HISTORICAL CATALOGUE UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI 1849-1909 Hfef ■i ommm warn ■B& fflmWm HL M M K BM8 B Bliiiiw ■■i TtmKmKm Hi I?* BfiMMIIH'HfiMted UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES Historical Catalogue OF THE University of Mississippi 1849-1909 I I \\ At/ NASHVILLE, TENN. MARSHALL & BRUCE COMPANY 1 91 O I fc TABLE OF CONTENTS. l'AGK Preface v History of the University of Mississippi 1 Educational Policy of the Continental Congress 1 Congressional Land Grants 1 Township to Jefferson College 2 First Township for State University 2 State Management of Seminary Lands 4 Adjustment of State's Indebtedness to the University 4 Second Township for State University 5 Increased Endowment 5 Important Dates 5 Charter of University 5 Board of Trustees 6 Character of Original Members 6 Early Meetings 7 Membership 7 First Faculty 1 . 7 Opening of the University 8 First Student Body 8 First Commencement 8 Growth of the University _. 9 Civil War 9 University Greys 9 Character of Student Body after Civil War 10 Professional Courses Introduced 11 Coeducation 11 Discontinuance of Preparatory Department 11 Summer Work 11 Legislative Appropriations in Recent Years 11 Enlargement of Faculties 11 Chief Executive Officers 12 Changes in Courses and Degrees Offered 13 Present Requirements 13 Historical Sketches of Departments and Schools 15 Academic Department 15 Philosophy 15 Mathematics 16 Physics and Astronomy 19 Latin 26 Greek 31 Romance Languages 34 Germanic Languages 37 (Hi) 4G9510 iv TABLE OF CONTENTS. Academic Department— Continued. page Chemistry . 38 Geology 40 English 44 History 48 Biology and Physiology 57 Oratory .. 58 Fine Arts ... 60 Law Department 61 Engineering Department 63 Education Department 66 Medical Department 67 Pharmacy Department 70 Sketches of Presidents and Chancellors 71 President Holmes 71 President Longstreet 71 President Barnard 72 Chancellor Waddell 73 Chancellor Stewart 74 Chancellor M ayes 75 Chancellor Fulton 76 Chancellor Kincannon 78 Register of Officers and Students _■ 81 Board of Trustees 81 Chief Executive Officers 86 Teachers 86 Professors 86 Adjunct Professors 91 Associate Professors 91 Assistant Professors : 92 Assistants 92 Instructors 93 Tutors 93 Fellows 94 Other Officers 94 Honorary Degrees Conferred 96 Alumni and Other Students 102 Law Students from 1856 to 1887 102 Academic Students from 1851 to 1887 114 All Undergraduate Students from 1887 to Present 215 Graduate Students 325 Medalists and Anniversarians from 1866 to 1887 332 General Summary 337 Alphabetical Index 340 PREFACE. \Ji UCH of the matter in this volume is based, in large measure, on the corresponding publication of a decade ago. The old historical sketch of the University has been rearranged to some extent; a few minor points, formerly omitted, have been introduced, and such other inser- tions and additions have been made as were necessary to bring the whole down to date. The historical sketches of the professional departments and of the schools of the academic department were prepared by the heads of these departments and schools. The biographical sketches of the presidents and chancellors of the University have been taken, in the main, from recent University period- icals. The first six appeared in the University of Mississippi Magazine in 1902, and were from the pen of Professor Dabney Lipscomb. The sketch of ex-Chancellor Fulton was published in the College Annual, "Ole Miss," in 1907. That of Chancellor Kincannon, with additions made later by the editor of this book, appeared in the Annual of the fol- lowing year. This last was also from Professor Lipscomb. The register of officers and students closes with the session of 1908-9. Mr. J. E. Calhoun and Mr. D. N. Powers, Secretaries to the Chancellor, had charge of the work of revising the lists of names contained in the His- torical Catalogue of 1899 and of preparing the additional list embracing all "students who have attended the University since that time. Those Chancery Court clerks who rendered valuable assistance in this matter of compiling statistics in regard to former University students residing in their counties are entitled to sincere thanks. It has been found advisable to arrange the names of students first in the order of their entrance into the University, and by classes, and also to give a complete alphabetical list. The dates in this index refer to one year in which the student was enrolled in the University, and will serve as a guide to further information recorded in that part of the catalogue corresponding to the year shown. In the general catalogue of former students, it has been attempted to give the present address of all who are living. While this has been accom- plished in many instances, it has been found impossible to locate a large number. The prefix "Hon." is used in its common sense to indicate one who has been a member of the Legislature; other abbreviations will be readily understood. The duplication of names is intentional when the first record shows the entrance of the student and the second his gradu- ation. It is believed that this arrangement of names in reference to years of attendance is more satisfactory to those who will read the list than any other order. (v) vi PREFACE. It is an unfortunate but unavoidable feature of work of this kind that tho facts withered by correspondence are those relating to such accom- plishments of individuals as have brought them prominently before the public eye. While many are thus mentioned as having achieved dis- tinction, it should be carefully borne in mind that there are hundreds of names in this catalogue belonging to those who have done their life work in the noblest manner, and who as citizens and as patriots are worthy of the highest praise, and yet whose taste or inclination has kept them from seeking ublic positions. Many of these have devoted themselves with the greatest success to private business, as planters, merchants, physi- cians, lawyers, teachers, in whose eminent success in these lines the Uni- versity properly takes as much pride as in the achievements of those of her sons who have won more conspicuous positions. The University of Mississippi. HISTORICAL SKETCH. /^\NE of the last acts of the old Continental Congress was the passage of ^"^ the bill which became a law on July 13, 1787, and which has become cel- ebrated in the history of public education and otherwise as the "ordinance of 1787 for the government of the Northwest Territory." The third of the six articles of compact forming a part of the ordinance foreshadowed the policy of the Federal Government, and that of the States to be formed out of the territory to which the ordinance related, in reference to edu- cation, in the statement that "religion, morality and knowledge, being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged." By the Act of May 20, 1790, Congress extended the general provisions of the ordinance of 1787 to the Mississippi territory, and by the Act of March 3, 1815, reserved from sale, for the support of common school edu- cation, the sixteenth section of every township of land, and one entire township for the use of a seminary of learning in this territory, which included the district now covered by the States of Alabama and Missis- sippi. By the Act of February 20, 1819, the State of Mississippi received in lieu of the township just referred to, another single township; "vested in the Legislature of the said State, in trust, for the support of a semi- nary of learning therein." The principles stated in the ordinance of 1787 became national policy. To every State formed out of the public domain Congress has granted, in carrying out the spirit of this ordinance, lands for the support of common schools and a seminary of learning or university. The State of Mississippi received thus one section in every township for common schools, and ONE township for the support of a seminary of learning — the one received under the Act of Congress of February 20, 1819. These grants have been uniformly made to the State or its Legisla- ture, in trust, for the purpose intended, and in the case of every State and Territory formed out of the public domain already, and in the case of each being formed, the Acts of Congress have been so framed as to se- cure to each State clearly, without incumbrance of any kind, not less than two townships of public land for the support of a seminary of learning or university, excepting only the State of Mississippi, which under the orig- inal Act received but one. 1 (1) 2 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. The Act of Congress making the first grant for a seminary of learning to the State of Mississippi is dated February 20, 1819, and its wording is peculiar. After the usual grant for a seat of government comes — SEC. 2. And b« it further enacted, That in addition to the township of land granted for the support of Jefferson College, there shall be granted in the said State another township, or a quantity of land equal thereto, to be located in tracts of not less than four entire sections each, which shall be vested in the Legislature of the said State, in trust, for the sup- port of a seminary of learning therein. *********** The expression "in addition to the township of land granted for the support of Jefferson College," suggests that Congress thought when this act was passed that Jefferson College was an institution belonging to the State of Mississippi. As a matter of fact, Jefferson College was a pri- vate corporation chartered in the Mississippi Territory in 1802. To this private corporation, by Act dated March 3d, 1803, Congress had donated one township of land. This land had been located on the Tombeckbee river, and when the Territory of Alabama was formed by the Act of March 3d, 1S17, these lands fell within the Territory of Alabama. The grant made to Jefferson College was made before the State of Mississippi was organized and was by its terms a donation to a private corporation. The official history of the Public Domain classes the grant to Jefferson College under the list of "Donations and SpecialGrants" and gives the order of the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States locating the lands» and dated October 5, 1812. It is important to note that the site of Jeffer- son College was near Natchez, in the present limits of the State of Mis- sissippi, but the township granted to it was located on the Tombeckbee river, and this location was not changed up to the time when the Act of Congress of February 20, 1819, was passed, although at that time the lands were situated in what had become the separate Territory of Alabama, by the Act of March 3, 1817. If, therefore, in the Act of February 20, 1819, Congress considered that the grant made to Jefferson College had been made to the people or the Legislature of the Mississippi Territory, it assumed that a grant made to a private corporation had been made to the people, and assumed also that a township, actually then located within the limits of the Territory of Alabama, belonged to the people of Mississippi. Without dwelling upon the complications that would have arisen if Mississippi had claimed the ownership of a township of land within the limits of the State of Alabama, it is worthy of note that from its founda- tion, in 1802, to the year 1826, there is nothing in the Acts of the Terri- torial or State Legislatures in Mississippi indicating that Jefferson Col- lege was in any way under the control of the State. It is true that the Territorial Legislature in the Act of December 13, 1816, provided for a loan of money to the trustees of Jefferson College, but it also provided that "bond in double the amount should be taken," and that suit should be instituted if the funds should not be returned at the stipulated time. Moreover, in the same Act of December 13, 1816, the Legislature made donations of money to two other schools — Greene Academy and St. Ste- UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 3 phen's Academy — which were, in no sense, State institutions, and not so regarded by the Legislature. The Legislature and people of the newly formed State of Mississippi were eager to utilize the means for public education afforded in the grants of land made by Congress in the Act of February 20, 1819. It was, how- ever, at once evident to the Legislature that it would have difficulty in securing the township which had been granted by Congress to Jefferson College, a private corporation. The Act of Congress of Febraury 20, 1819, implied that the original grant to Jefferson College had been in- tended for the Territory and State of Mississippi. It was evident to the Legislature of the State that there was no valid ground on which it could base a claim to this township, however much it might desire to have this addition to the lands it had received from Congress for the support of common schools and a seminary of learning. The trustees of Jefferson College seemed willing to relinquish some of their rights as an independent corporation if thereby they might help the institution to prosperity, or gain assistance from the State. The following extract from a "Historical Sketch of Jefferson College, published by order of the Board of Trustees in 1840," page 79, bears out this statement : "To afford an opportunity to the Legislature of placing the institution [Jefferson College] more immediately under its control and management, and to give to it that patronage and support which would be due to it as a State Institution, the trustees proposed to the next session of the Legisla- ture, in January, 1825, a modification of their charter. The act of the thirtieth of January, 1826, was accordingly passed and accepted by the trustees." . It was clearly understood, by both the Legislature and the trustees of Jefferson College, at this time, 1826, that the College was not a "State institution." In 1829, the Legislature of the State adpoted a resolution authorizing the Executive — "To appoint three agents to inquire into all the means and resources in the State applicable to the purpose of general education; to confer with the trustees of Jefferson College and ascertain the condition and pros- pects of the institution, and whether it was practicable, and on what terms the trustees would surrender the charter to the State. "The conference accordingly took place on the twenty-seventh of October, 1829, and an address, setting forth their views at large, was pre- sented by the agents, accompanied by several interrogatories propounded by them as to the dimensions and arrangements of the college building, the endowments and available funds, the number and character of the professors, its future prospects, the expediency of surrendering the char- ter, and, if the surrender was deemed expedient, what report the agents should make to the Legislature as to the money loaned to the institu- tion." (Extract from "H storical Sketch of Jefferson College," page 83.) From the ;ame "Historical Sketch," published by the trustees of Jef- ferson College, the following statements are taken (see pp. 83, 84)~i 4 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. "The temper of the board assembled on this occasion was most favor- able to the desires of the agents. The investigation, however, given the subject by the committee appointed to prepare a reply on behalf of the trustees, satisfied not only the trustees, but the agents themselves, of the utter inexpediency, if not impracticability, of the measure. "* * * As to the proposed surrender of the charter, it was shown that the proposition involved not merely the annihilation of Jefferson College, but the forfeiture of its resources, and, consequently, could con- fer no benefit to any other institution, though established in its name; that it could not, by the clearest principle of law, transmit its revenues or endowments to an institution erected in its stead; for, as to all pur- poses to which they were designed, they would necessarily fail with the demise of the corporation in which they were originally vested. * * * The land on the Tombigby, if it did not revert to the original grantor, would escheat to the State of Alabama." After this failure to secure the surrender of the charter of Jefferson College to the State, in 1829, on account of the difficulties indicated, all hope of the State's gaining control of the township of land granted by Congress to Jefferson College was lost, and the Legislature turned its attention to the proper administration of the trust connected with the second township mentioned in the Act of Congress of February 20, 1819, and received previously to 1825. Various causes prevented the speedy use of this grant for the purpose intended. The ambiguity of the Act of donation in its reference to Jef- ferson College, a private institution, itself a beneficiary of Congress, the desire of this and other schools to be taken under the fostering care of the State and to become the recipients of the seminary fund, and the fact that the Indian title was not extinguished to a large part of the territory embraced in the State, are reasons which seem to have had weight in causing the putting off to a later date of the founding of a State Univer- sity upon the grant of land received from the Federal Congress. From 1829 to 1833 the State adopted the policy of leasing the seminary lands. As these were agricultural lands, generally covered with heavy timber, and as other lands were abundant in the market, the plan was not successful, and up to 1831 only $8,402 was received from rents. In 1831 the Legislature directed the lands to be sold. Thirty-five and one- half sections were sold, in the manner prescribed by the Legislature, for 1277,332.52. The Act of the Legislature of February 20, 1840, appropria- ted all the proceeds of the sale of seminary lands "for the use and benefit of the University of the State of Mississippi." The management of the funds received from the sale of the original grant from Congress was vested in the Legislature of the State. The Act of the Legislature of March 5, 1880, provides for the ascertainment of the indebtedness of the State on account of the seminary fund, and "that the sum of $32,613 be, and the same is hereby, appropriated for the year 1880, and annually thereafter, for the purpose of paying the inter- est due on said sum of $544,061.22." UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 5 The fact that Mississippi was entitled to at least one more township of land for the State University seems to have been entirely forgotten in the State until the attention of Chancellor Fulton was attracted to it in his study of the history of the University in 1892. He called the atten- tion of the Board of Trustees to the matter in his annual report in June, 1892. No action was then taken in the matter. Attention was again called to it in 1893, and the board authorized the Chancellor to prepare a memorial to Congress reciting the facts and asking for the grant of ad- ditional lands to indemnify the State and the University. This memo- rial was prepared as directed, signed by the members of the Board of Trustees, and presented to Congress. It enlisted the hearty support of all the Senators and Representatives in Congress from Mississippi. The memorial asked, in order that the State and University might be fully indemnified for the failure of Congress to grant to Mississippi in 1819 her full quota of land for a State University, that Congress would grant to the State of Mississippi for the State University three additional town- ships, making the amount to this State for the State University as great as to any of the States for this purpose. As a result of this memorial, Congress, by the Act of June 20, 1894, granted one additional township of land to the State for the State Uni- versity. This land was selected in 1895 out of lands that had been formerly re- served for naval uses. These lands were restored to the Public Domain by Act of March 3, 1895, whose passage was urged by Chancellor Fulton with the eo-operation of the delegation from Mississippi in Congress. Upon the passage of this Act, land was at once selected by the Governor for the University. This additional township of 23,040 acres lies in the yellow pine district of the State in Harrison and Jackson Counties. On March 23, 1900, the State Treasurer gave credit to the University for the sum of $134,688.24, being the proceeds of the sale by the Trustees of the University of Mississippi made on the 10th of March, 1900, of the timber on 16,833.53 acres of land, a part of the grant of 23,040 acres of land made by Congress in the Act of July 20, 1894. This fund is known as the 1894 Land Grant Fund. To it was added, October 10, 1905, the sum of $20,405 from the sale of timber on other parts of the township. On the 20th of February, 1840, the Legislature passed an Act provid- ing for the location of the University. Upon the report of commission- ers appointed under this Act in the year 1841, before the organization of the University, the present location was fixed by the action of the Leg- islature by a majority of one vote. On the twenty-fourth of February, 1844, the University of Mississippi was duly chartered by the Legislature and its first Board of Trustees named.* In July, 1848, the election of the •CHARTER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. An Act to Incorporate the University of Mississippi, Feb. 24, 1844. 1. J. Alexander Ventress, John A. Quitman, William L. Sharkey, Alexander M. Clayton, William Y. Gholson, Jacob Thompson, Pryor Lea, Edward C. Wilkinson, James M. Howry, John J. McCaughan, Rev. Francis Hawkes, J. N. Waddel, A. H. Pegues are hereby appointed 6 r.YM i:itsiTY OF MISSISSIPPI. first Faculty occurred, and on the sixth of November, of that year, the Bret session opened. The first Board of Trustees was composed of men who ranked among the most distinguished citizens of the State. Among these, Hon. James Alexander Ventress has the distinction of being the author of the bill, which became a law in 1S44, organizing the University. He received his education in the common schools of Wilkinson County, Mississipi, at the University of Edinburgh, the Academie de Paris, and the Univer- sity of Berlin. He was a brilliant scholar and writer. While in Berlin he was the German correspondent and assistant editor of the Revue de Deux Mondes. To the organization, equipment and maintenance of the University of Mississippi he devoted his talents and his large political influence as a member of the Legislature and Speaker of the House of Representatives. He was continuously a member of the Board of Trus- tees from 1844 to 1867, the time of his death. An even longer period, twenty-six years, was covered by the valuable services of another mem- ber of the first Board, Judge James M. Howry. From 1844 to 1870 this devoted friend of the University gave freely of his time and talents in untiring efforts to advance the interests of the institution. During the greater part of this time he discharged with eminent ability and con- spicuous fidelity the duties of the combined offices of Secretary and Treas- urer. It was Judge Howry who successfully led the forces favoring the introduction of the Evidences of Christianity into the curriculum and establishing the University on a basis distinctly Christian. These are types of the men named in the list of Trustees of the Uni- versity given in this volume. No citizens of the State as a body have shown a higher degree of intelligence, or a larger or more unselfish devo- tion to the highest public interests than the men who have from 1844 given their time and influence to the promotion of higher education through trustees of the University of Mississippi, in Lafayette County, and they and their successors in office are hereby declared and constituted a body , politic and corporate, by the name and style of the "University of Mississippi," a majority of whom shall form a quorum to do business, but a committee of less number may be appointed to transact necessary business in the interim of a regular session of said trustees. 2. Said corporation shall be possessed of all the general powers, privileges and emoluments now secured to similar corporations by the constitution and laws of this State, and to adopt such by-laws and rules as they may deem expedient for the accomplishment of the trust reposed in them, not repugnant to the constitution and laws of this State. 3. The said board of trustees shall have full power, and entire control, over the funds be- longing to the "University of Mississippi," or the "Seminary Fund," after it shall have been collected, to be by them applied toward the consummation of the plan of the "University of Mississippi;" and said trustees shall have power to devise and adopt such a system of learning as in their judgment they may deem most advisable to be pursued in the course of education in the University; to employ a competent person to draft a plan of the same and appoint com- missioners to contract for the erection of the University building so soon as they may think advisable. 4. Said board of trustees shall have power to fill all vacancies that may occur in their body. 5. This Act shall be repealed at the will of the Legislature, and shall be in force from and after its passage. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 7 the University, without other compensation than that which comes from the satisfaction of a high duty well discharged. The first meeting of the Trustees was held in the capital of the State, January 15, 1845, at which time an organization was effected. Under the original charter the Board was a self-perpetuating corporation consist- ing of thirteen members. In 1857, by an Act of the Legislature, the Gov- ernor became, ex officio, a member and President of the Board. Since the Civil War vacancies have been filled by the Governor's appointment. An Act of the Legislature of 1870 states that such appointments are to be made with the advice and consent of the Senate. In 1876 the number of trustees was increased to fifteen. There are now seventeen members of the Board appointed for a term of six years, one ex officio, the State Su- perintendent of Public Education, one from each of the eight Congres- sional Districts, and eight from the State at large, with the Governor as ex officio President. In this Board is vested the supreme control of the University. The second regular meeting of the Board of Trustees was held in Ox- ford, July 14, 1845. The Board accepted two half-sections of land lying immediately west of the town of Oxford, the south half of section 20, and the north half of section 29, township 8, range 3 W., which had been pur- chased by citizens of Oxford and Lafayette County and donated to the State for the location of the University. Preliminaries were arranged for the construction of buildings and an executive committee appointed to attend to details. At that time a virgin forest covered the present Cam- pus of the University. The Board seems to have been hampered by diffi- culties in the way of securing the funds supposed to be available in the State treasury for their undertaking, and but little progress was made in preparation for work. At the next meeting in January, 1846, William Nicholl, an Englishman, was elected as supervising architect. Plans were made for th e Lyceum Building , the two contiguous dormitories, and resi- dences for lour professors, and work was begun upon these buildings prob- ably in 1847. At the meeting of the Board held in Oxford July 12, 1848, the election of a faculty was considered. During this meeting of the Board occurred an earnest discussion relating to the religious character of the University. Two members of the Board vigorously opposed the introduction of the Evidences of Christianity into the curriculum, and the election of any Christian minister to a professorship. It was then definitely settled that the University should have stamped upon it such religious and moral character in its work as would be acceptable to the Christian people who compose a large majority of the people of the State of Mississippi. George Frederick Holmes was elected President of the University. Albert Taylor Bledsoe was elected Professor of Mathematics, etc. John Millington was elected Professor of Natural Sciences; Rev. John N. Wad- del was elected Professor of Languages. To the President of the Uni- versity was assigned instruction in Mental and Moral Philosophy, Logic, Belles-Lettres, Political Economy, International Law. To the Profes- sor of Mathematics was assigned instruction in that department and in g UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. t he science of Astronomy. The Professor of Natural Science was required to jive instruction in Chemistry, Botany, Geology, Mineralogy and Nat- ural Philosophy. The Professor of Languages was required to give in- struction in the Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French, Spanish and German lan- guages. After laying these plans the Board adjourned to meet in October following for the opening exercises of the University. The record in the minutes of the Board of Trustees for Monday, November 6th, 1848, is as follows: "The Board met pursuant to adjournment; present, Messrs. Davis. Howry, Pegues, Thompson, Williams and Young. The President being absent, Mr. Young was called to the chair, and this being appointed as the day for opening the University, the Board repaired to the Univer- sity buildings to attend to the installation of the Faculty, whereupon Mr. Thompson delivered an address on the part of the Trustees, and Mr. Presi- dent Holmes on the part of the Faculty, and thereupon the institution was declared open for the reception of students, and on motion of Mr. Davis the Board adjourned until to-morrow morning at eight o'clock." During this first session eighty students were enrolled. The records indicate that most of these young men were very poorly prepared for any sort of college work, and that their ideals of college life included much more of frolic than of labor. The records of the first Faculty meetings indicate a considerable exercise of disciplinary power. Nearly one month was lost before suitable text-books could be procured, and this oppor- tunity was largely improved by those students who were inclined to idle habits. The late Chancellor Waddel, who was a participant in these beginnings, is authority for the statement that probably no more crude and disorderly set of young men ever assembled in any college. The educating power of the University is exemplified by the fact that very many of these young men have worthily filled places of highest eminence and influence. The President of the University was forced to return to Virginia on account of sickness in his family in the spring of 1849. His three colleagues, with Professor Bledsoe as acting President, completed the work of the session. The records of the Board of Trustees show the following entry on Mon- day, July 9, 1849: "This being the day of the commencement of the first annual examinations of the students at the University, the Board took a recess at 9 o'clock A. M. and attended the examinations of the Freshman class on the Latin and Greek Languages, and at 3 P. M. the Board again took a recess and attended the examination of the Freshman class on Mathematics, which closed the exercises of the day." Similar honor was paid by the Board to the Sophomore class the next day. On Thursday, July 12th, 1849, "the Board took a recess and re- paired to the Presbyterian church, where an address was delivered by the Hon. A. M. Clayton, President of the Board of Trustees, and a com- mencement address by Prof. A. T. Bledsoe, President pro tern, of the Faculty, in the presence of the students and a large auditory." It is noteworthy, and probably consistent with the experiences of this first session, that in this commencement address Prof. Bledsoe discusses total depravity as a factor to be considered in educational work. Other UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 9 exercises at this first commencement consisted of "composition and decla- mation by students." There was no class more advanced than the Sopho- more. At the close of this first session Dr. Augustus B. Longstreet, of Georgia, was elected President of the University. Under the wise administration of the Faculty and Trustees, the Uni- versity began to grow rapidly in numbers, and in the confidence of the public. The statistical information set forth in this catalogue will show who were connected with the institution as officers and students, and will indicate something of the extent of the work of each session. In 1856 President Longstreet resigned, and Prof. F. A. P. Barnard was elected to succeed him. President Barnard was, fortunately, able to secure from the Legislature funds for new buildings which were needed, and for the larger and better equipment of the library and the scientific departments of the University. The wisdom of his work in this direction was proven by the fact that the University of Mississippi speedily took rank as one of the best equipped institutions in the country. The value of the prestige thus attained was tangible and has been permanent. In the spring of 1861 the excitement due to political events seriously interrupted the work of the University. Many students withdrew before the close of the session, in order to enlist in the Confederate army. A company of students, which has become historic, was organized on the campus under the title "University Greys." The record of the service of this company of students is shown by the following memorandum, furnished by Hon. J. L. Power, Secretary of State: UNIVERSITY GREYS. Company A, Eleventh Mississippi, Davis Brigade. "Original commander, William B. Lowry. Organized February 28, 1861. " Whole number on roll during the war 135 Died of disease 7 Killed or died of wounds 30 Discharged, resigned, retired 53 Transfers by promotion to other commands 10 Deserted or dropped 10 Missing 1 Losses from all causes 111 Accounted for, March, 1865 24 It is probable that four-fifths of all the young men whose names appear on the rolls as students of the University, from its organization up to the beginning of the civil war, enlisted in the Confederate service. This fact is indicated in this catalogue with regard to many students individually, and such indication is by no means intended to show that others did not see such service. A very large proportion, much larger than the average of Confederate soldiers, sacrificed their lives in the service of the State. 