mrs. Jones
Kate Bradfield Mrs. Brown
Stella Bradtield
Ella Bussey
Irene D. Butler Mrs. Daniel
Lou Ella Davis Mrs. Drane
Ernestine M. Dempsey
1902
Jessie Mallory Mrs. DeLamar
Mary Barnard Nix
Pauline Norman
Sarah Quillian Mrs. Baldwin
Effie O. Smithg*
Lilla Tuck
Leila Williams Mrs. DeLamar
Mary Batemanf
Robie Clifton
Janie Brown Cofer
Emma Lois Cotton Mrs. Ellis
Sidnor Davenport Mrs. Hammings
Ar.nie Margaret Dunson__Mrs. Davis
Elizabeth T. Ferrell Mrs.
Leila Jernigan
Nellie Marchman Mrs. Flynt
Bertie Pennington Mrs. Campbell
Edna Philpot Mrs. Trippe
Cleta Quillian Mrs. Cleveland
Nancy Lee Shell Mrs. Norman
Nellie Yickers Mrs. Harvey
1903
Lillie Royal Brown Linnie F. MaloneS Mrs. Smith
Lena Vashti Daniel Annie Lou McCord
Annie Margaret DunsonJ Mrs. Davis Susie lone Strickland Mrs. Dasher
Annie F. Fanning Mrs. Blanchard
Music Diplomas
Maude Ragland Piano) Nina Winn (Voice) Mrs. Stubbs
1904
Mary Lou Drane Mrs. Jordan Mary Griffin
Lucy Ray Freeman Mrs. Edwards Emma Quillian Mrs. Singleterry
Music Diplomas
Eleanor C. Davenport (Voice) Leila M. Irvin (Voice) Mrs. Barnett
Vera Lee Dyal (Piano) Mrs. Ryals* Omie H. Ryals Piano) __Mrs.DeLoach
1905
Etta May Burnside Mrs. McDonald Kate Vivian Long Mrs. Coau
Maggie Lillian Means Mrs. Conner
Vesta Pirkle
Eva Ophelia RainpleyS Mrs. Little
Mattie Dora Rampley
Annie May Conner.
Lillian Martha Garrett
M. Catherine Hogg Mrs. Prather
Nancy Burnie Legg
Music Diplomas
Rosa A. Logan (Piano) Mrs. Brown Leona Anderson Wood (Piano)
1906
May Dell Cleaveland Carrie Moore Fleeth Mrs. Cook
Mary Boyd Davis Lillian Hicks
Annie Zuleika Dillardg Lillie Pennington
Music Diplomas
Bertha Louise Burnside (Piano) Juelle Ella Jones( Piano)
Vera Vashti Edwards (Voice)
1907
Glenn Antoinette Allen
Oneta Seals Askew Mrs. Ward
Marie Barnett*
Bessie Boyd Mrs. Stone
Palmyra Burnside
Mamie Alexandra Fenley
Mary Adelaide Hall
Lucile Hicks
Etta Mae Hobgood
Bessie Lou Johnson
Estelle Lois Jones
Emmeline M. Parks Mrs. Quillian" 1
Estelle Pittsj Mrs. Lucas
Alverda Bagsdale
Blanche Loyd Sims Mrs. Golden
Yula May Smith Mrs. Carter
Evelyn Rushin Stokes Mrs. Evans
Eva Lou Sutton Mrs. Curry
Teressa Viola Throne-
Martha Reese Tomlinson. Mrs. Eve;
Bula Edna Warner Mrs. Morgan
Eugenia Wat kins Mrs. Clements
.so
LaGrange College
[1907 continued]
Allie Kennon
Music Diplomas
Glenn Antoinette Allen Piano) Nellie Brown (Voice) Mrs. Newman
"vlaggie May Anderson (Piano) Lizzie Belle Murphy (Piano)
Belle Arnold (Piano) Fletcher Fay Shannon (Piano)
Marie Bamett* (Piano) Nora Magrada Simmons (Piano)
Gertrude Brown (Piano) Mrs. Cowen Sara Frances Thomason (Piano)
1908
Sallie Bohannon
Bertha Louise Burnside
Sarah Luna V. Cook
Kffie Eugenia Etter
Mary Elizabeth Fox
Ellie Gray
Mary Camilla Green
Janie Hearn
Annette Mayo
Willie Belle Moncrief
Music Diplomas
Leila Jackson Dillard Mrs. Edda Cook Pitt
Barbara Florence Dye Mrs. Ivey Dura Merle Upshaw
Ellie Gray
Expression Diplomas.
Leila Jackson Dillard Eddie Rampley
Janie Hearn
1909
Mary Ridley Murphy Mrs. Bujrg
Eunice Pauline Powledge
Leta Price
Christine Reynolds
Lillian Adelaide Rollins
Mary Frances Stanton Mrs. Gardner
Dura Merle Upshaw
Lula Kelly Willingham
Leola Adele Woolbright-_Mrs. Nicholson
Maxie Marinda Barron
Eugenia Lewis Christian
Leila Jackson Dillard
Corinne Virginia Jarrell
Emmie Maybelle Matthews.
Hallie Claire Smith
Ida Ruth Smith
Arminda Elizabeth Smithwick
Ava Cleo Widner
Mayne Katherine Archer.
