$35-oo Since 1831: LaGrange College is a pictorial celebration of the history of one hundred and seventy five years of LaGrange College. First a women's college, named in Gone With the Wind as the school Aunt Pittypat attended, LaGrange Female Institute became LaGrange Female College, and today the coeducational LaGrange College draws students from around the world. Unlike most books tracing college histories, this volume does not attempt to catalogue the growth of the college chronologically. Rather, we chose to juxtapose vintage photographs of the early years with contemporary ones. In this way we hope to illustrate the traditions and innovations that have led the college forward. The campus has outgrown its lofty hilltop, expanding into space and new buildings that now include the Callaway Campus, Price Theater, The Lamar Dodd Art Center, Cleaveland Field, Hudson Natatorium, softball and soccer fields, tennis courts, a football practice field, and Sunny Gables, the Alumni house. The cohesive, binding locus of the original quadrangle, however, can still be felt at the center of the college community of students, faculty and administration. Venerable old Smith Hall served as a hospital during the Civil War, and students more than a hundred years later still know its grand pillars as Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. It retains the honor of its title College Home. The 2 1st centuiy LaGrange College embraces its history, with a continuing mission to enable students to take their places as leaders, and with the vision and commitment to take its place as a premier liberal arts institution. COVl-R Smith Hall. 2005 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2014 https://archive.org/details/scince1831lagran2005lagr LAGRANGE COLLEGE Copyright 2005 LaGrange College Published by LaGrange College, LaGrange, Georgia. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher Since 1831: LaGrange College Edited by John Lawrence, Nina Dulin-Mallory, and Jared Ragland. Book design by Jared Ragland and Design Group. ISBN 09636717-1-5 Printed in Birmingham, AL. Commercial Printing Company 222 Sixth Avenue Birmingham, AL 3521 I www.lagrange.edu www.jaredragland.com www.commercialprinting.com www.tbdg.com Forward by President F. Stuart Gulley History 13 PART ONE Challenging the Mind 23 Miriam Lowe Adamson '49 27 PART TWO Inspiring the Soul 39 Fred Brown '64 51 PART THREE Traditions on the Hill 55 Andrew Johnson '04 103 Acknowledgements 1 1 I ^ ;.vS 9 69 70 Student organizations. 1 920s - 1 940s THIS SPREAD 71 ABOVE Choralaires in Smith Parlor. 1950s opposite Formal evening at Pitts. 1950s 72 "10 Outstanding Seniors." 1974 LEFT Association of Black Collegiates. 1974 right 75 76 ugNsMKnY Date Permit A couple walks hand in hand on the Quadrangle A window in Smith Hall etched by engagement rings, "giving notice" of new engagements May Day Court. 1934 above Phi Mu performs at Step Sing. 2003 OPPOSITETOP The Rabbits of May Day. 1 95 1 OPPOSITE BOTTOM 85 Championship Basketball Team coached by Alfred Mariotti. 1973 ABOVE Women's athletics opposite Cleaveland Field In 2000, Cleaveland Field opened as the new baseball facility. Callaway Foundation, Inc., gave the land and a challenge grant to honor Philip Cleaveland, a college trustee for nineteen years. In 2003. the baseball team won the United States Collegiate Athletic Association National Championship. LaGrange College Golf USCAA Championship Ring. 2003 top 2004 Panther Golf Team, the first team to represent the college at middle an NCAA championship LaGrange College students welcome golfing legend Bobby Jones to bottom the opening of the Highland Country Club. Basketball Team. 1926 opposite 93 Commencement invitation. 1888 above Convocation at First United Methodist Church. 2004 opposite 97 irrjjrr] m mum, cn favour x^^Yri . ,' r/ ,<'^j dam /ed eludtd uyu/vHrieA de c$i tfiwliAU : donee d r nr/// ;/./<>.> ^jjjjjrj : LtijA vaueet, f/tii vwment /oejouu ete /* cc/ut'tium, r//e t/icuie / et/imo ei Jet c/opet t/e tooted | /si icttnei /ten rf/wt ., \ l-^\'VlU fyie-4 Jtonola/ /< i y.r ^dbademoiie$e a acyut.i dam ceU$Wh ,%i,i/'hi/n /t, //out avoti-) a/t^iar. rt,-dc&&otw not r J 'talin/ur ^0XjT^ >! : } JJroftBfiicurs. The LaGrange College mace is carried by the President of the Faculty Assembly at the head of processions for convocation and graduation. Diploma. 1 85 I 102 ABOVE Andrew Johnson, Class of 2004, receives a congratulatory embrace from his father. -Jz^rT^y graduating class was lined up waiting to walk up to the quad on that beautiful May morning. My professors were intermingled amongst my classmates, reminiscing about past classes and discussing plans for the future. I walked over to my favorite place on campus, the swing on the patio, and sat down. I began to swing, tassle flopping around, gown rustling with the breeze I was creating. Many a day had been spent on that swing, but this day was different, it would be my last as a LaGrange College student. This was a tough idea to grasp. Once I overcame the anxiety of this thought, I too began to remember the events of the past four years. I began to remember the wonderful friends who had come and gone and the nights spent talking for hours with them about important topics and those more trivial. Watching the movie Superstar