10 VNH BRBITY OF MISSISSIPPI. At the close of the session in the spring of the year 1S61 there was some expectation that the exercises might be resumed in the fall. At the ap- point oil time for opening the next session only four students appeared for matriculation. Realizing that the civil war would continue indefinitely, all the members of the Faculty resigned and the doors of the institution were closed. During the civil war the buildings of the University were occupied sometimes by Confederate and sometimes by Federal soldiery. Soon after the battle of Shiloh they were used for hospital purposes, and gave their shelter to some 1,500 sick and wounded Confederate soldiers. More than 700 of these sleep in unmarked graves in a cemetery near the University campus. When the University buildings were occupied by Federal soldiery the personal influence of the late Professors Barnard, Boynton and others who were in the North, secured the interest of General Grant in the pro- tection of the apparatus and buildings belonging to the institution. The close of the civil strife found the University buildings and other materials but little damaged by the vicissitudes of war. In the summer of 1865 efforts were made at the first meeting of the Legislature to reorganize the institution, and the first session after the war opened in the fall of 1865, under the presidency of Rev. John N. Waddel, D.D. Through all the vicissitudes of the reconstruction period the University experienced the same good fortune which had attended it during the civil war. It has constantly grown in influence and prestige. The statistical tables in this catalogue and other data herein given will sufficiently indicate the work and progress of the institution under the administration of Chancellors John N. Waddel, Alexander P. Stew- art, Edward Mayes, Robert B. Fulton, and up to the present time. The necessarily meagre facts stated in these pages in regard to those who have been students in the institution show by the outcome of its work that the institution has been singularly fortunate in the cultivation of strong character. This is undoubtedly due to the fact that its policy has always been to secure diligent work on the part of its students together with manly deportment. The personnel of the student body in the ante-bellum days was entirely different from that of later years. When it is remembered that the per capita distribution of wealth in Mississippi was larger in the years pre- ceding the Civil War than in any other State, it will be understood that the student body was composed very largely of the sons of wealthy par- ents, many of whom did not realize the importance of work and study. But the record of the lives of these men show that the student body of this period has furnished to the State many of the noblest patriots and citizens. Immediately after the Civil War the halls of the University were filled with a class of students never before seen in any American college. They were the sons of parents who had been wealthy but whose wealth had been entirely swept away by the Civil War. Perhaps half of these young men had served in the Confederate Army. With such preparation for college as these circumstances suggest they came with possibly as little UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. H of scholastic attainments as those students who entered in 1848; but they came with a determination born of necessity. The efforts put forth and the influence felt while here resulted in the development of a type of manly character and power which cannot be equalled by the records of any other American college. A study of the lifework of this group of students fully verifies this strong statement as fact. In later years the University has been able to achieve higher advance- ment in scholarship. Its preparatory work has been abolished. It has over one hundred high schools affiliated with it and engaged in the prepa- ration of students for its courses. Its student body in late years has been characterized by a somewhat broader range of scholarship. Every effort is made to keep its students in their studies and in all that enlists their attention fully abreast with the activities, intellectual and other, which characterize college life at the beginning of the twentieth century. While in the original plan of the University the establishment of a course in Governmental Science and Law was provided for, six years elapsed before, in 1854, a Law Class was organized. Beginning with the session of 1882-3, women have been admitted to the University upon the same terms and conditions as men. In 1892 preparatory courses in the University were discontinued. Since that time the grade of educational work done has been advanced fully one year, the number of bona fide college students has increased from 167 to nearly 500 (October, 1909). In 1900 the Fanny J. Ricks Summer Term of the University began a much needed work for those who cannot attend the regular session. This work was maintained in the summer of 1900, 1901, 1902 and 1903 through the liberality of Mrs. Ricks. Her generosity secured additional funds for 1903 which greatly enlarged the work in scope and usefulness. Courses in Engineering were organized in 1900. (Some such work had been offered in 1872, but discontinued in 1875.) In 1903 Departments of Education and Medicine were added. As yet only the first half of a reg- ular four-year course in Medicine has been given. Beginning with the session of 1909-10 the work of the last two years will be offered at Vicks- burg in connection with the State Charity Hospital of that place. This property, valued at $150,000.00, was acquired by the University in 1908. A Department of Pharmacy has been in successful operation throughout the current session. In 1902 the Legislature appropriated the sum of $93,700 for various improvements, $24,000 of this being for current expenses. This fund enabled the University to enlarge greatly its facilities and advantages for the young men and young women of Mississippi. With it were con- structed substantial additions to the public buildings and a commodious dormitory for women students. 12 I NIVBRSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. With the liberal appropriations made by the Legislatures of 1904 and 1906i the institution has added much to its equipment and thus increased its usefulness. The Legislature of 190S made the University the largest appropriation in the hitter's history. As results, a large and thoroughly equipped dor- mitory for men, a commodious dining hall, and a new power house have been built; the light and heat distributing systems have been renewed and enlarged; and about one-half mile of wide concrete walks have been laid where most needed on the campus. The following named have served as the chief executive officers of the University under the titles and for the periods indicated: Pre si dent— George Frederick Holmes, LL. D 1848-1849 President— Augustus B. Longstreet, LL.D., D.D 1849-1856 President— Frederick A. P. Barnard, LL.D., D.D 1856-1859 Chancellor— Frederick A. P. Barnard, LL.D., D.D 1859-1861 Chancellor— John Newton Waddel, LL.D., D.D 1865-1874 Chancellor— Gen. Aleaxnder P. Stewart 1874-1886 Chairman of Faculty— Edw. Mayes, LL.D., F.S.C 1886-1889 Chancellor— Edward Mayes, LL.D., F.S.C 1889-1891 Vice-Chancellor— Robert Burwell Fulton, A.M 1892-1892 Chancellor— Robert Burwell Fulton, A.M., LL.D 1892-1906 Vice-Chancellor— Alfred Hume, C.E., D.Sc 1906-1907 Chancellor — Andrew Armstrong Kincannon, M.S., LL.D 1907- NOTE. — Chancellor Mayes resigned January 1, 1892, and Vice-Chancellor Fulton acted as Chancellor until the end of the session, when he was elected to the Chancellorship. From the opening of the University, in 1848, to the year 1870, the so- called "close curriculum" was in use. There was a course of study, en- tirely prescribed, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Arts, and a pre- scribed course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Laws. To say that a student was a "regular" student and in the Freshman, Sophomore, Junior or Senior class, was to define precisely his work. An "irregular" student was one not in the line of progress towards a degree, but taking a selected course of study. There was no department of preparatory education in the University previous to 1861. When the University again opened its doors in the fall of 1865, the lack of educational facilities in the State made it advisable to establish a department of preparatory education in the University, and this was continued until the end of the session of 1893. The "close curriculum" system of education was changed by action of the Board of Trustees, taken October 26, 1870. By this action each stu- dent was allowed to choose one of these courses leading to a degree: 1. A defined course of four years' extent, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Arts, and similar in its requirements to the course previously offered. 2. A defined course of three years' extent, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science. 3. A defined course of three years' extent, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 13 4. A defined course of four years' extent, leading to the degree of Civil Engineer. There were also offered — 5. Several definite Post-graduate courses, requiring one or more years for completion, open to Bachelors of Arts, and leading to the degree of Master of Arts. 6. Several definite Post-graduate courses, requiring at least two years for completion, open to Bachelors of Arts, and leading to the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Since 1870 various changes have been made in the courses and degrees offered, suggested by the experience of this and other institutions doing similar work. All of these changes have tended to give greater thor- oughness and larger extent to the work done by any student in earning a degree. In 1873 the course for Bachelor of Science was made a four years' course, and, in 1875, the course for Bachelor of Philosophy became in fact a four years' course, and its topics of study largely elective. Election of studies was gradually allowed to a considerable extent in the courses for B.A. and B.S. until 1889. In 1889 Latin, Greek, English and Mathe- matics were made the characteristic studies of the B.A. course; Mathe- matics and the Natural Sciences of the B. S. course, and the Bachelor of Philosophy course was made entirely elective. At present the University offers courses leading to the degrees Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Arts, Master of Arts, Bachelor of Laws, Bachelor of Engineering, Bachelor of Science (in Education), Bachelor of Arts (in Edu- cation), Doctor of Medicine, Graduate in Pharmacy, Bachelor of Pharmacy. The course for a bachelor's degree in the Academic Department re- quires the successful completion of sixty-five (65) units of work, a unit of work being defined to be the amount involved in attendance upon lectures or recitations for one hour a week for one session, or upon laboratory work for two hours a week for one session. The student's graduating thesis is counted as equivalent to one unit, and by systematic attendance upon physical culture in the gymnasium, not less than three hours a week during a ses- sion, he may reduce the number of points required for graduation by one for each of three sessions, making it possible to graduate thus with sixty- one (61) units of class-room work instead of sixty-five (65). The courses of study leading to a bachelor's degree are so arranged that sixteen (16) units will normally constitute full work for a student. With this amount he would graduate in four years. No student will be permitted to take less than thirteen (13) units of work, except in very special cases. No student having less than forty- five (45) points to his credit will be permitted to take more than eighteen (18) units of work. In the Department of Science, Literature and the Arts, the work of the course leading to a bachelor's degree consists of (1) Prescribed Studies, (2) Group Eleclives and (3) Free Electives. The Prescribed Studies as below indicated amount to twenty-eight (28) units of work. The Group Electives amount to from eighteen (18) to twenty-two (22) units, and the remainder of the course will allow about fifteen (15) units to be made by Free Elect- ees. 14 I fflVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. (.1) Prescribed Studies. Each candidate for a bachelor's degree must have placed to his credit on entrance, or complete in the University classes such college work in the following subjects as will entitle him to credit for the units indicated, which will be counted towards making the total number of units required for graduation; provided, such work has not been counted for points of admission. English and Rhetoric 5 units. Two Foreign Languages (at least three units in each of two) 6 units. History 2 units. Logic, Ethics or Psychology 2 units. Mathematics 5 units. Physics 2 units. Chemistry 2 units. Physiology, Botany, Zoology 2 units. Political Economy or Sociology 2 units. (2) Group Electives. Each candidate for a bachelor's degree is required to take either two or three of the twenty (20) courses indicated below and to take in them such an amount of work as will entitle him to receive credit for a total of from eighteen (18) to twenty-two (22) units, besides counting the credits he may have received in the same topics as Prescribed Studies. If he elects two, he is required to do from nine to eleven units in each. If he elects three, he is required to do from six to eight units in each. 1. Astronomy and Physics. 2. Biology. 3. Chemistry. 4. Drawing. 5. Electricity. 6. English. 7. French. 8. Geology and Paleontology. 9. German. 10. Greek. 11. History. 12. Latin. 13. Logic, Political Economy and Sociology. 14. Mathematics and Analytical Mechanics. 15. Mineralogy and Petrology. 16. Pathology, Bacteriology and Medical Zoology. 17. Physiology and Histology. 18. Psychology and Pedagogy. 19. Spanish and Italian. 20. Surveying. (3) Free Electives. The Prescribed Studies and the Group Electives taken together amount to from forty-six (46) to fifty (50) units. Students will select the remainder of their work in Free Electives. If a student UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 15 completes all the work prescribed as a course for one class in one school in one session, he may count such at its face value in units and as a Free Elect- ive. The courses that may be counted as Free Electives are marked with the letters a, b, c, d, and designating numbers in the Detailed Statements made later regarding the different schools in the University. Not more than ten (10) units of work in any one professional depart- ment may be counted as a Free Elective for either the B.S. or the B.A. degree. No Academic student may elect professional studies until he is en- titled to classification as a Junior in the Academic Department. For the past two sessions twelve (12) Carnegie units have been required for full admission to the Academic Department of the University. Be- ginning with 1910-11 the requirement will be fourteen (14) such units. ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT. PHILOSOPHY, LOGIC, SOCIOLOGY AND POLITICAL ECONOMY. In the history of the University the subjects included in this depart- ment have been variously assigned. During the earlier period instruc- tion was given in them largely by the Presidents and Chancellors, who, from the number and variety of the subjects committed to their charge, must have been men of marvelously versatile endowment. The cata- logue of 1853-54 contains the following: "Augustus B. Longstreet, LL.D., President and Professor of Mental and Moral Science, Rhetoric, Logic, Political Economy, International Law and Evidences of Christianity." In later years separate and dis- tinct Professorships were provided for these subjects and, with minor changes from time to time, they have been given prominence in the course of instruction. About the year 1855 there was organized the chair of Metaphysics and Ethics, the first incumbent of which was Rev. N. M. Crawford, D.D, of Georgia, who filled the chair for only one year, having been called to the Presidency of Georgetown College, Kentucky. This chair was subse- quently filled by Rev. Geo. W. Carter, D.D. (1857-60) and by Hon. L. Q. C. Lamar, LL.D. (1860-61), the latter of whom was again called to the chair of Ethics in 1866. In connection with the School of Metaphysics and Ethics there occurred in the very infancy of the institution an incident which doubtless, in no unimportant degree, influenced and determined the character of work to be done by the University throughout the whole of its existence. In one of the first meetings of the Board of Trustees a proposition was offered to exclude forever from the course of study the subject of Evidences of Christianity. This proposition provoked a prolonged and heated dis- cussion, a result of which was the resignation of one member of the Board, who in his letter of resignation took occasion to make a bitter assault 16 i NIYBRSITY OF MIB8IB8JPPI. upon the Christian religion. Happily, however, an overwhelming ma- jority of the Board were favorable to the admission of the subject into the curriculum, and the result of the controversy was to stamp the Uni- versity as a Christian, though in no sense as a sectarian institution. In 1888 there was established the chair of Metaphysics, Logic and Po- litical Science, which was filled successively by Gen. Francis A. Shoup» Rev. James A. Lyon, D.D, and Rev. J. J. Wheat, D.D, until 1886. In 1889 the title and scope of the department was again changed so as to include the subject of Mental and Moral Philosophy, Logic, History and Political Economy. Under this organization the department has con- tinued until the present time, with the exception that in 1897 the subject of History was severed and made a separate school. MATHEMATICS. The influence of the United States Military Academy is evident through- out the first forty years of the history of the School of Mathematics in the University of Mississippi. The comparatively small sections into which classes were divided, the text-books used, the character of the curriculum, the large amount of individual work on the part of students at the black- board, the rigid discipline and thorough training, all bear abundant tes- timony to the truth of this assertion. The record of these earlier years is altogether honorable. The mathematical requirements for admission to the Freshman class embraced nothing beyond arithmetic until the end of the first decade from the opening of the University in 1848. Then rudimentary Algebra was added. After the Civil War the amount of Algebra was materially increased, sometimes including Quadratic Equations but more often omitting that subject. The standard for entrance was raised again in 1891 by the addition of three books of Plane Geometry. Since 1906 Alge- bra through the Progressions, and all of Plane Geometry have been re- quired for admission. Consequently the course of study now is at least one year in advance of that before the war. Trigonometry was then in the last term of the Sophomore year, its place at present being in the Freshman; Analytics was in the Junior, now in the Sophomore; Calculus in the Senior, now in the Sophomore and Junior. For many years De- scriptive Geometry was a part of the course in pure Mathematics. This subject is now offered in the Engineering Department. As already suggested, most of the text-books in use until twenty years ago bore the stamp of West Point. The works of Davies, Church, Mahan, and Bartlett, particularly the first, were favorites. Davies' Bourdon and Davies' Legendre, in older and later editions, were continued from session to session. In more recent years the text-books given in the fol- lowing list have been used. The authors' names appear in the order in which their books were introduced. The parentheses denote the one in use at present: Algebra — Venable, Wentworth, Downey, Hawkes, (Wentworth). Geometry— Venable, Wentworth, Bowser, Wells (Wentworth). UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 17 Trigonometry — Wentworth, Bowser, Crockett, Phillips and Strong (Wentworth). AnalyticalGeometry-Puckle, Bowser, Hardy, Nichols, Ashton, (Nichols) Calculus — Todhunter, Courtenay, Bowser, Hardy, Nicholson, Taylor. Nichols, Granville (Osborne). In addition to the regular undergraduate work, courses have been given to small groups of graduate students in Weld's Determinants, Osborne's Examples of Differential Equations, Johnson's Differential Equations, Pierce's Newtonian Potential Function, Merriman's Least Squares, Wil- liamson's Advanced Calculus, C. Smith's Solid Analytical Geometry, Williamson's Dynamics, Bowser's Analytical Mechanics, Routh's Rigid Dynamics. The rank and term of service of each member of the corps of instruc- tion is given below: PBOFEBSOBS. 1848 Albert Taylor Bledsoe, M.A., LL.D.. 1854 1854.. ..Frederick A. P. Barnard, M.A., LL.D., D.D 1858 1858 Jordan McCullough Phipps, M.A . 1861 1865 Gen. Claudius Wistar Sears, M.A.. 1889 1889 Henry Aubrey Strode, M.A 1890 1890.... Alfred Hume, C.E., D.Sc. ADJUNCT PBOFESSOBS. 1850 Lucius Q. C. Lamar, M.A., LL.D ('69) 1852 1852 Jordan McCullough Phipps, M.A 1858 1872.... Robert J. Guthrie, B.A : 1873 1873 Alexander Fox Moore, B.A ...1874 ASSOCIATE PBOFESSOB. 1907 James Warsaw Bell, B.P. 1909. AS8ISTANT BBOFESSOB. 1889 John Wesley Johnson, M.A., Ph.D. ('92) 1890 ASSISTANTS. 1901 Walter Hugh Drane, M.A 1902 1905 J. Gilman Reid, B.A 1906 1906. ...Irby Coghill Nichols, B.S., M.A. ('08) 1908 TX7TOBS. 1856 Robert MarmadukeKimbrough, B.A., M.A. ('57). 1857 1857 Daniel B. Carr, B.A 1858 1869 Allston M. West, B.A 1871 1871 Robert J. Guthrie, B.A. 1872 1878. ..Thomas W. Stockard, B.A., M.A 1881 1890....Paul Hill Saunders, B.A., M.A. ('91), Ph.D. ('94). 1892 1892 Eugene Harper Roberts, B.P., Ph.D. ('95) 1893 1893... Walter Hugh Drane, B.A., M.A. ('97) 1897 1900 William O. Pruitt, B.S 1901 1904 Irby Coghill Nichols 1906 1908 James Tarpley Spann_ 1909 * 18 i NIVBRSITY OF UISSI8BIPPI. This accounl of the School of Mathematics would be very unsatisfac- tory and incomplete without brief biographical sketches of the men who made its history. To record these is a pleasant duty. A.LBEBT TAYI.OK BLEDSOE, M.A.. 1.I..1). Bom in Kentucky in 1808; appointed to a cadetship in the United States Military Academy in 1825 and graduated therefrom in 1830; saw military service two years; in 1833 became Professor of Mathematics in Ki nyon College, Gambier, Ohio; after serving there two years, filled the ohair of Mathematics in Miami University, and from 1840 to 1S48 prac- ticed law in Springfield, Illinois; elected Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy in the University of Mississippi in 1848, there being about fifty candidates for this position; resigned in 1854 and became Professor of Mathematics in the University of Virginia, continuing as such until 1861; Assistant Secretary of War of the Confederate States; after the war resided in Baltimore as editor of the Southern Revieiv, dying in 1877. While Bledsoe was a profound mathematician, he was even more a theologian and philosopher. His writings fully justify this statement. As early as 1845 he published a work entitled "An Examination of Presi- dent Edwards on the Will." About ten years later his "Theodicy, or Vindication of the Divine Glory" was published. His "Philosophy of Mathematics" is of special interest to the student of the calculus. It was during Professor Bledsoe's incumbency of the chair of Mathe- matics that L. Q. C. Lamar was Adjunct Professor of Mathematics. Sel- dom have two such massive and brilliant intellects been so closely asso- ciated in the same work. FREDERICK A. P. BARNARD, M.A., LL.D., D.D. (See Sketches of the Presidents and Chancellors of the University in this volume.) JORDAN M'CUULOUOH PHIPPS, M.A. Born in Tennessee October 14, 1828; removed to North Mississippi before the Chickasaw cession was organized into counties; was graduated from the University of Mississippi in 1851; while studying law in New Orleans was appointed, early in 1852, Adjunct Professor of Mathematics in the University of Mississippi to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. L. Q. C. Lamar; was elected to the full professorship of Mathe- matics in 1858 and served in that position until the outbreak of the Civil War; after the war was an attorney-at-law and Mayor of Oxford, Missis- sippi; has practiced law ever since except for three years spent as Chief Inspector of Customs of the Port of Key West; present address, Key West, Florida. CLAUDITJS WISTAR SEARS, M.A. Born in Peru, Massachusetts. November 8, 1817; appointed cadet in United States Military Academy, West Point, June 30, 1837; graduated from West Point June 30, 1841; promoted Second Lieutenant Sth U. S. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 19 Infantry; served with his regiment in the Florida War; resigned his commission in the U. S. Army October 10, 1842; was instructor of Mathe- matics in St. Thomas Hall, Holly Springs, Mississippi, 1844 and 1845; was Professor of Mathematics in the University of Louisiana, New Or- leans, from 1845 to 1859. While a resident of New Orleans, La., he was married to Susan Alice Gray, Houston, Texas, August 6, 1853. In 1859 he returned to Holly Springs, Mississippi, and was President of St. Thomas Hall until 1861, when he enlisted in the Army of the Con- federate States and was appointed Captain of Company G, 17th Missis- sippi Regiment, June 6, 1861 ; was appointed Colonel of the 46th Missis- sippi Regiment December 11, 1862; was appointed Brigadier-General March 7, 1864; at the battle of Nashville, December 15, 1864, was severely wounded, having a leg shot off. Elected Professor of Mathematics in the University of Mississippi in 1865, in which position he served until June, 1889; died at his residence at Oxford, Mississippi, February 15, 1891. HENRY AUBREY STRODE. M.A. Born in Fredericksburg, Virginia, February 14, 1844; soldier Brax- ton's Battery, Fredericksburg Artillery, Confederate States Army, 1861- 1865. After the war attended the University of Virginia where he was awarded the Courtenay Medal in mathematics; became Assistant Professor of Mathematics at Richmond College, Richmond, Virginia. In 1872 established the Kenmore High School at Amherst, Virginia, of which he continued as Principal until the year 1889, when he accepted the Professorship of Mathematics in the University of Mississippi, which he filled during the session 1889-90; during a part of this session was also the acting Professor of Chemistry. In 1890 he became the first Preside'nt of Clemson Agricultural College, the Agricultural and Mechanical College of South Carolina, and held this position until 1893; was also Professor of Mathematics in Clemson Col- lege until 1896, when he resigned, because of failing health, and returned to Virginia, where he died on September 1, 1898. PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY. The School of Physics, originally called Natural Philosophy, was one of the first provided for at the University of Mississippi. For sev- eral years it was combined with Chemistry. Dr. John Millington, one of the four original members of the Faculty, was elected head of this de- partment in July, 1848, and reported for duty the 6th of November fol- lowing, this being the day designated for the formal opening. Dr. Millington was born, reared and educated in England. He worked several years in the Royal Institution of London under Michael Faraday and Sir Humphrey Davy, and brought over with him a considerable sup- ply of physical and chemical apparatus, much of which, especially such as was used for original research in Electricity, was of the same kind, 20 ' \/I7.7,'n/7V OF MISSISSIPPI. and possibly the identical patterns used by Faraday and Davy. Many pieces of this interesting apparatus, which was purchased from Dr. Mil- lington by the University, may yet be seen in the Physical Laboratory, marked I. M. for John Millington, the I. before vowels in old print, being supplanted by J. in modern print. He was recognized as an elegant and scholarly English gentleman, well versed in science both practical and theoretical. He was author of a treatise on Mechanics, and also of one on Civil Engineering. During his five years of service he never failed to secure and retain the respect and even the affection of his classes, as well as the unswerving confidence and loyal admiration of his associates and neighbors. He resigned in 1853 and was succeeded by Rev. J. C. Keeny, who, on request of his class, resigned at the end of his first session. In 1854 Dr. Frederick Augustus Porter Barnard took charge of Natural Philosophy in connection with his Mathematics. On entering upon his work he at once proved, by his brilliant lectures and active participation in original research, that a master mind was in charge of the science work. Realizing that appropriations of money were necessary for building up his own, as well as the other departments of the University, he turned a large part of his attention to investigating an old claim that the University held against the State for lands donated by the Federal Government for establishing a seminary fund. He analyzed the claim, made a careful calculation of the alleged indebtedness, together with accrued interest, and accurately presented the whole matter in a public address before the Mississippi Legislature. The result was ultimately liberal appropria- tions to the University, sufficient to add several new buildings and to make a large increase in apparatus and general equipments. In 1856 he was elected President of the University to succeed Augustus B. Long- street, resigned. Three years after his election the title was changed from President to that of Chancellor. Dr. Barnard possessed many eminent qualities as chief executive, but as his service as Chancellor are described in another part of this book I shall not further pursue the subject here, but refer the reader for details to that article. The University closed its doors for four years during the war, from June, 1861, to October, 1865. Doubtless the buildings had been spared by the Federal troops through the personal influence of Dr. Barnard with General Grant. October the 25th, 1865, General Francis Asbury Shoup was elected Professor of Physics, Astronomy and Civil Engineering. This heavy work he did with credit till January, 1867, when he was relieved of Physics and Astronomy, but continued the other work till 1868, when he was offered the new chair of Metaphysics, Aesthetics, Logic and Political Philosophy. This he accepted, but the following year he resigned and left, much to the regret of the authorities of the University. I am indebted to his wife for the facts in the following brief sketch: Francis Asbury Shoup was born in Connersville, Indiana, the 22d of March, 1835; graduated at West Point in 1856; commissioned immed- iately as Lieutenant and sent in command of artillery to Sullivan's Island, South Carolina. In 1859 he resigned and returned to his home in Indian- UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 21 apolis, intending to practice law. Owing to excitement caused by the John Brown Raid, he was enthusiastically elected and served as Captain of Zouaves from Indianapolis. His love and admiration, however, for the South impelled him, in 1860, to resign his Federal commission and tender his services, early the next year, to the newly formed Confederate Govern- ment at Montgomery, Alabama. He was commissioned Major in the Corps of Engineers and assigned to duty first in Mobile, later in the Trans- Mississippi Department, and finally in Vicksburg. After the siege and fall of Vicksburg, he was commissioned Brigadier-General, and served with General Joseph E. Johnston in the famous Dalton Campaign. His fortifications around Atlanta and his redoubts on the Chattahoochee were pronounced a remarkable feat in engineering. As stated above he was elected Professor in the University of Missis- sippi at its reorganization after the war. In 1868 he took orders in the Episcopal Church and was ordained Priest by Bishop Green. He served St. Peter's Church in Oxford as Rector, in addition to his regular duties as Professor in the University. In 1869 he was elected Professor of Mathe- matics in the University of the South at Sewanee, Tennessee. This he accepted after giving four years of most efficient service to the University of Mississippi. In his new chair he continued to grow in usefulness and reputation, becoming the author of a valuable treatise on Algebra and a very popular work on Psychology. He died in 1896, loved and admired by all who knew him. As a mark of respect, the Daughters of the Con- federacy have erected a granite shaft over his grave. Dr. Landon Cabell Garland was elected January the 21st, 1867, to the chair of Theoretical Physics and of Astronomy. He had been for some years previous to the war and during its continuance, President of the University of Alabama. Being, however, a close student of science, he was pleased to have simply a professorship in his favorite field of research and to be free from the perplexing administrative duties of President. Having the duties of two chairs upon him, however, he was not given time or opportunity for extensive research. He was noted as a lucid and very attractive lecturer before his classes, as well as a most scholarly and cultured Southern gentleman. His influence in the university commu- nity was measured not alone by his scholarship, which was recognized by all as being of the highest type, but also by the magnetic personality of the man as a citizen, a neighbor and a friend. His example of upright living, dignity of bearing, cordiality in friendship, urbanity toward strang- ers, his fairness, truthfulness, and honesty in every kind of dealing, his devotion to his own church and liberality toward all other churches, his hospitality in his home as the head of a most cultured, elegant and pious family, his scrupulous concern for his own professional and private affairs, and his absolute non-participation in those of others, his splendid equi- poise of temperament — never sportive — never gloomy— all these and many other virtues made his presence a comfort to his friends and a bene- faction to the community. During the session of 1874-75 he was elected Chancellor of the new Vanderbilt University. Certain of our Faculty agreed to an exchange of hours so as to enable him to finish his course by •2'2 i Wi BR8JT7 OF MISSISSIPPI. • the first of April, as he was under promise to start about that time to Europe to purchase physical and chemical apparatus for the Vanderbilt University to be in readiness for the opening in the following autumn. Before his departure the Methodist congregation asked him to deliver a farewell address to the young men of the town and of the University in the M. E. Church. He consented, and chose as his subject Psalms 119:9, "Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way? By taking heed thereto according to thy word." Few farewell addresses, I presume, have ever been delivered that left more lasting impressions or more tender memo- ries. Thus Dr. Garland left Mississippi as admirable in character as he was brilliant in intellect. The following is a more accurate sketch from the pen of his daughter, Mrs. Rose G. Lewis, of Tuscaloosa, Alabama: "Landon Cabell Garland was born at his father's home, known as 'The Grove,' in Nelson County, Virginia, on the 21st of March, 1810. He came from a long line of distinguished ancestry on both his father's and his mother's side. He was the son of Spotswood Garland, a lawyer and Clerk of the Court of Nelson County for more than forty years — a grandson of Capt. James Garland, an officer in the Revolutionary army. An earlier ancestor was 'Warden of the Cinque Ports,' one of the highest and most important offices in the gift of the English King. His mother was Lu- anda Rose, daughter of Hugh Rose, of Geddes, a son of the celebrated Dr. Robert Rose, who came from Scotland to America in 1725. "He was sent to the best preparatory schools which the country afford- ed, and entered the Sophomore class at Hampden-Sidney College, Vir- ginia, in October, 1826. In all departments of learning he took the highest rank and graduated with first honor in a large and talented class. His father's intention was to send him to a law school, but he had exhibited such a tatse for mathematical and scientific pursuits, and had made such large attainments in Chemistry beyond the ordinary course of college instruction as to warrant his friend, Dr. John H. Price, President of the Union Theological Seminary, who had been cognizant of his rare scien- tific ability, to recommend his appointment to the tutorship of Chemistry in Washington College, located at Lexington, Virginia. This w r as done without Mr. Garland's knowledge, and a week or two before he graduated. Being but nineteen years of age, he felt it his duty to submit the matter to the decision of his father. His father consented to the acceptance of the appointment, provided that after two or three years he should turn his attention to the law. Accordingly he went to Lexington in Novem- ber, 1829. The manner in which he discharged the duties of his office gave such satisfaction to the Board of Trustees that at the expiration of the scholastic year he was unanimously elected Professor of Chemistry and Natural Philosophy. This appointment changed his destiny in life. Becoming more and more wedded to the sciences, with each returning year, he finally abandoned all idea of making law his profession, and de- voted himself to the business of collegiate instruction. "While Mr. Garland expended his labor chiefly upon the mathematics, pure and mixed, and the sciences of Chemistry, Geology and Botany, he UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 23 was assiduous in the -cultivation of languages, and used the Latin and Greek and several modern languages in the prosecution of his professional studies. He valued the Greek language chiefly for the original study of the New Testament, and in time attained to very considerable distinction as a biblical critic. This is attested by his contributions to the current religious literature of the day. (See sketch by Dr. Charles Foster Smith and others.) "Mr. Garland was brought up in sympathy with the Methodist Church, of which both his parents were members. When Randolph-Macon Col- lege was put in operation during the winter of 1833-34, Mr. Garland was unanimously elected to the chair of Natural Philosophy and Chemistry. His inclinations all led him to remain at Lexington. His situation was entirely agreeable, and he had won the esteem and confidence of that community. But, impelled by a sense of duty to the Church of his father and mother, he accepted the situation to which the Church had called him, with a much smaller salary than he had been receiving. There was no class at the organization of the institution in the department of Nat- ural Philosophy and Chemistry, but as the Professor-elect of Ancient Languages could not attend during the first session of the scholastic year, Mr. Garland discharged all the duties of this chair with an ability that showed that he was as much at home in philology as he was in science. On December the 29th, 1835, he was married to Louisa Francis Garland (a third cousin), daughter of David S. Garland and his wife, Jane Henry Meredith, a niece of Patrick Henry, the statesman and orator. The health of Dr. Olin, the President of Randolph-Macon, was so feeble as to induce his physicians to recommend a European tour. He obtained from the Board of Trustees an indefinite leave of absence, recommending to them to invest Mr. Garland, though the youngest of the Faculty, with the responsibility of the Vice-Presidency of the institution. "After Dr. Olin's return to America, considering a Southern climate unfavorable to his health, he resigned the presidency of Randolph-Macon, whereupon the board unanimously elected Mr. Garland to the office His duties were very onerous and taxing, and while he faithfully dis- charged them, he undertook the preparation of a series of mathematical text-books, doing most of the work at night. All this combined to some- what undermine a naturally good constitution, and in the fall of 1846 he resigned his position with the intention of practicing law. To prepare for this profession he returned to his father's house, who was then living in Lovingston, Nelson County, Virginia, and turned the whole energy of his disciplined mind to the study of law. He possessed a fine voice and oratorical power, and, no doubt, would have soon risen to the height of this profession. But the institutions of the country could not spare from the difficult and delicate work of collegiate training one who had proved himself so eminently fitted for it. The venerable college of William and Mary made an effort to secure his services as President, and other insti- tutions did the same thing. However, before he had entered upon the practice of law he was invited to the chair of English Literature, Rhet- oric and History in the University of Alabama. Thither he removed in 24 UNI V E Its 1 T Y OF MISSISSIPPI . the winter of IS 17 -IS. A year or two after his connection with the Uni- versity, the chair of -Mathematics (pure and mixed) became vacant, to which, at his own request, he was transferred. In this chair his services were eminently useful, until about the year 1854 the President of the Uni- versity, Dr. Basil Manly, retired on account of ill health, whereupon Dr. Garland was elected to fill his place. This threw upon him the duty of lecturing on Mental and Moral and Political Philosophy. Upon these studies Dr. Garland entered with great energy and untiring zeal, and regretted that he had not at an earlier period given these subjects the large attention he was then enabled to give. He considered them the most useful in the culture of the mind. Dr. Garland continued his con- nection with the University of Alabama, as its President, up to the time of its destruction by the raiding party of General Croxton, April, 1S65. The Faculty scattered in various directions, but his services were re- tained for about a year, to raise a fund with which to rebuild the univer- sity. He was then called to the chair of Physics and Astronomy in the University of Mississippi. Here he remained till he could see the ardent desire of all his mature years about to be fulfilled, the founding of a great Southern University in deed, as well as in name, where the young men of the South could obtain, at small cost, the best facilities in all branches of learning and useful arts, especially in a preparation for the ministry. He believed in an educated ministry. As soon as he was made Chancellor of this new university in 1875, he went to Europe, where he spent nearly two years in studying and having made the most approved apparatus for the various scientific departments, Physics, Astronomy, Chemistry, etc. "This short and imperfect sketch will close with an extract from a memorial address by Capt. Richard Irby, of Randolph-Macon College: " 'When the Vanderbilt University was founded the President of its Board of Trust, the late Bishop McTyeire. one of his pupils at Randolph- Macon, at once sought Dr. Garland to take charge of the University, knowing full well his eminent qualifications for the task. Here Dr. Gar- land had a field worthy of his ability and experience. He and Bishop McTyeire had for years wrought together as father and son, zealously and effectively in the establishment of a great Christian University. In the order of Providence the Bishop was the first to be taken away by death, but in this field of his last and best endeavor, Dr. Garland was permitted to live and spend the evening of his useful life under the shadow of the stately halls he had seen rise from the earth and in the shade of the beau- tiful trees which had been planted and nursed by his former pupil. And here, at the ripe age of four score and four years, with a heart full of love to God and still yearning to do what he could for the young men of his country, "he ceased at once to work and to live." ' (February 13, 1895.) "His remains lie entombed in a beautiful spot on the campus of Van- derbilt University under the loving care of those who will always honor and revere his name." Dr. Garland was succeeded, in the University of Mississippi, in 1875, by his son-in-law, Robert Burwell Fulton, who had been Adjunct Pro- fessor in the department for several years. Professor Fulton had gradu- UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 25 ated with first honpr in the class of 1869, and therefore brought to the department not only great intellectuality, but also great ambition and skillful devotion to science. He took hold with zeal both to improve the department and to advance science. Want of funds, at the same time, was a hindrance difficult to overcome. The policy of the trustees was rather toward establishing new departments than developing to high efficiency the old ones. Utilizing as best he could the small funds available and the campus laborers, he added to the equipments, enlarged the rooms and developed special arrangements for introducing laboratory work along with theoretical work. The design and execution of these good intentions were, in their very incipiency, seriously embarrassed by the poor prepa- ration of students entering the University. The work had to be very elementary to make any progress at all. In the department of Astron- omy he succeeded in securing an appropriation for a new telescope, which, however, was not received till 1893, after he had been elected Chancellor, which occurred in January, 1892. As his duties increased in the Chan- cellor's office, while retaining the title of Professor of Physics and As- tronomy, he abandoned all teaching except that of Astronomy. In the broader field of power, incident to his high office, his greatest services to the University of Mississippi were accomplished. But as a more detailed sketch of his life and work is given along with the other Chancellors, in other parts of this work, further details will be omitted here. In 1899, after serving several years as Associate Professor of Physics, Dr. John Wesley Johnson was elected Professor of Physics, Chancellor Fulton still retaining the Astronomy. In 1907 Astronomy was again combined with Physics, and is so retained at present. In 1900 Electricity was separated from Physics, and Professor Douglas Anderson, from Tu_ lane University, Louisiana, was elected Professor of Electricity and Elec- trical Engineering. He served only one year and was succeeded by Pro- fessor Arthur W. Smith, also from Tulane. He likewise served only one year, when Electricity was again combined with Physics, and Assistant Professor Eugene Campbell was transferred from the School of Chemistry to Physics and placed in charge of Electricity. The following year, 1903, the head of the department recommended that Electricity be separated from Physics and assigned to Professor Eugene Campbell. These rec- ommendations were approved, and the general oversight of the electrical plant and waterworks was also assigned to Professor Campbell. In 1906 it was recommended that Hydraulics be separated from Physics and made a part of Civil Engineering. Physics being thus relieved of both Elec- tricity and Hydraulics began at once to afford better opportunity for specializing in its own distinctive work. A further notice is due Professor Eugene Campbell, who was born Oc- tober 28, 1870, in Giles County, Tennessee, but reared in Mississippi. After attending the public schools as long as they were profitable to him, he entered at Lexington, Kentucky as a student, finishing the course there in 1890. On his return he engaged in teaching; was married June 4, 1893, to Miss Lucy Morrow, of Pontotoc County; moved with his wife to Oxford and entered the University in 1895, graduating in 1897, and 26 I SIVBRSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. taking his M.A. degree in 1000. In his senior year he was employed as follow and advanced to Assistant in Chemistry immediately after gradu- ation. In 1902 he was transferred to Physics and given charge of Elec- tricity. In 1903 Electricity and Electrical Engineering, together with the general management of the electrical and heating plant, were assigned him as a separate department. In this he was doing excellent work till he was smitten down by typhoid fever and died August 21, 1906. He was a man of more than ordinary ability as well as of great moral worth, and was rapidly rising in his profession and in usefulness when the dark messenger of Death took him away. LATIN. ORGANIZATION. The organization of this school is coincident with the establishment of the University. In the autum of 1848 when the doors of the Institu- tion were opened for the admission of students, they found a competent instructor in the classics, who, with three co-laborers, constituted the original faculty. The Board of Trustees had previously decided that the newly established seminary for learning should have a standard as good as the best. ' The resolution which decided this important issue was pro- posed by General John A. Quitman, who, as a member of the first Board of Trustees of the University, did yeoman service in her behalf. The requirements for admission in Latin were: "Five books of Caesar, the Eclogues and six books of the Aeneid of Vergil, Cicero's Orations." "The candidate must be well versed in the Latin Grammar, including Latin Prosody." 2 The original course of study planned contemplated three years of col- lege Latin as follows: "Freshman — Livy, Ovid — with antiquities, Latin composition and Prosody. "Sophomore — Horace, Tacitus, Juvenal and Persius, with antiquities, etc., as above. "Junior — Cicero de Oratore, de Senectute or Amicitia, with antiqui- ties, etc., as above." 3 Three years of Latin were required for the Bachelor of Arts degree. The graduate who desired a more advanced degree might obtain it by advanced work in this and other schools of the University, but only on the following terms: "The degree of Master of Arts shall not be con- ferred until two years after the degree of Bachelor of Arts, and to obtain it a regular course of satisfactory studies in each Department will be required." 4 1 Resolved, "That the qualifications for admission into the several classes will be substan- tially such as are required in the best regulated universities in the United States." Minutes of the Trustees, Vol. 1, p. 63. 2 Ibid. p. 89. » Ibid. p. 92. * Ibid. p. 93. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 27 ANTE-BELLUM PERIOD. The first Professor of Latin in the University was the Rev. John New- ton Waddel, D.D. He was sprung from excellent lineage, his father be- ing the Rev. Moses Waddel, D.D., who for a number of years was master of a famous classical school in Wellington, South Carolina. He num- bered as his pupils John C. Calhoun, William S. Crawford, Hugh S. Legare, Judge A. B. Longstreet and many others, who afterwards in church and state won distinction. In 1819 Dr. Waddel accepted the presidency of the University of Georgia, and remained at the head of this institution until 1829. In this year the son graduated at the early age of seventeen. Professor Waddel was prepared for college in a grammar school located on the college campus. He was introduced to the Latin grammar at the early age of eight, and when he entered college was already well grounded in' the classics. His teacher was Mr. Moses W. Dobbins, a cousin, who had been taught by his father. At the University he took a good stand in a strong class, and upon his graduation devoted himself to teaching, first in South Carolina, then in Alabama, and finally in 1841 he removed to Mississippi and settled in Jasper County. Here he established Mont- rose Academy, one of the earliest classical schools in the State. The school prospered, and the success which attended his labors here paved the way to his subsequent election to the Chair of Ancient Languages in the University. It was shortly after his settlement in Mississippi that he decided that he would undertake the work of the Christian ministry, and having read theology privately, he was duly examined and licensed to preach. Upon the organization of the University Mr. Waddel was chosen a member of its first Board of Trustees, and as a member of the committee on courses of study was, in a large measure, responsible for the curriculum of the institution. He resigned his position on the Board and was elected Professor of Ancient Languages. l Professor Waddel remained a member of the faculty until 1857. _ He was at this time so strongly urged to accept the Chair of Ancient Languages in the Synodical College at La Grange, Tenn., that finally thinking it the call of duty he, with much reluctance, tendered his resignation as a member of the University fac- ulty and undertook his new work. This institution was destroyed by the Civil War. Dr. Waddel was elected Chancellor of the University in 1865 and steered the institution safely through the dark days of reconstruction. In 1874 he resigned the chancellorship of the University and shortly after- wards was elected to the chancellorship of the Southwestern University at Clarksville, Tenn. After a number of years of useful service there he ^'When I received from the Secretary of the Board, Col. Williams, the official notification of my election, I learned that the title of the chair I was expected to fill was 'Professor of Greek, Latin, Hebrew, French, German and Spanish.' No sooner had I read the statement than I at once decided to decline the offer, and I wrote the Secretary to that effect and asked for an explan- ation. In his reply he wrote that I would not be expected to give instruction in any languages except Greek and Latin. He gave as the reason for the addition of the other names to the title of the professorship that the Board desired to have it publicly understood that a department of language was contemplated in the system of instruction when complete, but that the amount of available means at the control of the University was inadequate as yet to admit of such an extension." — Memorials of Academic Life, Waddel, p. 255. 28 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. retired, spending his last years in quiet and study. His memoirs, written by him during this period, reveal to us a useful and well-spent life. As ■ teacher Dr. Waddel was eminently successful. He combined sound scholarship and the student's love for study with the ability to impart his learning to others. He insisted upon a thorough mastery of the ele- ments of the language; a power to be acquired only by a study of the gram- mar and by Latin writing as well as extensive reading. He scorned for his pupils and for himself meretricious helps. The courses offered in Latin by him were in substantial agreement with those originally referred to, but it seemed wiser to postpone the reading of Juvenal until the Junior year, and this he did. The important position that Latin has held in the curriculum of this institution is in large measure due to the wisdom and learning of the first occupant of the chair. In 1S56 the Chair of Ancient Languages was divided, and Professor Waddel choosing to retain the Greek, Professor Wilson G. Richardson, A.M.. succeeded him as Professor of Latin. Mr. Richardson was a grad- uate of the University of Alabama, and had served his alma mater as a tutor. He subsequently studied in Rome, Berlin and Paris, and brought to the work excellent preparation, sound scholarship and enthusiasm for his subject. The standard for admission was now raised by the additional requirement of the Georgics of Vergil and three books of Ovid's Meta- morphoses. This added requirement made more extended reading in the college course possible. He thus expressed his views of the work that his department should perform: "The history of this remarkable people, the state of the arts among them, their domestic life, public and private usages, their mythology, laws, education, geography and antiquities are severally developed in expounding Roman authors. Latin is not taught as an isolated language, but in its various and important relations to other tongues. The influence of the Greek language upon the Latin is noted and the Latin upon the modern tongues, with especial reference above all to its bearing upon our vernacular. Everything is made sub- servient to thorough English scholarship." 1 He emphasized the struc- tural side of the language, and urged the importance of storing the memory with choice passages from the Latin writers. The Satires and Epistles of Horace were now given in the Freshman year, - and in the Sophomore systematic instruction in Roman history. At their June meeting in I860 the Board of Trustees elected Professor Alexandre J. Quinche to succeed Professor Richardson, who resigned dur- ing the previous session. 3 The newly elected professor was of Swiss- Huguenot parentage, but was a native of Minnesota, being born at Fort Snelling in the year 1829. He received his collegiate education at the Columbian University, Washington, D. C, and some years after his grad- uation was elected a member of the teaching staff of his alma mater. After a single year of satisfactory service at the University of Mississippi, with other members of the faculty, he tendered his resignation, as the Civil War had rendered it inadvisable to attempt to continue the work at the 1 vid. Catalogue of University for '56-'57, p. 21. 2 Ibid. p. 20. J Professor Richardson was later connected with Davidson College, North Carolina; Austin College, Texas, and late in life entered the ministry. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 29 University. But he- remained on the campus, and during a portion of this time he conducted a school under the authority of the Board, having as his associate Burton Harrison, Esq., subsequently secretary to Presi- dent Davis. He was made custodian of the University buildings, and probably saved them from destruction at the hands of the federals. ' POST-BELLUM PERIOD. When the University was reopened, in 1865, Professor Quinche was re-elected to the chair of Latin, and continued to fill this position for twenty-four years. His death occurred in August, 1889. Dr. Quinche was a faithful teacher, and to the end of his life was a close student of the Latin language. But the old order had passed away and the School of Latin suffered with the others. There were few schools in the State to take the place of the many private schools where young men had received adequate preparation prior to the Civil War. The public High School was yet undeveloped. The catalogue no longer required a standard for admission that could not be met. First it was announced that four books of Vergil would be required for admission, the require- ments in Caesar and Cicero remaining unchanged. In 1880 the admission requirement was further reduced to two books of Caesar, two Orations of Cicero and two books of the Aeneid of Vergil. For some years a Senior course was offered, extending through half the session, and this course compensated, in a measure, for the less effi- cient preparation. Beginning with 1887 the work in Latin was limited to the Freshman and Sophomore years. Dr. Quinche filled the chair for a longer period than any other occupant, and it was his good fortune to have under his instruction during this period many young men who have since attained positions of eminence in the State and Nation. Of this number are the present chief justice of the State, a member of the National Senate a bishop in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and the three last chancellors of the University. An examination of the University cata- logues of the period reveals the fact that Dr. Quinche introduced the best text-books as they appeared, and, further, outlined a course for the Mas- ter of Arts degree. THE SCHOOL UNDER PROFESSOR HOQUE. Professor Addison Hogue succeeded Dr. Quinche in this school. 2 He had for some years been at the head of the School of Greek, and in 1889 the two chairs were combined. During this period the requirements for admission were: Two books of Caesar and two Orations of Cicero, with corresponding work in Grammar and Latin writing. The course extended through only two years, but forms, syntax, Latin writing, and the read- ing of considerable portions of Cicero, Vergil, Livy and Horace were un- dertaken, and in addition Roman history and Roman religion were studied. l Dr. Quinche had lived in Illinois, where he had been associated with the relatives of Gen- eral Grant. As a result he was enabled to have General Grant, who was the first Union Genera I to enter Oxford, put a guard around the University buildings, and this protection was continued throughout the war. 2 vid. Who's Who in America, Vol. V 30 I \ l\ IL'SITY or MISSISSIPPI. This work was so effectually done that at the end of the two years' course the student was well prepared for more advanced work in this field. Thor- oughness was the Professor's watchword. Graduate work was given more emphasis than ever before. Professor Hogue is an able scholar, and was a strong and inspiring teacher. He left a lasting impression at the University, though he was at the head of this school for only a short time. THE RECENT HISTOKY OK THE SCHOOL. Professor Alexander L. Bondurant, A.M., was placed in charge of the school upon the resignation of Professor Hogue, which occurred in June, 1893. ' Mr. Bondurant had been connected with the work in classics for some years previously. He now found a school well organized, and pos- sessing sound traditions with reference to the subject to be taught, so the problem that presented itself was to develop, broaden and enlarge the work already so admirably begun. From the beginning there has been kept constantly in mind and presented to the students as sufficient reasons to justify the study of this subject its disciplinary value, the aid which it affords in the mastery of English and the Romanic languages, and finally the value of the study as an end in itself by reason of its noble literature, and because through it one learns to know the laws and life of the greatest people of antiquity. In developing the work, admission requirements, undergraduate, and graduate courses, and equipment have been considered. It was thought that no thoroughly satisfactory results could be obtained that did not take into consideration each of these as important factors. The stan- dard for admission in Latin was first raised to a minimum requirement of four books of Caesar and four orations of Cicero, with corresponding work in Grammar and Latin Writing. The standard has been further raised by adding two additional orations of Cicero and six books of Vergil. 2 This means that four years of high school work are required. The undergraduate courses have been extended from year to year until at present fourteen courses extending through four years are given in lieu of four courses extending through two years. These additional courses include Methods of Teaching Latin, Private Antiquities, Roman Religion, advanced Composition, reading courses in Roman comedy, elegy, the later satirists, Tacitus, Catullus and Pliny. 