Ruby Dallis Beall
Florence Dunson
Vera Vashti Edwards
Ella Amanda Godwin
Sara Lovelace Hogg
Piano Diplomas
.*. Annie Lucile Jones
Wilmer Alice Loftin _
Pearl Jarine Simmons
Pearl Watson
Allena Demore6t Stone
1910
Margaret Frances Eakes .
Annie Mae Lazenby
Lois Rives
T'L/lene Thrower
Martha Donovan Ware
Talladega Becton (Piano)
Carrie May Brownlee (Piano) ....
Natalie Holmes Cooper (Piano).
Florence Dunson (Voice)
Hallie Claire Smith (Voice
Music Diplomas
Cleo Smithwick (Voice)
T'L'lene Thrower (Piano)
Mary Jeannette Wilhoite (Piano)
Theo Pauline Woodward (Piano, Voice)
Expression Diplomas
Lois Rives.
Natalie Holmes Cooper
Indicates the B. S. degree. Indicates the B. L. degree. All College Alumnae since
1S80 were graduated with the A. B. degree, unless otherwise stated. Total number of
Alumnae 971.
The Alumnae Association
President, Miss Ernestine M. Dempsey, 1901, Jackson; Vice-
President, Miss Buford J. Johnson, 1895, Thomson; Secretary,
Miss Ellie Gray, 1908, LaGrange; Treasurer, Miss Mary Barn-
ard Nix, 1901, LaGrange.
The Association holds its annual reunion during Commence-
ment each year. Its dues are $1.00 per year.
The full name, post office, and other interesting data concern-
ing all the alumnae, is desired for a permanent record.
LaGrange College
51
REGISTRATION, 1910-11
* Students marked thus are slightly behind the class indicated.
Senior
Lenoir Henderson Bnrnside
Overton LaVerne Garrett
Sarah Lovelace Hogg-
Susie Willard Brown
Sarah Ann Christian*
Martha Edith Hamilton
Eunice Hill McGee
Susie Rae Jones
Flossie Louelle Mayo
Manie Cooper Towson*
Junior
Annie Maude Patrick
Mattte Pauline Sharpe
Ethel Lila Smith*
Ruth Walker*
Sophomore
Roberta Florence Briukley
Mildred Eakes
Luellen Jones*
Rosa May Murphy
Ruth Robb Trammell*
Frederic a S . Westmoreland*
Freshman
Lois Barnes*
Alice Claire Beckwith
Ellon a Clements*
Linnie Cleona Dooly
Helen Irvine*
Virginia Lee Johns*
Unclassified College Students
Jessie Myrtice Mallory*
Mary Elizabeth Marshall
Marree Marshburn*
Fannie Lou Mathews*
Lucy Frances Reynolds*
Linnie Idahlia Wilson
These students take selected studies, but have complied with
the requirements for admission to the Freshman Class. Those
marked * lack some High School work, but have conformed to
the requirements for Conditioned Freshmen.
Sarah Estella Moore
Mary Hill Moore
Mary Lura Allison
Mary Louise Asbury*
Mar ward Bedell*
Lottie Bond*
Mignon Irene Caldwell*
Vera Murle Caldwell*
Marcia L. Culver (Post-grad.)
Xell Lou Foster
Grace Francis
Leila Pearle Gibbs*
Marian Moseley
Ruby Elizabeth Neal
Ruby Marie Newsom*
Fay Augusta Parker*
Cora Louise Paulette*
Alice Peterson
Ruth Philpot*
Annette < >uillian
52
LaG range College
Lillie Elizabeth Harris*
Willa Clyde Holmes
Mrs. Leone Floyd Leath*
Eulalia Ledbetter*
Nyui Tsung Lee
Eloise Linson
Sara Mae Lovett
Edith May Lupton*
Sara Colton Mayo
Mattie McGee (Expression)
Alma Inez Mills
Annie Louise Moore*
Sarah Isabel Satterwhite
Claire England Shannon
Margaret E. Shepard (Post-grad)
Carrie Ethleen Smith
Cleo Smithwick
Blanchard Drake Smith
Annie Lucy Tankersley*
Drucilla Cecil Teasley*
Mattie Lee Wellborn*
Jessie DeLuth Williams
Letha Frances Williams
Sara Elizabeth Witcher
Sub-Freshman
Students whose names are followed by F will be able to enter
College next term either as Freshmen or Conditioned Freshmen,
if the present course of work is completed. The High School
work offered at the LaGrange College is equivalent to that of
the Ninth, Tenth and Eleventh Grades in City High Schools.
Those marked by * have only partial courses in literary, spend-
ing the greater part of their time in music or other special work.
They may be called Specials of High School advancement in
literary work.