until we could reenact each scene word for word. There was that triumphant day when I scored my first goal on the beautiful LC soccer field. Those classes and professors that challenged me and made me grow in ways that I would have never dreamed if not for them. Turning in that paper that felt almost perfect and a true reflection of who I was and what I had to say. Experiencing the art and music of my extremely talented friends. Feeling the clay spin between my fingers as I tried to create a masterpiece. Seeing my Cornerstone professor's face when we brought a keg (empty of course) to his Christmas party, and then when he said to tell the kids "it's a stool." My skin baking in the Costa Rican sun as we helped build a parsonage for the local pastor. Discovering books like From Brokenness to Community that I feel the need to read at least once a year. Dancing for hours at the many socials and parties and oddly in front of everyone at May Day. Experiencing death through the eyes of my amazingly strong roommate. My LC experience was filled with memories like these and just as importantly with a great sense of community. I felt truly accepted at LC by everyone, even those who completely disagreed with me on every topic. This was a feeling that is hard to come by if not nearly impossible. The community was alive, healthy and helped me grow in immeasurable ways. I always had someone to turn to in whatever situation I found myself in. There are not many colleges, or places in general, where people feel comfortable talking with the people in charge. Yet, I felt this comfort with the President, the staff, faculty, students, everyone. College was an amazing time in my life and I would not trade LC for any other school. My mind was challenged and my soul inspired. I am still learning from my times at LC and will probably come to new realizations for the rest of my life. Andrew Johnson 04 0-1 ABOVE Graduation procession. 1 950s id center) President Waights G. Henry, Jr. , assists graduates with regalia. 1970s IB * - Graduates. 1905 qg^-fiis book celebrating the I75 tn Anniversary of the college has been a collaborative effort. It was designed most skillfully by alumnus Jared Ragland 'OO, who was intent from the beginning that the book be like no other, more of an aesthetic scrapbook than a pictorial history. He was adeptly aided by alumni Laura Butler 'OO and Maria Hays '04 at Design Group in LaGrange. Heather Cowart 'OO also served as design consultant. We are particularly indebted to Dean Hartman and Stacy Gormanjackson OO in our Communications Department, as well as Martha Pirkle and Susan Hancock in the Alumni Office for helping us compile images and gather information. A very special thanks to Nina Dulin-Mallory who wrote the captions and text and also provided much needed encouragement. Additional help and advice were provided by Kay Minchew at the Troup County Archives and Julia Dyar, the college's former Director of Institutional Relations. We thank Miriam Lowe Adamson '49- Fred Brown '64, and Andrew Johnson '04 for their essays of memories of college days which added significantly to the content of the book. Fred Brown helped us launch the book with advice concerning the concept and production. While many of the earlier images were made by photographers we cannot identify, there are a number of photographs we can credit. We are extremely grateful for the rights to reproduce the works of Joe Benton, John McKeith, Tommy Thompson, Charles Nix, Stacy Gormanjackson, Dean Hartman, Derrick Dukes, Mike Jacoby, John Hughes, Rob Dicks, Jared Ragland and John Lawrence. CONTRIBUTORS Jared Ragland is a 2000 LaGrange graduate who joined the faculty at LaGrange as an adjunct professor for the 2004-05 academic year. He is a founding partner of themarvelouscollective.com, an online artist co-op, and has worked as a graphic designer and photojournalist for numerous international mission and aid organizations. John Lawrence, Fuller E. Callaway Professor of Art, is chairman of the Art and Design Department and director of the Lamar Dodd Art Center. His photographs have been published in numerous books including Faulkner's Rowan Oak, Travels in Troup County, and Walls of Light: The Murals of Walter Anderson. Dr. Nina Dulin-Mallory is a Professor of English at LaGrange College. She is advisor to the Honor Council and past president of the Center for Academic Integrity at Duke University. Miriam Lowe Adamson '49 studied English and Literature at LaGrange College. She has driven dogsleds in remote areas of Canada and won the Ms. Senior America Pageant in 1995. Her story of surviving breast cancer was featured in Portraits of Hope: Conquering Breast Cancer, 52 Inspiring Stories of Strength (Wonderland Press, 1998). Fred Brown '64 is the author and publisher of numerous books and journals including Brown's Guide to Georgia. He is co-author with his wife, Sherri Smith, of the book The River Keeper's Guide to the Chattahoochee, which won the Atlanta Press Club Authors of the Year Award in 1997 Andrew Johnson '04 was a Cunningham-Traylor scholar, a Servant Leadership Fellow, and a member of both the SGA and the Environmental Task Force at LC. After graduation he spent a year working and living in a home for disadvantaged youth in Atlanta ISBN O-963-67171-5