3 The growth in numbers in the school has been commensurate with the growth of the University. In 1894 the number enrolled in Latin by classes was 70, for 1909-10, it is 160. The Freshman class is now divided into three sections and the Sophomore into two. At the beginning of the present period all the work of the school was done by a single professor, now there are two men, a professor and assistant professor, giving their whole time to the work, and an additional assistant, who gives five hours a week. Two years of Latin are required for the A.B. degree, but 84 per cent of 1 Who's Who in America, Vol. V. Bulletin of the University of Mississippi, VIII. 1, pp. 69-70. -Ibid. 'Bulletin of the University of Mississippi, VIII. 1, pp. 99-101, for courses. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 31 those taking a bachelor's degree of any character whatsoever, exclusive of law, between 1893-1908, have included Latin in their course. All the Rhodes scholars sent from this State have taken Latin at the University, and only one student has passed the examination who has not studied here. On the second examination only one State, New York, had more students to pass the examination than Mississippi, and on the third exam- ination this State led all the Southern States. During this period a num- ber of books have been added to the Latin library, and a number of pic- tures and slides acquired. Considerable emphasis has been placed upon graduate work and ad- vanced courses have been offered in Lucretius, Roman Comedy, Roman Antiquities, and Ovid. A number of those who have completed this work have since engaged in teaching Latin. • In addition to the Professors already named the department has had connected with it the following: ASSISTANT PROFESSORS. Paul H. Saunders, Ph.D 1892-1895 Jas. W. Bell, B.P 1903-1904 Christopher Longest, A.B 1908- ASSISTANTS AND TUTORS. Chas. H. Lee, A.B 1856-1857 George T. Stainback . . 1855-1856 John W. Shields, A.B 1871-1872 Samuel A. Witherspoon, A.B.... 1876-1879 John W. Johnson, A.B 1879-1881 J. M. Furr, A.B 1904-1905 ■ H. W. Odum, A.M 1905-1908 GREEK. The records show that the importance of Greek, both as disciplinary and cultural, has been recognized in the University of Mississippi from its foundation. The chair has been filled by men eminent as scholars and as teachers, as may be seen from the list below: John H. Waddell, D.D., Professor of Greek 1848-1857 Henry Whitehorne, M.A., Professor of Greek 1857-1861 J. J. Wheat, M.A., Professor of Greek 1865-1886 A. H. Whitfield, M.A.. Adjunct Professor of Greek. .1872-1874 Addison Hogue, M.A., Professor of Greek 1886-1893 A. L. Bondurant, M.A., Professor of Greek 1893-1895 P. H. Saunders, Ph.D., Professor of Greek 1895-1905 J. G. Deupree, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Greek. . 1905 Dr. Saunders was born and educated in Mississippi, taking at the Uni- versity the degrees of B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. He is now President of the Commercial Bank and Trust Co., Laurel, Miss. 32 I MVi:i'SlTY OF MISSISSIPPI. Prof. A. L. Bondurant has continuously held the chair of Latin in the University, since Greek and Latin were separated in 1895. Prof. Addison Hogue, since 1S93, has filled the chair of Greek in Wash- ington and Lee University, Virginia. Prof. A. H. Whitfield, after resigning the chair of Greek, practiced law in Mississippi, was Professor of Law in the University, and has been for years upon the Supreme Bench, being now Chief Justice of this State. The others in the list just given have been summoned to the school abov< . When the Board of Trustees, on the recommendation of the Faculty, abolished the Preparatory Department in 1892, it was deemed advisable to assign to Greek a position in the curriculum later than heretofore. A student who had not studied Greek was to be permitted to begin the sub- ject at the University, provided he ranked not below Freshman in Latin. Early in the fall of 1895 Dr. P. H. Saunders, as Professor of Greek, undertook to raise the standard so as to make the course in Greek com- mensurate in extent and advancement with that offered in other depart- ments. The University authorities officially confirmed this action by joining the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of the South- ern States, one of the requirements for which was that a fair knowledge of forms and syntax, and at least three books of the Anabasis, should be required for entrance to the Freshman Greek class. This was about the scope of the advance before decided upon. The schools of the State were informed of the intended change, and were requested to introduce Greek if practicable. The correspondence course, offered by the indefatigable professor, was a phenomenal success from its inception. Many ambitious teachers thus prepared themselves to teach Greek, and as a consequence about forty schools in Mississippi now have Greek in their courses of study, and the standard has been so raised as to justify the following: ENTBANCE REQUIREMENTS. The requirements for admission to the Freshman class will hereafter be a beginner's Greek book and four books of the Anabasis. courses for 1909-1910. a 1. Xenophon (Agesilaus); Goodwin's Greek Grammar (used in courses a, b and c); reading at sight, Anabasis; five written exer- cises based on text, three prepared and two at sight. Four hours per week. a 2. Xenophon (selections from the Hellenica and Symposium); syn- tax of cases; reading at sight, Anabasis; six exercises, three pre- pared and three at sight. Lecture on Greek life with illustra- tions. Four hours per week. a 3. Homer (Odyssey, books I-IV) ; irregular verbs and syntax of moods and tenses to conditional sentences; reading at sight, Anabasis; six written exercises, three prepared and three at sight. Four hours per week. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 33 b 1, 2. Plato (selections); syntax of moods and tenses; reading at sight, Hellenica; fourteen written exercises, seven prepared and seven at sight. Lecture on Greek philosophers. Four hours per week, b 3. Euripides (Alcestis and Medea); review of grammar; reading at sight, Hellenica; seven written exercises, three prepared and four at sight. Four hours per week. *c 1, 2. Sophocles (Ajax, Philoctetes and Women of Trachis); Prosody. Each student will be required to prepare a brief paper in Greek on some assigned topic. Two hours per week. *c 3. Greek literature (Capps); reports on standard translations; reading at sight, Arrian (Anabasis). Lectures on influence of Greek literature on English writers. Two hours per week. *d 1, 2, 3. Homer (Odyssey, books I-XXIV); Homeric Language and Verse (Seymour); Introduction to Homer (Jebb); paper on some assigned philological topic. Two hours per week. Senior elective. Open to those who have taken course c. dd\,2, 3. New Testament; peculiarities of New Testament grammar. One hour per week. Course dd is open to students who have taken courses b or c. This course does not count for any degree. GRADUATE COURSE. e 1, 2, 3. Aeschylus (extant tragedies); Sophocles (Electra); Euripides (Electra); four papers on topics to be assigned; eight written exercises based on Lysias. Any B.A. graduate of the University of Mississippi, or of any university or college of like standing, will be entitled to count Greek for the M.A. degree on the satis- factory completion of course e. Any student of the University taking courses a and b, completes the requirements in Greek for the B.A. degree. Any student who completes course a is entitled to count the four hours thus made towards his graduation. Courses marked * may be counted for either graduate or undergrad- uate work, but not for both. In these eourses reports and papers will be required of graduate students in addition to the regular class work. METHOD OF INSTRUCTION. First Year.— The work of this year is in part devoted to a thorough and persistent drill on the inflections and in the elementary principles of syn- tax. Accuracy in form and accent is cultivated by the constant use of the blackboard and a correct pronunciation is secured by reading the accented forms from the board. Translation of English into Greek is practiced each day. The English sentences are given out on slips of paper, and the equivalent Greek is put upon the blackboard by the students. From fifteen to thirty lines are assigned for translation. Each student is given work each day. 3 34 ! WIVBRBIT7 OF MISSISSIPPI. Second Year. —In the Sophomore year the drill in inflections continues the principal parts of the most important irregular verbs are learned, and the rules of syntax are impressed by frequent questioning and by written exercises. A careful study of the geography of Greece is made, and the location and contour of important countries is impressed by map draw- ing. From thirty to fifty lines are assigned for translation, and sight read- ing is continually practiced and encouraged. Third Year. — The same general plan of thorough drill in forms and syn- tax is followed here, though not so much time is given to it. Translation is emphasized and metrical reading is practiced. Collateral reading from books to be found in the University library will be assigned each class. Each student should have a Liddell and Scott's Greek-English Lexicon (abridged), and a good hand-book of mythology. With the courses above offered it is interesting to compare the follow- ing as given in the catalogue of 1852-53: FRESHMAN CLASS. First Term. Second Term. Owens' Anabasis. Owens' Iliad. Greek Exercises. Greek Exercises. SOPHOMORE CLASS. Owens' Odyssey. Demosthenes De Corona. Greek Exercises and Prosody. Greek Exercises. JUNIOR CLASS. Greek Tragedies. Greek Tragedies. Exercises and Prosody. Exercises and Prosody. ROMANCE LANGUAGES. (See also Germanic Languages and Latin.) The Romance Languages belonged to the School of Modern Languages until 1905. Work in Modern Languages in the University of Mississippi was begun in the third year of its existence. Adolph Sadluski was elected Assistant Professor of Modern Languages in July, 1850, but as he did not appear for service the chair was declared vacant on the 29th of October, 1850. William A. Strozzi, A.M., took charge of the work in 1850 (or 1851) and continued in charge until 1854. Dr. Waddel, in his Memorials of Academic Life (p. 305), says: "Sadluski was succeeded by a very unsuitable man, by name William A. Strozzi, also a foreigner, who was in office only two years. Both of these men came recommended as competent for the position, but perhaps there have rarely been found such complete failures as they both proved to be." Professor Strozzi was succeeded by Wilson Gaines Richardson, A.M., who served to 1860. During the last four years of this period Professor UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 35 Richardson held also the chair of Latin. He had enjoyed the advantages of classical study at Berlin and Rome, and had spent nearly two years in Paris. French and Spanish were the languages taught. "The method of instruction in these languages is substantially the same as set forth for Latin." "In Spanish the course is quite limited." (Catalogue.) Tick- nor's History of Spanish Literature is one of the text-books put down in the catalogue. Alexandre James Quinche, M.A., was the next professor in this de- partment, holding the chair (along with Latin) for the year 1860-1861, and again for the first year after the resumption of university work at the close of the Civil War, 1865-1866. Dr. Quinche was born of Swiss parents at Fort Snelling, Minn., January 27, 1827. His boyhood was spent at Galena, 111., and his higher education obtained at the University of the City of New York, and at Columbian University, Washington, D. C. During the Civil War Professor Quinche was left in charge of the Univer- sity property, and on account of the acquaintance of his family with Gen- eral Grant's, formed at Galena, he was able to save the buildings and collections. In 1866-67 Dabney Minor Scales had charge of the department, Pro- fessor Quinche remaining in charge of Latin. French and Spanish were the languages taught, and were confined to the Junior and Senior years. From 1867 to 1872 Professor Quinche again had charge of Modern Lan- guages in addition to his duties as Professor of Latin. The last two years of this period he was acting Professor of Modern Languages, the profes- sorship being vacant. In 1872 Frederick A. Juny, S.T.D., took charge of the work and re- mained till 1876. Professor Juny was an Alsatian, who had at one time been a Roman Catholic priest, but was at this time an Episcopal clergy- man. German appears to have been given for the first time during his occupancy. Professor Quinche again assumed the responsibilities of the chair of Modern Languages in 1876 and held the position till 1881, continuing to serve as Professor of Latin all the while. Only French was given during this period. In 1881 Charles Woodward Hutson, a South Carolinian by birth, be- came Instructor and in 1884 Professor of Modern Languages, continuing in office till 1889. French and German were regularly given, but there was no demand for Spanish. Professor Hutson had formerly been Pro- fessor of Greek in Louisiana State University, and was later Professor of History in the A. & M. College of Texas. He is the author of a History of French Literature and a Story of Language. (See Who's Who in America.) His present address is New Orleans, La. Joseph Auguste Fontaine, Ph.D., succeeded Professor Hutson, hold- ing the Chair of Modern Languages for two years, 1889-91. Professor Fontaine is a Frenchman. He went from Mississippi to Bryn Mawr, where from 1891 to 1900 he was Associate Professor of Romance Languages. Later he returned to France. He is editor of Merimee's Colombo. The next occupant, Hans Schmidt-Wartenberg, Ph.D., likewise re- 36 DNIVBRBITJ OF MISSISSIPPI. mained two years, IS'U 93. Dr. Sehmidt-Wartenberg is a German. He wont from Mississippi to the University of Chicago. Chiles Clifton Ferrell, A.M., Ph.D., succeeded Dr. Sehmidt-Warten- berg in 1S93, and continued Professor of Modern Languages till 1905, when the chair was divided between him and Calvin S. Brown, Dr. Ferrell retaining the Germanic Languages and Dr. Brown taking the Romance. Spanish was revived in 1901-02, after having been out of the curriculum for many years. Dr. Ferrell was born in South Carolina, spent his boy- hood in Kentucky, took his Master's degree at Vanderbilt and his Doc- tor's at Leipsig. (See Who's Who in America.) His present address is Birmingham, Ala. During the spring term of the year 1901-02 Calvin S. Brown was Acting Professor, while Dr. Ferrell was on leave of absence in Europe. Dr. Brown remained for the summer school, this being the first time Modern Languages were given in the summer term. During the year 1901-02 James V. Bowen, B.P., was fellow in Modern Languages. He is now Professor of Modern Languages in the A. & M. College of Mississippi. Upon the division of the department of Modern Languages in 1905, Calvin S. Brown, D.Sc, Ph.D., took charge of the Romance Languages and remained in charge until the autumn of 1909. French and Spanish have been regularly given since the establishment of the chair of Romance Languages in 1905, and Italian was added in 1907-08. In 1907 the students of French under the direction of Dr. Brown played Moliere's Le Malade imaginaire, and in 1908 Moliere's Le Bourgeois gen- tilhomme. Dr. Brown is a Tennessean by birth, a graduate of Vanderbilt University, and has studied and traveled extensively abroad. (See Who's Who in America.) John L. Deister, B.A., was made Assistant Professor in 1908, and upon the transfer of Dr. Brown to the German department in 1909, was pro- moted to the full professorship. Professor Deister was born in Missouri, graduated at the University of that State, and has spent much time in Mexico. RECAPITULATION. Adolph Sadluski 1850-1850 William A. Strozzi, A.M 1850-1854 Wilson G. Richardson, A.M 1853-1860 Alexandre J. Quinche, M. A 1860-1861 Alexandre J. Quinche, M.A 1865-1866 Dabney M. Scales 1866-1867 Alexandre J. Quinche, M.A 1867-1872 Frederick A. Juny, S.T.D... 1872-1876 Alexandre J. Quinche, M.A., LL.D. 1876-1881 Charles W. Hutson.- 1881-1889 Joseph A. Fontaine, Ph.D 1889-1891 Hans Sehmidt-Wartenberg, Ph.D 1891-1893 Chiles C. Ferrell, Ph.D 1893-1905 Calvin S. Brown, Ph.D 1905-1909 John L. Deister, B.A., Assistant Professor 1908-1909 John L. Deister, B.A., Professor 1909- UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 37 GERMANIC LANGUAGES. (See also Romance Languages and Latin.) German belonged to the School of Modern Languages until that school was divided in 1905. In the earlier history of the University French and Spanish were the living foreign languages taught, German apparently not being given until Professor Juny took charge of Modern Languages. Frederick A. Juny, S.T.D., an Alsatian by birth, a Catholic priest by profession, later an Episcopal clergyman, held the chair of Modern Lan- guages from 1872 to 1876. Born in the city of Metz, Professor Juny spoke both French and German from childhood. To him belongs the honor of introducing German into the University. Alexandre James Quinche, M.A..LL.D., professor of Latin, was put in charge of the Modern Languages after Dr. Juny left and held the chair from 1876 to 1881. He discontinued German, giving only French during his occupancy. Dr. Quinche was born of Swiss parents at Fort Snelling, Minn., on the 17th of January, 1827. His boyhood was passed at Galena, 111., and his collegiate education was obtained at the University of the City of New York and at the Columbian University, Washington, D. C. Charles Woodward Hutson came to the University in 1881 as instructor in Modern Languages, and in 1884 was advanced to the rank of professor. He held the chair until 1889. Under him German was restored and it has ever since held a place in the curriculum of the University. Professor Hutson was born in South Carolina in 1840, held the chair of Greek in the University of Louisiana for several years, and later, after leaving Miss- issippi, was Professor of History in the A. and M. College of Texas. (See Who's Who in America.) At present he resides in New Orleans. Joseph Auguste Fontaine, Ph.D., a Frenchman, next held the chair of Modern Languages, his tenure being for two years, 1889-91. Upon his resignation from Mississippi he went to Bryn Mawr as Assistant Profes- sor of Romance Languages and later returned to France, where he is still living. Hans Schmidt-Wartenberg, Ph.D., a native German, held the chair from 1891 to 1893. After retiring from Mississippi he went to the Uni- versity of Chicago. Following Dr. Schmidt-Wartenberg came Chiles Clifton Ferrell, M.A., Ph.D., who held the chair of Modern Languages until it was divided in 1905 and from that time held the chair of Germanic Languages until 1908, when he resigned. Prof. Ferrell took his master's degree at Vanderbilt University and his doctor's degree at Leipzig, Germany. He is editor of Grillparzer's Sappho. (See Who's Who in America). Dr. Ferrell resides at present in Birmingham, Ala. During the spring and summer terms of 1901-2 Calvin S. Brown had charge of the department while Dr. Ferrell was on leave of absence in Europe. German was given then for the first time in the summer school. James V. Bowen, B.P., a graduate of this institution, was during 1901-2 teaching fellow in Modern Languages. He now holds the chair of Foreign Languages in the A. and M. College of Mississippi. 3S ' V1VBRSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Upon Dr. Ferrell's resignation in July, 1908, Calvin S. Brown, Ph.D., Professor of Romance Languages in the University of Mississippi, was asked to take charge of the department of Germanic Languages for the following year in addition to his regular duties. With him was associ- ated John L. Deister, B.A., as assistant professor. In 1909 Dr. Brown was permanently transferred to the chair of German and Prof. Deister took charge of the Romance Languages. Dr. Brown is a Tennessean by birth, a graduate of Vanderbilt University and the University of Colorado, and has studied in Germany and other European countries. He is editor of Tennyson's Poems and of the Later English Drama. (See Who's Who in A m erica). RECAPITULATION. Frederick A. Juny, S.T.D 1872-1876 (Alexandre J. Quinche, LL.D 1876-1881) Charles W. Hutson 1881-1889 Joseph H. Fontaine, Ph.D 1889-1891 Hans Schmidt-Wartenberg, Ph.D 1891-1893 Chiles C. Ferrell, Ph.D 1893-1908 Calvin S. Brown, Ph.D., j > 1908- John L. Deister, B.A., Asst. Prof., ) " ") 1908-1909 CHEMISTRY. Though the University opened in 1848, there is no record of a chair for teaching chemistry until 1850. At that time John Millington, M.D., was professor of chemistry and geology. The science under considera- tion was taught in the Junior year. In 1853 J. C. Keeney, A.M., was professor of chemistry, analytical chemistry, agriculture and geology. Johnston's Turner's Chemistry was used as a text for first half of Senior year, with analysis and agriculture for the last half. It is recorded for 1854 that the Board of Trustees "at their late meeting in Jackson, erected a distinct professorship for instruction in geology, agriculture and an- alytical chemistry, which have heretofore been united with the chair of chemistry." A room was then being prepared for chemical analysis. In 1854 Lewis Harper, LL.D., held the position of State geologist and pro- fessor of geology, agriculture and analytical chemistry. In that year the professorship of chemistry, natural philosophy and assistant State geologist was vacant, being filled in 1855 by the election of E. W. Hilgard, Ph.D. In 1856 E. C. Boynton, M.A., late assistant professor of chem- istry at West Point Military Academy, was chosen professor of chemistry, geology and mineralogy, the State survey having been detached from the University. The first full statement of the work offered in chemistry occurs in this year as follows: Instruction was offered only in the Junior year, with the laboratory enlarged and improved. "At each recitation every principle and fact of importance will be experimentally exhibited, accompanied by drawings and explanations intended to impart a more thorough understanding of the course than is usually secured by period- ical lectures. An expensive and complete apparatus has been secured and facilities for instruction are second to none in the country." In- UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 39 struction was also offered in physical chemistry, inorganic and organic chemistry. In 1865 Dr. Hilgard, State geologist, was acting professor of chemistry. He outlined his course as consisting of "daily lectures, accompanied by illustrative experiments alternating with recitations," and stated that "although thus far no express provision has been made in the curriculum for students who desire to make chemistry a special study, a limited number of such may be admitted to a practical course in the laboratory by special arrangement." In 1856 he stated that "students may devote their entire time to this special department." The main text was Fownes. The course for the above work was announced in 1867 to consist of, for the first year, Chemistry (Roscoe, U. S. Dispensatory, Gmelin), Quali- tative Analysis (Fresenius, Will, Plattner); second year, Organic Labo- ratory Work and Quantitative Analysis (Rose) ; and third year, Technical Chemistry and Original Research. Every catalogue during Dr. Hilgard's administration claims "a large and well appointed laboratory, excelled by none in the South." In 1870 the chemical department offered a course in pharmacy and in agricultural chemistry. The year 1872 records Dr. Hilgard as professor of chemistry and agricultural chemistry, with J. B. Adger, Jr., as adjunct professor. The latter seems to have had entire charge of the laboratory, the former serVing chiefly as State geologist. Dr. Hilgard resigned in 1874, Mr. Adger remaining in charge. For the session of 1875-76 there seems to have been no one occupying the chair of chemistry, but it was announced that the two professors of chemistry to be elected would also open the newly founded school of agriculture and mechanic arts. Special students in chemistry were to be charged a fee of $75, with $25 additional for breakage. In 1876 Dr. R. W. Jones was elected professor of chemistry and nat- ural history, with L. L. Mclnnis, A.B., as tutor. Special post-graduate cources were offered. The next year T. D. Greenwood, A.B., tutor, died December 5th. During the following [session fJ. M. Buchanan was assistant in chemistry. He remained until 1879. During the following two sessions J. W. Kilpatrick served as tutor. The course consisted of four hours of general chemistry and four hours of practical chemistry. W. E. Martin, A. B., was tutor for the year '81-'82. No tutors in chemistry are recorded from that year up to 1888. In 1885 Dr. Jones resigned and W. D. Hedleston, A. B., held the position of acting professor. Woodville Latham was elected professor in 1886 and six hours per week of laboratory work was added to the Senior year for B.S. students. In the year 1888 a fellowship in chemistry was established to encourage post- graduate work. The compensation was $300 per year, and the holder was required to spend part of his time as instructor. Dr. Jones returned to the University in 1889, with J. W. Provine, B.S., as fellow. Bloxam was the text for general chemistry, and Appleton for analysis. T. O. Mabry held the fellowship from '90 to '92, and the cata- logue for 1891 gives figures to show the accuracy of the students in chem- ical analysis. In 1891 the texts used were changed to Richter, Remsen, Smith and Kellar and Thrope and Tait. The new courses were: for M.A., 40 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Remsen's Theoretical and part of Thorpe's Quantitative Analysis; for Ph.D., in addition to the above Cooke's Chemical Philosophy, Wurtz's Atomic Theory and selected methods. During the year '92-'9.3 Charles Strong held the position of fellow, his name also appearing in this capacity in the catalogues from 1895 to 1S97. It was announced in 1892 that B.A. students could elect general or analytical chemistry, such classes having been confined to general chemistry theretofore. The laboratory that year commenced subscribing to the following journals: Chemical News, Americal Chemical Journal, Annales de Chimie et de Physique, besides others that were received by the general library. In 1893 the courses were changed to Sophomore, Elementary Chemistry, two hours; Junior, In- organic and Organic Chemistry, three hours; Senior, Practical and An- alytical Chemistry, ten hours. From '92 to '95 no Ph.D. courses were announced. Eugene Campbell was elected fellow in chemistry in 1897, assistant in 1899 and assistant professor in 1901. A course in metallurgy and assaying was added in 1900, and inorganic preparations and electrolytic and gas analysis in 1902. For the session 1904-05 W. A. Stevens, A.B., served as assistant, and the courses are for the first time announced in complete detail in the catalogue. General Chemistry and Analytical Chesmistry are arranged as two distinct schools. Altogether nine undergraduate courses are of- fered, besides several post-graduate courses. The following year A. H. Roop, B.S., served as assistant. In 1905 A. M. Muckenfuss, Ph.D., was elected professor of Chemistry, Dr. Jones having resigned, and C. W. Martin was the assistant. In 1906 the two schools of chemistry were merged into one, and G. L. Paddison, M.A., was elected assistant. The courses were rearranged and the course in metallurgy abandoned. Alto- gether six undergraduate and four post-graduate courses were offered. A new lecture room and a new Freshman laboratory were constructed. During the summer of 1908 the Board of Trustees let contracts for the complete remodeling of the chemical laboratory, so that at present it has practically all modern conveniences. GEOLOGY. On the organization of the University of Mississippi in 1848 the first faculty consisted of four members, one of whom was a professor of Chem- istry and Natural Philosophy. There were thirty-five applicants for this chair, the election resulting in the choice of John N. Millington, M.D., then filling a chair at William and Mary College, Virginia. Dr. Milling- ton was an Englishman by birth, a former associate and pupil of Faraday, and at the time of his election was seventy years old. We know little of the extent of Geological teaching at the University at this time, but it must have commanded some attention, for on March 5, 1850, the Legis- lature of the State passed an Act authorizing an Agricultural and Geo- logical Survey of the State, the survey to be conducted from the Univer- sity with Dr. Millington as chief Geologist. In addition to his work in Chemistry the trustees appointed him Professor of Geology and Agri- culture. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 41 In January, 1852> Professor B. L. C. Wailes was appointed Assistant Professor of Geology and Assistant State Geologist, succeeding O. M. Leiber. Wailes had come into Mississippi in an earlier day as a surveyor of land for the U. S. Government and had located at Washington, Miss. Dr. Millington being too old to go into field-work vigorously, Professor Wailes prosecuted the survey, while Dr. Millington did the class work and analytical work of the survey. In 1853 Dr. Millington resigned his work at the University to accept a chair in Memphis Medical College, and John C. Keeney, A.M., was elected Professor of Chemistry, Agriculture and Geology. He served in this capacity but one session, Lewis Harper, LL.D., becoming Professor of Geology, Agriculture and Chemistry in 1854. Meanwhile Wailes had prosecuted the survey work, and in that year published his "Report on Geology and Agriculture of Mississippi," his name appearing as State Geologist at the request of Dr. Millington, who disclaimed the honor, since Wailes did the chief part of the work. During these early years Geology was a required study in the Senior class, but the details of the work are not given in the catalogues of the time. During the professorship of Lewis Harper, 1854-1856, he was also State Geologist. In 1856 he was succeeded by Edward C. Boynton, elected as Professor of Chemistry, Geology and Mineralogy, which is the first evi- dence of Mineralogy constituting a recognized part of the work. Boynton had been Assistant Professor of Chemistry at West Point. Harper con- tinued as State Geologist until 1857, the Legislature having disassociated the position from connection with the Geological Department at the University. E. W. Hilgard, Ph.D., was Assistant Geologist under Har- per and succeeded him in that capacity in 1857. In the year 1856 the University purchased for the Geological Depart- ment the Francis Markoe collection, of minerals, which grace our cabinets at the present time. At the same time the Budd collection of shells was purchased in New York, containing some 10,000 specimens. These could not fail to add interest and effectiveness to the teaching in these depart- ments. Professor Boynton, though a Northern man, continued his work at the University until the very outbreak of the war in 1861, when the Univer- sity closed. In 1860 Dr. Hilgard, who had diligently prosecuted the survey of the State, published his "Report on the Agriculture and Geology of Missis- sippi." During the period of the Civil War all exercises at the University were suspended, though a small appropriation was allowed by the Legislature to pay the salary of State Geologist and defray necessary expenses for chemicals and apparatus for analysis. On the opening of the University after the war E. W. Hilgard was elected Professor of Chemistry, Mineralogy and Geology, beginning his work in that capacity in the session of 1866-67. Professor Hilgard, though not a native of Germany, was of German parentage and received his Doc- 42 ' W» I'KsiT) OF MISSISSIPPI. tor's degree at the University of Heidelberg in 1853. On leaving the Ger- man University he was elected Chemist of the Smithsonian Institution, where he served until his election to the University of Mississippi in 1866. He infused into all his work the energy and thoroughness of the German Schools of Science. In the following session, 1867-68, using the extensive collections of the various surveys of the State as a basis for more local study, a new course of Practical Chemistry and Geology was established, the Geological work being a special course in Mississippi Geology. Besides this, the course in General Geology was given as in previous years. This expansion of the department necessitated more workers, and the work became differ- entiated, Dr. Hilgard, assisted by R. H. Loughridge, doing the work in Chemistry, and Dr. George Little, assisted by E. A. Smith, Ph.D., doing the work in Geology. Dr. Little was from Alabama and had taken his Doctor's degree at the University of Gottingen, Germany, in 1859. Dr. Little was also State Geologist, having been elected two years previously, Dr. Smith being Assistant Geologist. Up to this time the work in Chemistry, Natural History and Geology had been merged under one management. Now we find the instruction in Chemistry constituting one work and that in Geology and Natural History another, with two instructors in each. All students were re- quired to take a half year of Geology and a half year of Mineralogy, three hours a week of the first and two hours a week of the last. It was a Senior work in all courses. In 1862 Congress gave to each State a grant of 30,000 acres of land for each Senator and Representative, the proceeds to be used for the estab- lishment of a College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. By this grant Mississippi received 210,000 acres, but by Act of the Legislature this was divided, two-fifths of the land coming to the University, the other three- fifths going to Alcorn University. The proceeds of the sale of this land brought the University $75,600, with which a School of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts was established, one of the chairs in which was a chair of Agricultural and Economic Chemistry and Special Geology and Agri- culture of Mississippi. In 1871 Professor Hilgard was elected to this chair, and was also made State Geologist, R. H. Loughridge being Assist- ant State Geologist and Adjunct Professor of Chemistry. Dr. Little was also one of the staff of instructors in the new school, having the chair of Geology and Mineralogy. Under the provisions of the grant of land none of the $75,600 could be used in the erection of needed buildings, and as the Legislature failed to make the necessary appropriations for that purpose, the school began its work under a heavy handicap. The School of Agriculture, which had now become an established feat- ure of the University, chiefly through the enthusiastic and able efforts of Dr. Hilgard, suffered a very serious if not a fatal setback and the Uni- versity a heavy loss when, in 1873, Dr. Hilgard resigned his position to accept one at the University of Michigan. His position in the Agricul- tural School remained unfilled. Dr. Little, though an able Geologist, gave little attention to the agricultural side of the subject. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 43 In 1875 Dr. Landon C. Garland, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, was elected Acting Professor of Chemistry, Mineralogy and Geology. That one man should have been required to do the work that no less than five had been doing shows a wonderful shrinkage in the resources of the University. But when it is remembered that the State was in the throes of reconstruction there is little reason for surprise. Necessarily the School of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts languished. In 1876 R. W. Jones, M.A., of Virginia, was elected Professor of Chem- istry and Natural History, including Mineralogy and Geology. Under Dr. Jones, besides the courses of instruction in Mineralogy and General Geology, the special course in Mississippi Geology and Agriculture was revived. Now, for the first time in the history of the University, we find mention of the fact that Mineralogy was studied by laboratory meth- ods. This, however, was required only of B.S. students. The work proving too much for one man, in 1877 Thos. D. Greenwood, A.B., a brilliant graduate of the University was appointed Tutor to Dr. Jones. In 1878, Greenwood having died by accidental poisoning, Jas. M. Buchanon filled the place of Assistant Professor of Chemistry and Natural History. 1879-81 J. W. Kilpatrick was tutor in Natural His- tory, followed by W. E. Martin, Dr. Jones filling the chief place until 1882, when Geology and Natural History were placed in a separate depart- ment under Dr. George Little. At this time Mineralogy was taught two hours a week for half a year, Geology three hours a week for half a year. He gradually increased the hours until in 1888 Mineralogy and Geology were each taught five hours a week for half a year. In 1889 Natural History and Geology was again merged with the De- partment of Chemistry under Dr. R. W. Jones, with J. W. Johnson, A.M., Assistant. The work in Geology and Mineralogy continued under Pro- fessor Jones' management, with assistants elected from time to time, until 1894, when T. O. Mabry, M.A., was put in charge of Natural His- tory, Geology and Mineralogy, as Assistant Professor. Professor Mabry was succeeded in the work in 1899 by Dr. W. S. Leath- ers. In 1904 Professors Leathers was given an assistant, H. R. Fulton, now of Penn. Agricultural College. In 1905 E. N. Lowe was elected Assist- ant to Professor Leathers, doing chiefly the work in Geology and Miner- alogy. In 1906 Albert F. Crider, of the U. S. Geological Survey, was elected Professor of Geology. Professor Crider, on being elected State Geolo- gist in the same year, resigned this chair to prosecute the field work of the Survey, after only a few months connection with the University. The election of Professor Crider as Professor of Geology placed Geol- ogy in a department by iteslf for the first time in the history of the Uni- versity. It had been variously merged with Natural History, Chemis- try, Agriculture and Economic Chemistry, but never before had Geology and Mineralogy constituted one department. Following the resignation of Professor Crider, Professor Calvin S. Brown, of the Department of Romance Languages in the University, was offered the chair of Geology, Dr. Brown being at that time Assistant State 44 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Geologist. Dr. Brown preferred to continue in the Language Depart- ment and declined. E. N. Lowe was elected Acting Professor of Geology and Mineralogy. In L908 ln> was elected Professor of Geology, a few months previously having been elected Assistant State Geologist, Dr. Brown having resigned his place on the Survey. With the beginning of the session 1908-09 the Department of Geology and Mineralogy was liberally fitted up with much needed apparatus and furnishings and the Museum of the State Collec- tion has been rearranged and placed in suitable quarters in the Science Hall, so that it has been possible to expand the work along these lines. The department embraces, 1st, a course in General Geology; 2d, a course in Mineralogy and Petrology; 3d, a course in Mississippi Geology and Mineral Products; 4th, a course in Physiography. ENGLISH. The history of the School of English in the University of Mississippi is broadly typical of the development of English studies in American col- leges. It presents the same stages of evolution in general aspects, and these respective stages are rather closely co-incident with their develop- ment in the leading institutions of the country. We recognize four dis- tinct periods of this growth. Given by years they are as follows: First period. 1848-1857; second, 1857-1873; third, 1873-1890; fourth, 1890 to the present. The above division has been made under the guidance of two determ- ining considerations. The chief of these was the character of the work undertaken as this work is indicated in the definite outlines of courses and in the descriptive statements of English study found in the cata- logues; the other, which is chiefly determining only in marking the divi- sion of the second period from the first, is the recognition given by the Board of Trustees to English in its establishment as a separate depart- ment or in modifying it by the creation of separate "schools" embraced by the general department. It will be understood that growth has not been made wholly "by leaps and bounds." On the contrary, each stage reveals a tendency toward the fully developed standards, aims and ideals of its succeeding stage. It is true, however, that the years which marked the beginning of each period witnessed some decided, if not revolutionary, change of purpose in the English department. The first period begins with the opening of the University and extends to the establishment of the "Department of English Literature" in 1858. Ex-Chancellor Mayes is authority for the statement, in his History of Education in Mississippi, that the late Dr. George F. Holmes, first presi- dent of the University, gave such instruction as was afforded in English. The catalogue of 1852-'53 shows that President A. B. Longstreet, in ad- dition to his duties as president, had imposed upon him the task of teach- ing a half dozen subjects, one of which happened to be Rhetoric. This subject stood in the curriculum in the second term of the Sophomore year. The text was "Dr. Blair's Rhetoric," a very formidable, not to say im- possible, book; but it was rich in classical flavor, abounding in allusions UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 45 to, and quotations from, the best of Greek and Latin literatures. In the year 1856-'57 appear the names of N. M. Crawford, "Professor of Intel- lectual and Moral Philosophy," and of Wm. R. Barksdale, "Tutor in Rhetoric, Logic, Composition and Elocution." In the same catalogue, in the statements of departments, these names appear over the statement describing the "Department of Belles Lettres and Mental and Moral Philosophy." It appears that all the instruction in English studies was given by Mr. Barksdale. The work comprised English grammar in the Freshman year, rhetoric and punctuation in the Sophomore, and "the study of figures and the analysis of sentences" in the Junior. In the year '57-'58 Wm. T. J. Sullivan succeeded Mr. Barksdale in the position of Tutor. At the time the University of Mississippi was founded the claims of English for co-ordinate recognition with Latin, Greek and mathematics were not admitted, even if such claims were advanced*. During this first period, however, there is a distinct movement towards the establish- ment of those claims. The appointment of an instructor, although his rank was only that of a tutor, to give instruction in English studies dur- ing parts of three years marks a development from the situation when the whole of English study was comprised in the study of rhetoric for half session under the president of the institution, who taught five other sub- jects. In the year 1858 the second stage of the department's history is inaug- urated by the election of Professor Wm. D. Moore, M.A., to the "Chair of English Literature." While the establishment of the chair did not result in any very decided advance in the courses given, the fact of its establishment is memorably significant. Few institutions in the entire country had at that time shown such appreciation of the importance of the study of the English language and literature, and, as far as I have been able to ascertain, no Southern college or university established the chair so early. The University of Virginia", greatest in influence and history of the universities of the South, has had courses in Anglo-Saxon since 1825, but the special department of the English language and literature was not established there until 1882. The advance made under the professorship of Mr. Moore is embraced in the extension of English work to four years, the introduction of the "study of literature" in the Senior year, and the introduction of the study of Anglo-Saxon. As to what work was done under the indefinite phrase "study of literature" we cannot tell. There is recognizable in the de- partmental administration of Professor Moore a movement towards the study of philology, as indicated in the growing emphasis placed on the course in Anglo-Saxon. This was probably in recognition of the tendency of that time to give more importance to that branch of English in the representative institutions of the country. This movement was arrested The ends of English study were sought to be attained by two accessory£features of college life. First, the literary societies were largely depended upon to supply training in composition; second, original speeches from senior students, and compositions, alternating with declamations, from the other classes delivered before the University body afforded additional training- 46 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. during the incumbency of Professor S. G. Burney, who succeeded to the chair in L866, and it remained for his successor to give pre-eminent im- portance to that branch of English study toward which Professor Moore was gradually moving. The features worthy of note under the administration of Professor Burney are: (1) the introducing of the study of the "History of English Literature," (2) the gradual elimination of Anglo-Saxon from the course of study, and (3) the announcement of post-graduate courses for such as might apply for them. During his incumbency the position of "As- sistant in English Literature" was held by Edward Mayes (1869-70) , later eminent as Professor of Law and Chancellor of the University, and John W. Shields (1S70-72). Professor Burney resigned after the session 71-72. The professor- ship was vacant in the session 72-73, and the department was in charge of Adjunct-Professor Shields. The session 73-74 begins the third period in the history of the depart- ment. Hardly any date, excepting perhaps that which marks the be- ginning of the fourth period, is so nearly epochal in the department's growth. In that year Professor J. L. Johnson came to the University as "Professor of English Literature and Provisional Instructor in Elocu- tion." Professor Johnson had very definite convictions as to what should constitute a college course in English, and he announces at length and with enthusiasm the aims of his department. He had been educated at the University of Virginia, where he had learned to attach great importance to "Old English" as forming not only the basis but the body for English scholarship. He shows himself wholly alive to the educational movement of his time, at a period when representative institutions were recognizing the eminent claims of English for a large place in a college curriculum. Although time has proved that the body of English instruction in under- graduate courses should consist of work in literature and composition, Professor Johnson was in harmony with the accepted ideas of the leading English teachers of his day in giving over-shadowing prominence to the study of Anglo-Saxon and the historical development of the language. A single scientific fact which his work emphasized might alone be con- sidered a revolutionary contribution. That was that the English lan- guage is not fashioned on the model of the Latin, but is a product of evo- lution, inseperable from the life of the people who spoke it. In Profes- sor Johnson's first catalogue statement three out of the four years of the entire work were given to the study of language, and the courses were all based on the idea of historical development. The course of the Junior year is described by the following analysis: "Morris' English Accidence, Earle's Philology of the English Tongue, Professor's Lectures on Linguistic Science." The "joy in widest commonalty spread" could hardly have extended to the class in junior English in the 70's. The work of the senior year was given up to literature. In the first term "literary bi- ography and the reciprocal relations of literature and history" were. stud- ied, with Shaw's Complete Manual of English Literature as a text. Hale's Longer English Poems and Rolfe's The Merchant of Venice were studied UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 47 in the second term. It appears that, for some reason, the extensive work in Anglo-Saxon which Professor Johnson offered at first was somewhat abridged in the latter years of his incumbency. Co-incident with this there was some extension of the study of literature. A course in Ameri- can literature, for instance, was first given in 1886-'87. In this fact we recognize again the law of evolution in these stages of growth; the grad- ual growth of literature courses was a movement toward the fourth stage where literature should come into its own as the most important part of English study. Between stages three and four there is a transition of one year, the session of '89-'90. In that year Professor R. M. Leavell, since so widely loved and honored as Professor of Philosophy, Logic and Political Econ- omy in the University, was called to the chair of English and Belles Let- tres. The "school" of Belles Lettres was established upon the recom- mendation of Chancellor Mayes. A man of fine general literary attain- ments himself, he appreciated the importance of giving this special prom- inence to the study of pure literature, or "mere literature," as it was disparagingly termed by the conservative scholars in English of that time. The fourth, and last, period of the school's development was signal- ized by the transfer of Professor William Rice Sims from the school of Mental and Moral Philosophy, Logic and Political Economy to the school of English and Belles Lettres. The early nineties make an im- portant period in the teaching of English throughout the country. It is hardly too much to say that the period marks the complete estab- lishment of modern ideas of English instruction. Two definite influences contributed largely toward this. One was the report of the English de- partment of Harvard University on the teaching of composition and rhetoric, the other was the epochal report of the conference on English appointed by the Committee of Ten. The influence of these reports and the sum of undefined tendencies prevalent elsewhere are manifest in the development of the department of English in the University of Missis- sippi during the last decade of the past century. The most significant results are found in the introduction of entrance requirements that stress previous preparation in literature and rhetoric, in the differentiation effected between literature and linguistics, and in the further differenti- ation of practical rhetoric from each of these. The altered character of English instruction here indicated gave greater influence and prominence to the school than it had had before. However, the new interest in English that characterized this period was not due chiefly to the increased attention given to literature. By all tokens Pro- fessor Sims added to a brilliant intellect unusual literary gifts and rare teaching ability. He retired from the University in 1895. In general deas and purposes the school has not been altered radically since he held the chair. In 1895 Professor Dabney Lipscomb, an alumnus of the University in the class of '79, was called to the chair. Under his administration the study of literature continued to hold the chief place as it had done under Professor Sims. The noteworthy feature of Professor Lipscomb's ad- 48 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. ministration was the increased emphasis on entrance requirements. The statement in the catalogue of his first year describes his standard: "Some degree of literary culture must be evidenced by the applicant to be tested by a knowledge of the extent of his reading and by the manner in which he reproduces orally or in writing something that he has recently read." A list of literary works are suggested for this preparation. In the state- ment of the catalogue of the session '96-'97 the study courses of the South- ern Association of Preparatory Schools and Colleges are adopted as en- trance requirements in English. The present occupant of the chair was elected in 1904. Two features may be noted in the history of the last few sessions. One of them mani- fests itself in the arrangement of the courses in literature according to a central purpose that gives unity to the course, such as the study of some literary form, the work of one great writer or the works of two or more great writers closely related, or the literature of a period; the other is found in the course for freshmen students, which consists almost wholly of work in composition. The School of Belles Lettres was maintained from its establishment in 1889-'90 until 1905-'06, when, in view of the fact that the extensive inclusion of various types and periods of literature embraced practically all that had previously been given as Belles Lettres, upon the recommen- dation of the professor the school of Belles Lettres was absorbed by the School of English, and the distinction, which in reality had ceased to ex- ist, was no longer maintained in the catalogue. The School of Rhetoric was established in 1897 and Professor Franklin L. Riley was called to the professorship of Rhetoric and History. This relationship was continued for three sessions. In 1900 the School of Rhet- oric was attached to the schools of English and Belles Lettres, and Pro- fessor Lipscomb was given charge of all. This grouping was maintained until the session of 1905-'06 when Professor Hubert A. Shands was called to the chair of Rhetoric and Oratory. At the end of that year, however, rhetoric was again attached to the School of English, and this arrange- ment is still retained. The courses offered in the schools of English and Rhetoric for the ses- sion 1909-'10 are found published in the current catalogue. Professor David H. Bishop has been Professor of English since 1904. HISTORY. No provision was made for direct instruction in history in the Uni- versity of Mississippi in the first decade after its establishment. With the exception of a reading course in Voltaire's Histoire de Charles XII, in the School of French, and of a course in Browne's History of Greek and Roman Classical Literature, in the Schools of Greek and Latin, History was not then taught even incidentally in the institution. The first efforts to supply this deficiency seem to have been made in 1857 by Prof. Wilson G. Richardson, of the Department of Latin and Modern Languages. Faint symptoms of such a development are to be found, however, in an announcement that appeared in the catalogue of UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 49 the tenth session (1857-58). It reads as follows: "The history of the Roman people, the state of the arts among them, their domestic life, public and private usages, their mythology, laws, education, geography and antiquities, are severally developed in expounding Roman authors." In the catalogue of the following year Roman History appeared in the summary of courses for a full session of the Sophomore year. The fol- lowing works were "recommended to students": "History of Rome to the Third Punic War— Arnold; From the Third Punic War to the Empire — Liddell; From Augustus to the Antonines — Schmitz or Putz; From the Antonines to the Capture of Constantinople by the Turks in 1453— Smith's Expurgated Gibbon; For the Earlier period of Roman History — Niebuhr." In the catalogue of the following session this announcement was re- peated and a course in English and American History for the first half of the Senior year was added. It is impossible to ascertain, however, what texts were used or in what department the subjects were taught. During the first five years after the War of Secession the only histor- ical instruction in the University was a course in Roman History given by the Professor of Latin to students in the Sophomore class. Upon the adoption of a new curriculum in 1870, General History was prescribed in every course leading to a Bachelor's degree, as follows: Half of the Freshman year for B.S. students, the entire Sophomore year for B.A. and B.P. students, and the entire Senior year for Engineering students. Wilson's Outlines was the adopted text in all of these classes. History and Political Economy were given for the first time a place among the optional studies for the M.A. degree. History was added to the chair of Metaphysics, Logic, and Political Economy, then held by James A. Lyon, D.D. Two hours a week were devoted to this subject. It is inter- esting to note that in the catalogues of that period the scope of the His- tory course is shown by the expressjon "Ancient, Middle and Modern History, Ancient Geography and Chronology." It seems that at this time (1870) the early creation of a separate chair of History and Political Economy was contemplated, since these sub- jects appear in the catalogue for the first time as a separate school. But in a note which follows an announcement is made to the effect that "for the present" this chair and that of Metaphysics and Logic "shall be filled by the same incumbent." In the catalogue of 1872-73 Dr. Lyons' name appears as "Professor of Metaphysics and Logic, Provisional Professor of Political Economy and History." Mr. A. H. Whitfield*, who had graduated with first honors in 1871 and had served as Assistant in Greek during the following session, was then (1873) given additional work as instructor in History. In the same year a prize of forty dollars for efficiency in History was awarded to James M. Sharpe, of Pike County. Two years of History was required of B.S. students and a two hours course in the same subject was also required of Freshmen students in the newly added "School of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts." *See biographical sketch in the current voluane of Who's Who in America. 4 50 ' DIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. At the end of the following session Mr. Whitfield was promoted to the rank of Adjunct Professor of Greek, and the subject of History was dropped from his title. Although no provision seems to have been made at that time for teaching history, a prize of forty dollars "for proficiency in His- tory" was that year awarded to J. W. Kilpatrick, of Corinth, and Thomas W. Stockard, of Lowndes County. The usual references were made to History in the summaries of courses, but no mention of the subject is found in the detailed statements of the different schools of the University. In the catalogue of 1876-77 the name of Gen. Alex. P. Stewart appears as Chancellor and Professor of History. No changes were made at that time in the History courses for University classes, but the subject was added to the curriculum of the preparatory department, Unites States History (Swinton's) being required in the second term of the first year. History was not, however, a required subject for admission to the Uni- versity or to the School of History. In the following year General Stewart was given the work in Political Economy in addition to his other duties. History was then prescribed for the first year in the B.P. course and the third year in the B.A. course, but was omitted entirely from the B.S. course. This requirement continued until 1880 when history was given through- out the third year in the B.A. and B.P. courses. At that time a two years' course in United States History was required of preparatory students, Swinton's and Ridpath's texts being used. Two years later the prepara- tory course was reduced to two years, and the subject of United States History was given in only one of them. No further changes appear in the announcements of history courses until 1884, when the prescribed work in that subject was reduced to the latter half of the fourth year for B.A. -and B.P. students. In the catalogue of 1885-86 appears the statement that "History has been assigned temporarily to the Professor of Modern Languages." It appears, however, that this assignment was unsatisfactory, as Chancellor Stewart continued to give instruction in Ancient and Modern History and Chronology during the second term of the Senior year in the courses for the B.A. and B.P. degrees, and the required work in Greek and Roman History was given by the Professors of Greek and Latin respectively. An undesignated course in "History" was also prescribed for the second term of the Junior year for B.A. students. Roman History in the second term of the Freshman year and an undesignated course in "History" throughout the same term of the Sophomore year were prescribed for the B.S. degree. In the following year the work in History was assigned "temporarily" to the chair of Modern Languages, then held by Prof. Charles W. Hutson.* The catalogue of that year stated that History was "a required study in the B.A. course; not in any other." The following extract from the cat- alogue of 1887-88 indicates that Professor Hutson accepted the new as- signment with some misgivings: "The time forbids any thorough explo- ration of so vast a field. It is assumed that the student comes to it here 'See biographical sketch in the current volume of Who's Who in America. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 51 with some preparation received in the training schools and from private reading. During the half year's daily attendance on lectures, with some practice in individual research, the student's mind is impressed with an outline of the science of history. The method of instruction is partly by lectures." The reader will appreciate the situation if he will bear in mind the fact that, in addition to his work in History, Professor Hutson was expected to give courses in French, German, Spanish and Italian. In 1889 "A School of History, of one year's course" is published as one of the nineteen schools of the University, "each being independent of the others." In the same year Prof. W. R. Sims became "Professor of Men- tal and Moral Philosophy, of Logic, of History and of Political Science." The extent of his history work is indicated by the announcement of only one course in the subject ("General Sketch of Mediaeval and Modern History, Geography and Chronology"), and this extended through only half of a session. An entrance examination in United States History was then required for the first time for admission to this school, but not for admission to the University. The annual catalogue for 1890-91 announces a post-graduate course on "Mississippi as a Province and as a Territory, based on the Claiborne collection of original manuscripts," which had been recently deposited at the University by an Act of the State Legislature. In 1890 Prof. P. H. Eager* became Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy, Logic, History and Political Economy. He was assisted by a worthy young law student, Mr. A. B. Amis, whose official title was "Tutor in History." A special course in English History was then added to the curriculum. In the following year five hours a week for a half session were required in Mediaeval and Modern History with extra readings "on epochs of commanding interest." The same time was also devoted to a course based on Greene's Short History of the English People. In 1891 Professor Eager was succeeded by Professor R. M. Leavell.f In the following year Mr. L. B. Howry became Fellow in History. A course in American History was then announced in connection with that in English History, the work in the latter subject being probably abridged to provide therefor. In the session of 1893-94 the History course was given by Professor Leavell without an assistant. The work was then organized as follows: Ancient History, throughout the Sophomore year, two hours; Mediaeval and Modern History with some work in English and American History throughout the Junior year, three hours. Both of these courses were made conditional requirements for the B.A. degree, choice being given between them and Logic and Political Economy. They were also offered in elect- ives for the B.S. degree. In a course of study for high schools published in the catalogue for 1894-95 no mention is made of Ancient History or Mediaeval and Modern History, and, strange to say, United States History and English History appear under the title "An English Course for High Schools." 'See biographical sketch in the Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society, VII, 171. tSee biographical sketch in the current volume of Who's Who in America. 