Julia Aiken
Edith Glenn Barnette F
Mary Bass*
Gertrude Martin Bunkley
Mary Elizabeth Beeks
Carrie Odessa Pullen*
Mary Emma Robinson*
Ilattie Virginia Sharpe
Florence Thorn ason Wells
Alliue Rochelle Williams
Wu Yoeh Ngoo*
Mattie Peacock
Ola Peacock*
Eddie Mae Chastiau
Lena Fay Childs
Leah Cown*
Sara Inez Davidson
Helen Celeste Dixon
Ruth Thomas Dunham*
Mabel Wagener Edmondson
Maria Dina Ferraez
Kathleen Ruffin Ferrell*
Mary Kate Heard
Annie Irvine F (died Sept 27)
Annie May James
Clara Johnson*
Maude Singleton Johnson
Maureen Lasseter F
Augusta Legg
Lassie Oree Lewis*
Zora Blonnie Loveru
Rosa Matthews F
Maidee Jeanie Mathews
Lucy Ora Mitcham
Beulah Estelle Mizelle
Susie Mizelle
Ruby Claire Moss F
Grace Keithley Murphy
Luta Armstrong Powers
Ruth Richards
Laura Katherine Ripley
Mattie Belle Ripley
Georgia Esther Robles
Ruth Elizabeth Rucker
LaGrangh College
53
Mamye Read Fitts*
Essie May Floyd
Lena Fowler*
Minnie Pitman Godwin F
Pearl Irene Goggans
Susie May Green F
Eddie Louise Greer F
Kloise Pearl I lines
Lois Hogg
Lillian liver F ( died Jan. 7)
Dorothv Annie Harris
Katherine Ransom
Amalee Sewell
Dora Sewell
Florence Glenn Smith
Nell Smith F
Nellie Thomas*
Sara Means Thomas
M. Louis Thompson
Bettie Thornton
Inez Whitaker F
Cora Estelle Wilson
SPECIAL DEPARTMENTS
Pedagogy
Mary Louise Asbury
vSusie Willard Brown
Mignon Irene Caldwell
Linnie Cleone Dooly
Ruth Thomas Dunham
Kathleen Ruffin Ferrell
Luelleu Jones
Susie Rae Jones
Augusta Legg
Zora Blonnie Lovern
Jessie Myrtice Mallory
Mary Elizabeth Marshall
Rosa May Murphy
Alice Peterson
Letha Frances Williams
Mary Bass
Vera Murle Caldwell
Sarah Ann Christian
Echo Corless
Julia Corless
Helen Celeste Dixon
Maria Dina Ferraez
Lena Fowler
Eddie Louise Greer
Eloise Pearl Hines
Sara Lovelace Hogg
Eulalia Ledbetter
Augusta Legg
Jessie
Expression
Lessie Oree Lewis
Mattie McGee
Sarah Estella Moore
Marian Moseley
Ruby Marie Newsom
Cora Louise Paulette
Ruth Pike
Carrie Odessa Pullen
Mattie Belle Ripley
Sarah Isabel Satterwhite
Carrie Ethleen Smith
Florence Glenn Smith
Ruth Robb Trammell
deLuth Williams
Music
Those marked * have only Sight-singing. The numbers, 1,
2, etc., indicate the grade of the work last taken by the student
in Piano. Those in the Fourth Grade and above usually have
Harmony and Musical History in addition to Piano or Voice or
54
LaGrange College
both. P indicates Piano, V Voice, P O Pipe-Organ.
Charles R. Allen V
Mary Lura Allison P
Mary Louise Asbury P 3
Lois Evelyn Barnes >::
Mary Bass 2 P
Alice Claire Beckwith P 4
Marward Bedell P 4, V
Mary Elizabeth Beeks P
Lettie Bond P 4
Roberta Florence Brinkley 5 V
Gertrude Martin Bunkley P3, V
Helen Burkhalter 1 P
Lenoir Henderson Burnside 4 P
Mignon Irene Caldwell V
Vera Murle Caldwell P 3, V
Eddie Mae Chastain P 3
Lena Fay Childs P O
Sarah Ann Christian 6 P, V
C. W. Coleman V
Vance Lovejoy Cotter, Violin
Leah Cown P, V
Francis Daniel P
Carrie Davidson P, V, P-O ( Sum-
Pattie H. Dixon, Violin [tner
Mattie Catherine Dozier P 4
Ruth Thomas Dunham V
Claude Polk Dunson, Violin
Florence Dunson V
Mildred Eakes 5 P
Mabel W. Edmondson, V, Vio.
Maria Dina Ferraez P 4, V
Alice Ferrell P 3
Dora Ferrell P
Kathleen Ruffin Ferrell P, V
Mamye Read Fitts 3 P, V
Essie May Floyd P 3
Bell Lou Foster P 4
Lena Fowler P 3, P-O
Grace Francis, P 4, V
Addie Frazier P
Leila Pearle Gibbs P
Susie May Green P3
Eddie Louise Greer V
Louise Hagedorn P 3, V
Dorothy Annie Harris*
Rosa Mathews P 3, V
Maidee Jennie Matthews P, V
Sarah Colton Mayo P 5
Eunice Hill McGee P 3
Alma Inez Mills P 4
Beulah Estelle Mizelle P 3, Vio-
Susie Mizelle P 3, V [lin
Annie Louise Moore P 4, Violin
Mary Hill Moore P 6, V
Marian Moseley P 4, Violin
Grace Keithley Murphy P 4
Ruth Newell Murphy
Ruby Elizabeth Neal P 3, V
Ruby Marie Newsom V
Emily I. Park P
Virginia C. Park P
Fay Augusta Parker
Cora Louise Paulette*
Dr. C. A. Peacock V
Mattie Peacock V
Ola Peacock P 4
Bessie Hope Perry P
Ruth Philpot F
