J>~' 



Volume LXXIII 



Number 1 



BULLETIN 

OF 

LaGRANGE COLLEGE 

LaGRANGE, GEORGIA 



ESTABLISHED 1833 



CHARTERED 1846 




CATALOGUE NUMBER 

1918-1919 



ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AT THE POST OFFICE AT 
LaGRANGE, GEORGIA. ISSUED QUARTERLY. 



LaGRANGE COLLEGE 




1918-1919 



LaGRANGE, GEORGIA 



CALENDAR 

1918 
September 17, 18, Examination and Classification of Students. 
September 19, First Chapel Exercises. 
November 28, Thanksgiving Day  a Holiday. 
December 20, Christmas Holidays begin. 

1919 
January 3, College Exercises resumed at Chapel Hour. 
January 16, End of Pall Term. 
January 17, Beginning of Spring Term. 
March 14-19, Spring Holiday. 
April 9, Benefactors' Day. 
April 26, Memorial Day. 
May 30  June 2, Commencement. 



BOARD OF TRUSTEES 

G. W. Duvall Buford, Ga. 

R. Frank Eakes , Atlanta, Ga. 

Jno. S. Jenkins Atlanta, Ga. 

W. S. Witham Atlanta, Ga. 

S. B. Ledbetter Cartersville, Ga. 

T. J. Christian Newnan, Ga. 

W. O. Jones Elberton, Ga. 

S. R. Belk Athens, Ga. 

J. M. Barnard LaGrange, Ga. 

W. L. Cleaveland LaGrange, Ga. 

J. E. Dunson LaGrange, Ga. 

O. A. Dunson LaGrange, Ga. 

W. V. Gray LaGrange, Ga. 

Frank Harwell Atlanta, Ga. 

A. H. Thompson LaGrange, Ga. 

C. V. Truitt LaGrange, Ga. 

J. G. Truitt LaGrange, Ga. 

J. W. Quillian Atlanta, Ga. 

H. Y. McCord Atlanta, Ga. 

S. A. Harris Cartersville, Ga. 

Claude H. Hutcheson Jonesboro, Ga. 

C. C. Jarrell Atlanta, Ga. 

R. J. Reaves Bowdon, Ga. 

A. M. Pierce Augusta, Ga. 

Hatton Lovejoy LaGrange, Ga. 

H. J. Fullbright Waynesboro, Ga. 

OFFICERS OF BOARD 

J. M. Barnard President 

Hatton Lovejoy Vice-President 

Frank Harwell Secretary-Treasurer 



COMMITTEES 

Finance J. M. Barnard, C. V. Truitt, W. 0. Jones, R. F. E'akes, 
J. G. Truitt, Hatton Lovejoy. 

Executive  C. V. Truitt, J. M. Barnard, W. L. Cleaveland, Frank 
Harwell, J. W. Quillian, J. S. Jenkins, J. E. Dunson. 

Insurance  W. L. Cleaveland, O. A. Dunson, Frank Harwell. 

Buildings and Grounds  J. G. Truitt, A. H. Thompson, Hatton Love- 
joy. 

Laura Haygood Witham Loan Fund  W. L. Cleaveland, C. V. Truitt, 
A. H. Thompson. 

Sinking Fund  J. M. Barnard, J. E. Dunson, Hatton Lovejoy. 
Davidson Loan Fund  W. L. Cleaveland, C. V. Truitt, A. H. Thomp- 
son. 



ADMINISTRATION 

OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION 

Miss Daisy Davies President 

Alwyn Means Smith Director of Music 

Ada Win slow Dean and Registrar 



FACULTY AND OFFICERS 1918-1919 

DAISY DAVIE'S 

President 

ADA WINSLOW, A.M. 

Columbia University ; Chicago University 

Dean and Registrar 

Professor of Romance Languages 

CHARLES A. TAGUE, A.M. 

Kentucky Wesleyan College ; course in Vanderbilt University 

Professor of Latin, Mathematics and Bible 

HILDA THRELKELD, A.B. 

Transylvania University ; course in Columbia University 
Professor of English 

CARRIE BELLE VAUGHAN, B.L. 

Columbia College, S. C. ; Winthrop College ; courses in History and English, 
University of Virginia 

Professor of History and Pedagogy 

HATTIE MAE CARMICHAEL, A.B. 

Woman's College, S. C. ; courses in University of Tennessee ; Peabody 
Normal ; Chicago University 

Professor of Science 

MAIDEE SMITH, A.B. 

LaGrange College ; University of Tennessee ; New York School of 
Philanthropy 

Professor of Sociology 

MARGARET EAKES, A.B. 

LaGrange College ; Georgia Normal ; course in Columbia University 
Instructor in Mathematics, English and French 

MINNIE CARROLL HALL 

Central College for Women, Mo. ; Cooper Institute 
Instructor in History and German 

HALLIE CLAIRE SMITH, A.B. 

LaGrange College ; course in University of Tennessee ; Columbia University 

Instructor in Physics 

JULIA ELIZABETH BROOKES, B.S. 

Vanderbilt University 
Instructor in Latin and Spanish 



SUE VIRGINIA EXUM 

Belhaven College ; Thomas Normal Training School 
Director Home Economics 

EULA BRADFORD DUNSON 

Curry School of Expression ; Summer School of the South 
Director of Expression 

HALLIE CLAIRE SMITH, A.B. 

New York School of Fine and Applied Arts ; Columbia University 

Painting and Drawing 

CORA ELIZABETH POTTER 

Curry School of Expression ; Baron Posse System of Gymnastics 
Physical Education 



ALWYN MEANS SMITH, A.M. 

Valparaiso Normal College ; New England Conservatory ; Metropolitan College 
of Music ; Royal Conservatory of Music, Leipzig, Germany 

Director of Music 

ALBERTA McCLOUD 

New England Conservatory of Music 
Violin 

ROSA MUELLER 

Royal Conservatory of Music, Leipzig, Germany ; Student under Carl Piutti, 

B. Zwintscher, and Robert Teichmueller 

Piano and Theory 

ADA MILDRED GANE 

Fargo Conservatory ; Oberlin Conservatory ; Leipzig Conservatory 
Pipe Organ, Piano and Theory 

MAIDEE SMITH, A.B. 

LaGrange College ; Valparaiso College 
Piano, Theory, Bight-Reading 

SARAH TATUM REED 
LaGrange College 
Choral Director 



OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION 

DAISY DAVIE'S 
President 

ADA WINSLOW 

Dean 

ORA M. ABBOTT 

Secretary 

MRS. DORA BOSTAIN EAKES 
Matron 

MRS. AGNES RAWLING 

Matron 

ADDIE FRAZIER 

Matron 



STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE FACULTY 

Classification  Professors Winslow, Threlkeld, Tague, Carmichael, 
Vaughan. 

Anniversaries  Professors Hall, Smith, A., Winslow, Gane, Exum, 
Abbott. 

Social Activities  Misses Eakes, McCloud, Potter, Exum, Smith, H., 
Threlkeld. 

Religious Work  Misses Smith, M., Threlkeld, Carmichael, Pro- 
fessor Tague. 

Alumnae  Misses Smith, H., Eakes, Smith, M., Mrs. Abbott. 

Catalogue  Misses Winslow, Carmichael, Mrs. Abbott. 

Library  Misses Vaughan, Mueller, Smith, H., Threlkeld, Mrs. Hall. 

Note: The President is ex-officio Chairman of all Committees of 
the Faculty. 



LaGRANGE COLLEGE 

HISTORY 

The history of LaGrange College is interesting. Instituted 
in 1833 # , it was, even in its infancy, an academy of high 
grade. Its first teacher of note was the Reverend Thomas 
Stanley. At the time of its founding, there was not in all the 
world an institution devoted solely to the higher education 
of girls and young women. 

In the year 1846, under the Presidency of Mr. J. T. Mont- 
gomery, a charter was procured*, and LaGrange Institute 
became LaGrange Female College, with all the rights of 
conferring "degrees, honors, and other distinctions of 
merit"* accorded other colleges and universities. 

After several years of prosperity  often two hundred and 
fifty girls being in attendance  the entire property was sold 
to the Georgia Annual Conference of the M. E. Church, 
South. In September, 1857, the College began its distinctive 
work of Christian education, under the presidency of the 
Reverend W. C. Connor. In the ensuing years it received 
patronage from every section of the South. 

Under the presidency of the Reverend W. M. Harris, D.D., 
in 1859, it took precedence over all church schools in sending 
out the first resident graduate class in the South. Of this 
class, Mrs. Alice Culler Cobb, afterwards a successful teacher 
in Wesleyan Female College, was an honored graduate. 

The work of the College was arrested by a most disastrous 
fire in 1860. However, after the close of the Civil War, 
Reverend James R. Mason, through his perseverance and 
indomitable energy, succeeded in rebuilding, and the college 
started on a long and successful career. 

In 1885, Rufus Wright Smith became President. During 
his administration, the property was nearly quadrupled in 
value, and its curriculum was advanced to that of a standard 
college. 

In May, 1915, Miss Daisy Davies was elected to succeed 
Dr. Smith, who died on January 2nd of that year. 

White's Historical Collection of Georgia, pp. 651-2; LAWS OF 
GEORGIA, 1847, p. 120. 



LOCATION 

LaGrange College is located in the City of LaGrange, 
Troup County, Georgia. LaGrange is seventy-one miles from 
Atlanta on the Atlanta and West Point Railroad, one hun- 
dred and five miles from Macon on the Macon and Bir- 
mingham, and about half-way between Brunswick and Bir- 
mingham on the Atlanta, Birmingham, and Atlantic Railway. 

The College is situated on a hill, one-half mile from the 
business portion of the town. The campus, which is twelve 
acres in extent, is 832 feet above the sea level, in a region 
on the upper side of Pine Mountain, with natural drainage 
in all directions. The extreme cold of the higher mountains 
and the heat of the lower lands are both avoided. Mr. Sears, 
Agent of the Peabody Fund, said, "I have travelled exten- 
sively in Europe and America, and I have not seen La- 
Grange equalled for beauty and adaptation." 

BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT 

The principal buildings of LaGrange College are the Col- 
lege, the Oreon Smith Memorial, the Harriet Hawkes Me- 
morial. The College Building is three stories high. It con- 
tains the Department of Music, the Art Studios, the Science 
Department, the Department of Home Economics, the Audi- 
torium, and various class rooms. 

The Oreon Smith Building contains Hardw T ick Hall, used 
for Evening Prayer, Literary Societies, Student Meetings, 
and Y. W. C. A. services ; the college parlors, the social 
rooms, the Y. W. C. A. room, the dining hall, the infirmary, 
and the President's suite, on the lower floors. The entire 
upper floor is used for dormitory purposes. 

The Harriet Hawkes Building w r as completed in 1911. It 
is one of the finest college buildings in the South. It contains 
the library and reading room, class rooms, the sales room for 
books and stationery ; offices of the Dean, Registrar, Secre- 
tary and Physical Director. The upper floors contain dormi- 
tory rooms, fitted with single beds and all equipments for 
two students each. The floors all have broad verandas. All 
buildings are electric lighted and steam heated. 

Recently, the old kitchen has been removed and a new one 
installed at the rear of the Oreon Smith Building; social 



rooms have been enlarged and refurnished; a Y. W. C. A. 
reading room equipped ; a new roof has been placed on the 
Oreon Smith Building; a number of new floors have been 
laid; the auditorium has been replastered and tinted; the 
class rooms have been made more comfortable by a thorough 
overhauling of the heating plant and the purchase of the 
latest and best desk chairs that the market affords. The 
building and equipment of the President's suite has added 
to the pleasure and convenience of the college home. A new 
flight of granite and concrete steps has greatly improved the 
approach to the college, and the city has lighted the campus 
with new arc lights. As a surety for continued improvement, 
LaGrange has inaugurated a campaign for $50,000. 

GYMNASIUM 

The first floor of the Harriet Hawkes Building is devoted 
to Physical Education. The Gymnasium is equipped with 
the best modern apparatus, and adjoins a swimming pool 
which has a capacity of thirty thousand gallons. Adjacent 
to the pool are dressing rooms and shower baths, and every 
convenience of the best natatorium. 

ATHLETIC GROUNDS 

To the rear of the Gymnasium, there is an athletic field 
where provision has been made for tennis, basket-ball, 
croquet, team and track work. 

LIBRARY 

The Library contains about 2,500 volumes which represent 
carefully selected reference books for the different depart- 
ments of the College. There are special divisions for Eng- 
lish, Science, History, Mathematics, Pedagogy, Bible, Refer- 
ence, Fiction, and the Y. W. C. A. Religious Library. 

Reference work is aided by means of an efficient card 
catalogue system which furnishes an index to any volume 
or subjects that may be desired. Newspapers and magazines 
for general reading are kept on the tables, and the students 
are encouraged to keep in touch with present day events. 

10 



LABORATORIES 

Three separate laboratories, well equipped for student 
work, are provided in the Departments of Physics, Chem- 
istry, and Biology. 

The Chemical Department is well supplied with lockers, 
Bunsen burners, chemicals and apparatus for individual 
work in the various branches of Chemistry. 

The Physical laboratory, accommodating twenty pupils at 
a time, is well equipped with high-grade apparatus. 

The Biology Department is equipped with microscopes, 
and needed appliances for making and mounting sections, 
and making cultures. 

HOME ECONOMICS 

The Home Economics Department has been thoroughly re- 
organized and refurnished. Three large and well-lighted 
adjoining rooms are devoted to this work. All of these 
rooms are equipped according to the most modern ideas. 

The Domestic Science Department occupies two of these 
rooms, one of which is used as a laboratory, and the other 
as a dining room. In the laboratory are to be found individ- 
ual sani-steel cooking desks, thoroughly fitted out with all 
necessary utensils. A gas range, as well as small gas stoves 
for each desk, has been installed. In addition to this, an 
oil stove is used, thereby making the work as practical as 
possible. 

The model dining room is very attractive and homelike. 

The room with its sewing machines is used by the Domestic 
Art Class. 



11 



STUDENT ACTIVITIES 

LITERARY SOCIETIES 

There are two literary societies, the Irenian, established 
during the early 70 's, and the Mezzofantian, established in 
1887. They meet weekly, and have exercises consisting of 
readings, recitations, debates, essays, criticisms, music, prac- 
tice in parliamentary usage, etc. 

Secret societies are not allowed, as they tend toward ex- 
travagance and an exclusiveness which is based upon wrong 
principles. 

THE YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION 

The Young Women's Christian Association is developing 
among the students a zeal for the cause of religion at home 
and abroad. Besides conducting weekly meetings for prayer 
and religious instruction, it promotes an intelligent interest 
in social and moral problems. Graduates of the College in 
both the Home and Foreign Mission fields are a compensating 
evidence of inspiration from this organization. A number 
of Bible and mission study classes are carried on under the 
direction of the faculty and more mature students. It has 
an attractive Library and Prayer Room on the first floor 
of the Or eon Smith Building. 

HISTORY CLUB 

The History Club is open to all students in the College. 
"With the co-operation of the Head of the History Depart- 
ment, weekly meetings for the discussion of historical and 
economic questions, biography, and current events are held. 
Monthly open debates on present-day subjects add much 
interest and enthusiasm. 

ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION 

An Athletic Association, composed of the members of the 
student body under the supervision of the Physical Director, 
has control of outdoor sports. It assists in equipping the 

12 



outdoor courts and track, formulates the rules for eligibility 
in class and college contests, and constantly encourages par- 
ticipation in all outdoor games, maintaining always a high 
code of honor and true sportsmanlike conduct in all forms 
of athletics. 

DRAMATIC CLUB 

The Dramatic Club meets each week for the purpose of 
studying plays, ranging from Shakespeare to modern 
comedies. Public performances are given at intervals 
throughout the year. 

Only members of the Expression Department are eligible. 

MODERN LANGUAGE CLUB 

The Modern Language Club meets weekly to promote in- 
terest in the respective language studied. Under the guid- 
ance of the Head of the Modern Language Department, cur- 
rent literature is studied, the language is spoken, and songs, 
readings, etc., given in the original. 

THE ORCHESTRA AND GLEE CLUB 

The Orchestra and Glee Club give public performances at 
the recitals of the College. 

STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION 

The Student Government Association based on powers 
and laws granted it by the President and Faculty has con- 
trol of all matters pertaining to the conduct and social life 
of the students. The life and work of the college is based 
on the Honor System, and this system applies not only to the 
rules and regulations concerning conduct, but to mid-year 
and final examinations, monthly and weekly tests, and to all 
written work such as note-books, and themes. 

Upon entrance each student is furnished with the Student's 
Hand Book so that she may familiarize herself with the rules 
of the Student Government Association. 



BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS 

The College, through the faculty, assists such graduates 
as wish to teach to find positions. This service is rendered 
without charge. 

13 



EXPENSES FOR 1918-19 

Payable on entrance in September, one-half amount due 
for year, remainder at beginning of Spring Term. 

Expenses for the College Year are as follows : 

Board, Light, and Fuel $200.00 

This does not include room fees. In the Oreon 
Smith Building, corner rooms are $12.00 a year 
for each occupant ; large rooms for four occu- 
pants are without extra charge; other rooms in 
this building are $6.00 a year for each occupant. 
In the Hawkes Building, all rooms are $18.00 a 
year for each occupant. 

Room reservations will not be made until room 
fee is paid. 

Literary Tuition, including use of Library 75.00 

Two Literary Subjects, not counting Bible 45.00 

SPECIALS 

Piano 72.00 

Pipe-Organ 80.00 

Voice 100.00 

Violin 60.00 

Harmony in Class 25.00 

Harmony or Counterpoint, private lessons 100.00 

Art 60.00 

Arts and Crafts 20.00 

Expression 60.00 

Domestic Science 30.00 

Domestic Art 30.00 

FEES FOR THE YEAR 

Matriculation Fee 10.00 

Laboratory Fees  

Chemistry 5.00 

Physics 5.00 

Biology 5.00 

Domestic Science 10.00 

Domestic Art 2.00 

14 



Infirmary Fee 5.00 

Gymnasium Fee 5.00 

Piano for Practice IV2 hrs. daily 10.00 

Each additional hr. per day 6.00 

Pipe Organ for Practice IV2 hrs. daily 10.00 

Diploma in any department 5.00 

Certificate in any department 3.00 

Boarding students must pay fees for Matriculation, Gym- 
nasium, and Infirmary. Day students must pay Matric- 
ulation fee. Laboratory, Pipe-Organ, and Piano Practice 
fees must be paid by those who enter classes in Chemistry, 
Biology, Physics, Home Economics, and Music. 

Sight-Singing and Free-Hand Drawing are free. Besides, 
the above, there are no incidental expenses. 

SUMMARY 

From the above, it will be seen that the cost of the full 
literary course for one year is as follows : 

Tuition $ 75.00 

Matriculation Fee 10.00 

Board, Lights, Fuel 200.00 

Gymnasium Fee 5.00 

Infirmary Fee 5.00 

Total for the year $295.00 

The cost of the regular literary course with Piano, Art, 
Expression, etc., may be found by adding the figures laid 
down for each under the head of " Specials' ' to this sum- 
mary. The summary above does not include room and lab- 
oratory fees. These two items may be found under the 
head of "Fees." 

NOTES 

Checks should be made payable to LaGrange College. 

When a patron finds it necessary to defer payments of 
bills when due, special arrangement must be made with the 
President. 

No reduction will be made for pupils who enter within 
one month after the term opens. 

15 



No student will be received for less than a term except by 
special agreement. 

No discount will be allowed for absence from any cause 
except sickness, and that only when the absence is for as 
long a period as ONE MONTH. 

In the event of withdrawal on account of sickness, the 
amount paid for board in advance of date of leaving will be 
refunded, but not amount paid for tuition. 

No reduction will be made by reason of a change in the 
course made during the term. 

Written permission must be sent by the parents or guar- 
dian, directly through the mails addressed to the Dean and 
not to the student, before any subject may be dropped. 

All dues must be settled in cash before students can receive 
certificates and diplomas. 

DISCOUNTS 

When two or more boarding students are entered from 
the same family, a discount of 5% is allowed on total bill, 
except laboratory fees. 

Students holding scholarships will not be given further 
discounts. 