52 I NIVBR8IT1 OF MISSISSIPPI. In 1806 Mr. R. E. Wilbourn became Fellow in History and English, which position he held for two sessions. During this time there was an increased amount of library work in connection with the History course. Readings were regularly assigned in addition to the text-book and special examinations were given in the same from time to time. To relieve two over-crowded schools, the subjects of History and Rhet- oric were temporarily combined to form a new chair in June, 1897. Frank- lin L. Riley, Ph.D., *then President of Hillman College, was elected to this position with the title of Professor of History and Rhetoric. Formal historical instruction in Greek and Roman History by the schools of Greek and Latin was discontinued in 1S99, all of the work in Ancient History being given to the new chair. After the combination of History and Rhetoric in the same chair had continued three years, the development of the History work necessitated their separation. The subject of Rhet- oric was then given back to the chair of English, the Professor of English being given an assistant, and the former Professor of History and Rhet- oric was given the chair of History, which position he still fills. The rapid growth of the School of History led, in 1905, to the employ- ment of Beverly W. Bond, Ph.D.,t as Assistant Professor of History. As a result several new courses were added in the following session. But in pursuance of a policy of retrenchment, in June, 1906, the assistant profes- sorship was abolished. This necessitated the reorganization of the work at the beginning of the next session and the cancellation of four of the courses which had been announced. The development of the School of History was thereby temporarily retarded. After the opening of the session of 1906-7 a slight degree of relief was afforded the school by the appointment of Mr. J. C. Johnson to the position of Reader in History. In the following session Mr. S. P. Walker became Reader in History, Mr. Johnson having become Professor of Oratory. In the same year a legis- lative appropriation of upwards of a thousand dollars was made avail- able for the purchase of books for the School of History. Little progress was made in the development of the school in the ses- sion of 1908-09, though some important plans were made which have characterized the work of the current year. At present the Professor of History is assisted by two Instructors, Mr. Fred M. Witty and Mr. S. P. Stubblefield, and by a Fellow, Mr. A. D. Somerville. Certain phases of the development of this department since 1897 are here given a topical treatment, as follows: ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS. The subject of United States History was required for admission to the School of History in 1897. Four years later the requirement was raised by the addition of a year's work in General History. In 1904 a year's work in Ancient or Mediaeval and Modern History was substi- tuted for the requirement in General History. Beginning with the ses- sion of 1910-11 three years of high school work will be required for entrance •See biographical sketch in the current volume of Who's Who in America. tSee biographical sketch in the Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society, IX, 25S. UNIVERSITY OF MI8STRRTPPI. 50 to University classes, in History, as follows: One year each in Ancient History, in Mediaeval and Modern or English History, and in United States History. HISTORY COURSES. In 1897 a Senior optional course of three hours in the Political and Constitutional History of the United States was added to those hitherto offered. Four years later a two-hour optional course in English Consti- tutional History was added to the curriculum. A course of two hours a week in Nineteenth Century History was first offered in 1904. Upon the addition of Dr. Beverly W. Bond to the teaching force in History in 1905 two other new courses were given as follows: Diplomatic History of the United States, two hours a week throughout the session, and Methods of Teaching History, one hour a week throughout the session. In 1907 a seminary course in American History was given for the first time. In the following session a two hours lecture course in Political History of the South was introduced. The History work was also made to begin in the Freshman instead of the Sophomore year. The following courses in History are being given in the current session: COURSES OPEN TO UNDERGRADUATES. 1. Ancient History. Beginnings of History. Two hours a week, first term. Greek History. Two hours a week, second term. Roman History. Two hours a week, third term. 2. Mediaeval and Modern History. Europe in the Middle Ages. Three hours a week, first term. History of Modern Times. Three hours a week, second term. The French Revolution and the Napoleonic Era. Three hours a week, third term. 3. Europe in the Nineteenth Century. The Period from the Congress of Vienna to the February Revolu- tion. Two hours a week, first term. The Period from 1848 to 1870. Two hours a week, second term. Problems in Recent History. Two hours a week, third term. 4. Methods of Teaching History in the Public Schools. History in Primary Grades. One hour a week, first term. History in Intermediate Grades. One hour a week, second term. History in the High School. One hour a week, third term. COURSES OPEN TO GRADUATES AND UNDERGRADUATES. 5. Political and Constitutional History of England. Beginnings of English History. Two hours a week, first term. The Period from 1485-1688. Two hours a week, second term. The Period since 1688. Two hours a week, third term. 6. Political and Constitutional History of the United States. American History to 1783. Three hours a week, first term. The Period from 1783-1860. Three hours a week, second term. The Period since 1860. Three hours a week, third term. 54 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 7. Political History of the South. The South in Colonial Politics, 1607-1776. Two hours a week, first term. The South in Federal Politics, 1776-1860. Two hours a week, second term. The South in National Politics. 1860-1908. Two hours a week, third term. 8. Diplomatic History of the United States. American Diplomacy from 1776-1846. Two hours a week, first term. American Diplomacy from 1846-1876. Two hours a week, second term. Recent Problems in American Diplomacy. Two hours a week, third term. 9. Seminary in American History. During the last three years the work in this Seminary has been devoted to original research in the local history of reconstruc- tion in Mississippi. Two hours, fortnightly. 10. Critical History of the Roman Empire. 11. Great Movements in History. Revival of Learning. Protestant Reformation. French Revolution. 12. History of Reconstruction. MISSISSIPPI HISTORICAL. SOCIETY. The Mississippi Historical Society was organized at the University of Mississippi in 1890, and was incorporated by the Legislature in the same year. Its membership has always embraced many members of the Faculty of the University, and its first Secretary and Treasurer was Dr. W. R. Sims, who was then Professor of History in connection with other subjects in this institution. During the first four years after its organization, the Society held frequent meetings and collected some relics and documents, the most important being the Claiborne collection of manuscripts. No contribu- tions to State history were prepared or publications issued under its aus- pices. Then followed a period of four years, during which the Society was in a moribund state. Shortly after entering upon his work as Professor of History and Rhet- oric, in 1897, the present Professor of History was requested to accept the position of Secretary and Treasurer of the then defunct Society. A suc- cessful effort was made to awaken wider interest and to enlist a larger membership. Throughout its history this Society has had its headquarters at the University of Mississippi. Its policies have for the most part been out- lined by the secretaries who have been connected with the School of His- tory in this institution. The students and alumni of the University have UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 55 also been among the most valued contributors to State history since 1897. The School of History in the University of Mississippi has rendered the following services to the cause of State and Southern History since 1897: 1. Reorganized the Mississippi Historical Society and enlarged its activities. 2. Stimulated interest in original research by means of public histor- ical meetings. 3. Procured special biennial legislative appropriations for State His- tory. 4. Directed the work of the Mississippi History Commission, which prepared the most elaborate report ever published on the documentary sources of State History. 5. Induced the Legislature to establish a State Department of Ar- chives and History, with headquarters in the Capitol. 6. Edited ten volumes of Publications (4,517 pages), which contain 238 contributions relating to almost every period and phase of State His- tory. 7. Edited A Political History of the South ("The South in the Building of the Nation" Series.) OBIGTOAL BE8EABOH. With a view to promoting an interest in original research, the Uni- versity Historical Society was organized in April, 1898. Monthly meet- ings were held and several valuable contributions to State History were read before it during the period of its activity. It did not fully meet the demands of the situation, however, as no provision was made where- by the Professor of History could give personal direction to the investi- gations of students. In 1906 a Historical Seminary was organized, which has since fully met the needs. During the three years of its existence some valuable original work has been done in the local history of recon- struction in Mississippi, as follows: E. C. Coleman, Reconstruction in Attalla County.* W. H. Braden, Reconstruction in Lee County, t F. M. Witty, Reconstruction in Carroll and Montgomery Counties.! J. E. Reed, Reconstruction in Lauderdale County. C. A. Williamson, Reconstruction in Lafayette County. I. C. Nichols, Reconstruction in DeSoto County. C. G. Wood, Reconstruction in Lincoln County. F. M. Ball, Reconstruction in Simpson County. F. P. Smith, Reconstruction in Yalobusha County. H. B. Edwards, Reconstruction in Noxubee County. E. G. Hightower, Reconstruction in Perry County. Hattie Magee, Reconstruction in Lawrence County. E. F. Puckett, Reconstruction in Monroe County. *Th : s contribution will be found in the Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society, X, 147-181. tThis contriburion will be found in ibid., 135-140. JThis contribution will also be found in ibid., 115-134. 5G ' VIVMRSITl OF MISSISSIPPI. Other original contributions prepared by men who have been connected with the School of History since 1S97 are as follows: Dr. Beverly W. Bond: Monroe's Efforts in Behalf of the Mississippi Valley during His Mission to France (Publications of the Missis- sippi Historical Society, IX, 255-262). Goode Montgomery: Alleged Secession of Jones County (Ibid. VII, 13 22 . Franklin L. Riley: Spanish Policy in Mississippi after the Treaty of San Lorenzo (Ibid. I, 50-66; Annual Report of the American His- torical Association for 1897, 175-192). Sir William Dunbar, the Pioneer Scientist of Mississippi (Ibid. II, S5-111). Location of the Boundaries of Mississippi (Ibid. Ill, 167-184). Transition from Spanish to American Control in Mississippi (Ibid, III, 261-311). A School History of Mississippi. Administrative Report of the Mississippi Historical Commission (Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society, V, 11-47). Mississippi Sources in State Archives (other than Mississippi) (Ibid. 70-74). Mississippi Sources in State Offices (Ibid. 121-135). and White (J. M.) : Mississippi Sources in County Offices (Ibid. 136- 139). and White (J. M.): Mississippi Sources in Municipal Offices (Ibid. 140-147). Mississippi Sources in Federal Offices (Ibid. 148-155). and White (J. M.): Mississippi Sources in Libraries and Societies (Ibid. 167-227). Private Collectors and Students (Ibid. 269-286). War Records of Mississippi (Ibid. 290-293). Extinct Towns and Villages of Mississippi (Ibid. 311-383). Life of Col. J. F. H. Claiborne (Ibid. VII, 217-245). John Francis Hamtramck Claiborne (Library of Southern Litera- ture, II, 891-914). Dr. John W. Monette: The Pioneer Historian of the Mississippi Valley (South Atlantic Quarterly, October, 1906). Choctaw Land Claims (Publications of the Mississippi Historical So- ciety, VIII, 345-395). Life and Literary Services of Dr. John W. Monette (Ibid. IX, 199- 237). A Contribution to the History of the Colonization Movement in Mississippi (Ibid. IX, 331-414). Biographical Sketch of Dr. M. W. Philips (Ibid. X, 305-310). Diary of a Mississippi Planter (Ibid. 311-482). Opposition of the South to the New Colonial Policy of&England (Polit- ical History of the South, "The South in the Building of the Nation" Series, Volume IV, pages 42-51). The South in the Develpoment of Organized Resistance, 1767-1775 (Ibid. 52-64). UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 57 The South in the Revolutionary War (Ibid. 65-87). The South in the Confederation (Ibid. 87-97).- The South in the Framing of the Constitution (Ibid. 108-134). Syllabus of Lecture Course on Methods of Teaching History. Syllabus of Lecture Course on the Beginnings of History. Handbook for Teachers of Mississippi History. BIOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY. It seems that the work of this school was done for the first time in the University in the form of natural history. The catalogue of 1869-'70 includes a description of the courses under the direction of Dr. E. W. Hilgard. Doctor Hilgard was the professor at that time of Biology, Chemistry and Geology. During the year of 1870-71 Dr. George Little was made State geologist and Eugene Smith, Ph.D., now State geologist of Alabama, was elected as assistant geologist. It appears that a few elementary courses were given in the institution in the biological sub- jects. For the following two or three years the courses were enlarged to some extent, but there was very little if any laboratory work done. The chair was declared vacant during the year 1875-'76. Beginning with the year 1876-'77 Richard W. Jones was made professor of chemistry and nat- ural history, with Louis L. Mclnnis, A.B., as tutor. During the session of 1877-78 Mr. Greenwood continued as tutor and Dr. James M. Buchanan, now at the head of the State insane asylum at Meridian, served as the assistant in Chemistry. From 1879-'81 Joshua W. Kilpatrick acted as tutor and William E. Martin was elected to fill this position for the year 1881-'82. In June, 1882, the Board of Trustees deemed it advisable to divide the chair. Dr. Jones was continued as the professor of Chemistry and Dr. George Little was elected to fill the chair of Natural History. This arrangement was continued until the year 1889, when Doctor Little resigned and Dr. Richard W. Jones was again chosen to the combination chair of Natural History, Geology and Chemistry. It was evident that the work was too heavy for one man and Dr. John W. Johnson was made assistant professor of Mathematics, English and Natural History in 1889- '90, and Thos. Ovid Mabry served as tutor in the department. During the same year Frank Clark Holmes, B.S., was elected as a fellow in Natural History and Geology. For the first time in the history of the University the work in Natural History was separated from that of Chemistry, and Thos. Ovid Mabry, M.S., was chosen as the assistant professor. In June, 1895, Prof. Mabry obtained a leave of absence and Dr. W. S. Leathers filled the vacancy until April of 1896 when Prof. Mabry returned to the institution. The position was filled most acceptably by Prof. Mabry until June, 1898 when he resigned. The chair remained vacant for a period of one year, and in June, 1899, Dr. W. S. Leathers was elected to fill the vacancy as an assistant professor. The Board, in 1903, made the chair a full professorship, and at that time the medical department was organ- ized and this necessitated the appointment of an assistant in the depart- ment. Mr. Harry Fulton was chosen for this position. At the close of 58 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. this session Mr. Fulton resigned to accept a fellowship in the University of Missouri and Dr. E. N. Lowe, who was at the time doing graduate work in the department, was elected to the position. Owing to the de- mand for geological work and the enlargment of the biological department it was decided to divide the chair in June, 190S, into Biology and Physiol- ogy and Geology. Dr. E. N. Lowe was then made the professor of Ge- ology and Mineralogy and Dr. W. S. Leathers was continued as the professor of Biology and Physiology, with Mr. Robert C. Rhodes, M.A., of Vanderbilt University acting as the assistant in Biology and Physi- ology. The work of the department has steadily developed and at the present time it has the largest attendance in its history. ORATORY. The history of the School of Oratory and Elocution in the University falls naturally into two periods, the first extending from the founding of the University to the year 1885, the second from 1885 to the present time. During the first period instruction in public speaking was given in con- junction with the work of other schools. During the second period pub- lic speaking has held the rank of a distinct school. The earliest discoverable announcement of this work is that published in the catalogue of 1853-'54, under the heading of Elocution and Composi- tion. "Two members of the Senior class, in alphabetical order, deliver original orations on each Monday afternoon in the presence of the faculty and the students assembled. The three lower classes declaim, also in rotation, and exhibit original compositions on the first Monday of each month to their respective professors." This seems to have been the mode of training used through all the earlier years of the institution up to the year 1856. It may be observed, in passing, that all the old catalogues announce the Hermaean and the Phi Sigma Literary Societies as student organiza- tions, established for the improvement of their members in Elocution, Composition, Extempore Speaking and Debate, and commend these so- cieties as "most important auxiliaries in promoting the great objects of the institution." The first formal instruction in Elocution was given in 1856-'57 along with English, Rhetoric and Logic in the department of Belles Lettres, Moral and Mental Philosophy under Professor N. M. Crawford, D.D., and Mr. W. R. Barksdale, B.A., tutor. The text-books used were Caldwell's Manual of Elocution and Rush's Philosophy of the Voice. This course was continued in the same department the next year, but was under charge of Mr. William T. J. Sullivan, Tutor in Rhetoric, Logic, Composition and Elocution. When, in 1858, English Literature became a separate department under Professor William D. Moore, M.A., Elocution was included in this department and was required as an ac- companiment of the work in English throughout the course. This ar- rangement continued till 1861. From the resumption of University work in 1865 till 1868 Professor UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 59 S. G. Burney, D.D.,, of the department of English Literature offered a course essentially the same as that just mentioned above, basing his work upon Caldwell's Manual of Elocution, and requiring compositions and declamations throughout the course. In the catalogue of 1867-'68 the Board of Trustees announce their offer of two gold medals as prizes to students of the Sophomore class for excellence in Elocution. The year 1868 is marked by the separation of Elocution from the department of English, provision then being made that "the practical exercises of all the college classes in Elocution and English Composition be under charge of the department of Logic, Metaphysics and Political Science." Pro- fessor F. A. Shoup, M.A., was the head of this department. This arrange- ment continued also from 1869 to 1872 under Professor James A. Lyon, D.D. During the last two years of this work Professor Lyon gave a Jun- ior course in The Principles of Eloquence. The next year, however, Elo- cution was shifted back to its former position. The catalogue of that year announces a department of English Literature, Composition and Elocution, under Adjunct Professor J. W. Shields, B.A. In 1873 Profes- sor John Lipscomb Johnson was placed at the head of this department, with the title of Professor of English Literature and Provisional Instructor in Elocution. Doctor Johnson conducted all training in public speaking, then, continuously up to the year 1885, giving instruction in Enunciation and in Gesture, and requiring in all courses weekly exercises in class de- bates and in declamation. While it is regretted that the catalogue statements of courses offered in Oratory during the first period are, in the main, so brief and general as to give but an inadequate notion of the scope and character of the instruc- tion, yet, from the scholarship of the professors who had charge of the work and from the distinction achieved by men who were trained here — the best criteria — it must be inferred that this subject, in spite of its subordination to other schools, maintained a high standard of excellence. The Board of Trustees, on June"25, 1884, passed a resolution ordering "that the matter of the election of a teacher of Elocution in this Uni- versity be referred to the committee to meet and report to the Board in August." The report of this committee was as follows: "That the Executive Committee be authorized to employ a suitable man, specially fitted for that duty, to teach Elocution, at a monthly salary, for such time during each term as they may find it expedient to employ such teach- er." This resolution was adopted. At the meeting of the Board, on June 27, 1885, a motion was made "that Miss Sallie McGee Isom be and she is hereby employed, at the salary and on the terms now paid to tutors, to teach Elocution in this University during the ensuing session." Ac- tion on the matter, however, was postponed until the following September. On September 2, 1885, the motion was adopted. Within a few years, however, the merits of the school thus established were recognized, the salary of the instructor was raised and work done in the school was counted toward the baccalaureate degrees. Miss Isom's announcement of her courses of study, as found in the catalogue of 1886, was substantially as follows. "The purpose of the course is to produce effective readers and 60 rv;i BRSITJ OF MISSISSIPPI. speakers, to substitute natural methods of expression for the faulty de- livery prevalent in the pulpit, on the platform and on the stage. The course covers the entire range of expression. To professional students it is a course practically necessary, and to others it is of great value as conducive to health and personal accomplishment." The subjects of study were: Physical Training, Respiration, Vocal Culture, Articula- tion, Gesture, Inflection, Emphasis, Analysis, Dramatic Reading. The text-books used were: Shoemaker's Practical Elocution, Best Things from Best Authors, Selected Plays cf Shakespeare, The Delsarte System of Ora- tory. The general plan of the work remained essentially unchanged up to 1905. Near the end of April of that year the chair was made vacant by Miss Isom's death. In her death the University lost a most consci- entious and efficient instructor, and the cause of Elocution a most ardent advocate and an artist of the highest rank. The School of Elocution was succeeded the next year by a School of Rhetoric and Oratory under charge of Professor Hubert A. Shands, Ph.D. The courses of study offered by Professor Shands were courses in Rhetoric and Composition, including Poetry and the short story, and courses in Argumentation and Debate. At the end of the session of 1905-'06 the department was discontinued and for two years thereafter no oratorical work at all was offered by the University. In June, 1908, in response to a petition of the students of the University the school was re-established under the name of the Department of Oratory, and Professor John Clarke Johnson was placed at the head of it. Briefly stated the courses of study now offered include both Elocution, with training in Vocal Expression and in Gesture, and Oratory proper, with study and practice in Argumenta- tion, Brief Drawing and Debate, in the composition and delivery of orig- inal orations, and in Extempore Speaking. FINE ARTS. Throughout the year 1907-'08 a course in the history and appreciation of the fine arts was given by Dr. Calvin S. Brown, professor of Romance Languages. The course dealt especially with architecture, sculpture and painting, but touched upon music, poetry and the minor arts, such as pottery, metal work, stained glass, mosaics, etc. The course was restricted to Juniors and Seniors and enrolled twelve students. Near the end of the year an art exhibition was held, embracing reproductions of many famous paintings, statues and buildings, paintings by local artists and examples of brass, bronze, copper, pottery, cameos, etc., loaned from the homes of Oxford and the University. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 61 THE DEPARTMENT OF LAW. The Department of Law was established in the year 1854 by an Act of the Legislature, which amended the charter of the University in response to a memorial of the trustees of the institution presented in their behalf by one of their number, the Honorable Jacob Thompson. William F. Stearns, LL.D., a prominent member of the Holly Springs Bar, was elected to the "Chair of Law and Governmental Science" thus created. The prescribed course of study for the degree of bachelor of laws in- cluded two sessions of ten months each. It is interesting to note that at that early date a composite course of law and letters was given as indicated by the following statements taken from the catalogue : "The Senior Collegiate Class and the Junior Class of law students proper pursue together, under the instruction of the law professor, the studies of International and Constitutional Law." Likewise law stu- dents were allowed, without extra charge, to attend lectures in the schools of letters and science with the consent of the professors. The Socratic method of instruction was adopted with provision for occasional lectures to seniors upon "local law and practice peculiar to Mississippi." By enactment of the Legislature, in 1857, the diploma conferring the degree of bachelor of law was made sufficient evidence of learning in the law to entitle the holder to a license to practice in the courts of the State. Mr. Stearns conducted the department with marked ability. He was a northern man by birth, but had, .previous to his election, spent many years in the practice of his profession in Mississippi. He discharged his duties with efficiency, and continued in the service of the University until 1861 when its doors were closed because of the civil war. After the war, sad to relate, Mr. Stearns died by his own hand. In 1860 the Legislature, by amendment of the charter of the University, created and endowed a second chair of law. The trustees in due time elected to this chair the Honorable James F. Trotter, of Holly Springs, who had adorned, successively, the Circuit, Chancery and Appellate bench of his State. In 1861 all the departments of the University were closed. In 1867 the Department of Law was reorganized. The Hon. Lucius Q. C. Lamar, that prince of teachers, was elected to the chair and continued to perform its duties until 1870 when he resigned to enter Congress. The Hon. J. A. P. Campbell was chosen as Mr. Lamar's successor, but did not accept the office. Henry Craft, Esq., of the Memphis Bar, was then elected, but he does not seem to have occupied the chair. Col. Jordan M. Phipps, a distinguished alumnus of the University, was elected adjunct professor, and taught the class of 1870-71. Cv2 nyrVBRBITT OF MISSISSIPPI. Chancellor Thomas Walton, also a distinguished alumnus of the insti- tution, was made professor of law in 1S71 and served till 1874. Dr. Ed- ward Mayes, another distinguished alumnus, succeeded Mr. Walton and, while Chancellor of the University, conducted the department of law until L892 when he resigned. Albert Hall Whitfield, now Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Mississippi, followed Mr. Hayes and served till 1894 when he resigned to go on the bench. Governor Garvin D. Shands was then called to the place, and during his administration, on account of the increased attendance and extended scope of instruction, it became nec~ essary to revive the second chair of law, which had been suspended in 1861. This was done in 1897, and Thomas H. Somerville, of the Winona Bar, was elected to this chair. The office of dean of the department of law was created, and Governor Shands elected thereto. The course in Constitutional Law was enlarged. Private International Law, Insurance and Equity Pleadings and other topics were added to the curriculum. In 1905 Governor Shands resigned to accept the chair of Common Law in Tulane University; thereupon Mr. Somerville was made dean of the department and the Hon. Clarence L. Sivley was elected to the vacant chair. In 1906 Mr. Sivley resigned the place to accept a lucrative office as railway attorney in the city of Memphis. To the vacancy thus created the Hon. J. Elmore Holmes, of the Hernando Bar, was elected. Both Mr. Sivley and Mr. Holmes were honored graduates of the Law Depart- ment. Grateful recognition of the faithful service of distinguished lecturers should be here recorded. For many years the Hon. Jehu A. Orr, of Col- umbus, and the lamented Horatio F. Simrall, late Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Mississippi, were accustomed to visit the University each session and devote a week to instruction by lectures on important topics of their own choosing. The Hon. Robt. A. Hill, late U. S. District Judge, long maintained the habit of greeting the class at the opening of the session, and during the year usually delivered a lecture on Federal Procedure. Each of these gentlemen was a trustee of the institution for many years. The first named still survives and is retained as a member of the staff of lecturers. During the present administration the course of study has been ex- tended. Two full sessions of nine months each are now required for grad- uation. Plans are on foot for material improvements. It would be pleasant to advert to the attainments of the graduates of the school and to speak of their usefulness in the various walks of life and of their ability and efficiency in the service of the people, but the attempt would extend this paper beyond its legitimate limits. The roster of graduates and students published in this volume will register the con- tribution of the law department to the interests of the public and include the names of many who are high in authority, State and federal. It would be needless and cumbersome to reproduce their names here. All the in- cumbents of the Supreme bench are alumni of this school. Let it suffice to point to the agency of the Law Department in the cause of legal education. As shown in the foregoing sketch Thomas Walton, UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 63 Edward Mayes, Clarence L. Sivley and J. Elmore Holmes have all served their alma mater as teachers, and the Hon. Lauch McLaurin, another distinguished graduate, is professor of law in the University of Texas. DEPARTMENT OF ENGINEERING. Courses in Engineering were first offered in the University immedi- ately after the close of the Civil War. In 1865 a chair of Physics, Astron- omy and Civil Engineering was organized and General Alexander P. Stew- art took charge as its head. He, however, retained the position only a few months and General Francis A. Shoup succeeded him. Gen. Shoup remained at the head of the chair from 1865 to 1867. In 1867 Physics and Astronomy were combined into a separate chair, with Dr. Landon C. Garland in charge, and General Shoup retained Civil Enginereing as a separate chair, its name, however, being changed to Applied Mathematics. He resigned in 1868 and for four years thereafter the Engineering work was discontinued, save Surveying, which was given in connection with Pure Mathematics by General Claudius W. Sears. In 1872, under the in- fluence of General Sears, the work was again introduced and the chair of Mathematics and Civil Engineering was instituted, with General Sears at its head. This chair was continued until 1875, when the Civil Engineer- ing was again abolished, and thereafter, with the exception of some work in Plane Surveying given by General Sears in connection with Pure Math- ematics, no further attempt was made to offer Engineering courses in the University until the fall of 1900, when the present department was organ- ized. The work of the department during these early years of its history included courses in Mechanical Drawing, Surveying, Descriptive Geom- etry, Mechanics, Hydraulics, Materials of Engineering and short de- scriptive courses in framed structures, masonry, highway construction and similar subjects, all this latter work being given as one composite course in the Senior year. It is both interesting and instructive to note that, even in these early years, when the South was stricken with material poverty because of the war and when there were available little of funds to purchase necessary equipment, that even with all these difficulties the courses offered measured well up to the standards