Margaret V. Phillips, Violin
Ethel S. Pike P
Mrs. Jesse T. Pike P
Ruth E. Pike P
Edith A. Poole V
Luta Armstrong Powers P 4
Carrie Odessa Pullen, P, V
Annette Quillian P 3, V
Mrs. J. W. Quillian P
Katherine Ransom v
Lucy Frances Reynolds P 4
Ruth Richards P
Laura Katherine Ripley P 3, V
Mary Emma Robinson P 3
Georgia Esther Robles V
Ruth Elizabeth Rucker P 3
Susie Lee Russell P
Sarah Isabel Satterwhite P 3, V
Lois Loraine Schaub P 4
Amalee Sewell P
Dora Sewell P 3 V
Claire England Shannon P 6, V
LaGrange College
55
Lillie Elizabeth Harris P, V
Sarah Harris P
Frank Harwell, Jr., Violin
Mary Jane Hill P
Eloise Pearl Hines V
Lois Hogg: P
Sara L. Hogg, Post-grad. P,V
Willa Clyde Holmes P 4, V
Robert Hutchinson, Violin
Lillian Hyer*
Helen Irvine*
Annie May James P
Virginia Lee Johns P 4, V
Clara Johnson P 3, V
Maude Singleton Johnson P
Annie Lucile Jones, Post-grad. P
Luellen Jones P 3
Mrs. Robert F. Kellum P
Maureen Lasseter P 3
Mrs. Leone Floyd Leath P 3, V
Eulalia Ledbetter P 3
Lee Nyui Tsung P 6, V
Lessie Oree Lewis P 3
Eloise Linson P 4
Latham Longino, Violin
Sara Mae Lovett P 4
Edith May Lupton P 6, V
Mary Elizabeth Marshall*
Hattie Virginia Sharpe P
Mattie Pauline Sharpe P
Carrie Ethleen Smith P 4
Florence Glenn Smith P 5
Hallie Claire Smith V
Leon Perdue Smith, Jr. P
Nell Smith P 3
Mary Elizabeth Smith P
Rufus Eugene Smith P
Cleo Smithwick 6 P, V
Mattie Louise Smithwick, Violin
Annie Lucy Tankersley P 4, V
Drucilla Cecil Teasley P 4, V
Nellie Thomas P 4
Sara Means Thomas P 3, V
M. Louis Thompson, P 4, V
Mary Fountain Turner V
Martha Donovan Ware P 5
Mattie Lee Wellborn P
Florence Thomason Wells P 4
Clara Louise Wells P
Maria Whitaker, Violin
Jessie deLuth Williams, Violin
Letha Frances Williams P 3, V
Robbie Annette Williams P 3
Linnie Idahlia Wilson V
Sara Elizabeth Witcher P 5
Wu Yoeh Ngee P 3
Art
Those marked * had Free-Hand Drawing only. Numbers in
dicate grade.
Mary Louise Asbury*
Edith Glenn Barnette
Mar ward Bedell*
Lottie Bond*
Susie Willard Brown*
Lenoir Henderson Burnside
Mignon Irene Caldwell*
Mrs. Jesse Thomas Carter
Leah Cown*
Linnie Cleone Dooly*
Maria Dina Ferraez
Essie May Floyd*
Alice Godwin
Pearl Irene Goggans*
Lucy Ora Mitcham 4
Annie Louise Moore
Ruby Claire Moss*
Mattie Peacock*
Ola Peacock*
6 Alice Peterson
Nellie Ruth Philpot
Luta Armstrong Powers
Katherine Ransom*
Ruth Richards*
Mattie Belle Ripley*
Ruth Elizabeth Rucker*
Annie Lucy Tankersley*
Drucilla Cecil Teasley
56 LaGrange College
Maude Singleton Johnson Nellie Thomas
Luellen Jones Bettie Thornton*
Augusta Legg* Mattie Lee Wellborn
Eloise Linson* Inez Whitaker
Sara Mae Lovett Alline Rochelle Williams
Mary Elizabeth Marshall* Jessie deLuth Williams*
Marree Marshman* Sara Elizabeth Witcher
Fannie Lou Mathews Wu Yoeh Ngoo*
Flossie Luelle Mayo 4
STATISTICS
Number of Students in High School courses 66
Number of Students in College courses 76
Number of Students in Special courses only 47
Number in Music Department 146
Number in Art Department 45
Number in Expression Department 27
Number in Pedagogy Department 15
Boarding Students 139
Local Students 50
Total Enrollment 189
DIPLOMAS AND CERTIFICATES, 1911
As this list is published before the end of the College term,
there may be some changes made before Commencement.
A. B. Diplomas. Lenoir Henderson Burnside, Thomson; Over-
ton LaVerne Garrett, Alexander City, Ala.; Sara Lovelace
Hogg, West Point; Susie Rae Jones, Augusta; Flossie Luelle
Mayo, Social Circle; Manie Cooper Towson, Cairo.
Piano Diplomas. Sarah Ann Christian, West Point; Nyui
Tsung Lee, Soochow, China; Edith May Lupton, Austell; Man-
Hill Moore, Oxford; Claire England Shannon, Commerce; Cleo
Smithwick, LaGrange.
Voice Diplomas. Sara Ann Christian, West Point; Lillie Eliz-
abeth Harris, Cartersville; Nyui Tsung Lee, Soochow, China.
Expression Diploma. Sarah Estella Moore, Sparks.
LaGrange College 5C
Art Diploma. Lenoir Henderson Burn side, Thomson.