When a student takes two musics, music and art, or any 
two or more "Specials," a discount of 10% will be allowed 
on the "Specials" taken. This does not include laboratory 
fee in Home Economics. 

One-half the literary tuition will be allowed to ministers 
who send their daughters as day students. Specials will 
be at regular rates. 

Ministers who send their daughters as boarding students 
will be charged only $175.00 per year for literary tuition, 
board, light, heat, and fees for library. This does not in- 
clude room, laboratory, gymnasium and infirmary fees. 
Branches under the head "Specials" will be at regular 
catalogue rates. 



16 



GENERAL INFORMATION 

By enrollment with us, students pledge themselves to 
abide by the rules of the College. 

No student will be enrolled in any subject unless she pre- 
sents a registration card properly filled out and duly signed. 

Parents desiring their daughters to come home or to visit 
elsewhere during the session must first send request to the 
President. Such request must not be included in letter to 
the daughter, but mailed directly to the President. Our 
experience has proved that visiting while in school is usually 
demoralizing. 

Students are not allowed to send telegrams or telephone 
messages without special permission. 

We encourage our students to be economical, and we ask 
parents to co-operate with us in discouraging needless ex- 
penditures. 

Students who keep money or jewelry in their rooms do so 
at their own risk. We can not be responsible for valuables 
unless they are deposited with us. 

Books, sheet music, and stationery are sold for CASH. 

Students are not allowed to charge purchases at LaGrange 
stores, except on written permission of parents or guardians, 
endorsed by the authorities of the College. 

Students must pay for damage done College property. 

They must observe the Sabbath and attend Sunday School 
and church. 

Students are not permitted to spend the night out in town, 
communicate with young men without permission of the 
President, leave the grounds without permission, borrow 
money, jewelry, or clothing from each other. 

HEALTH 

A close supervision is exercised over the health of board- 
ing pupils. All cases of sickness are required to be reported 
immediately to the Matron ; in case of serious sickness a 
physician is called. The perfect sanitary arrangements, good 

17 



water, and elevated country free from malaria have pre- 
vented sickness to a degree unsurpassed by any similar insti- 
tution in the State. 

Students must bring physician's certificate showing suc- 
cessful vaccination and inoculation. 

DRESS 

Parents are urged to co-operate with the administration 
in encouraging simple and inexpensive clothes. 

No strict uniform is demanded. 

Each student is required to have for street wear a simple 
blue suit, and a simple dark hat to match. 

Every student must be provided with rubbers, umbrella 
and raincoat. 

Each student must be supplied with several middy blouses, 
a pair of black pleated bloomers made of soft serge or other 
woolen cloth, and black tennis slippers for gymnasium work. 
These can be purchased after arrival at college. 

For ordinary wear, parents are requested to dress their 
daughters plainly. 

The Senior Class wear Oxford gowns in graduating 
exercises. 

FURNITURE 

The College supplies the students' rooms with heavy fur- 
niture. Each student is expected to furnish her own towels, 
sheets, blankets, counterpanes ; also napkins and napkin ring 
(plainly marked), and any other articles desired for her 
own room; as, pictures, curtains, rugs, a spoon, tumbler, 
knife, fork, etc. 

GUESTS 

Patrons and friends of the College are always welcome to 
its hospitality. As all visitors are guests of the College and 
not of individuals, a student who wishes to have a guest 
must consult the Matron to know whether a guest room is 
available. Students can not entertain guests in their rooms. 
Any student who has a guest to remain longer than two 
days will be charged at the rate of $1.00 per day. 

18 



LOAN FUNDS 

Students may be able to borrow from certain special funds 
of the College enough money to defray a large part of their 
expenses. This money loaned to a student begins to bear 
interest at 6 per cent, at the end of the year in which it 
was used. 

Mr. William S. Witham, Second Vice-President of the 
Board of Trustees, donated to the College the sum of $10,- 
000.00 (which has increased to over $24,000.00), to be loaned 
to poor or dependent girls. 

Mrs. J. C. Davidson, of West Point, Georgia, as a memorial 
to her husband, gave $1,000.00 to be used as a loan fund. 

Circulars of information concerning these funds can be 
secured from the President. The decision as to who will be 
accepted is vested entirely in a Committee of the Board of 
Trustees, to whom all applications will be referred. 



REPORTS 

Formal reports, based upon semi-annual and final exam- 
inations, together with the daily records of work, will be 
issued as soon as practical after the end of the First 
Term and after Commencement. 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. Un- 
necessary and unexcused absences seriously affect the stand- 
ing of students. 



ADMISSION OF STUDENTS 

Students may be admitted by certificate or by examination. 

Graduates of the accredited High Schools are admitted 
without examination upon such courses as certificates show 
they have satisfactorily completed. 

Students from other than accredited schools are examined 
at entrance. 

19 



CERTIFICATES FOR ENTRANCE 

Every student who enters, for music, art, literary or other- 
wise, 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. 
This should be sent in before the summer vacation. Can- 
didates will find it much easier to attend to this before their 
schools close for the summer. 

If the work of a student who has been admitted by certi- 
ficate is found unsatisfactory, such student may be placed 
in a lower class or grade. 



REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION 

For Unconditional Entrance Into Freshman Class. The applicant 
must offer subjects amounting to fifteen units. The units as- 
signed to the subject indicate the number of years, with five 
recitations (of not less than forty minutes in length), per week, 
which will be required in the secondary schools to make ade- 
quate preparation; that is, the total amount of time devoted 
to the subject throughout the year should be at least 120 '* sixty- 
minute' ' hours. 



The candidate must offer: 

Required for A.B. Degree: 

English 3 Units 

History 1 Unit 

Algebra IVz Units 

Plane Geometry 1 Unit 

Latin 3 Units 

Optional (From list 

opposite) 5V 2 Units 



Total 15 Units 



Electives: Units 

English 1 

Latin 1 

History 1 

French 2 

German 2 

Spanish 1 

Italian 1 

Greek 2 

Physics 1 

Chemistry 1 

Biology 1 

Botany % 

General Science % 

Physical Geography % 

Solid Geometry % 

2 yrs. Domestic Science 1 



20 



For admission to the B.S. Degree course, the same units 
are required as for the A.B. Degree, save that for any or all 
of the units in Latin, units in Science and Modern Languages 
may be substituted, at least one unit in Science being re- 
quired. 

A candidate wishing to offer Science or Domestic Science 
as one unit for entrance must present note books endorsed 
by the instructor who supervised the work, before being 
admitted to examination or accepted on certificate. 

2. Conditioned Freshmen. Applicants offering not less than twelve 

of the above units, three of which must be English and two 
Mathematics, may be admitted to the College as Conditioned 
Freshmen. This deficiency must be made up before the student 
passes into the Junior Class. 

3. Special Students. Teachers and other mature persons, not less 

than twenty years old, desiring special courses, may be ad- 
mitted without formal examination, upon satisfying the re- 
quirements of the departments which they wish to enter. It is 
understood that such persons will be able to satisfy entrance 
requirements in such subjects as English, History, and Math- 
ematics. 

4. Students of Music, Art, and Expression. Applicants desiring to 

pursue a course in Music, Art, or Expression, leading to a 
diploma must conform to the prescribed requirements for con- 
ditioned Freshmen, and devote nine or more hours a week to 
studies in the literary department, besides Bible. 

5. Advanced Standing. Students who are prepared to enter classes 

higher than Freshman can do so upon presenting satisfactory 
evidence of such preparation to the committee on classification. 



21 



DEFINITION OF ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS 

Required Subjects for All Applicants 

ENGLISH 

Three units prescribed. 

The College entrance requirements of the National Con- 
ference on Uniform Entrance Requirements in English  
1915 to 1920. 

I. Higher English Grammar, counting one-half unit. Eequired. 
Elementary Rhetoric, counting one unit. 

II. Literature, counting one and one-half units. Required. 

A. For Careful Reading and Practice. Applicants are required to 
present evidence of a general knowledge of the subject-matter 
of the books read, and to be able to answer simple questions 
on the lives of the authors. 

The books provided for readings are : 

Group I. (Two to be selected). The Old Testament, comprising at 
least the chief narrative episodes in Genesis, Exodus, Joshua, 
Judges, Samuel, Kings, and Daniel, together with the books of 
Ruth and Esther; the Odyssey, with the omission, if desired, of 
Books 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 15, 16, 17; the Iliad, with the omission, if 
desired, of Books 11, 13, 14, 15, 17, 21; VirgiPs Aeneid. The 
Odyssey, Iliad, and Aeneid should be read in English transla- 
tions of recognized literary excellence. 

Group II. (Two to be selected). Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's 
Dream, Merchant of Venice, As You Like It, Twelfth Night, 
The Tempest, Romeo and Juliet, King John, Richard II, Rich- 
ard III, Henry V, Coriolanus, Julius Caesar, Macbeth, Hamlet. 

Group III. (Two to be selected). Malory's Morte d' Arthur (about 
100 pp.); Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, Part I; Swift's Gulli- 
ver's Travels (voyages to Lilliput and to Brobdingnag) ; De- 
foe's Robinson Crusoe, Part I; Goldsmith's Vicar of Wake- 
field; Frances Burney (Madame d' Arblay) ; Evelina; Scott's 
Novels (any one); Maria Edgeworth's Castle Rackrent, or The 
Absentee; Dickens' Novels (any one); George Eliot's Novels 
(any one); Mrs. Gaskell's Cranford; Kingsley's Westward Ho! 
or Hereward the Wake; Read's The Cloister and the Hearth; 
Blackmore's Lorna Doone; Hughes's Tom Brown's Schooldays; 
Stevenson Novels (any one which is out of copyright); Cooper's 
Novels (any one); Hawthorne's Novels (any one which is 
out of copyright); Poe's Selected Tales. 

22 



Group IV. (Two to be selected). Addison and Steele: The Sir Roger 
de Coverly Papers, or selections from the Tatler and Spec- 
tator (about 200 pages); Boswell's Life of Johnson (about 
200 pages); Franklin's Autobiography; Irving 's Sketch Book 
(about 200 pages) or the Life of Goldsmith; Lamb's Es- 
says of Elia (about 100 pp.); Lockhart's Life of Scott (about 
200 pp.); Thackeray's Lectures on Swift, Addison, and Steele 
in English Humorists; Macaulay 's essays (any one of the fol- 
lowing) : Lord Clive, Warren Hastings, Milton, Addison, Gold- 
smith, Frederick the Great, Madame d' Arblay; Trevelyan's 
Life of Macaulay (about 200 pp.); Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies, 
or Selections (about 150 pp.); Dana's Two Years Before the 
Mast; Lincoln, Selections, including at least the two Inaugurals, 
the Speeches in Independence Hall and at Gettysburg, and the 
Last Public Address, and Letter to Horace Greeley; together 
with a brief memoir or estimate of Lincoln; Parkman's The 
Oregon Trail; Thoreau's Walden; Lowell's Essays (about 150 
pp.); Holmes' The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table; Steven- 
son's Inland Voyage and Travels with a Donkey; Huxley's 
Autobiography and selections from Lay Sermons, including the 
addresses on improving Natural Knowledge, A Liberal Educa- 
tion, and A Piece of Chalk; Essays by Bacon, Lamb, De 
Quincey; Hazlitt; Emerson. 

Group V. (Two to be selected). Palgrave's Golden Treasury (First 
Series); Books II and IH, with special attention to Dryden, 
Collins, Gray, Cowper, and Burns; Palgrave's Golden Treasury 
(First Series) : Book IV, with special attention to Wordsworth, 
Keats, and Shelley; Goldsmith's The Traveller and The De- 
serted Village; Pope's The Rape of the Lock; Collection of 
English and Scottish Ballads, as, for example, Robin Hood bal- 
lads, The Battle of Otterburn, King Estmere, Young Beichan, Be- 
wick and Grahame, Sir Patrick Spens; Coleridge's Ancient 
Mariner, Cristabel, and Kubla Khan; Byron's Childe Harold, 
Canto III, or Canto IV, and Prisoner of Chillon; Scott's The 
Lady of the Lake, or Marmion; Macaulay 's The Lays of An- 
cient Rome, The Battle of Naseby, The Armada, Ivry; Tenny- 
son 's The Princess, or Gareth and Lynette, Lancelot and Elaine, 
Passing of Arthur; Browning's Cavalier Tunes, The Lost Leader, 
How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix, Home 
Thoughts from Abroad, Home Thoughts from the Sea, Incident 
of the French Camp, Herve Riel, Pheidippides, My Last Duchess, 
Up at a Villa  Down in the City, The Italian in England, The 
Patriot, "De Gustibus," The Pied Piper, Instans Tyrannus; 
Arnold's Sohrab and Rustum, The Forsaken Merman; selec- 
tions from American Poetry with special attention to Poe, Low- 
ell, Longfellow, and Whittier. 

B. For careful study and practice. This part of the examination will 
include questions bearing on form and style, the exact meaning 
of words and phrases, and the subject-matter and the under- 
standing of allusions. 

23 



The books provided for study are: 
Group I. Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Macbeth, Hamlet. 

Group II. Milton's L 'Allegro, II Penseroso, and either Comus or 
Lycidas; Tennyson's The Coming of Arthur, The Holy Grail, 
and the Passing of Arthur; the selections from Wordsworth, 
Keats, and Shelley in Book IV of Palgrave's Golden Treasury 

(First Series). 

Group III. Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Macaulay's 
Speech on Copyright, and Lincoln's Speech at Cooper Union; 
Washington's Farewell Address; Webster's First Bunker Hill 
Oration. 

Group IV. Carlyle's Essay on Burns, with Selections from Burns* 
Poems; Macaulay's Life of Johnson; Emerson's Essay on 
Manners. 

MATHEMATICS 

Two and one-half units prescribed. 
College Algebra  

(a) To Quadratics. One unit. 

(b) Quadratics through Progressions. One-half unit. 

Plane Geometry. One unit. 

Solid Geometry. One-half unit. (Given as a Freshman study). 

Trigonometry. One-half unit. (Given as a Freshman study). 

LATIN 

Three units prescribed. 
Grammar and Composition. One unit. 
Caesar (four books). One unit. 
Cicero (six orations). One unit. 
Virgil (six books of the .ffineid). 

For the work in Caesar or Cicero, an equivalent amount of Nepos 
and Sallust, and for the work in Virgil an equivalent amount of Ovid 
may be substituted. 

HISTORY* 

One Unit prescribed. 
General History. One unit. 
Greek and Roman History. One unit. 
Mediaeval and Modern European History. One unit. 
English History. One unit. 
American History (Civics may be a part of this course). One unit. 



*NOTE: Any two of these units may be offered for entrance. 

24 



ELECTIVES. 

French. Two units. 

(a) One-half of Elementary Grammar, and 100 pp. of approved 

reading. One unit. 

(b) Grammar completed and 250 to 400 pp. of approved read- 

ing. One unit. 

German. Two units. 

(a) One-half of Elementary Grammar, and 75 to 100 pp. ap- 

proved reading. One unit. 

(b) Elementary Grammar completed, and 150 to 200 pp. ap- 

proved reading. One unit. 

Spanish. One unit. 

The same requirements as in French. 

Italian. One unit. 

The same requirements as in French and Spanish. 

Greek. Two units. 

(a) Grammar and Composition. One unit. 

(b) Xenophon (first four books of Anabasis). One unit. 

(c) Homer's Iliad (the first three books), with Prosody and 

translation at sight. One unit. 
Science. Two units. 

(Xote. Candidates wishing to offer any Science for entrance, must 
present note books endorsed by the instructor under whose super- 
vision the work was done.) 

I. Botany. One-half unit. 

The preparation in Botany should include the study of at 
least one modern text-book, such as Bergen's Elements of 
Botany, together with approved laboratory note-book. 

II. General Science. One-half unit. 

A study of a modern text-book, as Elhuff or its equivalent, 
with laboratory note-book. 

III. Physics. One unit. 

The study of a modern text-book, as Carhart and Chute, or 
Millikan and Gale, with a laboratory note-book covering at 
least forty exercises from a list of sixty or more. 

IV. Chemistry. One unit. 

The preparation in Chemistry shall be upon the same plan as 
that prescribed for Physics. 



25 



REQUIREMENTS FOR DEGREES 

The College confers two degrees, the A.B. and the B.S., the courses 
leading to which are indicated below. 

The requirements for either degree call for a four years' course. 

The minimum work required for graduation is sixty session hours, 
exclusive of laboratory work, and gymnasium. 

The minimum year for a regular literary student in the Freshman 
or Sophomore class is seventeen hours a week. (This means seventeen 
recitation periods a week for thirty-six weeks, or the equivalent, each 
one hour long). The maximum year for Freshman or Sophomore 
students is twenty hours a week, with one special, eighteen. 

The minimum year for those in the Junior or Senior class is fifteen 
hours a week, the maximum eighteen hours a week, with one special, 
seventeen. 



COLLEGIATE COURSES LEADING TO A.B. AND B.S. 

FRESHMAN 

Required Hours 

English 3 

Mathematics 3 

History or Science 3 

Latin 3 

Modern Language (any one) ... 3 

Bible 1 1 

SOPHOMORE 

Required Hours Elective Hours 

English 3 Latin 3 

Biology 3 French 3 

History 3 German 3 

Bible II 1 Spanish 3 

Electives 5 Mathematics 3 

Harmony 1 

History of Music and Art.... 1 

Fine Arts 1 

JUNIOR 

Required Hours Elective Hours 

English 3 English 3 

History 3 Economics 2 

Bible III 2 Philosophy 3 or 6 

Electives 7 Science 3 or 6 

Latin 3 or 6 

Modern Languages (any one).. 3 or 6 

Mathematics 3 or 6 

History 3 

History of Music and Art 1 

Harmony 1 

26 



Required 
Bible IV. . . . 
Fsychology \ 
Ethics j 

Electives 



SENIOR 

Hours Elective Hours 

2 English 3 or 6 

3 Philosophy 3 or 6 

Modern Languages (any one).. 3 or 6 

10 Sociology 3 or 6 

Psychology \ 3 

Ethics J 

Science 3 or 6 

Latin 3 or 6 

Mathematics 3 or 6 

History 3 

History of Music and Art 1 

Harmony 1 



Note 1.  A minimum of one year of German is required for B.S. 
Degree, otherwise requirements are the same. 

Note 2.  A student who has presented neither Physics nor Chemistry 
for entrance must elect one of these sciences in the Freshman year and 
take History in the Sophomore year. If either Physics or Chemistry 
has been presented for entrance, the other of these sciences and His- 
tory must be elected, one in the Freshman year and the other in the 
Sophomore year. 

Note 3.  Upon completing the work of the second year, students 
select the line of their further study according to their special apti- 
tudes. 

Before the beginning of the third year each student will be expected 
to select a leading subject from the following: English, English 
Literature, Latin, Greek, German, French, Philosophy, History, Math- 
ematics, Chemistry, Physics, Biology, or Sociology. She will be 
required to complete nine hours of elective courses in her leading 
subject. Other courses will be arranged after conference with her 
adviser, the head of the department in which she elects her prin- 
cipal work. 



27 



COURSES OF INSTRUCTION 

ENGLISH 

I. LANGUAGE AND COMPOSITION 

PEOFESSOE THEELKELD 
INSTEUCTOE EAKES 

1. Foundation Course in English Composition.  A theoretical and 

practical study of the principles of Ehetoric. 
First Semester: A study of style in general, diction, the sentence, 

the paragraph. Weekly themes. 
Second Semester: The composition as a whole, the literary types. 

Weekly themes. Individual conferences. Three- hours a week. 

Eequired of Freshmen. 

2. Augumentation and Exposition.  Analysis of questions, brief -draw- 

ing, oral and written discussions. Study of representative 
essays. Exercise in writing book reviews and in reporting for 
newspapers. Two hours a week. Open to students who have 
had Course 1. 

3. History of the English Language.  Origin and structure of the 

English Language in vocabulary, grammatical inflections, and 
syntax as the basis of modern usage. Eeading of extracts from 
Old English Prose and Poetry. Three hours a week. Open to 
Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors. 

4. Advanced Composition.  A course in the writing of the short story, 

and the essay. Daily themes and personal interviews. Intended 
for students who have shown special talent for writing. Open 
to students who have completed Courses 1 and 2, or Courses 
1 and 5. Two hours a week. 