of those times. That they should have been given at all is due to the heroism of those distin- guished men who were in control and who, in the roles of teachers, dis- played no less ability than they had exhibited as generals in the Confed- erate Army. But in spite of their efforts the work failed for lack of support and for lack of interest in it upon the part of young men. During all these years, though many students took one or more of the courses in Engineer- ing, only twenty became candidates for the degree of Civil Engineer as offered by the University, and of these twenty only two graduated. It was too soon after the Civil War for Southern educational ideas to change, (4 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. and Civil Engineering at that date in the South was not regarded as a profession. Hence, few young men of talent and education could be in- duced to adopt it. Indeed the necessity for the radical change in her educational methods has been realized by the South only after a lapse of some thirty or forty years, and even now that change is in progress. In June, 1000, the Board of Trustees authorized the introduction of Engineering courses in connection with Pure Mathematics, and during the session 1900-'01 courses in Surveying and Drawing were given by the Professor of Mathematics, Dr. Alfred Hume. In the same year a chair of Electricity and Electrical Engineering was established and Professor Douglass S. Anderson put in charge. The equipment, both in Electricity and for Surveying and Drawing, was very meager and any extensive work was impossible. In June, 1901, Professor Anderson resigned and Professor Arthur W. Smith was made Professor of Electricity and Electrical Engineering. Pro- fessor Walter H. Drane was elected assistant in Mathematics and Civil Engineering, and, in addition to the work given the previous year, three other courses in Civil Engineering were offered — one in Analytical Me- chanics, one in Descriptive Geometry and one in Roofs and Bridges — the first and second by Dr. Hume, the third by Prof. Drane. In 1902 Professor Smith resigned, the chair of Electricity and Electrical Engineering was abolished and Electricity was combined with Physics and put in charge of Dr. John W. Johnson, the Professor of Physics. Pro- fessor Drane was made assistant in charge of Civil Engineering, the work, however, remaining under the general direction of the professor of Pure Mathematics, Dr. Alfred Hume. No additional equipment could be pur- chased, but the work was still further extended by the introduction of new courses and the attendance continued to increase. The Legislature, in the winter of 1903, made considerable appropriations for equipment and for a building, the latter fund being used to put additions to the Ly- ceum Building, several rooms of which were allotted to the use of Civil Engineering, Electricity and Electrical Engineering. Accordingly, in June following this appropriation, the Board of Trustees re-established the chair of Electricity and Electrical Engineering, and Professor Eugene Campbell was put in charge as full professor. Professor Walter H. Drane was made full professor of Civil Engineering, which was also made a chair separate from Pure Mathematics. Large additions were made to the equipment and the work was again enlarged and extended by the intro- duction of new courses. This at once had its effect upon the growth of the work for the attendance immediately increased, the total enrollment being 43, the class enrollment being over 100. During the years 1903-'04, 1904-'05, 1905-'06 the work in Engineering prospered and grew in magni- tude and importance. So much so that in June, 1905, Professor Robert H. McNeilley was elected assistant in Civil Engineering. It seemed that nothing was needed but work and patience to make the department sec- ond to none of its kind in the South, when its support was cut off by lack of appropriation by the Legislature. Curtailment became an absolute necessity, and in June, 1906, the chair of Electricity and Electrical Engin- UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 65 eering was again abolished and the work restored as a part of Physics, under Dr. John W. Johnson. Professor Robert H. McNeilley resigned and Professor J. H. Dorroh succeeded him, he, however, being made assistant professor of Civil Engineering. In 1907 all the work of Elec- tricity and Electrical Engineering was combined into one professional department, with Professor Walter H. Drane in charge and Professor J. H. Dorroh as assistant professor in charge of Electricity and Electrical Engineering. In June, 1908, the chair of Municipal and Sanitary Engin- eering was created and Professor J. H. Dorroh put at its head as full pro- fessor, also acting professor of Electrical Engineering. Professor Drane remained as the head of the department and professor of Civil Engineering. In that same year the chair of Geology was made a part of the Engineering department and Professor E. N. Lowe put in charge. It has been omitted to mention that early in this latter history of the department a School of Mines and Mining Engineering was established and courses published in the catalogue for several years, but no professor was ever appointed and practically nothing was accomplished. Accord- ingly, in 1906, this school was abolished and the chair of Municipal anp Sanitary Engineering established in its place. As at present organized the Engineering Department comprises four schools, viz.: Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Municipal and Sanitary Engineering and Geology. Professor Walter H. Drane is acting dean of the department and professor of Civil Engineering, Professor E. N. Lowe is professor of Geology and Professor J. H. Dorroh is professor of Municipal and Sanitary Engineering and acting professor of Electrical Engineering. While the department has never recovered from the cur- tailment of its support there are signs that there will be healthy growth in the future if a suitable building and sufficient equipment can be ob- tained. The attendance is on the increase and more and more interest is being manifested in its work by the young men. Some idea of the growth of the department since 1900 can be gained from the following approximate data: In 1900, 15 students were enrolled, about 12 units of work were offered, including that in Electricity, and the value of the equipment was about $2,000, including the electrical equip- ment; only one professor was in the department as such. At present the department occupies seven rooms in the Lyceum build- ing and one in the new Science Hall; its equipment, though by no means adequate, may be estimated to be worth $6,000; there are 50 units of work offered; since 1900 the number enrolled for degrees has been in the neigh- borhood of 200; the total number of graduates about 25; total number of students taking one or more courses in the department about 300, and there are three full professors in the department. 5 66 ' VIVBR81TY OF MISSISSIPPI. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION. The history of the School of Pedagogy was traced in the last historical catalogue from the first suggestion of Chancellor Mayes that such a school be established with Dr. Deupree, then a Professor at Mississippi College, as its first Professor, to the incumbency of the chair by that honored Mississippi teacher and veteran soldier. In the present short sketch the history of the department as a separate professional division really be- gins. In 1S93 the Chair of Pedagogy was established, with James Under- wood Barnard as Professor. He served three years and returned to Mis- souri to become Principal of a High School in Kansas City, where he remained till his death in January, 1909. In 1896 J. G. Deupree was elected to the Chair of Pedagogy to succeed Professor Barnard, and held the same till 1905, when he was transferred to the Chair of Greek. The annual catalogues show progress and growth, and in 1903 the Department of Education, with J. G. Deupree as Dean, was established. At that time the School of Psychology, previously asso- ciated with Philosophy under the honored Dr. R. M. Leavell, was trans- ferred to the Department of Pedagogy, and Dr. T. P. Bailey, who had served the Universities of California and Chicago, was made Professor of Psychology and Applied Psychology. Mr. J. W. Bell, who had attracted the attention of the Board by his successful work as Superintendent of city schools, was appointed High School Visitor and Associate Professor of Pedagogy. Professor Bell served two years and then accepted a flat- tering call to the professorship of Mathematics at the Industrial Insti- tute and College, at that time presided over by our present able and de- voted Chancellor, Dr. A. A. Kincannon. In 1905 Mr. Robert Torrey, the efficient Superintendent of Schools of Yazoo City, succeeded Professor Bell as School Visitor and served one year. The office was then discon- tinued until the present year. In 1905 Dr. Deupree was transferred to the Department of Greek, a branch he loved and had taught for a number of years. Dr. Bailey was made Dean of the department and Professor of Psychology and Educa- tion. Miss Eula Deaton, the accomplished and beloved Dean of Women, was appointed Lecturer in the department and served efficiently until her retirement from the University. In 1906 the Department of Educa- tion was temporarily abolished, because it was supposed that a shortage in funds necessitated a decrease of the teaching force. But four weeks later, acting on a petition from the State Teachers' Association and the students of the University, the department was reinstated by unanimous vote of the Board. In 1908 Chancellor Kincannon asked the Dean of the Department to undertake the arduous but important task of working up the high school system of the State in connection with the co-operation of the General Education Board. Dr. Bailey was continued as Dean and took the title UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 67 of Professor of Psychology and Secondary Education. The splendid spirit and cordial co-operation of the teachers of the State makes it pos- sible for this standardising and constructive work to be one that prom- ises great things for the high schools and the University. At this time a course for teachers wishing to work for professional license and to equip themselves for greater usefulness was instituted. Mr. Robert Torrey, formerly High School Visitor, was called from his superintendency at Jackson to take charge of this work, with the title of Professor of Ped- agogy. Reference to the current catalogue will show that the department has developed a flourishing teachers' club with fifty members; has secured the co-operation of the Oxford Graded School in the training work of the department; has greatly developed the institute conductors' course under the direction of the Dean of the department, and is striving in every legitimate way to make the department as useful as possible to the Uni- versity and to the cause of education in the State. The State institutions and the denominational and private colleges are joining the high schools of the State in giving hearty co-operation to the work of the department. When the Legislature is kind enough to help the department train leaders in education through the establishment of scholarships, the department will be in a position to render its full service to schools in the upbuilding of Mississippi's schools so admirably begun by Preston, Kincannon, Whitfield, and being continued by our zealous and progressive State Superintendent, J. N. Powers. Many whose names we do not mention have helped in this noble work, and the Department of Education hopes that their work and ours will soon put Mississippi where she belongs naturally — among the leading educational States of 4 the Union. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. It is interesting to know that as early as the year 1870-71 the Board of Trustees passed a resolution relative to establishing a medical depart- ment in the University. On the minutes of the Board will be found a resolution which reads: "This professional school will be organized and put in regular operation upon the plan in the University of Virginia, which has proved to be so eminently successful, just as soon as the resources of the institution shall have increased to a sufficient amount to admit it, and hopes are entertained by the friends of the University that the time will not be delayed much longer when this shall be realized." This state- ment is included in the catalogue from 1870-79. Doubtless the develop- ment of this important work was confronted by so many difficulties that the head of the institution could not foretell the future prosperity of the University with sufficient accuracy to predict the time when the action of the Board pertaining to a department of "Medicine and Surgery," as it was termed, could be carried into effect and so it was excluded from the catalogue of 1880. 68 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. It seems that the matter was held in abeyance until Dr. R. B. Fulton, then professor of physics and astronomy, was elected to the chancellor- ship of the University. After making several attempts with varying degrees of success, the first two years of the medical course were organ- ized in June, 1903. During the first four years of the work the conditions were so unfa- vorable that results were accomplished with marked difficulty. The quar- ters in which the greater part of the course was being given consisted of two rooms in the Lyecum, the dissecting being done in a small frame building about fifty yards to the north of the Lyceum building. The con- struction of this building was made possible at the time by a gift from Hon. Harry Howard, then an honored member of the Board of Trustees. The faculty had to solve many troublesome problems and among them was the securing of cadavers. This was done with some degree of incon- venience until the meeting of the Legislature January 1, 1905. Realizing the necessity of teaching this important branch in a satisfactory man- ner, it was deemed advisable to place a bill before the Legislature asking that all unclaimed bodies of the State Charity Hospitals be turned over, under the supervision of the State Board of Health, to the medical de- partment of the University. The bill on first presentation passed tho Senate, but, owing to the agitation of a certain feature of it, the motion was entered for a reconsideration and after a heated debate the measure was tabled and was not recovered during this session of the Legislature. Without any particular reason the medical department of the University was forced to go through another period of hardship and labor. The bill was again introduced at the next meeting of the Legislature and, by sub- jecting it to severe analysis previous to its discussion by the committee, it was recommended for passage and was made a law without any mate- rial opposition. The medical department has now quite commodious quarters in Science Hall, erected during the session of 1906-07. Owing to the prevailing idea that it was necsesary to have a large city in order to teach medicine there were many physicians in the State who were inclined to oppose the organization of a medical school in Missis- sippi, but in view of the radical changes which have been inaugurated in the best medical colleges of America those who were interested in the making of a greater University of Missisippi, on carefully studying the question became convinced that the undertaking was in thorough accord with the modern methods of instruction in medicine. So the first two years were given with the understanding that the last two years should be added as soon as the University could come into possession of a hos- ital in which the clinical branches would be properly taught. In March, 1908, Chancellor Andrew A. Kincannon was approached by Dr. B. B. Martin and Dr. E. F. Howard relative to accepting the State Charity Hospital located at Vicksburg to be used for the purpose of estab- lishing the last two years of medicine as a part of the Medical Depart- ment of the University of Mississippi. Those gentlemen expressed the opinion that the Board of Aldermen and the Board of Supervisors of War- UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 69 ren County were disposed to turn over the hospital to the University for medical teaching, and if the Chancellor cared to consider the proposition the necessary papers would be drawn up and matters made in every way satisfactory to the authorities of the University. Chancellor Kincannon, realizing the need of medical education in the State, called a meeting of the Board of Trustees in Jackson, March 28, 1908, for the purpose of con- sidering the acceptance of the State Charity Hospital as part of the Uni- versity property and to be used in connection with the medical depart- ment. The Board appointed at this meeting a committee consisting of the Hon. W. E. Baskin, Hon. J. T. Senter and Hon. J. L. Taylor, to make a trip to Vicksburg to investigate the hospital relative to accepting it as property of the University to be used in the development of the medical department. At the next meeting of the Board the hospital was accepted. It was the intention at this time to begin the work of the last two years of the course in September, 1908, but owing to the limited time intervening between the acceptance of the hospital and the opening of the following session, it was thought best to defer the election of the Faculty for the course of the last two years and the making of other arrangements at Vicksburg until the succeeding year. The first faculty of the Department of Medicine consisted of the fol- lowing professors and lecturers: R. B. Fulton, M.A., LL.D., Chancellor of the University. R. W. Jones, M.A., LL.D., Professor of General and Medical Chemis- try. W. S. Leathers, M.D., Professor of Biology and Physiology. James B. Bullitt, M.A., M.D., Professor of Anatomy and Pathology. P. W. Rowland, M.D., Acting Professor of Materia Medica. J. W. Johnson, M.A., Ph.D., Professor of Physics. Eugene Campbell, B.P., M.A., Professor of Electricity. Thomas H. Somerville, LL.D., Professor of Medical Jurisprudence. Harry R. Fulton, B.A., Assistant in Biology and Physiology. Woodson A. Stevens, B.S., Assistant in Chemistry. J. M. Buchanan, M.D., Lecturer on Physiology of Nervous System. J. A. Crisler, M.D., Lecturer on Minor Surgery. H. A. Gant, M.D., Lecturer on Hygiene. J. F. Hunter, M.D., Lecturer on Physiology. H. L. Sutherland, M.D., Lecturer on Pathology. A. A. Young, Lecturer on Pathology and Bacteria. 70 UNH ER8ITT OF MISSISSIPPI. DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACY. Realizing the need of a college of Pharmacy in the State, on July 1, 1908, the University of Mississippi added such a department coordinate with those already established. Accordingly, on September 24, 1908, the doors of the department of Pharmacy were opened for the reception of students. The first faculty was constituted as follows: Andrew A. Kincannon, LL.D., Chancellor. Thomas H. Somerville, LL.B., LL.D., Professor of Medical Jurispru- dence. Waller S. Leathers, M.D., Professor of Physiology and Botany. Peter W. Rowland, M.D., Professor of Materia Medica. Anthony M. Muckenfuss, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry. Henry Minor Faser, Professor of Practical and Theoretical Pharmacy. George Lucas Paddison, Assistant in Chemistry. Fifteen students applied for entrance with the opening of the session, and the department has very flattering prospects of something like thirty- five students in both classes with the opening of the second year. When we consider the fact that quite a number of the most reputable colleges of Pharmacy opened their doors with a smaller number than we have en- rolled, and when we consider further that the department was established only two months before the opening of the session, we have reason for being highly satisfied with the enrollment we have made. The aim of this department is to provide instruction for students who desire to acquire the special training necessary for the successful practice of Pharmacy. The importance both to the pharmacist and to the public of a thorough, scientific training in Pharmacy, is now fully recognized. The course extends throughout two collegiate sessions, nine months each. Every student taking the course is given eight hundred and sixty-four hours of lectures and recitations and nine hundred and thirty-six hours of laboratory work. The department is admirably equipped for doing excellent work. The three laboratories are provided with all the neces- sary fixtures and conveniences for all general purposes, and contain fully equipped stands with reagents; and, for each student, a closet with ap- paratus under his own lock and key. The chemical laboratory is located in the Lyceum building. During the past year the University has expended $4,500 in repairing and increas- ing its equipment. The pharmaceutical laboratory is located on the first floor, west end of the new Science Hall. It is one of the finest and best equipped rooms of its kind to be found anywhere. It is spacious, airy, well lighted and well ventilated, and has individual working tables and lockers for each student. Gas and water are supplied at each stand and large washing sinks are amply provided to meet every requirement. Brief- ly put, we have every convenience needed to carry out the purpose of this department successfully. The practical Materia Medica and Botany UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 71 laboratory is located on the second floor of the Science Hall. This is a large and convenient room. The desks are designed for microscopical work, and appropriate illumination is supplied for each pupil. The ample laboratory equipment consists of both simple and compound microscopes of the most approved patterns, all the principal microscopical accessories, modern reagents, mounting material, etc. The lecture halls are large and spacious; each branch of the department has its own lecture room, and each is provided with comfortable chairs to accommodate one hundred students. The lecture rooms and labora- tories are lighted by electricity and heated by steam; they have been carefully arranged so as to give the greatest comfort to the student and the best conveniences to the teachers. Each subject of the department is taught by a specialist in his particular branch. The department has established high and thorough standards and confidently expects to con- tribute service to the profession through the increasing number of grad- uates that it shall send out from year to year. PRESIDENTS AND CHANCELLORS. GEORGE FREDERICK HOLMES, LL.D. Born in Guiana, South America, in 1820, a graduate of Durham Uni- versity, in England, George Frederick Holmes came to the United States in 1838. After teaching school for several years in Virginia, Georgia and South Carolina, and, though unnaturalized, having been admitted to the bar in South Carolina by special act of the Legislature, he was elected, in 1847, Professor of History, Political Economy and International Law in William and Mary College, Virginia. July 12, 1848, at the age of 28, he was chosen the first President of the University of Mississippi. The arduous duties of his office, made unusually trying by the turbulent spirit of the student body, proved too great a strain upon his physical strength, and in April, 1849, President Holmes returned to Virginia to regain his health and for the benefit also of that of some member of his family. Com- mencement came and he had not returned or been heard from, though it is said that he had written and was on the eve of starting southward. In his absence the Board of Trustees unanimously declared his office va- cant, and elected Augustus B. Longstreet, of Georgia, his successor. Dr. Holmes became Professor of History and Literature in the University of Virginia in 1857 and for forty years was eminent in his service to that great institution, noted for his legal attainments as well as for his re- searches in history and literature. He was the author of a number of text- books for Southern schools, and by the series of readers which bear his name is now perhaps most widely known. His death occurred November 4, 1897. AUGUSTA BALDWIN LONGSTREET, LLD., D.D. Under conditions peculiarly unfavorable, the second President of the University entered upon the discharge of his difficult and delicate respon- 72 / \ / 1 BRBITY OF MISSISSIPPI. sibilities. But the Trustees had evidently chosen wisely. Disorder di- minished, attendance increased and the reputation of the University was improved and extended. "Judge Longstreet." as he was best known, was born in Augusta, Georgia, September 22, 1790. He was prepared for col- lege by Dr. Moses Waddel at the once famous "Wellington Academy" in South Carolina. In 1S13 he graduated at Yale College, and then studied law at Litchfield, Conn. Returning to Georgia he rapidly rose to dis- tinction as a lawyer and orator. He was appointed judge but declined the office, and was entering upon a canvass for Congressional honors, with confidence of election, when an irresistible call to preach caused him to give up his prospects of wealth and political preferment and enter the humbler but, as he testifies, happier life of a Methodist itinerant. Ere long the circuit-rider was transformed into the college president, and for thirteen years Emory College, Georgia, felt his gently, firmly, guiding hand, and entered fully on its career of usefulness and honor. He resigned the presidency of Emory College in 1848 and shortly after was elected President of Centenary College, Louisiana. In 1849 he was unanimously chosen President of the University of Mississippi, having failed of the election the year before by only one vote. As has been stated, under his wise administration discipline was enforced and rapid progress was achieved. Owing chiefly, it seems, to dissensions in the faculty, and to some extent among the trustees, President Longstreet, in July, 1856, tendered his resignation. It was accepted with regret and under protest by the Board of Trustees. From 1857 to 1859 he was President of the University of South Carolina. After the war, which suspended that University and others in the South, he returned to Oxford, Miss., where, in his eightieth year, July 9, 1870, he died in the midst of his family and friends. His remains now rest under a handsome monument near the entrance to the Oxford Cemetery. As a preacher he was earnest, deeply spiritual and persuasive, though it is said he never attempted eloquence in the pulpit. His political and educational writings were sound and forcible. As the author of "Georgia Scenes." humorous sketches of early nineteenth century life in Georgia, autobiographical in part, "Judge Longstreet" holds a secure place in Southern literature. It may be added that he is said to have deprecated the work in his latter days, and even sought to suppress it. He as President, his son-in-law, L. Q. C. Lamar, as Professor, and Edward Mayes, son-in-law of Lamar, as Chancellor, have largely shaped the destiny of this University. FREDERICK AUGUSTUS PORTER BARNARD, S.T.D., LL.D., L.H.D., D.C.S. This distinguished mathematician, physicist and educator, third Pres- ident and first Chancellor of the University, was born in Sheffield, Mass., May 5, 1809. He graduated from Yale in 1828, and a few years later, for the improvement of his health, sought educational work in the South. From 1833 to 1848 he was Professor of Mathematics and Natural Phil- osophy in the University of Alabama, and from 1848 to 1854 of Chemistry and Natural Philosophy in that institution. As the successor of Dr. A. T. Bledsoe, he became Professor of Mathematics, Natural Philosophy and UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 73 Civil Engineering in the University of Mississippi in 1854. That year, a Oxford, he was ordained a priest of the Episcopal Church by Bishop Greene. Succeeding President Longstreet in 1856 he at once addressed himself earnestly to the task of broadening the curriculum and equipping more completely the scientific departments. His published "Letter to the Trustees" and his address before the Legislature made a deep impres- sion in favor of higher education and secured for the University a liberal appropriation. By this means the Observatory Building was erected, apparatus for it and the chemical laboratory provided, and the valuable collections in the biological museums purchased. A very large tele- scope was ordered, but never received on account of the outbreak of war. In 1858 Dr. Barnard's title was changed from that of President to Chan- cellor. When the doors of the University were closed in 1861 Chancellor Barnard returned to the North, and in 1863-64 was connected with the U. S. Coast Survey in Washington. Through his influence, in part, the buildings and other property of the University were not destroyed by the Federal Army. He was chosen President of Columbia College, N. Y., in 1864, and with that institution his name and fame are inseparably associ- ated. He found it in 1864 a second or third rate college and left it at his death, in 1889, one of the leading institutions of learning in America. Barnard College, the annex for women to Columbia University, appro- priately bears his name for he was always a warm advocate of the higher education of women. In recognition of his valuable services to the cause of science and education, degrees and honors were showered upon him and high trusts were committed to him. In 1860 he was a member of the Labrador Eclipse Expedition, sent out by the Coast Survey. The same year he was elected President of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science. He was one of the United States Commissioners to the Paris Exposition in 1867. His publications were chiefly scientific and educational. Shortly after his death in New York, April 27, 1889, in Harper's Weekly there appeared a noble tribute, from which this as the central thought is taken: "The death of Dr. Barnard deprives Ameri- can Science of one of its foremost representatives; Columbia College of the ablest and most successful in its line of presidents." JOHN NEWTON WADDEL, D.D., LL.D. The son of the Rev. Moses Waddel, D.D., founder of "Willington Academy," and afterward President of the University of Georgia, Chan- cellor J. N. Waddel was born at Willington, S. C, April 2, 1812. He at- tended first his father's school and then the University of Georgia, from which he was graduated in 1829 with distinction. For a year or two he taught in the "Willington Academy" and then turned to farming. In 1837 he moved with his small family to Greene County, Alabama, and in 1840 he settled in Jasper County, Mississippi. The year following he entered the ministry of the Presbyterian Church, and soon thereafter established "Montrose Academy," which in a few years became the edu- cational center of Southeast Mississippi. As one of the charter members of the Board of Trustees of the University, Dr. Waddel rode horseback 74 UNI\ ER8ITY OF MISSISSIPPI. from Jasper County to Oxford, over two hundred miles, in April, 1847, to attend a meeting of the Board. He was appointed Chairman of the com- mittee to arrange a course of study, and his report was, at the next meet- ing of the trustees, adopted, in spite of a vigorous effort by two of them to strike "Evidences of Christianity" from the course. Having resigned from the Board of Trustees in January, 1848, the July following Dr. Wad- del was elected Professor of Ancient Languages. Urged by officials in his church, in 1S57 he reluctantly resigned his chair in the University to accept the Professorship of Ancient Languages in the La Grange, Tenn., Presbyterian Synodical College. When the University was reorganized in 1S65, Dr. Waddel was called to the Chancellorship. In 1869 he made a tour of inspection of the leading colleges, North and South, with a view to the reorganization of the curriculum of the University which then led only to the B. A. degree in the academic department. The curriculum of the University of Michigan, with modifications, was, on his recommen- dation, adopted in 1870, and in its main features is still in force. The days of "reconstruction" came and the University was for several years in great straits. Chancellor Waddel's "Open Letter" in September, 1870, in which he stated that he and his colleagues would resign before they would matriculate negro students, combined with Governor Alcorn's support and the establishment of Alcorn A. and M. College that year, "saved the University." At the commencement of 1873, the twenty-fifth anniversary of the University was celebrated with appropriate exercises. The Board of Trustees published Chancellor Waddel's "Historical Ad- dress" in pamphlet form, and requested him to write a "History of the University. When, in June, 1874, he tendered his resignation, the Board for one month declined to accept it, but on his refusal then to withdraw it they elected General Alexander P. Stewart as his successor. As Sec- retary of Education for the Southern Presbyterian Church from 1874 to 1879 and as Chancellor of the Southwestern Presbyterian University at Clarksville, Tenn., from 1879 to 1888 Dr. Waddel's latter years were full of honor and of blessing to mankind. He died at Birmingham, Alabama, January 9, 1895, having given fifty years of his life to the cause of Southern education, and twenty-two of the best of these years to the University of Mississippi as trustee, professor and chancellor. GENERAL ALEXANDER P. STEWAKT, IX.D., F.E.H.S. General Stewart was born at Rogersville, Tenn., October 2, 1821. He graduated at the U. S. Military Academy in 1842, and from 1843 to 1845 was Assistant Professor of Mathematics in that institution. From 1845 to 1869 he was Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy in Cum- berland and Nashville Universities. Commissioned Brigadier General C. S. A. in 1861, he was in command of the Army of Tennessee at the close of the war. In 1866 he was offered the chair of Physics, Astronomy and Civil Engineering in the University of Mississippi, but declined it. He succeeded Dr. Waddel as Chancellor of the University in 1874 and resigned in 1886, the longest term any President or Chancellor had then served. General Stewart was the Southern member of the Chickamauga and Chat- UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 75 tanooga National Park Commission from 1890 until his death. Before the Legislature of 1902 "he made an eloquent plea for an appropriation for suitable memorials to Mississippi heroes slain on those bloody battle fields. General Stewart assumed the Chancellorship at a trying period. The "reconstruction" ordeal was not yet passed, attendance on the Uni- versity was decreasing, and its future was not promising. The Law De- partment had been suspended. In 1877 that department was re-estab- lished and tuition in the Academic Department was abolished. As a result of these measures the enrollment in 1877-78 was the highest up to that time in the history of the University, the total being 471, including 259 in the Preparatory Department. The admission of women in 1882 is another important event in General Stewart's administration. Judge A. M. Clayton and Hon. H. M. Sullivan appear to have been the members of the Board of Trustees who proposed and most earnestly advocated this policy. In the management of the finances of the University Gen- eral Stewart was remarkably systematic and judicious. Military in his bearing, the impersonation of dignity, he was no less affable and sympa- thetic, deeply concerned for the temporal and spiritual welfare of the students, collectively and individually. This concern was manifested in earnest, private conferences, as well as in his chapel talks and baccalau- reate addresses. The writer remembers on his graduating day to have heard Judge H. H. Chalmers say to another member of the Board of Trustees, after Chancellor Stewart had spoken his parting words to the literary graduates and then to the law graduates in lines of thought very different and yet equally excellent, "There is not another man in the State who could make in succession two addresses so similar and yet so differ- ent, and both of such high order." He died at Biloxi, Mississippi, Au- gust 30, 1908, and was buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery, St. Louis. EDWARD MAYES, IX.D., F.S.C. The first chief executive of the University chosen from its alumni, and the only native of the State as yet thus honored, (the present Chancellor excepted), is Hon. Edward Mayes, who was born in Hinds County, Miss., December 15, 1846. He attended Bethany College, Virginia, in 1860-61, served in the Confederate Army in 1864-65, graduated from the literary department of the University of Mississippi in 1868 and from the law department in 1869, was Professor of Law in the University from 1877 to 1892, Chairman of the Faculty 1886-89, Chancellor of the University 1889-92. Among the significant events and improvements during the administration of Chancellor Mayes mention should be made of the following: 1. His great controversy with Senator George on the Endow- ment Act of 1880, by which the State recognized its indebtedness to the University and provided for the appropriation to it of the annual interest upon this debt. That the settlement was unshaken shows how masterly was Chancellor Mayes' presentation of the University side of the question. 