Piano Certificates. Alice Claire Beckwith, Mansfield; Mar-
ward Bedell, Burnt Fort; Lottie Bond, Lithonia; Lenoir Hender-
son Burnside, Thomson; Mattie Catherine Dozier, LaGrange;
Nell Foster, Hampton; Willa Clyde Holmes, V id all a; Kloise
Linson, Clinton, S. C; Sara Mae Lovett, Wrightsville; Alma
Inez Mills, Woodland; Annie Louise Moore, Buena Vista; Ma-
rian Moseley, LaGrange; Ola Peacock, Kite; Lucy Frances
Reynolds, Greenville, Ala.; Carrie Kthleeu Smith, Greensboro;
Annie Lucy Tankersley, Tignall; M. Louis Thompson, Svvaius-
boro .
Voice Certificates. Sara Lovelace Hogg, West Point; Claire
Kngland Shannon, Commerce; Letha Frances Williams, Lyons.
Art Certificate. Flossie Luelle Mayo, Social Circle.
Expression Certificate. Carrie Ethleen Smith, Greensboro.
Latin Certificate. Susan Willard Brown, Pinehurst; Eunice
Hill McGee, LaGrange; Maude Patrick, Newborn.
Pedagogy. Miss Susie Rae Jones, Augusta.
High School. Jessie Myrtice Mallory.
The Commencement Preacher for 1911 is Bishop K. E. Hoss,
D. D., LL. D., Nashville, Tenn.
The Commencement Speaker for 1911 is Rev. Charles Lane,
Helena, Ga.
GRADUATE RECITAL
MARCH 2, 1911, 4 P. M.
Graduate Piano Recital Miss Claire E. Shannon, Commerce
Miss Cleo Smithwick, LaGrange
Graduate Expression Recital Miss Sarah Estella Moore, Sparks
Beethoven, Concerto in B-flat, Third Movement Miss Smithwick
Longfellow, The Famine from Hiawatha Miss Moore
Moszkowski, Melodie in G-flat; St. Avenhagen Caprice, Op. 2, No. 3
Miss Smithwick
Kate Langley Bosher, The Wedding (Original cutting from Miss Cary)
Miss Moore
Bach, Fuga in C Minor; Reger, Moment Musical; Moszkowski, Arabesque,
Op. 61, No. 1 Miss Shannon
Helen Potter, Jakey and Old Jacob; Brother Gardner on Liars Miss Moore
Mendelssohn, Concerto in G Minor, First Movement Miss Shannon
^<S LaGrange College
CERTIFICATE AND GRADUATE RECITAL
MARCH 16, 1911, 4 P. M.
Certificate Piano Recital Miss Lucy F. Reynolds. Greenville, Ala.
Miss Carrie E. Smith, Greensboro
Graduate Voice Recital Miss Lillie E. Harris, Cartersville
Poldini, Poupie Valsante Miss Maureen Lasseter
Counting Eggs (Reading) Miss Helen Dixon
Chopin, Prelude, Op. 28, No. 20; Beethoven, Andante from Sonata, Op.
49, No. 1 Miss Reynolds
Mattei, Patria; Eugen Hildach, Spring, Op. 19, No. 5 Miss Harris
Bach, Invention, No. 14; Grieg, To Spring, Op. 43, No. 6 Miss Smith
Gade, Op. ^ 9 { f ^rierzo Miss Re 3^
Frances Calhoun, The Humble Petition (Reading). ...Miss Ruby M. Newsom
Chopin, Prelude, Op. 28, No. 4; Nevin, Barchetta, Op. 21, No. 3
Miss Smith
Gounod, Le Parlate d'Amor (Faust); Napoleon Zardo, To Night
Miss Harris
"HIGBY OF HARVARD"
MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 20, 1911, EIGHT O'CLOCK
Presented by the School of Expression of LaGrange College, Miss Jane
Allison, Director. Musical Numbers prepared by Mrs. Maude H. Par-
sons.
Act I. Lawn at the Withrow home, Brookline, Mass. Time, the present.
Act II. Drawing-room at Withrow' s, evening of same day. Act III. A
mining camp in Montana, five months later.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Watson W. Higbee, from Montana, a good fellow with millions, who
knows neither fear nor grammar Miss Sarah Estella Moore
Hon. V. D. Withrow, a blue-blooded ex-senator with a tall family tree and
a short bank account Miss Mattie Belle Ripley
Lorin Higby, son of Watson, champion athlete at Harvard, in love with
Madge Miss Ruth Trammell
Theodore Dalrymple, called "Ted," worked his way through Harvard, in
love with Nancy Miss Sarah A. Christian
Higgins, the butler Miss Florence Smith
Nancy Withrow, the senator's daughter Miss Ruby Newsom
Madge Cummings, from Montana Miss Carrie Smith
Mrs. Ballou, the senator's sister from New York Miss Sara L. Hogg
Mrs. Melvina Meddigrew, originally from Missouri
Miss Jessie deLuth Williams
MUSICAL SPECIALTIES (BETWEEN ACTS)
Solo and Chorus V. Joncieres
Miss Cleo Smithwick and chorus of selected voices
Vocal Trio "Mikado" Sullivan
Misses Marward Bedell, Letha Williams and Hallie Smith
LaGrange College 59
CERTIFICATE PIANO RECITAL
APRIL 6, 1911, 4 P. M.