II. LITERATURE 

5. General Course in English Literature.  Study and criticism of rep- 

resentative writers of different periods of English Literature. 
Open to students who have completed Course 1. Three hours 
a week. 

6. The English Drama (exclusive of Shakespeare).  A study of the 

law and technique of the drama, the evolution of the English 
drama, and a study of representative plays from the Morality 
and Miracle plays up to the present drama. Open to students 
who have completed Courses 1 and 5. Three hours a week. 

28 



7. Shakespeare.  The study of Shakespeare's development as a 

dramatist. His plays read and discussed in class, and some of 
them studied closely. Note-book and theme work. Open to 
students who have completed Courses 1 and 5. Three hours 
a week. 

8. Development of English Prose Fiction.  A study of English prose 

fiction from the first prose romance to the modern novel. Criti- 
cal study of representative novels. Note-book and theme work. 
Open to students who have completed Courses 1 and 5. Three 
hours a week. 

9. English Poetry of the Nineteenth Century.  This course considers 
the work of the Georgian and Victorian poets. Especial study 
is given to Wordsworth and Coleridge; Keats and Shelley; 
Tennyson and Browning . Scott, Landor, Byron, Clough, Arnold, 
Morris, Eossetti, and Swinburne. Open to students who have 
completed Courses 1 and 5. Two hours a week. 

10. American Literature.  Not an introductory course, but a more 

intensive study of the American authors. Open to students 
who have completed Courses 1 and 5. Two hours a week. 

11. English Literature of the Fourteenth Century.  Especial attention 

is given to Chaucer. Open to students who have completed 
Courses 1 and 5. First Semester, two hours a week. 

12. English Lyric Poetry of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. 

 Open to students who have completed Courses 1 and 5, and 11. 
Second Semester, two hours a week. 

LATIN 

PEOFESSOE TAGUE 

INSTEUCTOE BEOOKES 

Latin I.  Livy, Book XXI.; Horace's Odes; D'Ooge's Latin Com- 
position, Part III., once a week. Three hours a week. 

Latin II.  Sallust's Cataline: Selections from Horace's Satires and 
Epistles; Lyric Metres of Horace; Tacitus' Germania or Agri- 
cola. Three hours a week. 

Latin III.  Eoman Comedy and Tragedy; Terence's Phormio and 
Andria; Platus Captivi and Mostellaria; Seneca's Medea; Me- 
Kail's Latin Literature; Sight Eeading. Three hours a week. 

GREEK 

MISS M. SMITH 

1. Elementary.  First Greek Book (White). Three chapters of 
Xenophon 's Anabasis. Three hours a week throughout the year. 

29 



This course is open to all who have not offered it for entranee. 
It may be counted toward the A.B. degree if the candidate offers 
Latin and one modern language for entrance. 

2. Xenophon's Anabasis, Books I.-IV. (Mather and Hewitt); Pear- 
son's Prose Composition. The Gospel by Mark (Drew). Three 
hours a week throughout the year. 

3a. Homer.  Iliad I.-VL, Selections (Seymour); Homeric construc- 
tion, forms and prosody. Three hours a week for the first term. 

b. Plato's Apology, Crito, and selections from the Phaedo 
(Kitchel). Three hours a week for the second term. 

4. New Testament Greek (Westcott and Hort).  Burton's New Testa- 
ment Moods and Tenses. One hour a week throughout the year. 
Open to those who have completed I. 

FRENCH 

PROFESSOR WINSLOW 
INSTRUCTOR EAKES 

1. *Elementary Course.  Grammar, Composition, reading, exercises in 

speaking and writing from dictation. 

Texts : Fraser and Squair's Grammar, selections from Laboulave, 
Daudet, Malot, Legouve* et Labiche, Vigny, Augier. La- 
Visse : Historie de France II anne. 

Three hours a week. Open to all undergraduates. 

2. Intermediate Course.  Composition, exercises in speaking, writing 

from dictation. A systematic review of syntax introductory to 
theme writing and oral narrative. 

Texts : Fraser and Squair's Grammar ; Frangois' Advanced Prose ; 
Sol<< Lions from Lnmartine. Maupassant, About, Balzac, 
Colin, Sandeau, Chauteaubriand. 

Three hours a week. Open to students who have completed 
Course I. or who have two units for entrance. 

3. Outline History of French Literature.  A general course in the 

literature of the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Cen- 
turies. Original themes, papers on topics suggested by texts, 
Collateral reading. 

Texts : Abry, Audic et Crouzet's Historie de la Literature 
franchise ; Selections from Corneille, Racine, Moliere, 

Montesquie, Voltaire, Rousseau. 

Two hours a week. Open to students who have completed 
Course II. or equivalent. This course may not be elected with* 
out Course IV. 

*First-year French may not be counted toward the B.A. degree, if 
taken after the Sophomore year, nor French 2, if taken after the 
Junior vear. 

30 



4. Systematic Practice in Speaking.  Subject-matter: Representa- 

tive Men of France. French texts are used. One hour a week. 
Open to students who have completed Course II. This course 
may not be elected without Course III. 

5. The Drama of the Seventeenth Century.  A study of the drama as 

represented by Corneille, Racine, and Moliere. Three hours a 
week. Open to students who have completed Courses III. and 
IV. 

6. A Study of Romanticism.  Romanticism: its origin, its principles, 

and the foreign influences at work during the period. Writers 
studied: Mme. de Stael, Chauteaubriand, Hugo, Lamartine, Mus- 
set. Lectures, collateral reading, reports. Three hours a week. 
Open to students who have completed Course V. or Courses III 
and IV. 

7. Reaction Against Romanticism.  A study of the new influences at 

work in fiction, history, the drama, and poetry. Writers: Hugo 
to Rostand, Taine, Renan, Leconte de Lisle, Sully Prudhomme. 
Lectures, discussion, collateral reading, and reports. Three 
hours a week, second semester. Open to students who have com- 
pleted Course VI. 

8. Advanced Grammar and Composition.  Thorough review of the 

principles of syntax. Translations from English into French. 
Rapid sight translations, oral reports from journals and pe- 
riodicals. Three hours a week. Open to students who make 
French a major study; a major in French consists of at least 
twelve hours which must include Courses II., III., V., VI. and 
VII., and at least two hours selected from any course in which 
II. is a prerequisite. 

GERMAN 

PROFESSOR WINSLOW 
INSTRUCTOR HALL 

1. *Elementary Course.  Grammar, reading, oral and written exer- 

cises. 

Texts : Thomas's Practical German Grammar ; Bacon's Im Vater- 
land, Marchen und Erzahlen ; Selections from Storm, 
Schiller, ron Hillern. 

Three hours a week. Open to all undergraduates. 

2. Intermediate Course.  Grammar, reading, reproduction, and prose 

composition. Conversation and memorizing of poems. 

*First-year German may not be counted towards the B.A. degree, 
if taken after the Sophomore year, nor German II., if taken after 
the Junior year. 

31 



Texts : Thomas's Practical Grammar, Part II. ; Volkmann- 
Leander's Traumerein ; Storm's Immensee ; Schiller's 
Wilhelm Tell ; Mueller's Deutsche Liebe ; Wildenbruch's 
Das Edle Blut, Der Letzte. 

Three hours a week. Open to students who have completed 
Course I. 

3i Outline History of German Literature.  A course intended to give 
a general historical background for more detailed study of 
German literature in subsequent courses. 

Texts : Schiller's Maria Stuart ; Wenckebach's Meisterwerke ; 
Goethe's Dichtung und Wahrheit. 

Three hours a week, first semester. Open to students who have 

completed Course II. 

4. The Classic Drama.  A continuation of Course III. Chief topic: 

the classical period in German literature. Critical perusal and 

study of the works read. 

Texts : Schiller's Wallensteine ; Goethe's Egmont, Iphigenie auf 
Tauris ; Lessing's Minna von Barnhelm. 

Three hours a week, second semester. Open to students who 

have completed Course III. 

5. Goethe's Life and Works.  Study of the principle characteristics 

of Goethe 's life and works to the time of his literary co- 
operation with Schiller. Lectures, discussions. 

Texts : Gotz von Berlichingen ; Iphigenie ; Goebel's selected poems ; 

Boyesen's Life of Goethe ; Goethe's Briefe Dichtung und 

Wahrheit. 
Three hours a week, first semester. Open to students who have 
completed Course II., III., and IV. 

6. Schiller's Life and Works.  Study of Schiller's life, some of his 

important dramatic works. Lectures and discussions. 

Texts : Boyesen's Schiller's Life ; Schiller's Die Rauber, Wallen- 
stein, Gedichte, Briefe. 

Three hours a week, second semester. Open to students who 

have completed Course V. 

7. Scientific and Historical Reading.  A study of the works of lead- 

ing German scientists and historians. This course is designed 
especially to aid students in their work in the sciences. 

Texts : Thomas's Practical German Grammar ; Hodge's Course in 
Scientific German ; Gore's German Science Reader, 
Three hours a week. Open to students who have completed 
Course I. 

8. Grammar and Phonetics.  A systematic study of German Gram- 

mar, exercises in oral and written expression, discussions of 
methods of teaching German, conversation stressed. 

Texts: Thomas's Practical Grammar; Buhnendeutsche Elements 
of Phonetics. 
Three hours a week. Open to students who make German their 
major subject. 

32 



SPANISH 

PEOFESSOE WIXSLOW 

INSTRUCTOR BEOOKES 

Elementary Course.  Grammar, and reading of modern authors, 
themes, reports and collateral reading on Spanish subjects. 

Texts : De Vitis' Spanish Grammar ; Turrell's Spanish Reader ; 
Ramo's Carrion y Vital Aza. 

Three hours a week. Open to all undergraduates. 

Intermediate Course.  Grammar, reading, history of Spanish litera- 
ture. 

Texts : Ramsey's Spanish Grammar ; Ford's Spanish Composition ; 
Alarc6n's El Capitan Veneno ; Isla's Gil Bias ; Butler 
Clarke's Spanish Literature. 

Three hours a week. Open to students who have completed 
Course I. 

Advanced Course.  The drama of the Golden Age. 1550-1650. 
Characteristic dramas of Lope de Vega, Alarcon, Tirso de 
Molina and Calderon will be studied as representative of the 
nation's thought and ideals at the time. Three hours a week. 
Open to students who have completed Course II. 

ITALIAN 

PEOFESSOE WINSLOW 

Elementary Course.  Grammar, reading and composition. Practice 
in pronunciation is given by reading in class well-known Italian 
operas. 

Texts : Grandgent's Italian Grammar ; Marinoni's Italian Reader ; 
De Amieis. La Vita Militare. 

Three hours a week. Open to all undergraduates. 
Reading from Standard Authors.  

Texts : Dante's Vita Nuova, Inferno. Purgatorio ; Goldini's Un 
Curioso Accidente ; Garnett's History of Italian Litera- 
ture ; Grandgent's Grammar ; Selections from Alfieri, 
Manzoni. Torquato Tasso. 

Three hours a week. Open to students who have completed 
Course I. 

HISTORY 

PEOFESSOE VAUGHAN 

The Development of Modern Europe.  This course begins with the 
period of Louis XIV., traces the rise of Eussia and Prussia, 
and the struggle between France and England for India. Stress 
is laid upon social, religious, political and industrial conditions. 
Collateral readings. Note-books kept. 

Texts : Robinson and Beard's Development of Modern Europe. 
Three hours a week. Open to all undergraduates. 

33 



2. The French Revolution, the Napoleonic Era and Europe in the 

Nineteenth Century.  Collateral readings. Note-books kept con- 
taining written topics and reports on readings. 

Tkxts : Stephen's Revolutionary Europe ; I-lazen's Europe Since 
1815. 

Three hours a week. Open to students who have completed 
Course I. 

3. An Advanced Course in Political and Constitutional History of 

the United States.  The main stress of this course, during the 
first term, is thrown upon the philosophy of the dramatic his- 
tory of our national growth. The second term is devoted to 
an interpretative study of American institutions. Three hours 
a week during entire year. Optional for Juniors and Seniors. 

4. English History From 1066-1815.  Special stress is laid upon a 

study of the Norman Conquest, the War of the Eoses, the 
Reformation Parliament, and the growth of the British Colonial 
Empire. Collateral readings. Note-books kept. Two hours a 
week during entire year. Open to those who have had History I. 

5. The Making of Modern England.  In this course special stress ig 

laid upon the social, economic, and political factors in English 
history. Two hours a week. Open to Juniors and Seniors. 

6. Current History.  No class is more important than this, for present 

day questions are discussed. We believe that it is most im- 
portant that our students keep in touch with the history which 
is now being made. One hour a week during entire year. Open 
to all History students. 

7. Greek History.  In this course stress is laid upon the Political 

history of the Greek States, and the manifold activities of 
Greek civilization. Work is based upon reading in translation 
of ancient Greek writers. Two hours a week. Open to Seniors. 

8. Roman History.  A study of the political development of the 

Eoman State, based upon the reading in translation of Eoman 
writers. Two hours a week. Open to Seniors. 

ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY 

PEOFESSOE VAUGHAN 
PEOFESSOE SMITH, M. 

1. Principles of Sociology.  Two hours a week, first semester. 

2. Social Problems.  The family, immigration, crime, the negro ques- 

tion, charities. The class is required to do wide collateral 
reading, theme-work, and to visit local institutions. Two hours 
a week, second semester. The above course not open to Fresh- 
men. 

3. Principles of Economics.  This course is intended to give an out- 

line knowledge of the important theories and accepted laws of 
Political Economy. As much time as is practical is given to 

34 



study of the problems of the day, and to discussions of the 
latest phases of economic thought. Note-books kept containing 
written reports on reference-work and collateral readings. Two 
hours a week, entire year. Open to Juniors and Seniors. 

4. A Study of Conditions in American Cities, Including the Causes of 

Poverty and Pauperism. Two hours a week, first semester. 
Open to Juniors and Seniors. 

5. A Study of Socialism, with Stress Laid Upon Modern Ideas of 

Christian Socialism.  Two hours a week, second semester. Open 
to those who have completed Courses I. and II. 

6. Labor Problems.  A history of organized labor, and modern labor 

improvements. Two hours a week, first semester. Open to 
those who have completed Course III. 

7. Economic History of the United States.  A survey of economic 

conditions in our country from Colonial times to the present. 
Two hours a week, second semester. Open to those who have 
completed Course VI. 

PHILOSOPHY AND PEDAGOGY 

PROFESSOR VAUGHAN 

I. 1. Ethics.  The application of ethical principles to the practical 
problems of conduct. Text-book: Drake's Problems of 
Conduct. Three hours a week, first semester. 
2. Psychology.  A study of the elementary facts of conscious- 
ness. Text-book: Baldwin's Psychology and Education. 
Assigned work from James, Davis, and Seashore. Three 
hours a week, second semester. 

II. Logic.  Sellar's Essentials of Logic and assigned work from 

other texts. Two hours a week, second semester. 

III. 1. History and Principles of Education.  A general survey of 
educational principles and theories, and the factors in 
individual development based upon the texts of Seeley 
and Monroe. Three hours a week, first semester. 

2. Methods in Education.  This is a course of study and dis- 
cussion of general method in teaching, and of Nature 
Study and its value in education. Text-books: Col- 
grove's The Teacher and the School, Dutton's School 
Management, Hodge's Nature Study, and assigned work 
from Page, Butler, Strayer. Three hours a week, second 
semester. 

IV. 1. Education Psychology.  A course in the general relations of 
bodily and mental growth; the development of instincts 
and their educational value. Text-books: Kirkpatrick 's 
Child Study, Pyle's Psychology; assigned library work. 
Three hours a week, first semester. 

35 



2. Technique of Teaching.  A course in methods of teaching and 
class room procedure based on Hollister's High School 
Administration, the Georgia Manual for Teachers, Geor- 
gia School Laws, model lessons and observation work. 

V. 1. Practical Teaching.  A course of model lessons one hour a 
week throughout the year. This course presents the 
actual lesson,  assignment, development, and review  in 
all texts required for elementary school work. The use 
of the sand table, the picture, the experiment, the crayon 
drawing, and the note-book in connection with class 
work is demonstrated. 

2. Observation Work.  Through the courtesy of the Superin- 
tendent of Schools of LaGrange, the classes in Pedagogy 
do observation work in the eight grades of the City 
Public Schools. Two hours of observation work a week 
until the course is completed. 

Teachers' Certificates.  All applicants for the course in Peda- 
gogy must present, upon entrance, the prerequisites of 
fifteen units of High School work required of students 
looking toward an A.B. degree. In addition to Courses 
III., IV., and V. of Philosophy and Pedagogy, students 
must complete two full years of College work; subjects 
to be elected from the A.B. College course, provided 
that the applicant chooses in these electives two years of 
College English, Bible, and Sight-singing, and not less 
than one year of Free-Hand Drawing. 

THE BIBLE AND RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 

PROFESSOR TAGUE 

I. The Bible as Literature.  A study of the books of the Bible. 

The purpose is to enable the student to know the author 's 
point of view and purpose and the division and literary 
structure of the books, and to read the English Bible 
with intelligent appreciation. Text-book: The Bible as 
Literature. Grant. One hour a week throughout the 
year. 

H. The Old Testament.  A study of the great men and women 

of the Old Testament, emphasis being placed upon the 
moral qualities of the characters. Reproduction of the 
Bible stories, orally and in writing. Text-book: To be 
announced later. One hour a week throughout the year. 

III. The New Testament.  A study of the beginning of Chris- 

tianity. The purpose of this course is to give the student 
a thorough knowledge of the gospel narrative of the life 
and teachings of Christ and of the life and labors of the 
Apostles. Text-book: New Testament History. Rail. 
Two hours a week throughout the year. 

36 



IV. The Social Institutions and Ideals of the Bible.  A study of 

the living conditions in which the men and women of 
both the Old and New Testaments lived, labored, preach- 
ed and wrote. Text-book: The Social Institutions and 
Ideals of the Bible. Soares. Two hours a week through- 
out the year. 
V. Mission Course.  

1. A study of the lives of the great missionary heroes and the 

growth of missions in the various mission fields. One 
hour a week throughout the year. 

2. Comparative Religions. A comparative study of the great 

faiths of the world, special reference being given to the 
effects of these religions upon the believers. One hour 
a week throughout the year. 

VI. Church History.  A survey of church history from the Apos- 

tolic Age until the present time. Text-book: Sohm's 
Outlines of Church History. One hour a week through- 
out the year. 

VI. Religious Pedagogy.  The course is designed to prepare 

Christian workers for service in Sunday School and 
Church; it embraces two years, and is practical and 
helpful. 

1. A study of the qualifications of the Sunday School teacher, 

child development, and the child's religious interest. 
Text-books: The Pupil and the Teacher, Weigle. One 
hour a week throughout the year. 

2. A study of the Organized Sunday School; principles and 

methods of work in the different grades; the work of 
the modern church, the relation of the church to the 
modern social problems of the young church member. 
Text-books: The Bible, Cope's Efficiency in the Sun- 
day School. One hour a week throughout the year. 

SCIENCE 

PEOFESSOE CAEMICHAEL 
INSTEUCTOES SMITH, THEELKELD 

BIOLOGY 

1. General Biology.  A study of the general laws of life, and the 

fundamental relationships of living things. Comparative mor- 
phology and biology of animals as represented by a series of 
types of the most important classes of invertebrates and verte- 
brates. 

Texts : Conn, Biology ; Hegner, Introductory Zoology. 
Eequired of Sophomores. 
Lectures, laboratory and field work. Value, three hours a week. 

2. Invertebrate Zoology.  Lectures and laboratory work devoted to 

the structure, habits, and distribution of animal life. 

Texts : Parker and Haswell, Zoology ; Howard, Nature Series. 

37 



Recitations, three hours a week. Laboratory, two two-hour 
periods a week. Value, three hours. Prerequisite, Course I. 

3. Vertebrate Zoology.  A comparative study of vertebrate types. 

This work will consist chiefly of the dissection of typical 
examples of fishes, amphibians, reptiles and mammals. 

Texts : Parker and Haswell, Zoology ; Holmes, Biology of the 
Frog ; Howard, Nature Series. 

Recitations, one hour a week. Laboratory, two two-hour pe- 
riods a week. Value, three hours. Prerequisite, Course I. 

4. Insects.  Lectures, laboratory and field work in the study of the 

morphology, habits and life histories of economic insects. Lec- 
tures, one hour a week. Laboratory, four hours a week. Value, 
one and one-half hours. First semester. Prerequisite, Course I. 

5. Natural History.  Lectures, laboratory, and field work with 

special reference to local fauna, both land and water. Lectures, 
one hour a week. Laboratory, four hours a week. Value, one 
and one-half hours. Second semester. Prerequisite, Course I. 

6. Household Bacteriology.  A course designed especially for stu- 

dents of Home Economics, and includes a study of yeasts, 
molds, and bacteria. Lectures, two hours a week. Laboratory, 
one two-hour period a week. Value, one and one-half hours. 

PHYSICS 

1. General Physics.  A study of Mechanics, Sound, Heat, Electricity 

and Magnetism. 

Text : Carhart, College Physics. 
Recitations, three hours a week. Laboratory, two two-hour 
periods a week. Value, three hours. Required if not offered 
for entrance. 

2. Mechanics, Molecular Physics, and Heat.  Machines, liquids and 

gases, thermometry, properties of vapors and gases, transmis- 
sion of heat, the steam engine. 

Text : Carhart, University Fhysics. 

Recitations, two hours a week. Laboratory, three hours a week. 
Value, one and one-half hours. First semester. Prerequisite, 
Course I., and Mathematics I. 

3. Electricity, Sound, and Light.  Magnetic and electric fields of 

force, the study and use of instruments for the measurement 
of current, potential difference and resistance, electro-magnetic 
induction. Resonance, interference of sounds, musical instru- 
ments. Phenomena of dispersion, interference, diffraction and 
polarization of light. 

Text : Franklin and MacNutt, Electricity and Magnet ; Franklin 
and MacNutt, Light and Sound. 

Recitations, two hours a week. Laboratory, three hours a week. 
Value, one and one-half hours. Second semester. Prerequisite, 
Course 2. 

38 



4. Advanced Physics.  A course in theoretical and mathematical 
Physics. 

Texts : Preston, Theory of Light ; Maxwell, Theory of Heat % 
Ames, Theory of Physics. 

Lectures, recitations, reference work. Value, three hours. } 

CHEMISTRY. " [ 

1. General Chemistry.  A study of the principles of Chemistry, as 

illustrated by the non-metals and their compounds, and the 
metals and their compounds. This course is intended for be- 
ginners in Chemistry. 

Texts : MaePhorson and Henderson, General Chemistry. 
Recitations, two hours a week throughout the year. Labora- 
tory, two two-hour periods a week. Value, three hours. Re- 
quired of all students who have not offered Chemistry for 
College entrance. All students are required to take either this 
course, or Chemistry 2, or Physics 1, in the Freshman or Sopho- 
more year. 

2. Advanced Chemistry.  This course covers practically the same 

general principles as those studied in Course 1, but they are 
taught from a physical-chemical standpoint. Recitations, two 
hours a week throughout the year. Laboratory, two two-hour 
periods a week. Required of all students who have offered both 
Physics and Chemistry for entrance, and elect Chemistry for 
their College course. 

3. Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis.  This is a laboratory course 

in the study of the reactions of the principal acids and bases, 
their detection and separation, and a few typical processes 
involving both volumetric and gravimetric methods of analysis. 
Recitations, one hour a week throughout the year. Laboratory, 
two two-hour periods a week. Value, three hours. Prerequisite, 
Course 1 or 2. 

4. Organic Chemistry.  A systematic survey of the hydrocarbons, and 

their typical compounds. Preparation of the important com- 
pounds of the different classes will be taken up in the labora- 
tory. Recitations, three hours a week throughout the year. 
Laboratory, two two-hour periods a week. Value, three hours. 
Prerequisite, Chemistry 1 or 2. 

5. Household Chemistry.  Lectures, recitations and laboratory work 

designed to show the importance of chemistry in the home. 

Some of the main types studied are air, water, fuels, food and 

its functions, household remedies, poisons and their antidotes, 

the detection and effects of adulterants. Recitations, two hours 

a week throughout the year. Laboratory, two two-hour periods 

a week. Value, three hours. Prerequisites, Chemistry 1 or 2. 

Note : Both Physics and Chemistry, when not offered for entrance, must 
be taken in College, and when both are offered for entrance, an advanced 
course in one or the other must be taken in College. 

39 



HYGIENE 

1. Personal Hygiene.  This course deals with the subjects of muscular 

exercise, food and eating, fresh air and vocal organs, the skin, 
bathing and clothing, hygiene of the special senses, nervous 
system, daily living regimes as to work, study, recreation, men- 
tal habits, etc. Three hours a week, first semester. Open to 
Juniors. Prerequisite, Anatomy and Physiology. 

2. Educational Hygiene.  The range of subjects dealt with in this 

course is broad. It treats of methods of safeguarding civic 
health and maintaining sanitary surroundings. Epidemics, in- 
fection, quarantine. Proper construction, furnishing, heating, 
lighting, and ventilation of school buildings. Use and necessity 
of play grounds. The health of school children and teachers. 
Diseases caused by school life. Mal-nutrition. Medical and 
dental inspection of schools, etc. Three hours a week, second 
semester. 

MATHEMATICS 

PROFESSOR TAGUE 
INSTRUCTOR EAKES 

1. Wentworth-Smith's New Solid Geometry, completed with original 

work. Three hours a week, first semester. Prerequisite: Plane 
Geometry with all originals of that course, though the student 
may make up a small part of the originals with a special class, 
first semester. 

2. Bauer and Bracke ? s Trigonometry. Three hours a week, second 

semester. Prerequisite: Mathematics 1. 

3. Hawkes' Advanced Algebra. Three hours a week, first semester. 

Prerequisite: Methematics 2, and an examination on Quad- 
ratics and the general principles of High School Algebra, such 
as is given in Mathematics 1A and 2A. 

4. Smith and Gale's Plane and Solid Analytical Geometry. Three 

hours a week throughout the year. Prerequisite: Mathe- 
matics 3. 

5. Osborne's Differential Calculus. Three hours a week, second 

semester. Prerequisite: Mathematics 4. 

HOME ECONOMICS 

MISS EXUM 

I. Home-Maker's Course. 1. The principles of household manage- 
ment, including work in purchasing, preparing, and serving 
simple foods; table service; household sanitation; and 
household chemistry. One hour a week, first semester. 

40 



2. This course is designed to give general knowledge of plain 
sewing by hand and machine, the repairing and care of 
clothing, darning, patching, simple embroidery stitches and 
crocheting. Various articles are made. One hour a week, 
second semester. 

II. Domestic Science. 1. General methods of food preparation; 

equipment, location, plan and furnishing of kitchen. Uten- 
sils and their care; fuels; general food value; the prepara- 
tion of the following groups of foods: beverages, soups, 
quick breads and yeast breads, fruits and vegetables, eggs, 
milk and cheese, meats, fish and simple cakes. Text-book: 
Kinne and Cooley's Foods and Household Management. 
Five hours a week throughout the year. 

2. Continued study of the preservation of foods; preparation of 
salads, meats, desserts, candies, pastries, cake making and 
decoration. Attention is paid to fireless cooking, invalid 
cooking, and planning of menus with thought as to nutri- 
tive value, proper selection, combinations, and cost. Table 
service is also taught. Each pupil is required to plan, pre- 
pare, and serve at least one meal during the year. Text- 
books: Greer 's Text-Book of Cookery, Cooley's Nutrition 
and Diet. Five hours a week throughout the year. 

III. Domestic Art. 1. (a). This course includes practice in the fol- 

lowing: the use of the sewing machine and its attachments; 
patterns,  their interpretation, use, and alteration; hand 
and machine sewing; seams and finishes for wash ma- 
terials; making of various garments; simple embroidery 
and crocheting. Four hours a week throughout the year. 

(b). Study of textiles, home decorations, and house fur- 
nishings. Text-book: Kinne and Cooley's Shelter 
and Clothing. One hour a week throughout the 
year. 

2. (a). A continued study of patterns, their uses, simple 

drafting; fine hand sewing; the making of various 
garments, including lingerie and dresses. Four 
hours a week throughout the year, 
(b). Home nursing. This course is intended to give in- 
struction in simple emergencies and first aid, and 
in simple procedures in the care of the sick. One 
hour a week, first semester. 

NOTE: All pupils registering for Domestic Science must provide 
themselves with two plain long white aprons, and two white caps. 

DIPLOMAS AND CERTIFICATES IN HOME ECONOMICS 

A diploma is awarded upon the completion of two years 
of Domestic Art and two years of Domestic Science. 

41 



Two years work is required for a certificate in Domestic 
Science or Domestic Art. 

Literary requirements for a Certificate or a Diploma: 
Four years accredited High School, provided six hours a 
week literary work be done in College. 

PHYSICAL EDUCATION 

MISS POTTER, DIRECTOR 

It has long been an accepted fact that mental states are 
directly influenced by one's physical condition. Hence, an 
educational institution can not furnish efficient, systematic 
development for the members of its student body unless it 
makes adequate provision for physical training and the 
study of personal hygiene. In women's colleges, there is an 
especial need for carefully supervised exercise, that will 
improve and invigorate the bodily welfare of the girls upon 
whose health and condition depends the future happiness 
of themselves and their families. 

There is an acknowledged tendency on the part of many 
young women to take too little exercise, a tendency that has 
increased by college book work. Round shoulders are all 
too prevalent. Lowered muscular tone and weak control of 
the nervous system are danger signals of impending ills and 
disorders. Accordingly, three years of gymnasium work and 
outdoor sports are required in LaGrange College. 

1. Gymnastics.  Swedish gymnastics, progressing from free-standing 

to heavy apparatus, such as rings, ropes, ladders, bars, etc.; 
exercises for correcting various physical defects; swimming, 
tennis, captain ball, volley ball, basket-ball; rhythmical move- 
ments of the body, aesthetic and military drills; marching 
and hiking. Two hours a week. Required of Freshmen. 

2. Gymnastics.  Twice a week throughout the year. Required of 

students who have completed Course I. 

3. Gymnastics.  Twice a week throughout the year. Required of 

students who have completed Courses I. and II. 

4. Special Gymnastics and Hygiene.  A training course designed as 

a preparation for directing physical education in public schools. 
The activities taken up cover a wide range of adaptability for 
indoors and out-of-doors, from cramped school rooms and 
spacious fields, for the children's playground and the school 
gymnasium. This course is offered largely for the benefit of 

42 



Seniors specializing in Pedagogy or Expression. Once a week 
throughout the year. Open to students who have completed 
Courses L, II., and III. 

EXPRESSION 
MBS. DUNSON 

The study of Expression is not merely a training for the 
platform. It is a training for life, and seeks to awaken the 
student to the highest possibilities of mind, body and soul. 
Attention is given to the harmonious training of the mind, 
the voice, and the body, developing the mental action and 
training the voice and body to respond spontaneously to 
the conceptions of the mind and the emotions of the soul. 

COURSE OF STUDY IN EXPRESSION 

First Year.  Responsiveness; Problem Eeading; Fundamentals of 
Training; Criticism; Story-Telling; Lyric, Narrative and De- 
scriptive Studies of Vocal Expression; Harmonic Gymnastics; 
Normal Adjustments. 

Text-Books : Curry's Foundations for Vocal Expression ; Curry's 
Classics for Vocal Expression. 

Second Year.  Qualities of Voice  Eesonance; Development of Imagi- 
nation; Literature, The Drama and studies from standard 
writers; Dramatic Behearsal; Comedy; Criticism; Original work 
in arranging short stories for reading; Public Speaking; Har- 
monic Gymnastics  Pantomimic Problems. 

Text-Books: Curry's Imagination and Dramatic Instinct; Curry's 
Classics for Vocal Expression. 

Third Year.  Qualities of Voice Emission; Shakespeare; Dramatic 
Rehearsal; Bible Reading; Platform Art; Life-Sketches; Mono- 
logues; Impersonations; Extemporaneous Speaking; Study of 
Epic and Dramatic Poetry. 

Text-Books : Curry's Browning and the Dramatic Monologue ; 
Dowden's Shakespeare Primer ; Curry's Vocal and 
Literary Interpretation of the Bible. 

Required for Certificate: Candidates for Certificate in Expression 
must spend at least one year in the institution; must complete 
the second year's work in Expression, and must give a 
miscellaneous program on public recital. 

Required for Diploma: Candidates for Diploma must present the 
third year's work in Expression, and must give a full evening 
in public recital. The recital for a Certificate and that for a 
Diploma can not be given in the same year. 

Literary Requirements: Four years' accredited High School, one year 
of College English, History, and one other elective besides 
Bible. 

43 



ART 

MISS HALLIE SMITH 

The Studio for Art is well-lighted and is supplied with 
casts, a kiln for burning china, and other necessary equip- 
ment. 

The classes in Free-Hand Drawing, including some work 
in Water Color, are free of charge to all students connected 
with the institution. 

COURSE OF STUDY IN THE ART DEPARTMENT 

First Year.  Drawing in charcoal, block, hands, feet, fruit, leaf, 
geometrical forms from casts. Still-life groups, and simple 
fruit studies from nature in charcoal. 

Second and Third Years.  In charcoal, hands, feet and heads from 
casts. Still-life studies, copies after the best artists, and 
studies from nature in crayon, oil, water colors,  and pastel. 
Sketches in pen and ink. 

Fourth and Fifth Years.  Studies from nature in oil, water colors, 
and pastel. Flower studies from nature. China painting. 

Sixth Year.  Oil, water colors, and pastel portraits from life. Water 
colors and oil copies from the best fac-similes. China Painting. 

CERTIFICATES AND DIPLOMAS 

Required for Certificate: The above course in Art completed through 
the Fourth Year, four years accredited High School, provided 
nine hours of literary work a week, besides Bible, be done in 
residence. 

Required for Diploma: The completion of entire course in Art, four 
years of accredited High School, Myths and Fables, Bible III. 
or IV. Nine hours of literary work a week, besides Bible, 
must be done in residence. 



44 



MUSIC DEPARTMENT 

ALWYN M. SMITH, DIKECTOR 

This department offers thorough courses in voice, piano, 
pipe-organ, violin, sight-singing, sight reading (piano), 
theory of music, including harmony, counterpoint, and his- 
tory of music. 

Semi-monthly recitals in music give training for public 
work. The courses of theory and sight singing are deemed 
essential to an intelligent comprehension of voice culture, 
piano, pipe organ, or violin. 

THEORY 

A. M. SMITH, MISSES MAIDEE SMITH, GANE, MUELLEE 

COURSE OF STUDY IN THEORY 

First Grade.  Notation, rudimentary principles. Scales, signatures, 
intervals, etc. Written exercises adapted to pupil. 

Second Grade.  Drills in signatures, scales, intervals, etc. Thorough 
bass. Marks of expression. Written exercises adapted to pupil. 

Third Grade.  Emery's Elements of Harmony. Emery's Additional 
Exercises. Original modulations. 

Fourth Grade.  Emery's Elements of Harmony completed. Jadas- 
sohn's Harmony. Double chants, chorals. Harmonizing mel- 
odies. Acoustics. 

Fifth Grade.  Bride's Simple and Double Counterpoint. Jadassohn's 
Counterpoint. Figuration. Simple composition in rondo form. 

HISTORY OP MUSIC 

A. M. SMITH 

COURSE OF STUDY IN HISTORY OF MUSIC 

First Year.  Lessons in Musical History (Fillmore), with outlines and 
sketches. 

Second Year.  The Great German Composers (Crowest). Biographical 
sketches of each composer. History of Music (Gantvoort). 

45 



PIANO 

MISSES MUELLER, GANE, MAIDEE SMITH 
COURSE OF STUDY. 

First Grade.  Biehl's Technical Exercises. Koehler, op. 249, Vols. L, 
II. Duvernoy, op. 176. 

Second Grade.  Biehl's Technical Exercises. Bertini, op. 100. Duver- 
noy, op. 120. Czerny, op. 821. Lemoine, op. 37. Diabelli's, 
Liehner's and dementi's Sonatinas. 

Third Grade.  Biehl's Technical Exercises. Beren's, op. 61. Bertini, 
op. 29, 32. Czerny, op. 636. Bach's Preparatory Studies. 
Heller, op. 45, 47. Schumann, op. 68. Classic and modern 
sonatinas. Smaller works of good composers. 

Fourth Grade.  Beringer's Technical Studies. Czerny, op. 299, 740. 
Cramer's Fifty Selected Studies. Loeschorn, op. 66. Bach's 
Inventions, Preludes, and Easy Fugues. Chopin's Waltzes. 
Mendelssohn's Songs Without Words. Mozart's, Clementi's, 
Beethoven's Sonatas. Selected Solos. 

Fifth Grade.  Tausig-Ehrlich's Exercises. Clementi's Gradus ad 
Parnassum (Tausig). Kullak's Octave Studies, Bk. II. Bach's 
Well Tempered Clavichord. Jensen, op. 32. Seeling 's Concert 
Etudes. Beethoven's, Haydn's, Schubert's Sonatas. Chopin's 
Polonaises, Nocturnes. Selections from modern composers. 

Sixth Grade.  Tausig-Ehrlich's Exercises. Chopin, op. 10, 25. Bach's 
Suite Anglaise. Eeinecke, op. 121. Mendelssohn, op. 104. Con- 
certos of Hummel, Weber, Schumann, Field. Pieces by Raff, 
Jensen, Moszkowski, Weber, Schumann, Grieg, Liszt, Chopin, 
MacDowell, and others. 

COURSE OF STUDY IN ORGAN 

MISS GANE 

First Grade.  Ritter's Organ School. Schneider's Pedal Studies, Bk. 
I., II. Easy pieces by European and American composers. 

Second Grade.  Extempore playing begun. Accompaniments for Con- 
gregational Singing. Bach's Preludes and Fugues, Vol. L, II. 
H. R. Shelley's Modern Organist. 

Third Grade.  Extempore playing. Accompaniments for chorus and 
solo singing. Mendelssohn's Preludes and Sonatas. Schu- 
mann's Fugues ueber B. A. C. H. Selections from Reinberger, 
Piutti, Richter, Guilmant, Rossini, Raff, Gounod, Schubert. 

Fourth Grade.  Thomas ' Etudes. Bach 's Masterpieces. Eddy, Church 
and Concert Organist. Concert pieces from Buck, Wagner, 
Schumann, Guilmant, Flagler, Sonatas of Reinberger, Lemmens, 
Ritter. 

46 



COURSE OF STUDY IN VIOLIN 

MISS McCLOUD 

First Grade.  Schools: Gruenberg, Dancla, de Beriot, Sevcik. Easy 
Major Scales. Solos: Sitt, Gabrielli, Bohm, Reinecke, 
Wohlfahrt. 

Second Grade.  Scales, major and minor keys, Gruenberg. Etudes: 
Meerts, Kayser (Book I.), Sitt, Winternitz (Book I.) Solos: 
Papini, Huber, Schill, Dancla. Sonatinas, Hauptmann. 

Third Grade.  Scales and arpeggios, Gruenberg; Foundation Studies, 
Gruenberg; Velocity Exercises, Sevcik; Bowing Exercises, 
Casorti, Study of first three positions. Etudes: de Beriot, 
Winternitz (Book II.), Kayser (Book II.), Ries, op. 28. Easy 
double stopping. Concertinos: Seitz, op. 22, Sitt, Huber. 

Fourth Grade.  Scales and bowing exercises, Schradieck. Third to 
seventh positions. Etudes: Dont, Kayser (Book III.), Mazas 
(Book I.), Meerts. Sonatas: Corelli, op. 5, Dancla. Concertos: 
Accolay, Seitz. 

Fifth Grade.  Scales, bowing exercises, Massart; Trill studies, Sevcik; 
Mazas ("Book II.); Leonard, op. 21: Kruetzer. Solos: Becher, 
Bach, Gorlard, Hubay, Brahms. Sonatas: Haydn, Haendel, 
Mozart. Concertos: Bode, Viotti. 

Sixth Grade.  Difficult double stopping and bowing exercises, Sevcik, 
Schradieck. Etudes: Fiorillo, Rode. Concertos: Viotti, Mozart, 
Kruetzer, Bruch. Selections from Bach Sonatas for violin alone. 

Requirements for Violin Certificate : 

Third Grade Theory (Harmony). 

First Year History of Music. 

Prima Vista (Violin). 