Certificate Piano Recital Miss M. Catherine Dozier, LaGrange, Georgia
Miss Kloise A. Linson, Clinton, South Carolina
Miss Marian Moseley, LaGrange, Georgia
Beethoven. First MovL-ment from Sonata in F, Op. 10, No. 2
Miss Virginia Lee Johns
Beethoven . Andante con Variazoni from Sonata, Op. 26; Moszkow-ki,
Op. 18, No. 3 Miss Dozier
Mendelssohn. Andante (Organ) Miss Fay Lena Childs
Weber, Menuetto Capricciosco from Sonata, Op. 39; Wagner-Liszt, O
Thou Sublime, Sweet Evening Star Miss Mosele\
Bach, Two Part Invention, No. 1; Mozart, First Movement from Sonata
in C Minor Miss Linson
Johns, I Cannot Help Loving Thee Miss W. Clyde Holmes
Nevin, A Shepherd's Tale, Op. 16, No. 1; Litolff, Spinnlied... Miss Dozier
Schytte, Les Spectres; Gottschalk, Tremoly Miss Moseley
Faulkes, Cantilene (Organ) Miss Childs
Gretchaninow, Plainte, Op. 3, No. 1; Chopin, Impromptu in A-flat, Op.
29 Miss Linson
Guy d'Hardelot, Little Boy Blue; Schubert, Ha rk, Hark, the Lark
Miss Marward Bedell
Raff, Etude Melodique in A Miss Lillie E. Harris
CERTIFICATE AND GRADUATE RECITALS
APRIL 20, 1911, 4 P. M.
Certificate Piano Recital Miss W. Clyde Holmes, Vidalia, Georgia
Miss Sara Mae Lovett, Wrightsville, Georgia
Miss Annie L. Moore, Buena Vista, Georgia
Certificate Voice Recital Miss Letha F. Williams, Lyons, Georgia
Graduate Piano Recital Miss Sarah A. Christian, West Point, Georgia
Bach, Invention, No. 14; Mozart, Aldagio from Sonata, No. 6. Miss Holmes
Leschetizky, Sextette from Lucia di Lammermoor (Donizetti); Schuett,
L'Amour, Op. 59, No. 2 Miss Lovett
Haendel, Angels Ever Bright and Fair (Rec. and Air from Theodora);
Weber, When a Lad Comes (Air from der Freischuetz) Miss Williams
Bach, Invention, No. 8; Jensen, Serenade in E Miss Moore
Schumann. March in D Minor, Op. 99; Bach, Three Part Invention, No.
15; MacDowell, Scotch Poem, Op. 31, No. 2 Miss Christian
Mozart, Voi che sapete, Conzone from Figaro; Grieg, Solvejg's Lied;
Grieg, Sunshine Song Miss Williams
Ravina, Etude; Schuett, Valse Lente Miss Plolmes
Chopin, Waltz in C-sharp Minor; Scharwenka, Polish Dance. ...Miss Lovett
MacDowell, Thy Beaming Eyes; Nevin, Mighty Lak' a Rose
Miss Williams
Grieg, Dance Caprice, Op. 28, No. 3; Godard, Les Hirondtlles, Op. 14
Miss Moore-
Beethoven, Concerto, No. 1, in C Major (Reinecke Cadenza) Miss Christian
60 LaGrange College
PIANO AND EXPRESSION RECITAL
MAY 4, 1911, 3:30 P. M.
Certificate Piano Recital Miss A. Clare Beckwith, Mansfield, Georgia
Miss A. Inez Mills, Woodland, Georgia
Miss Ola Peacock, Kite, Georgia
Certificate Expression Recital Miss Ruth Robb Trammell, Kingston
Graduate Piano Recital Miss Nyui Tsung Lee, Soochow, China
Beethoven, Allegro from Sonata, Op. 7| Miss Beckwith
Bach, Invention, No. 1 J
Kjerulf, Cradle Song \ . Peacock
Weber, Rondo Brilliant J AJ1SS ^ eacock
Meribah Philbrick Abbott, Lilacs Miss Trammell
Mozart, Allegro from Sonata, No. 40 ,,. ,,.,,
Bach, Invention, No. 8 J " " Mlss Mllls
Beethoven, Sonata, Op. 27, No. 1, Andante, Allegro \ ^,- T
Mayer, Grande Etude in F-sharp Major /
Francis Greenman, The Mission Box that Scandalized the Village,
Miss Trammell
Schumann, Warum 1 , r , ...
Leschetizky, Two Larks j Mlss Beck th
Grieg, Butterfly \ ,,- Peacock
Wilson Smith, March Fantastique / * U1SS reacocK
Greig, Berceuse \ Mi Mil]
Field-Leschetizky, Nocturne J M1SS mms
Mark Twain, Adventures of Tom Sawyer (Original Cutting). .Miss Trammell
Mendelssohn, Capriccio Brilliant, Op. 22 in B Minor Miss Lee
CERTIFICATE AND GRADUATE RECITAL
MAY 11, 1911, 3:30 P. M.
Piano Certificate Miss Lenoir H. Burnside, Thomson
Expression Certificate Miss Carrie Ethleeu Smith, Greensboro
Piano Graduate Miss Mary Hill Moore, Oxford
MacDowell, To a Wild Rose, Op. 51; Beethoven, First Movement from
Sonata, Op. 27, No. 2 Miss Burnside
Denza, Daisy Time (Chorus) Miss Poole's Sight-Singing Class
Seybold, La Tendresse (Violin) Miss Marian Moseley
Shakespeare, Lovers and Music; Act V. Scene I. Merchant of Venice
Miss Smith
Bach-MacDowell, Menuet in G; Paderewski, Chant du Voyageur, Op. 8,
No. 3 Miss Mary Hill Moore
Rossini, Faith (Chorus) Miss Bagby's Sight-Singing Class
Leopold Dancla, Waltz (Violin) Miss Annie L. Moore
""^{IZ^^^^l-^ 2 Miss Burnside
John Habberton, Story of Joseph (Helen's Babies) (Original Cutting)
Miss Smith
Gabriel-Marie, Madrigale Miss Claude P. Dunson
Bemberg, Nymphs and Fauns Miss Cleo Smithwick
Mendelssohn, Finale from Concerto in G Minor Miss Mary Hill Moore
Bell Marshal Locke, A Man, a Maid and a Dress-suit Case Miss Smith
Reinecke, Bolero, Op. 86, No. 3, (two pianos) ..Misses Eakes and Brinkley
LaGrange College 61
PIANO CERTIFICATE RECITAL
MAY 18. 1911, 3:00 P. M.