Fourth Grade Violin. 

First Year Sight-Singing. 

One year Orchestra. 

Public recital, four numbers. 

Literary requirements  same as for Piano and Voice. 

Requirements for Violin Diploma : 

Fourth Grade Theory (Harmony). 

Second Year History of Music. 

Prima Vista (Violin). 

Two Year Orchestra. 

Fourth Grade Piano. 

Sixth Grade Violin. 

First Year Sight-Reading. 

Public Recital, four numbers, one a concerto. 

Literary requirements  same as for Piano and Voice. 

47 



SIGHT-SINGING 

Every pupil in the institution has the advantage of a 
thorough course in vocal music, enabling her, without the 
aid of an instrument, to sing ordinary music at sight. Pupils 
taking this course in sight-singing make more rapid and 
intelligent progress in voice as well as in instrumental music. 
The aim of this department is to develop among our pupils 
a musical taste and ability. Sight-singing, fundamental 
principles, glees, church music, choruses, as well as harmony, 
are taught daily except Thursday. 

COURSE OF STUDY IN SIGHT-SINGING 

First Grade.  First and Second Eeader (Educational Music Course). 
Notation. Major Scales, Ear training. Drills in intervals. 
Music Dictation. Two-part singing. Selected glees. 

Second Grade.  Third and Fourth Header (Educational Music Course). 
Major and Minor Scales. Accidentals. Modulation. Musical 
Dictation. Three-part singing. Selected glees and choruses. 

Third Grade.  Fifth and Sixth Eeader (Educational Music Course). 
Choruses selected from standard operas and oratorios. Church 
music. Four-part singing. 

VOICE 

DIEECTOE ALWYN SMITH 
COURSE OF STUDY IN VOICE 

First Grade.  Technical exercises adapted to pupil. Concone's 30 
Lessons. Bonoldi's Exercises. Panofka 's A. B. C. 

Second Grade.  Breathing and technical exercises. Marchesi, op. 1. 
Concone 's 50 Lessons. Panofka, op. 85. Simple solos. 

Third Grade.  Breathing and technical exercises. Concone 's 25 Les- 
sons. Vaccai's Italian Method. Marchesi, op. 15. Italian pro- 
nunciation. Selected songs. 

Fourth Grade.  Breathing and technical exercises. Marchesi, op. 21, 
32. Panofka, op. 81. Concone, op. 17. Arias, selections from 
oratorio, concert singing. English, Italian and German songs. 

Fifth Grade.  Breathing and technical exercises. Preparatory exer- 
cises for trill. Bordogni's 36 Vocalises. Concone, op. 12. Lam- 
perti's Exercises. Concert singing. Study of aria, recitative 
and cavatina. Operatic selections in English, Italian and 
German. 

48 



REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTIFICATES AND DIPLOMAS 
IN THE DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC 

Certificate in Piano: 

Third Grade Theory (Harmony). 

First Year Musical History. 

Prima Vista. 

Fourth Grade Piano. 

First Year Sight-Singing. 

Public Recital of Four Numbers. 

Literary Requirements for a Certificate: Four years accredited 
High School, provided nine hours a week of literary 
work, besides Bible, be done in residence. 

Certificate in Voice: 

Third Grade Theory (Harmony). 

First Year Musical History. 

Public Eecital of Four Numbers. 

Fourth Grade Voice. 

First Year Sight-Singing. 

Literary Requirements as for Piano Certificate. 

Diploma in Piano: 

Fourth Grade Theory (Harmony). 

Second Year Musical History. 

One Year Prima Vista. 

Sixth Grade Piano. 

First Year Sight-Singing. 

Public Recital of Three Numbers, one to be a concerto. 

Literary Requirements: Four years accredited High School, 

two years of German, French or Italian, Literature, 

History I. or II., Bible. 

Diploma in Voice: 

Third Year Sight-Singing. 

Fifth Grade Voice. > 

Public Recital of Four Numbers. 

Second Year Musical History. 

Fourth Grade Theory (Harmony). 

Literary Requirements as for Piano Diploma. 

THE CERTIFICATE AND DIPLOMA RECITALS MAY 
NOT BOTH BE GIVEN IN THE SAME YEAR. 

The policy of the institution is to require music students 
to take as much literary work as is practicable. 

Students can not receive Certificates and Diplomas for 
less than one year of work done in residence. Before 
Diplomas are given, both Certificate and Diploma Recitals 
are given. 

49 



ACADEMY 

LaGrange College maintains two High School grades, 
equivalent to the Tenth and Eleventh grades of the ac- 
credited High Schools. 

ENGLISH 

English 3a.  A study of the forms of Discourse; practical work in the 
main principles of Style. Daily themes. A study of classics 
required for College entrance. Three hours a week. 

English 4a.  An introductory course to the study of American Litera- 
ture. Monthly themes. Three hours a week. 

LATIN 

Latin 3a.  Cicero's Four Orations against Catiline, The Manilian Law 
and Archeas. Texts: D'Ooge's Latin Composition, Part II. 
For reference: Allen and Greenough's Latin Grammar. Four 
hours a week. 

Latin 4a.  Virgil's ^Eneid, Books I.- VI. Study of the Dactylic Hex- 
ameter; Allen and Greenough's Latin Grammar; D'Ooke's Latin 
Composition, Part III., weekly; Gayley's Classic Myths. Four 
hours a week throughout the year. 

FRENCH 

French 4a.  Text-books: Guerber, Contes et Legendes (Part I.); Malot, 
Sans Famille; Fraser and Squair's Grammar; Selections from 
Labiche-Martin, Fontaine and Daudet. Four hours a week. 

GERMAN 

German 4a.  Thomas's Practical German Grammar, Part I.; Hervey's 
Supplementary Exercises to Thomas's Grammar; Guerber 's 
Marchen und Erzahlungen, Part I.; Hillern's Hoher als Die 
Kirche; Storm's Immensee; memorizing of selected lyrics. Four 
hours a week. 

HISTORY 

History 3a.  Myer's Mediaeval and Modern History, library work, and 
the writing of topics. Collateral reading. Note-books kept. 
Prerequisite: History 2a. Three hours a week. 

50 



History 4a.  General review of the entire period of American His- 
tory with special attention to the Continental Congress, the 
Confederation, the making of the Constitution, and growth of 
political parties. Note-books kept containing written topics 
and reports on readings. Texts: West's American History and 
Government, West's Source Book; Library reference work. 
Three hours a week. 

MATHEMATICS 

Mathematics 3a.  Algebra from Quadratics through Progression. Four 
hours a week. 

Mathematics 4a.  Completion of Five Books of Plane Geometry, with 
originals. Text: Wentworth-Smith's Plane Geometry. Four 



hours a week. 



SCIENCE 



3a. Botany.  A study in the analysis and classification of typical 
Southern plants. Eecitations, laboratory and field work. Three 
hours a week. 

4a.  Physics.  A study of elementary mechanics, sound, light, heat, 
electricity, and magnetism. A selected set of laboratory experi- 
ments forms part of the course. Recitations, two hours a week. 
Laboratory, four hours a week. 



51 



ALUMNAE 

PLEASE inform us concerning marriages, deaths, omitted alumnae, 
or any errors in the names below. Information concerning 
addresses, occupations, etc., will be thankfully received. If 
married, state husband's name, title, and address. Send us 
catalogues issued prior to 1886. Deceased alumnae are indi- 
cated thus*. 

1846 
A. B. 

Elizabeth L. Burk* 

Sarah B. Cameron (Mrs. Swanson)* 

Sarah T. Cameron (Mrs. Hill)* 

1847. 

A. B. 
Adelaide E. Bigham* 
Sarah H. Cooper (Mrs. Newton) 
Tabitha E. Hill (Mrs. Howard)* 
Martha E. Hill (Mrs. Potts)* 
Rebecca V. Marshall* 
Sarah C. Morgan (Mrs. Barber) 
Ophelia A. Osburne (Mrs. Weeks) 
Susan J. Presley (Mrs. Bunkley) 
Mary A. Saunders* 

1848 

A. B. 
Mary A. Broughton (Mrs. Montgomery)* 
Eliza J. Bryan (Mrs. Martin) 
Amarintha C. Cameron (Mrs. Gibson)* 
Sarah Clayton (Mrs. Jeter) 
Catharine P. Dozier (Mrs. Willis) 
Jane E. Gilbert 

Frances J. Greenwood (Mrs. Perry)* 
Sarah J. Kidd (Mrs. Camp)* 
Sarah E. King (Mrs. Rice)* 
Pauline Lewis (Mrs. Abercrombie)* 
Elizabeth Parham (Mrs. Tigner)* 

1849 
A. B. 
Josephine Akin (Mrs. Tatum)* 
Georgia C. Bigham (Mrs. Williams) 
Henrietta Broome* 
Sophronia Campbell (Mrs. Ferrell) 
Dorothy Chappel (Mrs. Matthews)* 
Amanda Dubose (Mrs. Ivey) 

52 



Frances A. Favor (Mrs. Goldsmith) 
Mary P. Griggs (Mrs. Neal)* 
Susan Maddox (Mrs. Johnson) 
Nancy Meaders (Mrs. Leak)* 
Acadia E. Mitchell (Mrs. Dowdell) 
Ann E. Pitts (Mrs. Dozier) 
Elizabeth A. Stinson (Mrs. RadclifT)* 
Mary A. Thompson* 

1850 
A. B. 
Frances E. Broughton (Mrs. Long)* 
Antionette P. Burke (Mrs. Gartrell)* 
Martha E. Dixon (Mrs. Glanton)* 
Isabella E. Douglass (Mrs. Amoss) 
Narcissa W. Douglass (Mrs. Bailey) 
Rebecca G. Forbes* 
Margaret A. Gilliam (Mrs. Goodman) 
Mary Griffin (Mrs. McGhee) 
Sarah Griggs (Mrs. Long) 
Martha Harvey (Mrs. Harper) 
Ann E. McGhee (Mrs. Akers)* 
Susan Meadors (Mrs. Brown) 
Sarah C. Newton (Mrs. Dozier) 
Cordelia Redding (Mrs. Jones) 
Eebecca Slaton (Mrs. Nicholson) 
Carolina Stevens (Mrs. Banks) 
Catharine Stinson (Mrs. Neal)* 
Helen Tate (Mrs. Mitchell) 

1851 
A. B. 

Mary Alford (Mrs. Heard)* 
Tallulah Carter (Mrs. Wells)* 
Mary Cox (Mrs. Kener) 

Ann Davis (Mrs. ) 

Jane Davis (Mrs. Weston) 
Mary M. Douglas* 
Susan Douglas (Mrs. Gunn) 
Mary E. Drake (Mrs. Phillips) 
Mary Graves (Mrs. Lee) 

1852 
A. B. 

L. C. Hampton (Mrs. Davis) 
Sarah Harris (Mrs. Lockhart)* 
S. Celestie Hill (Mrs. Means) 
Susan McGhee (Mrs. Hampton) 
Jane Newton (Mrs. Hall) 
Eliza Kidd (Mrs. Lane)* 
Ann Reid 
Mary F. Reid* 

53 



Bebecca Eutledge (Mrs. Boynton) 
Roxana Sharp (Mrs. Jones) 
Catharine Spicer (Mrs. ) 

1853 
A. B. 

Lorine Acee (Mrs. Smith) 

Sarah Ayers (Mrs. Potts)* 

Alberta Amoss (Mrs. Heard)* 

Isabella Baldrick* 

Louisa Bryan* 

Anna Calhoun (Mrs. Martin) 

Emma Cameron (Mrs. Leonard)* 

Sarah Cameron (Mrs. Waters)* 

Ellen Cline (Mrs. Gaffney)* 

Catherine Coleman 

Mary Colquitt (Mrs. Dix)* 

Caroline Craven (Mrs. Sappington)* 

E. S. Edmondson (Mrs. Maffett) 

Mary Fall 

Nancy Hall (Mrs. Hall) 

Missouri Jones (Mrs. ) 

Mary Lee (Mrs. ) 

Mary Loyd (Mrs. T. S. Bradfield)* 

Elizabeth Pace (Mrs. ) 

Marietta Peeples* 

Susan Pressley (Mrs. Pearson) 

Harriet Spivey (Mrs. Marcus)* 

Caroline Ware (Mrs. Gay) LaGrange, Ga. 

Mary Whitfield (Mrs. Boyd) 

1854 
A. B. 

Sarah Barnes (Mrs. Burney) 

Mary Colquitt (Mrs. Green) 

Ann E. Cooper 

Margaret Cunningham (Mrs. Smith)* 

Amanda Edmondson (Mrs. Newton)* 

Harriet Edmondson (Mrs. Anderson) 

Frances Harris (Mrs. Kimball)* 

Mary King (Mrs. Scott) 

Florida Key (Mrs. Ward) 

Mary McKemie (Mrs. Craven) 

Lucy Morrow (Mrs. Smith) 

Susan Newton (Mrs. Bennett) 

Lucy Pace (Mrs. Scaife) 

Georgia Patrick (Mrs. Allen) 

Missouri Pitts 

Sarah Reed (Mrs. W. D. Grant) .... 427 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. 

Susan Skeen 

Sarah Smith (Mrs. Wilson)* 

54 



Sarah Stembridge (Mrs. Herring)* 

Mary Stevens (Mrs. Cory) 

E. T. Taliaferro 

Cornelia Tyler 

Mary Yancey (Mrs. Young)* 

1855 
A. B. 

Letitia Austell 

Martha Coghill 

Sarah Dawkins (Mrs. Pace) 

Virginia Edmondson (Mrs. Field) 

Margaret Griffin 

Sarah Harris 

Mary Holland 

Melissa Laney 

Phoebe Mabry* 

Henrietta McBain (Mrs. Kimbrough) 

Margaret McDowell 

Camilla Meadors 

Margaret Mooney (Mrs. Ezzell) 

Blanche Morgan (Mrs. Johnson) 

Mary Eedwine 

Sarah Reese (Mrs. Lovelace) 

Kate I. Selleck (Mrs. Edmondson)* 

Eliza Shepherd (Mrs. Morgan) 

Mary Steagall (Mrs. Dent) 

Susan Tooke* 

Emma Tucker 

Sarah Ward (Mrs. Davidson) 

1856 
A. B. 

Melissa Appleby (Mrs. McCraw) 

Martha Blackburn (Mrs. Judge) 

Laura Cameron (Mrs. Kirby)* 

Martha Carter (Mrs. Weaver)* 

Sallie Craig 

Lizzie Cunningham* 

Elizabeth DeLoach 

Ellen DeLoach 

M. J. Edwards (Mrs. Thompson) 

Louise Ellis (Mrs. Herring) 

Susan Harrell (Mrs. Smith) 

Anna Haynes (Mrs. Renwick) 

Nancy Hill (Mrs. Morgan) 

Harriet Lipscomb (Mrs. Kirby)* 

Martha McKemie (Mrs. Craven) 

Anna Meadows 

S. Indiana Pitts (Mrs. Stowe) 

Mary Powell 

55 



Rebecca Powell 

Sophia Saunders 

Frances Tennyson 

Mary Tyler (Mrs. Bynum) 

Philo Ware (Mrs. Witherspoon) 

1857 
A. B. 

Margaret Alford (Mrs. Heard) 
Frances Andrews 
Mary Y. Atkinson (Mrs. Mallory) 
S. A. Cameron (Mrs. Colbert) 
Mary C. Cole* 

Laura Garlington (Mrs. ) 

Susan Harrell (Mrs. Mayberry) 
Addie Power 
Hattie Shumate 
G. A. Baldrick* 

Mittie Berry (Mrs. Oglesby) ' . Dalton, Ga. 

Hadessa Byrd Mrs. Trawick) 
Elizabeth Smith (Mrs. Clark) 

Anna Stegall (Mrs. ) 

Mary Stinson (Mrs. Ben Tigner)* 

Anna Swanson (Mrs. Swanson) 

Martha Tooke 

Fannie Warde (Mrs. J. D. Johnson) West Point, Ga. 

1858 
A. B. 

Georgia Bonner (Mrs. Terrell)* 

Lydia Brown (Mrs. ) 

Sallie Bull (Mrs. John Park)* 

W. H. Clayton 

Julia Cooper (Mrs. Van Epps) 

Margaret Cox (Mrs. A. J. Tuggle) LaGrange, Ga., R. F. D. 

Rebecca Crowder (Mrs. Boddie) 

I. F. Gordon 

A. S. Greenwood (Mrs. Slatter)* 

E. A. Hamilton 

Mary Hamilton 

A. C. Hanks (Mrs. ) 

Mary Reese 

May E. Speer (Mrs. Winship)* 

1859 
A. B. 

Mary L. Akers* 

Susan Bass 

Martha Bell (Mrs. Ridley) 

Hattie Carlton (Mrs. Dozier)* 

Mary Carlton 

56 



Alice Culler (Mrs. J. B. Cobb)* Nashville, Tenn. 

Fletcher Harden (Mrs. Flournoy) 
C. McKemie (Mrs. Craven) 
Sue Means (Mrs. Griffin)* 
A. Moreland (Mrs. Speer)* 
Anna Morgan (Mrs. Flournoy) 

E. M. Moss (Mrs. Moss)* 
Bettie Nelson 

M. R. Pullen (Mrs. Russell)* 
Mary Shepherd (Mrs. Kirksey) 
Mattie Shepherd (Mrs. Russell) 
Aley Smith (Mrs. Boddie) 
Carrie Stinson (Mrs. Ogletree)* 

Achsah Turner (Mrs. Marsh) 7 Peachtree PI., Atlanta, Ga. 

Ophelia Wilkes (Mrs. Tumlin)* ' 
Tinsley Winston (Mrs. Winston)* 

Sarah Womack (Mrs. ) 

R. K. Woodward (Mrs. Harris)* 

1860 
A. B. 

Emma Bostwick (Mrs. Edmondson) 

Abbie Callaway 

Claude Carlton 

Eliza Cox (Mrs. Akers) 

Mary E. Evans (Mrs. Edwards)* 

F. C. Fleming (Mrs. Dixon) 
Cornelia Forbes (Mrs. Waltermire) 
Augusta Hill (Mrs. Thompson)* 
Fannie Jeter 

M. Fannie Johnson (Mrs. McLaw) 
N. A. Johnson (Mrs. Maddox) 
Lizzie Laney 
Janie Laney 

Alice Ledbetter (Mrs. Revill) Greenville, Ga. 

S. Cornelia Lovejoy 
Mary Miller (Mrs. N. A. Mooty) 
Fredonia Raiford (Mrs. McFarland)* 
Aline E. Reese (Mrs. Blondner) 
Polly Robinson (Mrs. Hammond) 
Edna Rush (Mrs. Callahan) 
Sallie Sanges (Mrs. Mullins) 
Laura Sassnett (Mrs. Branham)* 
Sallie Shepherd (Mrs. Shorter) 
Mollie Smith 
Sallie Tally* 
Isabel Winfrey 

1861 

A. B. 
Lavinia Byrd (Mrs. Craig)* 
Julia Bohannon (Mrs. Witter)* 

57 



George Broughton (Mrs. Hays) 
Cordelia Cooper (Mrs. Fields) 
Ella Cunningham (Mrs. Smith) 
Frances Douglass (Mrs. Lowe) 
Mollie Hunnicutt (Mrs. Turner)* 
C. M. Ledbetter (Mrs. Ellis)* 

Lucy Lipscomb (Mrs. T. J. Harwell) LaGrange, Ga. 

Levecie G. Maddox (Mrs. Kendrick) 

Nuda M. Ousley 

Emma Page (Mrs. Hunnicutt)* 

Ellen E. Pattillo (Mrs. S. P. Callaway) LaGrange, Ga. 

E. C. Phillips (Mrs. Jelks) 
L. C. Pullen (Mrs. Morris) 
Charlotte Reid (Mrs. Jos. Ware)* 
Genie Reid (Mrs. Cameron)* 
M. A. Story (Mrs. McDonald) 
S. Elmirs Wilkes (Mrs. Shuttles) 
Emma Yancey (Mrs. Bryan)* 

1862 

A. B. 
Mary Baldrick 
Frances Bass 
Fletcher Birch 
Vandalia Boddie* 
Lizzie Burge 

Anna E. Evins (Mrs. Wisdom)* 
Mattie Fleming 
Lucy Fleming 

Bettie Howell (Mrs. Bailey) Newnan, Ga. 