Piano Certificate Miss Annie Lucy Tankersley, TignalJ
Miss M. Louis Thompson, Swainsboro
R. K. DeReef, The Hop-Toad Miss Helen Burkhalter
Kllmenreich, Spinning Song Miss Ruth Richards
R. Friml, Crepuscule, Op. 36 Miss Eddie May Chastain
Foote, On the Way to Kew Miss Sara L. Hogg
Schumann, Warum, Op. 12; Thomas, Gavotte from Mignon. Miss Tankersley
Arnold, Buying a Railroad Ticket Miss Florence G. Smith
G. Merkel, Butterfly; Bach, Two Part Invention, No. 4 Miss Thompson
Grieg, Ich liebe dicta .... Miss Annette Quillian
Wollenhaupt, Morceau Caracteristique, Op. 22, No. 1 Miss Luta A. Powers
Heinrich Hoffmann, Reverie, Op. 34, No. 3; Chaminade, Air de Ballet.
No. 4 Miss Tankersley
Dudley Buck, Sunset Miss Hallie Claire Smith
Tsehaikowsky, April, Op. 37, No. 4; Chopin, Nocturne, Op. 9, No. 2
Miss Thompson
Robertson, Kentucky Philosophy - Miss Rub}- M. Newsom
Rubinstein, Valse-Caprice in F>flat Miss Lillie E. Harris
MUSICALE BY THE MUSICAL KINDERGAR-
TEN AND PRIMARY CLASSES
MAY 25, 1911, 3 P. M.
FIRST PART
The Story of Miss Keyboard's School Burrowes
Recited by Elizabeth Smith. Illustrated by Alice Ferrell
Miss Keyboard's School Burrowes
Sung by Class. Illustrated by Emily Park
The Seven Octaves, Borrowes .Illustrated by Frances Daniel
The Scholars' Names, Burrowes Illustrated by Bessie Perry
Piano Duet, Selected, Hoffman Virginia Park, Emily Park
Primary Staff and Keyboard Drill Elizabeth Smith, Alice Ferrell, Dora
Ferrell, Virginia Park, Frances Daniel
Advanced Staff and Keyboard Drill ..Bessie Perry, Emily Park.
Ethel Pike, Leon Smith
The Treble Lines and Spaces, Burrowes Illustrated by Ethel Pike
Memory Writing Emily Park
Primary Metre Drill Dora Ferrell, Virginia Park, Frances Daniel
Piano, Airy Fairies, Spaulding Frances Daniel
The Bass Lines and Spaces, Burrowes Illustrated by Leon Smith
Piano, Ducklings, Englemann Bessie Perry
Rhythm Exercises Bv the Class
62 LaGrange College
SECOND PART
The Note Family, Burrowes Sung by Frances Daniel, Bessie Perrv, Em-
ily Park, Virginia Park, Ethel" Pike.
Illustrated by Leon Smith.
Memory Writing, Continued Bessie Perry
Primary Staff Notation Drill Elizabeth Smith, Alice Ferrell, Virginia Park
Piano, Tassel Dance, Spalding Emily Park
Audition Drills Bessie Perry, Frances Daniel, Emily Park, Ethel Pike
Virginia Park, Leon Smith
Memory Writing, Continued Frances Daniel
Piano, Mock Turtle's Story, Crosby Ethel Pike
Advanced Metre Drill Bessie Perry, Emily Park, Ethel Pike,
Leon Smith, Frances Daniel
Terminology Song, Burrowes Illustrated
Piano, A Wild Rose, Loep Leon Smith
Muscle Exercises Bv the Class
JOINT MEETING IRENIAN AND MEZZOFAN-
TIAN SOCIETIES
MAY 25, 1911, 8:00 P. M.
Moszkowski, Valse Impromptu Miss Virginia Johns
Is the Circle Complete? Miss Susie Brown
Kate Langley Bosher, An Unthankful Orphan (Original Cutting from
Mary Cary) Miss Mattie Belle Ripley
Development of Shakespeare's Style in His Earliest Comedies
Miss Ethel Smith
Grieg, Sunshine Song; Nevin, Mighty Lak' a Rose. ...Miss Letha Williams
Shakespeare's Use of History (Based upon a Consideration of King John,
Henry VI, Parts I, II, III, and Richard III) Miss Florence Brinkley
The Flood and the Ark Miss Sarah Christian
E. Schuett, Prelude, Op. 35, No. 8 Miss Mildred Eakes
The Sandals of Rhodope Miss May Murphy
W. II. Pontius, A Prayer of Love Miss Ruby Newsoni
ANNUAL CONCERT
JUNE 3, 1911, 8 P. M.
Salome, Grand Chorus in A (Organ; Miss Fay Lena Childs
Reinhold, Phantasie, Op. 40 Miss Claire E. Shannon
Napoleon Zardo. To-Night (Vocal) Miss Lillie E. Harris
Mendelssohn, Concerto in D Minor Miss Edith A. Poole
Guonod, Cinq Mars, Cantilena (Vocal) Mrs. Maude Parsons
Raff, Valse Caprice, Op. Ill, No. 2 Miss Bertha L. Burnside
LaGrange College 63
Hezekiah Bntterworth, How Dot Heard the Messiah (Reading)
Miss Jane Allison
Liszt, Concerto in form of Hungarian Fantasie Andante mesto, Vivace
assai Miss Alma MacDonald Bagb}
Seitz, Concerto in G Minor (Violin) Mrs. Ethel D. Hill
VonSuppe, Overture to Poet and Peasant (Organ). Miss Bertha L. Burnside
Nevin, Wedding Morn (Vocal) Mrs. Maude Parsons
Belle Vf. Locke, Miss Ceely; The Mountain Singers (Original Readings)
Miss Jane Allison
Brahms, Rhapsodie in B Minor, Op. 79 Miss Rosa Mueller
Widor, Toccata from Fifth Organ Symphony (Finale) Miss Edith A. Poole
SENIOR DAY EXERCISES
JUNE 5, 1911, 10 A. M.
Faulkes, Marche Nuptiale (Organ) Miss Lena Fowler
Prayer
Class History Miss Lenoir Henderson Burnside, Thomson, Grt.
Tennyson, Enoch Arden, Part I Miss Sarah Estella Moore, Sparks, Ga.
Mozart, Voi che sapete (Figaro) Miss Letha F. Williams
Class Prophecy Miss Overton LaVerne Garrett, Alexander City, Ala.
Rubinstein, Kamenoi-Ostrow, Op. 10 Miss Edith May Lupton
Class Will Miss Susie Rae Jones, Augusta, Ga.
Donizetti, Luce di quest animo (Linda di Chamounix)
Miss Cleo Smith wick, LaGrange, Ga.
Tennyson, Enoch Arden, Part II Miss Moore
Schubert-Liszt, Auf dem Wasser zu singen
Miss Sarah Ann Christian, West Point. Ga.
Class Jester.. Miss Flossie Luelle Mayo, Social Circle, Ga.
Smart, Rest Thee on This Mossy Pillow (Trio)
Misses Annette Quillian, Letha Williams and Lillie Harris
GRADUATING EXERCISES
JUNE 5, 1911, 8 P. M.
Faulkes, Barcarolle, (Organ) Miss Lillie E. Harris
C. Sternberg, Impromtu, Op. 83 Miss Lee Nyui Tsung
J. Blumenthal, Venetian Boat Song (Duet)
Misses Letha Williams and Marward Bedell
Address Rev. Charles Lane, Helena, Ga.
Baccalaureate Addres. Conferring Degrees. Benediction.
NEXT SESSION BEGINS SEPTEMBER 10
64
LaGrange College
INDEX
Accredited High Schools 15
A. B. Degree 21
Administration 2
Admission Certificate 15
Admission to College 16, 20, 22
Alumnae 41
Alumnae Association 2, 50
Art Department 7, 35, 36
Bible and Missions 31
Board and Laundry 7
Board for Visitors 8
Books 9
Building Committee _ 2
Buildings 10
Calendar 2
Campus 10, 12
Certificates 7, 8, 38,39, 56
Change of Rates 8
Classification of Sttidents 21
College Courses 21, 23, 24
College Faculty 3
Commencement 2
Conditions .14
Date of Opening and Closing 2
Diplomas ..7, 8, 38, 39, 40, 56
Domestic Arrangements 9
English 26
Entrance Examinations 15
Equipment 12
Expenses 7
Expression 37
Extra fee late entrance 8
Extra fee Rooms 8
Faculty 4
Fee for Special Examination 8
Fees 7
Free-Hand Drawing. 7, 36
French 30
Freshman Class 23
General Information 10
German 30
Greek 31
Grounds 12
Gymnasium 8, 11,39
Harmony 7
Health 13
High School Work 22, 24
History 33
Holidays 2
Information about Loans 9
Junior Class 23
Laboratory 8, 11, 12
Latin 2S
Library 8, 11, 12
Loan Funds 9
Mathematics 32
Metaphysics 24
Ministers' Daughters 8
Music Department 6, 7, 35, 36
Musical History 7
Officers 2
Officers Y. W. C. A 13
Outline of Courses 24
Patrons 14
Pedagogy 35
Piano 7, S
Pipe Organ 7, 11
Physical Culture 37
Programs of Recitals, etc 57
Railroads 10
Rates in City Schools 9
Reading Room 11
Recitals 38, 57
Registration 51
Regulations 13
Reports 14
Requirements for Admission 16
Requirements for Graduation 21
Science 24
Senior Class 23
Sheet Music 9
Sight-Singing .7
Societies 12
Sophomore Class 23
Special Students 21
Statistics 56
Stationery 9
Stipulations 8
Study in City Schools 9
Supplies for Rooms... 9
Swimming Pool 12
Time for Payments 8
Trustees 2
Tuition 7
Uniform 9
Use of Piano 7
Violin 7
Visitors 8
Voice Culture 7, g
Y. W. Christian Association 13
lit
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