Sallie A. Knight (Mrs. ) 

Sallie A. Little (Mrs. Williams) 

Anna Lyon 

C. P. McGhee* 

Kate Merritt (Mrs. Joiner) 

Mary Moonery 

Lou O'Neal 

Mary Gilmer 

Lizzie Goodwin (Mrs. Cotton) 

Jennie Goodwin (Mrs. Bailey) 

Rebecca Harrison (Mrs. Bookhart) 

Mary Haynes 

Eliza Hill 

Georgia Hodnett (Mrs. Ward) 

Susan Hogg (Mrs. Davidson)* 

Kransillian Owens (Mrs. Tafft)* 

Clara Packard 

Fletcher Pitts (Mrs. Marshall) 

Mattie Pitts (Mrs. Harris) 

Mattie Taylor (Mrs. Wright) 

Mollie White 

Mattie Wimbish (Mrs. Abraham)* 

58 



1863 
A. B. 

Addie Bull (Mrs. Tomlinson)* 
Hattie Callaway* 
Lizzie Leslie* 

Sallie Leslies (Mrs. Beasley) LaGrange, Ga. 

Mattie Marshall (Mrs. Turner) 

Annie Martin (Mrs. Freeman) 

Belle McCain 

Geraldine Moreland (Mrs. Speer) 

Anna Turner 7 Peachtree PL, Atlanta, Ga. 

1864 
A. B. 

Eliza Akers (Mrs. Bowden) 
Ella Broughton 
Ida Burk (Mrs. Hay)* 
Mary Cunningham 

Mary E. Curtwright (Mrs. Rakestraw) LaGrange, Ga. 

Fannie Hall (Mrs. Tom Caudle) LaGrange, Ga. 

Nora Owens (Mrs. Smith) 
Fannie Pullen (Mrs. Amis) 

1865 
A. B. 

Kate Beall (Mrs. Hornady) 
Alice Bryant (Mrs. Willis) 
Achsah Maddox (Mrs. Pace) 

1871 
A. B. 

Janie Barber (Mrs. Truitt) 

Nannie Callaway (Mrs. Wylie)* 

Lula Culberson (Mrs. McCoy) 

Mary Hill (Mrs. Boyce Ficklin) Washington, Ga. 

1872 
Mattie Strother (Mrs. Barksdale) Aonia, Ga. 

1873 
A. B. 

Sallie Cotter (Mrs. Reaves)* 

Annie Curtwright (Mrs. W. J. McClure) Hazlehurst, Miss. 

Carrie Pitman (Mrs. Truitt)* 
Willie Pitman (Mrs. Bradfield)* 
Mary L. Poythress (Mrs. Barnard)* 

1874 
A. B. 

Maria Bass 

Dora Boykin (Mrs. Maffett) 

Mollie B. Evans (Mrs. Seals)* 

59 



LaGrange, Ga. 



. 128 E. Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 



305 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga. 



Sallie Lou Haralson (Mrs. Cobb) 
Lula Ward 

Maggie Whitaker (Mrs. W. E. Foote) 
Addie Wimbush (Mrs. Anthony) 

1876 
A. B. 

Aldora Gaulding (Mrs. Thomasson) 
Jennie McFail (Mrs. B. A. Warlick) . 

1877 
A. B. 

Mary Alford (Mrs. Hogg) 
Julia Connally (Mrs. Luther Kosser) . 
Annie Crusselle (Mrs. Vaughan) 
Emma Palmer (Mrs. Williams)* 
Clodissa Kichardson (Mrs. Connally) 

1878 
A. B. 

Lizzie Baugh (Mrs. McDonald) 

Sallie Boykin (Mrs. C. C. Jones) .... East Lake, Birmingham, Ala. 

F. Virgie Buice (Mrs. Morley) 

Leila Hudson 

Mattie McGhee (Mrs. Jno. W. Park) Greenville, Ga. 

Ola Simmons (Mrs. Simmons) 
Lizzie Traylor 

1879 

A. B. 
Lula Jones 

Mattie Traylor (Mrs. T. H. Northen) . 650 Piedmont Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 
Fannie White (Mrs. Clay) 
Sallie Williams (Mrs. Eeid) LaGrange, Ga. 



1880 
A. B. 



Jennie M. Atkinson 

Mattie Cook (Mrs. Zellars) 
Sallie Dowman 

Fannie Dowman (Mrs. Zuber) 
Ida Lee Emory (Mrs. Trammell) 
Hattie Handley (Mrs. Eeade) 
Myrtle McFarlin (Mrs. Eussell) 
Emma Stipe (Mrs. Walker) 

Lula Brannon (Mrs. Knapp) 

Stella Burns 

Ella L. Crusselle (Mrs. Baker) 
Mattie Driver (Mrs. Smith) 



Missionary to China 



1881 



Hotel Clement, Opelika, Ala. 



60 



Myrtle Gates (Mrs. Smith) 

E. Baxter Mabry (Mrs. Brooks) 

Augusta Vaughan (Mrs. Matthews) 

Etta Vaughan (Mrs. Fitzpatrick) 

Lula Walker (Mrs. Ware) 

Loulie Watkins (Mrs. Overstreet) 

Mollie Whitaker (Mrs. Matthews) 

1882 
A. B. 

Alice Boykin (Mrs. Millard McLendon) LaGrange, Ga. 

Lily Howard (Mrs. McLarin) Fairburn, Ga. 

Ida Palmer (Mrs. F. I. McDonald) . . 30 Glendale Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 

Mollie Stipe (Mrs. F. E. Walker) Plains, Ga. 

Mary Fannie Turner 

Bertha Walker (Mrs. Furher) 

Irene Ward (Mrs. Lupo)* 

1883 
A. B. 

Helen Baldwin Baltimore Place, Atlanta, Ga. 

Carrie Ballard (Mrs. Sasser) 
Annie Bradley (Mrs. Park)* 
May Candler (Mrs. Winchester) 
Susie Candler 
Ginevra Gholson (Mrs. Cantrell) 

Carobel Heidt (Mrs. Andrew Calhoun) Atlanta, Ga. 

Maude Howell Mrs. Brook) 

Carrie Parks (Mrs. Luke Johnson) Atlanta, Ga. 

Nellie Revill (Mrs. O'Hara) Greenville, Ga. 

Effie Thompson (Mrs. A. J. Smith)* 

Janie Wadsworth (Mrs. Irvine) 

Lilarette Young (Mrs. Matthews) Thomaston, Ga. 

1884 
A. B. 

Beulah B. Arnold (Mrs. Pringle) 
Ellen Barry (Mrs. Carney)* 

Mary Broome (Mrs. Young Gresham) College Park, Ga. 

Minnie Revill (Mrs. Atkinson) Greenville, Ga. 

Eugenia Sims (Mrs. Redwine) 
Mamie Spears (Mrs. Wicker) 
A. S. Wadsworth (Mrs. Copeland) 
Mary Lizzie Wright (Mrs. Stevens) 

1885 
A. B. 

Pauline E. Arnold (Mrs. Wright) 

J. Jessie Barnett 

Emma F. Bullard (Mrs. Smith) 

61 



Katie D. Cooper (Mrs. W. F. Culpepper) Senoia, Ga. 

Ethel Jackson (Mrs. W. A. Puckett) Tifton, Ga. 

Daisy Knight (Mrs. Abercrombie) 

Lollie Lewis (Mrs. Harris) 

Olivia V. Macy (Mrs. Geo. Crusselle)* 

Mollie C. Simms (Mrs. Ward) Carrollton, Ga. 

Annie Kate Worley (Mrs. E. E. Kimbrough) 

B. S. 

Hattie Mae Morgan (Mrs. Johnston) 

Persia Wright (Mrs. J. H. Thomason) Opelika, Ala. 

1886 

A. B. 

Lizzie L. Dyer (Mrs. Duke) LaFayette, Ala. 

Lucy Evans (Mrs. Chas. Banks) 335 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 
Bessie Jackson (Mrs. Boyd) 

Mattie Magruder (Mrs. Robert Amnions) LaGrange, Ga. 

Willie Miller (Mrs. Cook) Long Cane, Ga. 

Mary Euth Mixon (Mrs. Sam Dobbs) .... Inman Park, Atlanta, Ga. 

Nellie Smith (Mrs. Isham Dorsey) Opelika, Ala. 

Belle Poer West Point, Ga. 

Leman Poer (Mrs. Henry Lanier)* 

Ida B. Smith (Mrs. Gay) 

Bunnie Trimble (Mrs. Clarence Johnson) . Peachtree Rd., Atlanta, Ga. 

Ella Walker* 

B. S. 

Emma Barrett (Mrs. Black) 
Willie Burns (Mrs. Davis)* 

Mary Lou Dansby Alto, Ga. 

Jessie Pitman (Mrs. Ed. Sutton) Decatur, Ga. 

Minnie Ware (Mrs. William Woodyard)* 

1887 
A. B. 

Glenn Camp (Mrs. Starling Carpenter Newnan, Ga. 

Annie L. Cole (Mrs. L. H. Wolfe) . . . 2617 Maple Ave., Dallas, Texas 

J. Winona Cotter Newnan, Ga. 

Lucy A. Heard (Mrs. Jones)* 
Bertha V. Henry (Mrs. Thomas) 

Susie Jarrell (Mrs. Henry Turner) Quitman, Ga. 

Blanche McFarlin (Mrs. Gaffney) 

Maud McFarlin (Mrs. Jas. White) 

Clara Merriwether (Mrs. McMeekin) . . . . R. F. D., Washington, Ga. 

Amy Moss Prince Ave., Athens, Ga. 

Lillian O. Ridenhour (Mrs. Payne) 

Maidee Smith LaGrange, Ga. 

Mary K. Strozier (Mrs. Barnett) Greenville, Ga. 

Jimmie Lou Thompson (Mrs. Thos. Goodrum) Newnan, Ga. 

Maud S. Tompkins (Mrs. Perry) 

62 



Carrie Y. Williams (Mrs. Chas. Baker) Butherford, N. J. 

Annie Wilson* Luthersville, Ga. 

B. S. 

Jessie G. Burnett (Mrs. P. J. Williams) Montgomery, Ala. 

E. May Johnson (Mrs. Neal Harmon) Odessadale, Ga. 

Ora Wing (Mrs. West) 

1888 

A. B. 

Dora H. Beckman (Mrs. Schettman) Charleston, S. C. 

Lou G. Camp (Mrs. Robt. Brannon) Moreland, Ga. 

M. Jennie Cooper (Mrs. Springer Mabry) 

Fannie Covin (Mrs. J. C. Shirah) 

Minnie L. Crawford (Mrs. Jenkins)* 

Pearl Crawford (Mrs. Jno. H. Maddox) . 212 Euclid Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 

Ollie Ellis (Mrs. Trippe) 

M. Jennie Evans (Mrs. J. L. Bradfield) LaGrange, Ga. 

Mamie Hardwick (Mrs. Purvis)* 

Lily Jarrell (Mrs. W. J. McClenny) Thomasville, Ga. 

N. Grace Johnson (Mrs. Twyman) 

Fannie Bert Jones (Mrs. Augustus Quillian) .... Cartersville, Ga. 

Cecile Longino Fairburn, Ga. 

Annie M. Moate (Mrs. Scott)* 

Minnie Moore (Mrs. Lythgoe) Newnan, Ga. 

S. Lizzie Parks (Mrs. Thomas Betterton) .... Chattanooga, Tenn. 

Lillie Sullivan 

A. Lois Turner (Mrs. Wilcox) 

Pearl White (Mrs. Albert Barnes) Abbottsford, Ga. 

Lallie A. Witherspoon (Mrs. Johnson) 

B. S. 

Lizzie I. Arnold 

Maude M. Scroggins (Mrs. J. E. Dent) Newnan, Ga. 

Maggie Van Zandt (Mrs. Eufus Scott) Paris, Texas 

Ruby Ware (Mrs. Chas. Searcy)* 

1889 
A. B. 

Annie H. Chambliss (Mrs. Wooley) . . 76th St. and 1st Ave., E. Lake, 

Birmingham, Ala. 
L. Abbie Chambliss 
L. Dora Cline* 

C. Lillian Moates (Mrs. Wm. Eives) Sparta, Ga. 

Julia P. Moate Devereux, Ga. 

Bettie D. Parker (Mrs. Chas. Davenport) Fairburn, Ga. 

M. Corrie Dickerson (Mrs. Lee) 

Mary N. Hurt (Mrs. A. Loyd) . 281 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 

M. Lily Jackson (Mrs. Albert Tigner) . . White Sulphur Springs, Ga. 

A. Maude McDaniel 

Minnie E. Mclntire (Mrs. Sam Tribble) Athens, Ga. 

63 



Julia F. Eidley (Mrs. Elbert Willett) Anniston, Ala. 

E. May Swindall (Mrs. Logan) 

Fannie Teasley (Mrs. Hutcherson) Canton, Ga. 

Kate Truitt (Mrs. Wm. Young) LaGrange, Ga. 

B. S. 

Lula Dickerson (Mrs. Maxwell) The Hill, Augusta, Ga. 

Dona E. Haralson (Mrs. Smith) 

F. Eugenia Shepherd 

Minnie B. Wilkinson (Mrs. Frank Tatum)* 

1890 
Grace L. Aiken (Mrs. Mitchell) 
Mira Will Brantley (Mrs. Tye) 

Kate D. Daniel (Mrs. Joe Polhill) Hawkinsville, Ga. 

Maggie W. Dean (Mrs. Warden) St. Petersburg, Fla. 

Maggie E. Evans (Mrs. Robt. Riley) . . Smart Ave., Kansas City, Mo. 

Clara N. Graves (Mrs. Oscar Smith) Valdosta, Ga. 

M. Loulie Hardwick (Mrs. Candler) 
Sallie Hodges 

Willie Jones 607 20th St., Columbus, Ga. 

Ruth Marsh (Mrs. Thos. Lee) Chickamauga, Ga. 

Mamie C. McGhee White Sulphur Springs, Ga. 

Ada McLaughlin (Mrs. Wm. Jones) Greenville, Ga. 

Annie G. Robertson 

S. Corinne Simril Newnan, Ga. 

Claire L. Smith (Mrs. Frank Hill)* 

M. Emma Wilson (Mrs. Sam Turnipseed) Griffin, Ga. 

B. S. 

S. Paralie Brotherton (Mrs. Geo. Walker) . . . Lee St., Atlanta, Ga. 

D. Newtie Ingram (Mrs. Merrill) Turin, Ga. 

Pearl Lee (Mrs. Wilbur Trimble) Trimble, Ga. 

M. Gladys Sims (Mrs. Ponder)* 

Minnie L. Smith (Mrs. Wall) 

Una T. Sperry (Mrs. E. Rivers) Roxboro, Ga. 

Connie V. Stovall 
Minnie Willingham 

1891 

A. B. 

Frankie M. Arnold (Mrs. J. D. Lyles) Jonesboro, Ga. 

Myrtie G. Beauchamp (Mrs. Dickerson) 

U. Quie Cousins (Mrs. Brown) Jonesboro, Ga. 

Jennie Lou Covin (Mrs. Howard Wooding) LaGrange, Ga. 

Mamie Zach Crockett (Mrs. J. C. Haynes) Jonesboro, Ga. 

Lucie Crouch (Mrs. Dr. Thrash) Atlanta, Ga. 

Georgia Heard (Mrs. Fields) 

Hettie O. Hearn (Mrs. L. McCalla)* 

Arizona B. Liles (Mrs. Hines) 

E. Montana Liles (Mrs. Summit) 

Pearl Long (Mrs. Clifford L. Smith) LaGrange, Ga. 

64 



Jennie Lou McFarlin (Mrs. H. H. Mattingly) . . . 509 Jackson St., 

Atlanta, Ga. 
Florence Smith (Mrs. Stone) 
Mattie W. Walcott 

B. S. 

Eosa O. Atkinson 

Lillie Brady (Mrs. W. G. Fish) ... 414 W. 72nd St., Lawrence, Kan. 

Lucile Covin (Mrs. Glanton) 

Addie C. George 

Ora Gray 

C. Walton Hollinshead (Mrs. Eobie) Milledgeville, Ga. 

Mattie E. Johnson (Mrs. Dillard)* 
Leila Winn (Mrs. Miller) 

Music Diplomas 
Rosa 0. Atkinson 
Maidee Smith 
Minnie L. Smith (Mrs. Wall) 

1892 

A. B. 

Maud L. Bailey (Mrs. Arthur Richardson) Tate, Ga. 

Annie F. Baxter (Mrs. Smith)* 

Annie E. Bell (Mrs. Shenck) 

Sallie S. Boyd (Mrs. Pierre Sims)* 

Lady E. Boykin (Mrs. Robt. Segrest) LaGrange, Ga. 

E. Maude Ellis 

Jennie Smith Hanford, Calif. 

Talitha E. Speer (Mrs. Ezzard)* 

Bonnell L. Strozier (Mrs. Bivens) Moultrie, Ga. 

Forrest L. Strozier Greenville, Ga. 

Juliet Tuggle LaGrange, Ga. 

Lucie W. Hunt* 

Ella R. Johnson (Mrs. Sykes) 

Sallie M. Quillian (Mrs. John Jones) Cartersville, Ga. 

Rosa Sharp* 

T. Antoinette Ward New York City 

Edith West (Mrs. Harris) 

M. Louise Wimbish (Mrs. Beach) Inman Park, Atlanta, Ga. 

B. S. 

Effie S. Agnew (Mrs. McCrary) 

C. Lorraine Bradley (Mrs. Jos. Jarrell) 

Ruth Camp (Mrs ) , Fla. 

Clarabess Crain (Mrs. Jno. Fambro) Rockmart, Ga. 

Jennie F. Foster (Mrs. Mason)* 

Maud Freeman 

Winnie V. Hearn 

Clara E. Hodges (Mrs. Linder) 

F. Lillian McLaughlin (Mrs. Jos. McGhee)* 

65 



Lizzie P. Merritt* 
Lizzie M. Parham 
Mary Wooten (Mrs. Moss)* 

Music Diplomas 

Clara N. Graves (Mrs. Oscar Smith) Valdosta, Ga. 

Mary L. Park (Mrs. M. D. Fowler) LaGrange, Ga. 

Claire L. Smith (Mrs. F. H. Hill)* 

1893 

A. B. 

M. Bird Baxter (Mrs. O. A. Gentry) Eastman, Ga. 

S. Amanda Britt (Mrs. Lewis) Columbus, Ga. 

Mattie Bulloch Bullochville, Ga. 

Blonde Capps (Mrs. Clarence Mason) Charlotte, N. C. 

Gene Covin (Mrs. E. K. Farmer) Fitzgerald, Ga. 

Meta Dickinson (Mrs. J. B. Daniel) LaGrange, Ga. 

Euth Evans (Mrs. Eoy Dallis) LaGrange, Ga. 

M. Edna Ferguson (Mrs. Tate) Fairmount, Ga. 

Fannie Harrell 

Leila B. Kendrick 

Dolly Hooks 

Mary F. Liles (Mrs. Nelson) 

M. Lula Lovelace (Mrs. Eobt. Hogg) West Point, Ga. 

Lizzie S. Lupo (Mrs. McGrew) 

M. Ora Martyn (Mrs. H. E. Abbott) College Park, Ga. 

Angie L. Maynard (Mrs. Sell) 

M. Kate Moss (Mrs. E. C. Cleckler) Atlanta, Ga. 

Annie F. Eeid (Mrs. Eoberts) 
Leila A. Shewmake* 

Macie E. Speer (Mrs. E. M. Copeland) McDonough, Ga. 

Estelle Strozier (Mrs. Eavenell) Valdosta, Ga. 

Mary Tomlinson (Mrs. A. J. Tu^gle) LaGrange, Ga. 

Jennie W. Williams (Mrs. Miller) 

B. S. 

B. Mae Brady (Mrs. Frank E. Bartlett) .... 237 Brooklyn Ave., 

Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Ledra Edmondson (Mrs. Chas. Warner) Eome, Ga. 

Maymie B. Hendrix (Mrs. Anderson) 

Annie Gertrude Henry (Mrs. ) 

Nellie B. Kirkley (Mrs. Campbell)* 

Mary Latham (Mrs. Gus Cox) 21 Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga. 

Fredonia Maddox (Mrs. Webster) 
Vela C. Winn (Mrs. Hawkins) 

Music Diplomas 

Nellie B. Kirkley (Mrs. Campbell)* 

M. Lula Lovelace (Mrs. Eobt. Hogg) West Point, Ga. 

T. Antoinette Ward New York City 

66 



1894 

A. B. 

Louise Anderson (Mrs. Manget) Missionary to China 

V. Eula Beauchamp (Mrs. Meacham) 

Lula Belle Bird LaGrange, Ga. 

Lina Brazell (Mrs. Will Trimble) Hogansville, Ga. 

Sadie Bess Bryan (Mrs. O. M. Heard) Cordele, Ga. 

Etta Cleveland (Mrs. Dodd) LaGrange, Ga. 

Susie Harrell 

A. Estelle Harvard (Mrs. E. E. Clements) Havana, Cuba 

Adella Hunter (Mrs. C. N. Pike) LaGrange, Ga. 

Ima O. Lewis (Mrs. McElroy) 

Mary Mitchell (Mrs. G. W. Clower) Lawrenceville, Ga. 

Lizzie Moss (Mrs. E. C. Cleckler)* 

Amy I. White (Mrs. Wisdom)* 

Pearl W. White (Mrs. Fanning Potts) Gabbettsville, Ga. 

B. S. 

Mary L. Brinsfield (Mrs. Wallace Eogers)* Atlanta, Ga. 

Fannie H. Clark (Mrs. Maynard) Tyler, Okla. 

Edda Cook (Mrs. Pitt) McEae, Ga. 

Clara DeLaperriere (Mrs. Lanier) 
Eula Hines (Mrs. Johnson) 
Nettie C. Howell (Mrs. Lane)* 

E. Eula Liles (Mrs. Eadney) Eoanoke, Ala. 

Cora Milam Louin, Miss. 

Bessie Moseley (Mrs. Brown) LaGrange, Ga. 

Lucie Patillo 
Kate Wilkinson 

Music Diplomas 

Bird Baxter (Mrs. O. A. Gentry) Eastman, Ga. 

Gene Covin (Mrs. E. K. Farmer) Fitzgerald, Ga. 

1895 
A. B. 

Myra L. Bruce (Mrs. Glasure) 

Eosa Callahan (Mrs. James M. Lassiter) Conyers, Ga. 

Hunter M. Carnes (Mrs. Virgil Harvard) 

Lily Coggins (Mrs. Jones) Canton, Ga. 

Alice Harp (Mrs. Young) 

M. Evans Harris (Mrs. Wm. King) Griffin, Ga. 

H. Estelle Hutcheson (Mrs. Harlan) 

Buford Johnson Thomson, Ga. 

Lillian Johnson (Mrs. Burkhalter)* 
Annie I. Key (Mrs. Walker)* 
Eva Mashburn (Mrs. Lamback)* 
Gussie E. McCutcheon 
Birdie Meaders (Mrs. Dowda) 
Daisy Morris (Mrs. Smith) 

Clara Parks (Mrs. Jos. Featherston) Newnan, Ga. 

67 



Tallulah Quillian (Mrs. John Thrasher) Waycross, Ga. 

Alice Eobins (Mrs. Geo. Cunningham) Atlanta, Ga. 

Flora E. Seals (Mrs. Thorpe) DeFuniak Springs, Fla. 

Effie Shewmake (Mrs. Singleton) Fort Valley, Ga. 

Daisy Taylor (Mrs. G. P. Bumble) Forsyth, Ga. 

Annie Thrasher (Mrs. W. B. Parham) Watkinsville, Ga. 

Kate Trimble (Mrs. Steven Davis) Hogansville, Ga. 

Eomania Welchel* 

Annie Wiggins (Mrs. Meadows)* 

B. S. 

Callie Burns (Mrs. King)* 

Lora Edmondson (Mrs. Hatton Lovejoy) LaGrange, Ga. 

Annie Kate Johnson (Mrs. Parks) 

Julia Manning (Airs. E. A. Holmes) .... 31st St., Birmingham, Ala. 

Mattie Schaub LaGrange, Ga. 

Lula Welchel (Mrs. Smith) Gainesville, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 

Lina S. Brazell (Mrs. Will Trimble) Hogansville, Ga. 

Effie J. Shewmake (Mrs. Singleton) Ft. Valley, Ga. 

1896 

A. B. 

Lizzie A. Ayers (Mrs. Leland Little) Carnesville, Ga. 

Belle Brantley (Mrs. Eodenberry) 
Lula Bulloch (Mrs. Bulloch) 

Annie Callahan (Mrs. Hutchinson) Hogansville, Ga. 

Estelle Chappell (Mrs. H. H. Chandler) Sardis, Ga. 

Ellen Davenport (Mrs. J. A. Hamm) Ft. Pierce, Fla. 

Sallie DeLamar (Mrs. B. M. Poer) Broxton, Ga. 

Pattie Dixon Woodbury, Ga. 

Beuna Harris 

Lucy Hill (Mrs. Anthony) 

Tallulah King (Mrs. J. O. Norris) Decatur, Ga. 

Bessie Longino (Mrs. Vickers) Fairburn, Ga. 

Myra Merriwether (Mrs. Bulloch) 
Blanche Murphy (Mrs. Speer) 
Inez Murrah (Mrs. Knott) 
Eoline Price 

Hallie Quillian (Mrs. W. H. Ashford) Watkinsville, Ga. 

Florence Traylor (Mrs. Orr) 
Nannie Ware 

A. Maud Williams (Mrs. Mack Trotter) Lookout Mt., Tenn. 

Mary Lou Woodall 

Mittie Wright (Mrs. Harber) 

B. S. 

Morah T. Bailey (Mrs. Eowrer) Fla. 

Clara Baker LaGrange, Ga. 

68 



Mary Beasley (Mrs. Chenowith) LaGrange, Ga. 

Jessie Cotter (Mrs. Eichards) New Orleans, La. 

Josie Daniels (Mrs. Hogan) Hogansville, Ga. 

Mattie Lee Dunn (Mrs. R. A. Sloan) McDonough, Ga. 

Annie Clyde Edmondson (Mrs J. B. Eidley) ... 273 E. North Ave., 

Atlanta, Ga. 
Helen Hendrick (Mrs. Mattox) 
Gussie Merriwether (Mrs. Winn) 

Ola Miller (Mrs. Jno. Johnson) West Point, Ga. 

Mary Will Smith (Mrs. ) 

Cecelia Thompson (Mrs. Wimberly)* 

Evelyn Whitaker LaGrange, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 

Belle Brantley (Mrs. Rodenberry) 

Sallie DeLamar (Mrs. B. M. Poer) Broxton, Ga. 

1897 

A. B. 

Annie Campbell 1532 Gwinnett St., Augusta, Ga. 

Mary Carmichael (Mrs. H. M. Lively)* 

S. Eleanor Cloud (Mrs. Bryan) Crawfordsville, Ga. 

Clara Freeman 

Leila Hood* 

Kate S. Ingram (Mrs. Gordy) 

Willie Maddox (Mrs. Holloway) Dallas, Tex. 

Ruby McElroy (Mrs. W. H. Born) MeRae, Ga. 

Ozella B. Roberts (Mrs. Ross) 

Mary Seale Greenville, Ala. 

Julia B. Tigner White Sulphur Springs, Ga. 

Gertrude Touchstone 

Cora Tuck (Mrs. W. H. Morton) Athens, Ga., R. F. D. 1. 

Alice Turner* 

Lilian Venable (Mrs. Shaw) 

B. S. 

Leah Baker (Mrs. Moon) 97 W. Baker St., Atlanta, Ga. 

Julia Bradfield LaGrange, Ga. 

Ida E. Chupp (Mrs. Carroll) 
Etta Cook (Mrs. Hopkins) 
Irene Florence (Mrs. Green) 
Kate Jenkins (Mrs. Alonzo) 
Rena Mai Ledbetter (Mrs. Graves) 

Henrietta Smith (Mrs. Jos. Faust) Greensboro, Ga. 

Alma Stroud (Mrs. Hancock) 

Gussie Tigner (Mrs. Sterling Wiggins) Augusta, Ga. 

Bertha Wilson (Mrs. Jno. Upshaw) Social Circle, Ga. 

Montana M. Winter (Mrs. Hall) 

69 



Music Diplomas 

Eleanor Davenport (Mrs. J. A. Hamm) Ft. Pierce, Fla. 

Carrie Davidson LaGrange, Ga., E. F. D. 

Mamie Dozier (Mrs. Davis) 
Kate Ingram (Mrs. Gordy) 

1898 
A. B. 

Irene Adair Greenville, Ga. 

Lutie Blasingame (Mrs. M. B. Sams) Lavonia, Ga. 

Mary Will Cleaveland (Mrs. A. H. Thompson) .... LaGrange, Ga. 
Nettie L. Cook (Mrs. Campbell) 
Clara Dallis (Mrs. Sterling Turner)* 
Bessie Farmer (Mrs Lockhart) 

Emmie Ficklen Washington, Ga. 

Laurie Lanier (Mrs. Horace Mallory) 

Hortense McClure (Mrs. H. L. McClesky) Hazlehurst, Miss. 

Evelyn McLaughlin (Mrs. J. 0. McGehee) Greenville, Ga. 

Annie Bell Pendleton Augusta, Ga. 

Louise Eosser (Mrs. Warren) Griffin, Ga. 

Sophie Wright (Mrs. Brown) Griffin, Ga. 

B. S. 

Emily Dickinson (Mrs. Smith) 

Annie Fulcher (Mrs. Fred Turner) Tampa, Fla. 

Sallie Myrt Gilliam (Mrs. Durham) 

Flora Glenn (Mrs. Howard Candler) .... Inman Park, Atlanta, Ga. 

Ward Hardwick (Mrs. Gailey) 

Sallie Fannie Hodnett (Mrs. Eance O 'Neal) West Point, Ga. 

Gordon Hudgins (Mrs. Miller) 
Eva Mann (Mrs. Thomas) 
Mary D. Mann (Mrs. Howell) 

Dana Marchman (Mrs. W. A. Wooten) Eastman, Ga. 

Euth Miller Corinth, Ga. 

Mary Eay (Mrs. Shurley) Macon, Ga. 

May Storey (Mrs. Parker)* 

Euth Tuggle LaGrange, Ga. 

Eosa Wright (Mrs. Boyd) 

Music Diplomas 

Mary Will Cleaveland (Mrs. A. H. Thompson) .... LaGrange, Ga. 
Lilian Johnson (Mrs. Allen Burkhalter)* 

Art Diplomas 

Nona Harris (Mrs. Buford Carter) LaGrange, Ga., E. F. D. 

Alma Nesbitt (Mrs. Willingham) 

70 



1899 

A. B. 

Allie Beall (Mrs. ) 

Idella Bellah 

Lilias Fleming (Mrs. Carroll Graham) Bainbridge, Ga. 

Lizzie Gray (Mrs. Bobert Adams) LaGrange, Ga. 

Willie Hardy (Mrs. Lovelace) 
Helen Huntley 

Alice Jenkins (Mrs. Sherman) Bessemer, Ala. 

Mattie Loflin (Mrs. Smalley) 

Lela Newton 

Annie Bynum (Mrs. Davis) 

Mary Park (Mrs. T. G. Polhill) LaGrange, Ga. 

Leila Parks (Mrs. Erwin) 

Anna Quillian (Mrs. Thos. Dillard) Bishop, Ga. 

Mary Bosser 

Carlie Smith (Mrs. Dozier) 

Sallie Tomlinson (Mrs. Ivey) Hawkinsville, Ga. 

Mattie Byrd Watson (Mrs. W. L. Chunn)* 
Annie Kate Bondurant (Mrs. Jones) 
Aurena Evans (Mrs. Burgess) 

Mary Bosser Kimbrough (Mrs. Guttenberger) Macon, Ga. 

Lila Park 

Kola Dickinson (Mrs. Wheeler) 

Mary Belle Dixon (Mrs. McKenzie) Thomaston, Ga. 

Mary E. Quillian (Mrs. Harrell) St. Marys, Fla. 

Anita Stroud 

B. L. 

Lillian Neal Carnesville, Ga. 

Pearl Sewell (Mrs. J. C. Holbrook) Carnesville, Ga. 

Mabel Thrower (Mrs. McDonald) 

Music Diplomas 

Annie Cheatham . Voice . (Mrs. Whiddon) Atlanta, Ga. 

Marilu Ingram  Piano  (Mrs. Letcher) El Paso, Texas 

1900 
A. B. 

Glenn Anderson (Mrs. Boswell) 
Mary Lizzie Anderson (Mrs. Watson) 

Esther Askew (Mrs. J. H. Kelley) Brooks, Ga. 

Clyde Bruce (Mrs. Emmett Williams) Bullochville, Ga. 

Willie Crawford (Mrs. Johnson) 

Virgil Harris (Mrs. Harvard) Arabi, Ga. 

Marie Harrison (Mrs. Wilson) 
Nellie Johnson (Mrs. Wilkerson)* 
Clyde Lanier 
Lottie Maxwell (Mrs. Robertson) 

71 



Rebie Neese (Mrs. L. M. Moore) Waleska, Ga. 

Flora Quillian (Mrs. J. T. VanHorn) Monroe, Ga. 

Ruby Sharp (Mrs. George Rosser) . . . Wesleyan College, Macon, Ga. 

Mary Howard Smith (Mrs. Green Johnson) Monticello, Ga. 

Sadie Smith (Mrs. Phinizy) Forsyth, Ga. 

Exa Stewart 

Annie Stone (Mrs. Clifford Powell) Woodbury, Ga. 

B. S. 

Ethel Bryson (Mrs. Thompson) Madison, Ga. 

Marion Clifton 
A. Louise Moate 

Louise L. Ray (Mrs. C. C. Burch) Eastman, Ga. 

Leone J. Tucker (Mrs. Rush Burton) Lavonia, Ga. 

B. L. 

Coral Capps (Mrs. Stapler) Commerce, Ga. 

Rosebud Dixon (Mrs. Oscar Callahan) Woodbury, Ga. 

Annie Lou Hood (Mrs. Fred Robinson) LaGrange, Ga. 

Ethel Lively (Mrs. ) 

Jessie Manning (Mrs. Sternes) 

Eva Sutton (Mrs. Savage) Danburg, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
Irene Dempsey* 

Leila Irvin  Piano  (Mrs. Meriwether Barnett) . . . Dahlonega, Ga. 
Fannie Smith (Mrs. Ricks) Reynolds, Ga. 

1901 

A. B. 

Stella Benton (Mrs. Harry Jones) .... 214 Green St., Augusta, Ga. 
Irene Butler (Mrs. Daniel) 

Ernestine Dempsey Jackson, Ga. 

Jessie Mallory (Mrs. DeLamar) Hamilton, Ga. 

Pauline Norman 87 Oak St., Atlanta, Ga. 

Lilla Tuck Athens, Ga., R. F. D. No. 1 

B. S. 

Kate Bradfield (Mrs. Jno. S. Brown) Locust Grove, Ga. 

Stella Bradfield 
Ella Bussey 

Lou Ella Davis (Mrs. W. E. Drane) Buena Vista, Ga. 

Mary Barnard Nix LaGrange, Ga. 

Sarah Quillian (Mrs. W. W. Baldwin) Madison, Ga. 

Effie C. Smith* 

Leila Williams (Mrs. O. W. Tucker) LaGrange, Ga. 

1902 
A. B. 

Janie Brown Cofer (Mrs. ) 

Emma Lois Cotton (Mrs. P. W. Ellis), 603 Whitaker St., Savannah, Ga. 

72 



Sidnor Davenport (Mrs. Hammings) 

Elizabeth T. Ferrell (Mrs. ) 

Nell Marchman (Mrs. H. I. Flynt) 803 Ponce de Leon Ave., 

Atlanta, Ga. 

Bertie Pennington (Mrs. Sherrod Campbell) Mansfield, Ga. 

Cleta Quillian (Mrs. Harry Cleveland) Elberton, Ga. 

Nancy Lee Shell (Mrs. Pierce Norman) Alpharetta, Ga. 

Nellie Vickers (Mrs. Chester Harvey) Fairburn, Ga. 

B. S. 

Mary Bateman (Mrs. ) Dallas, Texas 

Eobie Clifton (Mrs. Christine Williams) Lyons, Ga. 

Leila Jernigan Decatur, Ga. 

Edna Philpot (Mrs. Trippe) Hogansville, Ga. 

B. L. 

Annie Margaret Dunson (Mrs. Frank Davis) LaGrange, Ga. 

1903 

A. B. 

Vashti Daniel 

Susie Strickland (Mrs. C. A. Dasher) Thomasville, Ga. 

B. L. 

Lillie E. Brown Ft. Valley, Ga. 

A. Margaret Dunson (Mrs. Frank Davis) LaGrange, Ga. 

Annie F. Fannin (Mrs. Blanchard) 

Linnie F. Malone (Mrs. L. P. Smith) . . . 104 Clayton St., Macon, Ga. 

Annie Lou McCord Jackson, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
Maude Ragland  Piano 
Nina Winn  Voice  (Mrs. Darcy Stubbs) Claxton, Ga. 

1904 
A. B. 

Mary Lou Drane (Mrs. E. R. Jordan) .  Ellaville, Ga. 

Lucy Ray Freeman (Mrs. W. L. Edwards) Claxton, Ga. 

Mary Griffin 

Emma Quillian (Mrs. Singleterry) Blakely, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
Eleanor C. Davenport . Voice . (Mrs. J. A. Hanner) . . Ft. Pierce, Fla. 
Vera Lee Dyal  Piano  (Mrs. Ryals)* 

Leila Irvin  Voice  (Mrs. Meriwether Barnett) . . . Dahlonega, Ga. 
Omie H. Ryals  Piano  (Mrs. DeLoach) Lumber City, Ga. 

1905 
A. B. 

Etta May Burnside (Mrs. Jno. McDonald) Tatesville, Ga. 

Annie May Conner 

Lillian M. Garnett (Mrs. E. P. McDaniel) Conyers, Ga. 

73 



Nancy Burnie Legg 64 Granger St., Atlanta, Ga. 

Kate V. Long (Mrs. Ira Coan) Columbus, Ga. 

Maggie L. Means (Mrs. Conner)* 
Vesta Pirkle 

B. S. 

Catherine Hogg (Mrs. Judson Prather) West Point, Ga. 

Eva Eampley (Mrs. J. C. Little) Carnesville, Ga. 

Mattie Eampley Carnesville, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
Rosa Logan  Piano  (Mrs. John Brown) 
Leona Anderson Wood . Piano Hapeville, Ga. 

1906 

A. B. 

May Dell Cleaveland (Mrs. W. A. Briggs) Hampton Ave., 

Greenville, S. C. 
Mary Boyd Davis (Mrs. D. A. Harvard) 

Carrie Moore Fleith (Mrs. Austin Cook) LaGrange, Ga. 

Lillian Hicks (Mrs. Webb) 

Lillie Pennington Covington, Ga. 

B. S. 

Annie Zu Dillard (Mrs. Gordon Stipe) Oxford, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
Bertha Louise Burnside  Piano  (Mrs. A. K. Forney) . Thomson, Ga. 
Vera V. Edwards . Voice . (Mrs. Eoy McGinty) . . . Chatsworth, Ga. 
Juelle Jones . Piano . (Mrs. Henry A. Willy) LaGrange, Ga. 

1907 
A. B. 

Glenn Antoinette Allen (Mrs. Quillian L. Garrett) . . . Atlanta, Ga. 

Oneta S. Askew (Mrs. S. Ward) Hampton, Ga. 

Marie Barnett* 

Bessie Boyd (Mrs. Emory Stone) Boydville, Ga. 

Palmyra Burnside (Mrs. Eobert Burks) LaGrange, Ga. 

Mamie A. Fenley 

Adelaide Hall 

Lucile Hicks 

Etta Hobgood (Mrs. McNeil) 

Bessie Johnson (Mrs. ) 

Estelle Jones (Mrs. Wilson J. Culpepper) Eoswell, Ga. 

Allie Kenon McEae, Ga. 

Emmeline Parks (Mrs. Quillian)* 
Alberta Eagsdale 

Blanche Sims (Mrs. E. Z. Golden, Jr.) Langdale, Ala. 

Yula May Smith (Mrs. J. T. Carter) LaGrange, Ga. 

Evelyn Stokes (Mrs. Frank Evans) Buena Vista, Ga. 

74 



Eva Sutton (Mrs. W. G. Curry) ... 909 Jefferson St., Savannah, Ga. 

Teressa Thrower 584 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 

Martha Tomlinson (Mrs. Ivey) 

Beulah Warner (Mrs. T. Morgan) LaGrange, Ga. 

Eugenia Watkins (Mrs. Clements) 

B. S. 

Estelle Pitts (Mrs. Lucas) 

Music Diplomas 

Glenn Allen LaGrange, Ga. 

Maggie Anderson 

Belle Arnold (Mrs. Bryant) Americus, Ga. 

Marie Barnett* 

Gertrude Brown (Mrs. E. B. Cowen) Bainbridge, Ga. 

Nellie Brown  Voice  (Mrs. Newman) Fla. 

Lizzie Murphy Teacher in Brazil 

Fay Shannon (Mrs. N. P. Burke) Millen, Ga. 

Nora Simmons (Mrs. ) Claxton, Ga. 

Sarah Frances Thomason Chipley, Ga. 

1908 

A. B. 
Sallie Bohannon (Mrs. E. E. McConnell) . 430 Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga. 

Bertha Burnside (Mrs. A. K. Forney) Thomson, Ga. 

Luna Cook Carrollton, Ga. 

Erne E. Etter 1727 Walton Way, Augusta, Ga. 

lone Ellis Monticello, Ga. 

Mary Fox Alpharetta, Ga. 

Ellie Gray Missionary to Korea 

Mary Green Whitesburg, Ga. 

Janie Hearn Eatonton, Ga. 

Annette Mayo Social Circle, Ga. 

Willie Belle Moncrief (Mrs. Boyd N. Eagsdale) .... LaGrange, Ga. 
Mary Murphy (Mrs. Eobt. Bull) . . 31 N. Mayson Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 

Pauline Powledge (Mrs. W. O. Wooten) 212 Brignoli St., 

Talladega, Ala. 

Leta Price Montana 

Christine Eeynolds Fredonia, Ala. 

Adelaide Eollins (Mrs ) Kingston, Ga. 

Mary F. Stanton (Mrs. E. G. Gardner) Griffin, Ga. 

Dura M. Upshaw (Mrs. Leon Young) 

Lula Willingham (Mrs. Wallace Neal) Thomson, Ga. 

Adele Woolbright (Mrs. J. J. Nicholson) . . Bronwood, Ga., E. F. D. 1 

Music Diplomas 

Leila Dillard Oxford, Ga. 

B. Florence Dye (Mrs. Ivey) 

Ellie Gray Missionary to Korea. 

Mrs. Edda Cook Pitt McEae, Ga. 

Dura M. Upshaw (Mrs. Leon Young) 

75 



Expression 

Leila Dillard Oxford, Ga. 

Janie Hearn Eatonton, Ga. 

Eddie Eampley (Mrs. Tim Sullivan) Eoyston, Ga. 

1909 
A. B. 

Maxie Barron Atlanta, Ga. 

Eugenia Christian (Mrs. Tom Swift, Jr.) Elberton, Ga. 

Leila Dillard Oxford, Ga. 

Corinne Jarrell LaGrange, Ga. 

Maybelle Mathews Ypsilanti, Ga. 

Hallie Claire Smith LaGrange, Ga. 

Euth Smith (Mrs. G. W. Hammond) Bowdon, Ga. 

Elizabeth Smithwick LaGrange, Ga. 

Ava Widener (Mrs. Holderfield) Stroud, Ala. 

Music Diplomas 
(Piano) 

Mayne Archer (Mrs. Jos. Aycock) Carrollton, Ga. 

Euby Beall Carrollton, Ga. 

Florence Dunson (Mrs. Eobert Hutchinson) LaGrange, Ga. 

Vera Edwards (Mrs. Eoy McGinty) 

Ella Godwin (Mrs. ) Bullochville, Ga. 

Sarah Hogg (Mrs. C. E. Cliatt) 

Lucile Jones (Mrs W. G. Partin) LaGrange, Ga. 

Alice Loftin (Mrs. ) 

Pearl Simmons (Mrs. Anderson) Claxton, Ga. 

Pearl Watson* 

Allena D. Stone (Mrs. Graham) Decatur, Ga. 

1910 
A. B. 

Margaret Eakes Decatur, Ga. 

Annie M. Lazenby 

T'L'lene Thrower 584 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 

Martha Ware LaGrange, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
Talladega Becton  Piano  (Mrs. J. A. CoCork) . . . Swainsboro, Ga. 

Carrie May Brownlee  Piano  Calhoun, Ga. 

Natalie Cooper  Piano  (Mrs. E. C. Buchanan) .... Atlanta, Ga. 
Florence Dunson  Voice  (Mrs. Eobt. Hutchinson) . . LaGrange, Ga. 

Hallie Claire Smith  Voice LaGrange, Ga. 

Cleo Smithwick  Voice  (Mrs. Grady Traylor) .... LaGrange, Ga. 
T'L'lene Thrower  Piano . . . 584 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 

Jeanette Wilhoite . Piano LaGrange, Ga. 

Theo Woodward  Piano  (Mrs. Austin) 

Expression 

Natalie Cooper Atlanta, Ga. 

Lois Eivers Sparta, Ga. 

76 



1911 
A. B. 

Lenoir H. Burnside Thomson, Ga. 

LaVerne Garrett 

Sarah Hogg (Mrs. C. E. Cliatt) 

Susie E. Jones 418 Broad St., Augusta, Ga. 

Flossie Mayo Social Circle, Ga. 

Manie Towson Eastman, Ga. 

*!usic Diplomas 
Sarah Christian  Piano, Voice  (Mrs. A. H. Cromartie) 

Hazlehurst, Ga. 

Lillie Harris  Voice  (Mrs. Reeves) Atlanta, Ga. 

Nyui Tsung Lee  Piano, Voice  (Mrs. Yang, Pao Ling) 

Soochow, China. 

Edith Lupton  Piano  (Mrs. Frank Hunt) San Diego, Calif. 

Mary Hill Moore  Piano  (Mrs. Harry Neal) .... Canaguay, Cuba 

Claire Shannon  Piano Commerce, Ga. 

Cleo Smithwick  Piano  (Mrs. Grady Traylor) . . . LaGrange, Ga. 

Art 
Lenoir Burnside Thomson, Ga. 

1912 
A. M. 

Marcia Culver Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga. 

A. B. 

Susan Willard Brown 

Martha Hamilton (Mrs. Frederick Travis) Boldenhurst, Saskatchewan 

Eunice Hill McGhee LaGrange, Ga. 

Ouida McClure Canton, Ga. 

Maude Patrick (Mrs. J. C. Baker, Jr.) Manchester, Ga. 

Mattie Sharpe (Mrs. Henry D. Mincey) Ogeechee, Ga. 

Ethel L. Smith (Mrs. C. B. Culpepper) Vienna, Ga. 

Ruth Walker Cass Station, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
(Piano) 

Marward Bedell St. Mary's, Ga. 

Florence Brinkley Thomson, Ga. 

Mildred Eakes Decatur, Ga. 

Louise Evans Douglas, Ga. 

Nell Foster Hampton, Ga. 

W. Clyde Holmes (Mrs. Bountree) 

Sarah Mayo Social Circle, Ga. 

Carrie Smith Greensboro, Ga. 

Florence Smith Ypsilanti, Ga. 

Annie L. Tankersley (Mrs. Williams) Ky. 

Martha Ware (Mrs. B. A. Gandy) LaGrange, Ga. 

Sarah Elizabeth Witcher 

77 



Expression 

Carrie Smith Greensboro, Ga. 

Ruth Trammell Newborn, Ga. 

1913 
A. B. 

Alice Claire Beckwith Mansfield, Ga. 

Mildred Eakes Decatur, Ga. 

Pauline Fox 

Music Diplomas 
(Piano) 

A. Claire Beckwith Mansfield, Ga. 

Lottie Bond (Mrs. J. E. Phillips) Lithonia, Ga. 

Katherine Dozier LaGrange, Ga. 

Elma Warlick (Mrs. Elbert D. Hale) Woodbury, Ga. 

Leone F. Leith  Voice 

Lessie Lewis Sylvania, Ga. 

A. Eloise Linson 

Euby Newsom  Voice  (Mrs. Thos. Campbell) .... 115 Broad St., 

North Augusta, Ga. 

Sarah Satterwhite  Voice Chipley, Ga. 

Nell Smith (Mrs. Elbert Nicholls) Hartwell, Ga. 

Art 
Hallie Claire Smith LaGrange, Ga. 

Expression 

Euby Newsom (Mrs. Thos. Campbell) . 115 Broad St., N. Augusta, Ga. 

1914 
A. B. 

Susie M. Green 

Mary B. Hunter LaGrange, Ga. 

Ruby Moss LaGrange, Ga. 

Frederica Westmoreland (Mrs. H. H. Heisler) . R. F. D., Lumpkin, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
(Piano) 
Pauline Becton  Piano and Voice  (Mrs. V. Perkins) . Swainsboro, Ga. 
Bessie Bryant 
Gladys Cantrell 

Eddie Mae Chastain (Mrs. Thos. H. Lang) Calhoun, Ga. 

S. Pearl Dozier LaGrange, Ga. 

Florence Few Watkinsville, Ga. 

Frances Waddell Woodbury, Ga. 

Thel Gilmore 

Dolly Jones  Voice Augusta, Ga, 

Sarah Satterwhite Chipley, Ga. 

Lois Schaub LaGrange, Ga. 

W. Ruth Sparks 

Sarah Tatum (Mrs. Harvey Reed) LaGrange, Ga. 

78 



Expression 
Sarah Satterwhite Chipley, Ga. 

1915 
A. B. 

Bessie Blackmail West Point, Ga. 

Daisy Boney Fitzgerald, Ga. 

Irene Butenschon 1121 Wilmer Ave., Anniston, Ala. 

Nellie C. Hammond (Mrs. ) 

Laura Lewis Waleska, Ga. 

Vera Eawls Talbotton, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
(Piano) 

Bessie Blackman West Point, Ga. 

Florence Foster Hampton, 'ra. 

Marie Griffin Temple, Ga. 

Nellie C. Hammond Leary, Ga. 

Dolly Jones Augusta, Ga. 

Ouida Parish  Piano and Voice Wrens, Ga. 

Euth Pike (Mrs. W. C. Key) LaGrange, Ga. 

Lois Schaub  Organ LaGrange, Ga. 

Expression 

Daisy Boney Fitzgerald, Ga. 

Annie Hines Mountville, Ga. 

Frances Eobeson LaGrange, Ga. 

Art 

Annie Moore (Mrs. Dennis S. Smith) Buena Vista, Ga. 

1916 
A. B. 

Annette Patton Thomasville, Ga. 

Jennie Vaughan Marshville, N. C. 

Music Diplomas 
(Piano) 

Sarah Segrest LaGrange, Ga. 

Olive Bradley Carrollton, Ga. 

Expression 

Annie Belle Hutchinson Senoia, Ga. 

Jennie Vaughan Marshville, N. C. 

Home Economics 
Euth Eichards (Mrs. E. Eobeson) . . 211 49th St., Newport News, Va. 

Katharine Shaver Atlanta, Ga. 

Ephie Butenschon (Mrs. Tarleton) 

Annie Fennell (Mrs. A. M. DeMedici) Manchester, Ga. 

Art 
Dora Lane LaGrange, Ga. 

79 



1917 
A. B. 

Evelyn Hale Milner, Ga. 

Josephine Hurst Monticello, Fla. 

Kuth Elizabeth Pike (Mrs. W. C. Key) LaGrange, Ga. 

Annie Belle Kodgers Hampton, Ga. 

Mardel Taylor Covington, Ga. 

Music Diplomas 
(Piano) 

Marian Hollis Edmondson LaGrange, Ga. 

Helen Lyle Harris  Piano and Voice McDonough, Ga. 

Lollie Maude Harris Cartersville, Ga. 

(Voice) 

Frances Elizabeth Black Calhoun, Ga. 

Lucius Mahlon Bedell St. Mary's, Fla. 

Home Economics 

Mary Lee Edwards Claxton, Ga. 

Mary Bacon Osborne (Mrs. T. Moncrief ) LaGrange, Ga. 

Julia Samuels Muse Maysville, Ky. 

Total number of Alumnae 1,097 

ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION 

The Alumnae Association holds its annual reunion during 
Commencement. Its dues are $1.00 per year. All of the 
Alumnae are invited to become actively identified with it. 
The full name, post office, and other interesting data con- 
cerning all the Alumnae, is desired for a permanent record. 

The Officers for 1916-1917 are : 

President, Mrs. J. L. Bradfield, LaGrange, Ga. ; Vice- 
President, Miss Sue Jones, 1334 Glenn Avenue, Augusta, 
Ga. ; Treasurer, Miss Eunice McGhee, LaGrange, Ga. ; 
Secretary, Mrs. Boyd N. Ragsdale, LaGrange, Ga. ; Cor- 
responding Secretary, Mrs. A. H. Thompson, LaGrange, 
Ga. 



80 



CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES AND CERTIFI- 
CATES, 1918. 

DIPLOMAS 

Duane Campbell, A.B. 

O'Lura Campbell, A.B. 

Mary Connally, A.B. 

Maude Harris, A.B. 

Mary Kate Clements, Piano. 

Nellie Humber, Piano. 

Mary Lizzie Wright, Piano. 

Jennie Mae Erwin, Voice. 

Mrs. W. C. Key, Voice. 

Helen Clark, Expression. 

Mrs. Harvey Beed, Expression. 

Mardel Taylor, Expression. 

Dorothy Bledsoe, Art. 

Clara Evans, Home Economics. 

Harriet .Rains, Home Economics. 

CERTIFICATES 

Emily Allen, Piano. 
Vera Griffith, Piano. 
Alma Murphy, Piano. 
Tenella Tingle, Piano. 
Irene Combs, Expression. 
Lois Hall, Expression. 



81 



ROLL OF STUDENTS, 1917-1918. 

COLLEGE 

Allen, Emily Georgia 

Bailey, Lurline North Carolina 

Baker, Ruth Georgia 

Black, Frances Georgia 

Bledsoe, Dorothy Georgia 

Campbell, Duane Georgia 

Campbell, O'Lura Georgia 

Chunn, Thelma Georgia 

Clark, Elizabeth Georgia 

Clements, Mary Kate Georgia 

Connally, Mary Georgia 

Cotton, Lodusky Georgia 

Curlee, Odessa Georgia 

Davis, Kate Georgia 

Davis, Sarah Georgia 

Dozier, Sarepta Georgia 

Eakes, Dora Georgia 

Eakes, Nora Georgia 

Erwin, Jennie Mae Georgia 

Fullbright, Iris Georgia 

Goggans, Evelyn Georgia 

Griffeth, Vera Georgia 

Grogan, Elmira District of Columbia 

Grogan, Kathleen Georgia 

Haley, Georgia Georgia 

Hall, Lois Missouri 

Hardy, Ruth Georgia 

Harlow, Mattie Georgia 

Harris, Maude Georgia 

Henderson, Ruth Georgia 

Henderson, Sarah Ruth Georgia 

Humber, Nellie Georgia 

Jackson, Myrtle Georgia 

Jarrell, Veola Georgia 

Kaney, Martha Georgia 

Kimbrough, Mary Georgia 

Kurfees, Marjorie Georgia 

Lane, Grace Georgia 

McRee, Grace Georgia 

Marsh, Otis North Carolina 

Mayfield, Alyne Georgia 

Murphy, Alma Georgia 

Muse, Julia Kentucky 

O'Neal, Sarah Georgia 

Poer, Florrie Georgia 

Rains, Harriet Kentucky 

Rutland, Mary Georgia 

82 



Save, Ida Lee Kentucky 

*Smith, Mildred Georgia 

Stephens, Ola Georgia 

Sutton, Fannie Georgia 

Tague, Alice Kentucky 

Taylor, Louise ' Georgia 

Taylor, Mardel Georgia 

Taylor, Ruth Georgia 

Teasley, Coretta Georgia 

Thompson, Robbie Lee Georgia 

Tingle, Tenella Georgia 

Turner, Mattie Georgia 

VanDevander, Lillian Georgia 

VanGorder, Marion Georgia 

Walker, Delle Georgia 

Walker, Kate Georgia 

Ware. Patti Georgia 

Whatley, Ella Ruth Georgia 

Williams, Emily Frances Georgia 

Wright, Mary Lizzie Georgia 

IRREGULARS. 

Allen, Georgia Georgia 

Birdsong, Mary Georgia 

Black, Louise Georgia 

Bradfield, Ira Georgia 

Brannon, Fannie Lou Georgia 

Caldwell, Keith Wesley Georgia 

Clark, Helen Georgia 

Clark, Ha Georgia 

Clay, Marie Georgia 

Dallis, Louisa Georgia 

Harrington, Sarah Benton Georgia 

Edwards, Virginia Georgia 

Ferrell, Alice Georgia 

Foster, Louise Georgia 

Glass, Mrs. Xeil Georgia 

Hammer, Hester Mae Georgia 

Hill, Claire Georgia 

Key, Mrs. W. C Georgia 

King, Mary Ellen Georgia 

Lane, Mary Georgia 

McCaine, Lamartha Georgia 

Murphy, Susie Georgia 

Newton, Mrs. Tracy Georgia 

Park, Emily Georgia 

Park, Virginia Georgia 

Reid, Mrs. Harvey Georgia 

Sappington, Mary Sue Georgia 

Sparks, Walter L. Georgia 

Whatley, Ruth Georgia 

Whatley, Annie Georgia 

^Deceased. 83 



ACADEMY 

Amos, Anberry Georgia 

Atkinson, Emily Georgia 

Baird, Virginia Tennessee 

Blanton, Florence Georgia 

Chenault, Carlisle Kentucky 

Childs, Gussie Pearl Georgia 

Collum, Pearl Georgia 

Combs, Irene Georgia 

Evans, Clara Georgia 

Ford, Louella Georgia 

Forrest, Willie Hortense Georgia 

Foster, Margaret Georgia 

Freel, Maggie Georgia 

Haley, Josephine Georgia 

Haley, Eebie Georgia 

Henderson, Frances Georgia 

Hicks, Irene Georgia 

Hollingsworth, Annie Flo Georgia 

Langley, Thelma Georgia 

Leonard, Elizabeth Georgia 

McDonald, Louise Georgia 

Martin, Corinne Georgia 

Maxwell, Louise . Georgia 

Mizell, Helen Georgia 

Morgan, Sarah Georgia 

Norman, Laura Georgia 

Ogletree, Susie Georgia 

Osborne, Willela Georgia 

Owings, Nell Georgia 

Patterson, Mary Leila Georgia 

Perry, Bessie Georgia 

Roach, Murrell Tennessee 

Rogers, Dorothy Georgia 

Satterfield, Laura Lee Georgia 

Scarborough, Leila Georgia 

Sewell, Marguerite Georgia 

Smith, Evelyn Georgia 

Sprouse, Gladys Georgia 

Stephens, Eloise Georgia 

Sutton, Martha Georgia 

Tompkins, Lulline Georgia 

Veal, Nell Georgia 

Vickers, Gladys Georgia 

Ware, Laura Mai Georgia 

Ware, Mary Beverly Georgia 

Wingo, Jean Georgia 

Wolford, Louise Georgia 

84 



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85 



INDEX. 

Academy 50-51 

Administration 4 

Admission of Students 19 

Alumnae 52-80 

Alumnae Association 80 

Board of Trustees 3 

Bureau of Appointments 13 

Calendar . 2 

Candidates for Degrees and Certificates, 1918 81 

Committees 4 

Courses of Instruction 28-48 

Definition of Entrance Eequirements 22-25 

Expenses 14-16 

Faculty and Officers 5-6 

General Information 17-19 

LaGrange College 8-11 

Ofiicers of Administration 7 

Reports 19 

Requirements for Admission 20 

Requirements for Degrees 26-27 

Roll of Students, 1916-1917 82-84 

Schedule 85 

Standing Committees of the Faculty 7 

Student Activities 12-13 



86