2. Erection of the Library Building, the addition of several thousand dollars' worth of books and the reclassification of the entire library. 3. Renovation of the dormitories and professors' 76 ' \lVi:itsiTY OF MISSISSIPPI. residences. 4. Reorganization of the curriculum in 1889, making the courses for the B.A., B.S. and B.P. degrees more distinctive. 5. Laying of the brick walks on the campus and the purchase of the large new telescope. 6. The tour of the State in the interest of the University made by Chancellor Mayes, and his Chairmanship of the Committee on Bill of Rights in the Constitutional Convention in 1890 also deserve men- tion among the important events of his administration. As an author Dr. Mayes is entitled to additional distinction. Without enumerating his legal publications, it will be sufficient to refer to his valuable "His- tory of Education in Mississippi" and to his admirable "Life, Times and Speeches of L. Q. C. Lamar." That he was a delegate to the Methodist Ecumenical Conferences of 1891 and 1901 indicates his church relation- ship and the esteem and confidence entertained toward him by his church. Since his resignation of the Chancellorship, Mr. Mayes has been the attor- ney of the Illinois Central Railroad before the Supreme Courts. From 1S95 to 1900 he was Professor of Law in Millsaps Methodist College, Jack- son, Miss. Still in the vigor of manhood, with a national reputation as a lawyer, Ex-Chancellor Mayes, for character, attainments and services, ranks among the most eminent of the sons of Mississippi. ROBERT BURWFXL FULTON, A.M., LL.D. Dr. R. B. Fulton was born in Sumter County, Alabama, in April, 1849. His father was a successful planter, who believed in giving his sons the best educational opportunities. Dr. Fulton was taught at home until in his thirteenth year he entered an academy at Pleasant Ridge, Greene County, Alabama, where he studied three years until the spring of 1865. In 1865-66 he studied in the private school of Rev. C. M. Hutton and in the fall of 1866 entered the Sophomore class in the University of Missis- sippi. In 1869 he graduated with the highest rank and first honors in an unusually strong class of twenty-one men. After an experience of a session and a half in teaching in high schools in Alabama and in New Orleans, he was offered the place of Assistant Professor of Physics and Astronomy in the University, and entered upon the duties of this position March 5, 1871. He served the University of Mississippi continuously from that date to the time of his resignation in September, 1906, giving the longest period of service of any man ever connected with the Institution. That his service during these years was uniformly successful is shown by the fact that it was rendered under various administrations and under varying conditions, and that it led to continuous promotion. A former professor in the University expressed what is generally known of Chancellor Fulton when he wrote that "with a long term of service ranging from tutorship to chancellorship, no man knows the institution so thoroughly as he, or has labored longer or more successfully for its upbuilding." Of the more important events and lines of progress that characterized his administration the following may be cited: (1) The abolishing of preparatory classes in 1892; (2) the inauguration in 1893 of summer terms that drew altogether over 2,000 individual teachers to the University; (3) UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 77 the securing from Congress, by his own initiative and efforts, of a grant of 23,040 acres of land for the University in 1894, which added $10,- 000 to the annual revenues of the University and which opened the way to other grants to the other colleges of the State, which grants put over $600,000 into the State Treasury for the benefit of these institutuons; (4) the development of a system of public and other high schools affiliated with the University, numbering over 80, in which preparation for Uni- versity classes was given; (5) the enlargement and beautifying of the University grounds, the introduction of waterworks, sewerage, electric lights, steam heating; (6) the repairing of old and the erection of new buildings, and the increase of scientific equipment that more than doubled the value of the plant; (7) the enlargement from a college to a university curriculum by the establishment of departments of Engineering (Civil, Mining and Electrical), Education and Medicine. In 1892 there were 157 University students enrolled, there were 15 professors and instructors, the total annual revenues were less than $40,000, the buildings were di- lapidated and the University was in need of all things. During the ses- sion 1905-06, the last under his administration, there were enrolled 361 University students, there were 31 professors and instructors, and the total revenues of the University were over $80,000, with other funds avail- able for new buildings to be erected. Besides these improvements, he had, after obtaining the written approval of a majority of the Board, secured, in 1905, the offer of a handsome library from Mr. Andrew Carne- gie, which offer was afterwards declined by the Board. He secured from individual friends, in and out of the State, funds for the Summer School, and for prizes and other current needs of the institution. Chancellor Fulton has been thrice honored with the degree of Doctor of Laws, holding this honor from the University of Nashville, South Caro- lina College and the University of Alabama. Dr. Fulton has been prom- inent in all educational work, in and out of the State. He took the in- itiative in organizing the National Association of State Universities, including the presidents of forty State Universities, and was for five suc- cessive years elected president of the Association, which at its meeting in November, 1905, had the presidents of thirty-nine State Universities pres- ent. He was president of the Richmond meeting of the Southern Edu- cational Association, and was president of the Department of Higher Education of the National Educational Association at its Los Angeles meeting, of which Association he is a director and a member of the Council . He is a member of a number of scientific societies and a fellow, by elec- tion, of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He is an Elder in the Presbyterian Church and has represented his church on several occasions in the General Assembly and in the Pan-Presbyterian Alliance. He was for years a member of the Executive Committee of the Mississippi Historical Society, and a Trustee of the Department of Archives and History and was an active member of the State commis- sion in charge of the geological survey of Mississippi. One who was long actively associated with him in the University of Mississippi characterizes him as "scholarly, yet practical; versatile, yet 78 i \n fu'sirv of Mississippi. accurate, energetic, tactful and systematic. Chancellor Fulton, in addi- tion to his thorough acquaintance with the history and needs of the Uni- versity, possesses a combination of gifts and attainments which fits him in a high degree for the office which he has filled so ably." In his college days Chancellor Fulton was a member of the Chi Psi Fraternity, which has had no chapter at the Uuiversity for many years. Without bias or prejudice in his administration, he strove to be just to all, and was ever the friend of the poor boy struggling for an education. The Alumni Loan Fund was founded at his instance. Still in full vigor, he has taken up the administration of the affairs of the noted Miller School in Virginia, founded for this class of boys, who have always had his interest and sympathy. That he had to face and overcome many difficulties in his great work at the University of Mississippi goes without saying. His deep and abid- ing interest in the main purpose of his work, the advancement of the Uni- versity of Mississippi in all that makes for the uplift of the State, left no place in his mind for bitterness toward any who differed with him or strove against his work. No change of affairs can mar the record of his achievements for his Alma Mater, every blade of grass and every stone on whose grounds, as well as every person connected with her, he was known to love. ANDBEW ABMSTBONG KINCANNON, A.B., M.S., LL.D. Over obstacles that few could have surmounted, overcoming opposi- tion at every step that would have daunted a less manly soul, Andrew Armstrong Kincannon has written his name at the top of the roll of Mis- sissippi educators. The very utterance of the name suggests the strength and resoluteness of him who bears it and reminds those who have watched with admiration his steady, upward stride to State and national reputa- tion that the real strength of the man and the chief element of his success has been, not so much his vigorous intellect and clear insight into men and measures, important as these have been, but rather a great warm heart which has enfolded his State, and uniting with his indomitable will has made to him no service too arduous, no sacrifice too great in behalf of the sons and daughters of Mississippi. Space permits a mere outline sketch of a life unusually full of beneficence and honors. Born in Noxubee County, August 2, 1859, a child amid the gloom and disaster of the early sixties, educated in Lee County in the days of recon- struction, revolution and financial reverses, Andrew Armstrong Kin- cannon, the second son of James and M. A. Kincannon, early learned the lessons of self-help and self-denial. The impress of both father and mother are easily discernible in his character, and his devotion to his parents and to his brothers and sisters have ever been strikingly manifest. From the Verona High School, where he was the pupil of both Drs. Deupree and Leavell, of the University faculty, he went to the State Uni- versity. At the University he was elected anniversarian of the Phi Sigma Literary Society, but resigned and afterward urged a change in the method of selecting the anniversarian. From the University he went to the Nor- UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 79 mal University, Lebanon, Ohio, from which institution he took both the A.B. and M. S. degrees. At the University and in his difficult early years as teacher in the Verona High School, where he had been a pupil, he gave evidence of that executive ability for which he has later become distin- guished. Three valuable years were spent as assistant professor of English at the Mississippi A. and M. College, under the immediate direction of that prince of English teachers, Dr. W. H. Magruder, and under the general supervision and friendly counsel of Gen. Stephen D. Lee, well termed the "father of industrial education in the South." In 1886, as Superintendent of Meridian Public Schools, A. A. Kincannon came into prominence as a leader in the educational awakening and reorganization of the common schools of the State. He found in Meridian a single, disorganized, un- equipped school; in ten years he added five schools and developed a pop- ular, well articulated city school system. During this period his influ- ence in the State Teachers' Association and in county institutes was nota- bly weighty in the promotion of various reforms, and naturally so, being as he was, the founder and head of the first and largest city school system in the State. It should be mentioned that in 1888 an epoch in his life was made when he was united in marriage with Miss Mary George Barksdale, daughter of William R. Barksdale, of Grenada, Miss., and oldest grandchild of Senator J. Z. George. Thus added incentive to effort came into his life, and with it the sympathy and encouragement of a wife who has always entered fully into his plans and has often proven herself singularly wise and timely in her counsel. In 1895, after a brilliant canvass, in which he triumphed over a polit- ical combination that seemed invincible, Mr. Kincannon was nominated by acclamation for State Superintendent of Education by the largest Democratic Convention ever assembled in Mississippi. In spite of the strong sentiment in the Legislature of 1896 favoring the reduction of the common school fund, the appropriation committee recommending only $700,000, Superintendent Kincannon succeeded in inducing the Legis- lature to increase the appropriation to $950,000 per annum, and secured also an increased appropriation for summer normals. Of the wholesome school laws that bear his impress mention will be made of only one, the creation of the State Board of Examiners, generally conceded by the best authorities to be a wise statute. Not one of the school laws adpoted on his recommendation has ever been repealed. His reports as State Super- intendent of Education to the Legislature attracted wide attention on account of their excellence both in subject matter and style. Favorable criticism was evoked from the leading school journals of the United States. Meanwhile the Industrial Institute and College for the white girls of the State, having passed through years of internal discord and weakness of administration, had reached a crisis in its history. Doubtful indeed, if the Legislature would appropriate funds for its support, as matters then stood, Governor McLaurin, Bishop Galloway and others members of the Board of Trustees urged Superintendent Kincannon as a patriotic Mis- 80 I DIVERSITY OF Mississippi. sissippiao to accept the presidency of the college and save the institution. With his plans for the public school system but beginning to be devel- oped, and expecting no call to other work for years to come, Superintend- ent Kincannon reluctantly resigned his State office and accepted the presidency of the 1. 1, and C, having been unanimously elected by the Board of Trustees, responding to the call of duty and the claims of the girls of .Mississippi, as the Board presented the case to him. The transforma- tion at once wrought in the college, the doubling in a few years of its fac- ulty and student body, the addition of building after building, and the ready response of successive Legislatures to President Kincannon's elo- quent appeals for funds to meet the increasing needs of the great insti- tution, fondly proclaimed by Governor Vardaman and others "the pride of the State," are facts as far famed as the institution, attesting how efficiently President Kincannon met the great demands made upon him, and far surpassed the expectations of the Board and even the best of his friends. So distinguished have been his services to the I. I. and C. that repeatedly has he been called to similar positions in other States. But these have moved him little, for to his own State duty and affection have held him inflexibly firm, supremely loyal. In November, 1906, he was called to the chancellorship of the State University, but declined to accept it for reasons satisfactory to himself. In June, 1907, Mr. Kincannon was again elected to the chancellorship of the University, and after having had more power conferred upon him than heretofore given to any chancellor, he accepted it. Chancellor Kincannon holds the LL.D. degree from the University of Arkansas. He has been a Director of the National Education Asso- ciation, and is now a Director of the Southern Educational Association. He has also served as a member of the State Board of Examiners. Of the important events and improvements which have marked the opening years of Chancellor Kincannon's administration, the following may be enumerated: 1. The "honor system" has been crystalized and rendered more effective by the creation of an Honor Council representa- tive of the entire student body. 2. A Student Bureau of Self Help has been successfully inaugurated. 3. The Legislature of 1908 made the Uni- versity the largest appropriation in the latter's history. As results, a large, handsome and thoroughly equipped dormitory for men, a commo- dious and beautiful dining hall and a new power house have been built; the light and heat distributing systems have been renewed and enlarged; and about one-half mile of wide concrete walks have been laid where most needed on the campus. 5. Plans have been drawn and most of the neces- sary funds secured for a magnificent new library building. 6. A Depart- ment of Pharmacy has been established and has been in most successful operation since the opening of the session of 1908-09. 7. While the first two years of a regular four-year course in Medicine have been given since 1903, not until the beginning of the session of 1909-10 were the last two years added. The second half of the complete course is now being offered to a fine body of students at Vicksburg in connection with the State Char- ity Hospital of that city. This property, valued at $150,000, was acquired UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 81 by the University in^lSOS. Five full professors and nine assistants are engaged in the work of instruction at Vicksburg. 8. The attendance has continued to increase until there are at this time, November, 1909, very nearly five hundred students enrolled. Chancellor Kincannon has more than met expectations and bids fair to place the University of Mississippi higher yet in the educational roll of the country. REGISTER OF OFFICERS AND STUDENTS. vindicates Deceased.) TRUSTEES. Appointed Vacated 1844 J. Alexander Ventress, Esq.* 1868 1844. Hon. John Anthony Quitman* 1848 1844 Hon. William L. Sharkey, LL.D.* .'. 1865 1844 Hon. Alexander M. Clayton, LL.D.* 1852 1844 Hon. William Y. Gholson* 1845 1844 Hon. Jacob Thompson* . . 1857 1844 PryorLee, Esq.*. 1846 1844 Hon. Edward C. Wilkinson* 1856 1844 James M. Howry. Esq.* 1870 1844 John J. McCaughan, Esq.* _.-__ 1848 1844 Rev. Francis L. Hawks, D.D.* 1845 1844 Rev. John N. Waddel, D.D.* 1848 1844 Alexander H. Pegues, Esq.* . 1860 1845 Thomas H. Williams, Esq.* 1851 1845 Isaac N. Davis, Esq.* 1861 1846 James Brown, Esq.* 1870 1848 Hon. C. Pinckney Smith, LL.D.* 1864 1848... 1 George H. Young, Esq.* 1870 1848 Hon. Henry Mounger* ". 1850 1850 Hon. John J. McRae* 1868 1851 Dr. B. W. Earle* 1857 1852 Hon. J. W. Clapp* 1867 1856 Hon. Charles Clark* 1870 1857 Hon. A. M. Clayton, LL.D.* 1857 1857 William F. Dowd, Esq.* 1865 1860 Thomas E. B. Pegues, Esq.* 1870 1861 Hon. Jacob Thompson* 1864 1865 H. A. Barr, Esq.* 1865 1865 Rev. D. P. Bestor, D.D.* 1869 1865 Giles M. Hillyer, Esq.* 1870 1867 Hon. E. C. Walthall* 1870 1867 Hon. R. A. Hill* .' 1870 1868 Hon. William Yerger* 1870 1869 Hon. A. M. West* 1870 1869 John Duncan, Esq.* 1870 1870 Rev. James A. Lyon, D.D.* 1870 S2 UM\ KHS1TY OP MISSISSIPPI. Appointed Vacated 1870 ..Thomas D. Isom, M.D.*..__ 1876 1870 Hon. A. M. West*... 1876 L8TO Hon. John Duncan* 1872 1870 Hon. J. Tarbell* ..1876 1870 Hon. E. G. Peyton* 1872 1870 Hon. H. F. Simrall, LL.D.* 1894 1870. Hon. Jason Niles* _, 1874 1870 .Hon. Charles Clark* . 1878 1S70-. Hon. A. Warner 1872 1870 Hon. C. W. Clarke 1876 1870 Hon. T. E. B. Pegues* 1872 1871 Hon. G. C. Chandler* 1874 1872 Hon. J. A. Orr 1904 1872 Hon. A. Warner 1878 1872 Hon. T. E. B. Pegues* 1875 1872 Rev. M. P. Lowrey, D.D.* 1876 1875 Hon. Victor W. Thompson* 1876 1875 Hon. W. W. Howe 1876 1875 Hon. J. M. Stone* 1876 1875 Hon. H. W. Warren* 1876 1876 Hon. H. H. Chalmers* 1884 1876 Hon. H. L. Muldrow* 1898 1876 Hon. Cowles M. Vaiden* 1880 1876 Hon. H. W. Walter* 1878 1876 Hon. Hugh A. Barr* 1894 1876 Hon. James A. Green* 1882 1876 Rev. Charles H. Otken, D.D 1882 1876 Hampton M. Sullivan, Esq.* 1886 1876 Hon. Andrew J. Baker 1885 1876 Hon. Robt. A. Hill* 1896 1876 Hon. Robt. J. Guthrie* 1877 1876 Hon. Wm. R. Barksdale* 1877 1876 Hon. Thos. S. Gathright* 1877 1877 Hon. Jas. L. McCaskill* 1886 1878 Hon. James Z. George* 1880 1878 Gen. Will T. Martin* 1896 1878 Hon. Alex M. Clayton, LL.D.* ..1889 1880 Hon. Thos. M. White* 1889 1880 Hon. Wiley P. Harris* 1890 1882 Rev. Chas. B. Galloway, D.D.* 1894 1882 Hon. Chas. B. Howry, LL.D 1894 1885 Gen. G. Y. Freeman* .1894 1885 Dr. Erasmus F. Griffin* 1890 1886 Hon. William C. Wilkinson* 1896 1888 Hon. J. S. McNeily 1894 1889 Thos. W. White, Esq.* 1892 1889 Hon. A. H. Whitfield, LL.D 1891 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 83 Appointed Vacated 1890 Hon. Robert H. Thompson, LL.D 1906 1890 Hon. Robert Lowry 1898 1891 Rev. J. B. Gambrell, D.D 1893 1892 Hon. Donald McKenzie* 1895 1895 Hon. Leroy Percy 1904 1896 Hon. A. T. Roane 1896 Hon. J. R. Mcintosh* 1899 1896 Hon. J. H. Jones 1906 1896 Dr. T. P. Lockwood 1902 1896 Ex-Gov. John M. Stone* 1900 1896 Dr. Yerger Hicks 1902 1896 Hon. J. W. T. Falkner 1908 1896- Hon. A. H. Whitfield 1904 1896 Hon. L. M. Southworth 1904 1896 Supt. A. A. Kincannon, ex officio 1898 1896 Hon. E. W. Smith* 1903 1898 Hon. H. M. Quinn 1903 1898 Hon. W. A. Belk 1898 Supt. H. L. Whitfield, ex officio 1908 1899 Hon. W. E. Baskin 1900 Hon. M. M. Evans 1908 1902 Hon. J. T. Senter* 1908 1902. ..Hon. W. B. Walker* 1904 1902 Hon. Harry T. Howard . . 1904 1903 Hon. F. C. Holmes 1904 Hon. C. Kendrick 1904 Hon. John L. Hebron 1908 1904 Hon. J. W. George 1904 Hon. C. M. Williamson 1904 Hon. J. D. McKie* .' 1907 1904 Hon. J. M. Acker 1908 1904 Hon. E. D. Stone 1906 1906 Hon. W. F. Tucker 1906 ...Hon. S. A. Morrison 1906 Hon. Robert Powell 1907 Hon. J. L. Taylor.. ._ 1908 Hon. D. M. Kimbrough 1908 Hon. A. F. Gardner 1908 Hon. C. R. Hoye 1908... Hon. James Gordon 1908 Hon. S. S. Carter 1908 Hon. J. N. Powers, ex officio PRESIDENTS OF THE BOARD. 1844 Hon. Alexander M. Clayton* .1853 1852... Hon. Jacob Thompson* 1856 1856 His Excellency John J. McRae, ex officio* ....1858 84 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Appointed Vacated 1 858 His Excellency William McWillie, ex officio* 1860 1860 His Excellency J. J. Pettus, ex officio*.. 1864 L864 His Excellency Charles Clark, ex officio* ...1865 1S65 His Excellency B. G. Humphreys, ex officio* 1868 1868 His Excellency Adelbert Ames, ex officio 1869 1S69 His Excellency James L. Alcorn, ex officio* 1871 L871 His Excellency R. C. Powers, ex officio 1874 1874 His Excellency Adelbert Ames, ex officio 1876 1876 His Excellency John M. Stone, ex officio* 1882 1882 His Excellency Robert Lowry, ex officio 1890 1890 His Excellency John M. Stone, ex officio* 1896 1S96 His Excellency A. J. McLaurin, ex officio 1900 1900 His Excellency A. H. Longino, ex officio 1904 1904 His Excellency Jas. K. Vardaman, ex officio 1908 1908 His Excellency E. F. Noel, ex officio SECRETARIES AND TREASURERS. 1848 Thomas H. Williams* 1851 1851 James H. Howry, Esq.* 1870 SECRETARIES. 1870 Thomas E. B. Pegues, Esq.* 1875 1876 Victor W. Thompson* 1876 1876 H. M. Sullivan, Esq.* 1886 1886 Bern Price, Esq.* 1898 1898 J. R. Stowers, Esq 1900 1900 W. D. Porter, Esq TREASURERS. 1870 Hon. Alexander Warner 1876 1876 Hon. W. L. Hemingway, ex officio 1890 1890 Hon. Jos. J. Evans, ex officio* 1896 1896 Hon. A. Q. May, ex officio 1900 1900 Hon. J. R. Stowers, ex officio 1902 1902 Hon. Geo. W. Carlisle, ex officio* 1903 1903 Hon. Thad. B. Lampton, ex officio 1904 1904 Hon. W. J. Miller, ex officio 1908 1908 Hon. Geo. R. Edwards, ex officio 1876 Wm. A. West, Esq.,* Local Tr .1881 1881 Bern Price, Esq.,* Local Tr 1898 1898 Hon. J. R. Stowers, Local Tr 1900 1900 Hon. W. D. Porter, Local Tr EXECUTIVE COMMITTEEMEN. 1845.. James M. Howry, Esq.* 1861 1845 Alexander H. Pegues, Esq.* 1860 1845 Hon. John A. Quitman* 1845 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 85 Appointed - Vacated 1845 I. N. Davis, Esq.* 1847 1847 James Brown, Esq.* ...1870 1848 I. N. Davis, Esq.* 1861 1851 Hon. Jacob Thompson* 1852 1854 Hon. J. W. Clapp* 1867 1856 Hon. Jacob Thompson* 1857 1857 George M. Young, Esq.* 1861 1861 T. E. B. Pegues, Esq.* 1870 1861 Hon. Jacob Thompson* 1864 1865 H. A. Barr, Esq.* 1865 1867. ..Hon. R. A. Hill* 1870 1870 T. D. Isom, M.D.* 1876 1870., Hon. A. M. West* 1875 1870 John Duncan, Esq.* 1872 1870 Hon. A. Warner 1872 1870 Hon. J. Tarbell* 1875 1872 Hon. J. Niles* 1875 1872 Hon. J. A. Orr 1875 1875 Hon. A. Warner 1876 1875 Hon. W. W. Howe 1876 1875 Hon. V. W. Thompson* , .-1876 1875 Rev. M. P. Lowrey, D.D.* 1876 1876 Hon. R. A. Hill* 1886 1876. ..Hon. H. A. Barr* 1886 1876 Hon. A. J. Baker 1885 1876 Hon. J. A. Orr 1904 1876 Hon. H. M. Sullivan* 1886 1881 Hon. Alex M. Clayton* . 1883 1883.. ..'... .Hon. Chas. B. Howry, LL.D 1886 1885 Hon. T. W. White* ". 1886 1886 Hon. W. P. Harris* 1891 1886 Gen. G. Y. Freeman* 1891 1886 ...Hon. H. F. Simrall, LL.D.*. 1894 1889 Hon. Robert Lowry 1898 1889 Hon. W. C. Wilkinson* 1896 1889 The Chancellor of the University 1903 1891 Hon. Robert H. Thompson, LL.D 1904 1896 Dr. T. P. Lockwood 1902 1896 Hon. J. W. T. Falkner 1908 1898 Hon. J. M. Stone* 1900 1900 Hon. A. T. Roane 1902 1902 Hon. W. B. Walker* 1904 1902 Hon. H. M. Quinn 1903 1903 Hon. W. A. Belk 1908 1904 Hon. C. M. Williamson 1908 1904 Hon. J. L. Hebron 1907 1904 Hon. A. T. Roane 1908 86 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Appointed Vacated 1907 Hon. Robert Powell 1908 1907 Hon. J. D. McKie* 1907 1907 Hon. C. Kendrick 1908 1908 Hon. James Gordon 1908 ...Hon. A. F. Gardner 1908. .Hon. S. S. Carter 1908 Hon. C. R. Hoye 1908. - Hon. F. C. Holmes. CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS. President— George Frederick Holmes, LL.D 1848-1849 President— Augustus B. Longstreet, LL.D., D.D 1849-1856 President— Frederick A. P. Barnard, LL.D., D.D 1856-1859 Chancellor— Frederick A. P. Barnard, LL.D., D.D 1859-1861 Chancellor— John Newton Waddel, LL.D., D.D 1865-1874 Chancellor— Gen. Alexander P. Stewart 1874-1886 Chairman of Faculty— Edw. Mayes, LL.D., F.S.C 1886-1889 Chancellor— Edward Mayes, LL.D., F.S.C 1889-1891 Vice-Chancellor— Robert Burwell Fulton, A.M 1892-1892 Chancellor— Robert Burwell Fulton, A.M., LL.D 1892-1906 Vice-Chancellor— Alfred Hume, C.E., D.Sc 1906-1907 Chancellor — Andrew Armstrong Kincannon, M.S., LL.D 1907- Note. — Chancellor Mayes resigned January 1, 1892, and Vice Chancellor Fulton acted as Chancellor until the end of the session, when he was elected to the Chancellorship. PROFESSORS. Natural Philosophy and Chemistry. 1848 John Millington, M.D.* 1853 Mathematics and Astronomy. 1848 Albert Taylor Bledsoe, LL.D.* 1854 1854 Frederick A. P. Barnard, LL.D., D.D.* 1858 Ancient Languages. 1848 John Newton Waddel, D.D.* 1856 Modern Languages. 1850 Adolph Sadluski 1850 1851 William A. Strozzi 1853 1854 Wilson Gaines Richardson, A.M.* 1856 1866 Dabney Minor Scales 1866 1869 William S. Wyman, M.A 1870 1873 F. A. Juny, S.T.D.* 1876 1882 Charles W.'Hutson 1889 1889 Joseph T Auguste Fontaine, Ph.D 1891 1891 H. Schmidt-Wartenberg, Ph.D 1893 1893 Chiles Clifton Ferrell, Ph.D 1905 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 87 Chemistry and Agriculture. Appointed Vacated 1S50 John Millington, M.D.* 1853 Chemistry. 1853 J. C. Keeney, M.A 1854 1856 Edward C. Boynton, M.A.* 1861 1868- Eugene W. Hilgard, Ph.D 1873 1875 Richard W. Jones, LL.D 1885 1885 Woodville Latham 1889 1894 Richard W. Jones, LL.D 1905 1905. Anthony Moultrie Muckenfuss, A.M., Ph.D Agriculture and Geological Science. 1854.. Lewis Harper* 1856 Governmental Science and Law. 1854 William F. Stearns, LL.D.* 1861 1860 J. F. Trotter* . 1861 1866 Hon. H. F. Simrall, LL.D.* 1867 1867 Lucius Q. C. Lamar, LL.D.* 1870 1870 Hon. J. A. P. Campbell, LL.D 1870 1870 Henry Craft, Esq.* 1871 1871 Thomas Walton, LL.B.* . 1874 1877 ...Hon. J. J. Hamm 1877 1877 Edward Mayes, LL.D 1892 1892 Albert Hall Whitfield, A.M., LL.D 1894 1894 G. D. Shands, LL.D 1906 1897 Thos. H. Somerville, LL.B 1906 Clarence Lee Sivley, LL.B 1907 1907...: John Elmore Holmes, LL.B Greek Language and History of Ancient Literature. 1856 John Newton Waddel, D.D.,* 1857 1857. .Henry Whitehorne, A.M 1861 1865 John J. Wheat, D.D.* z 1886 1886 Addison Hogue 1893 1895 Paul H. Saunders, Ph.D 1905 Latin and Modern Languages. 1856 Wilson Gaines Richardson, A.M.* 1859 1860 Alexander J. Quinche, M.A.* _' 1861 1865 Alexander J. Quinche, M.A.* 1873 1876 Alexander J. Quinche, M.A., LL.D.* ...1882 Metaphysics and Ethics. 1856 Nathaniel Macon Crawford, D.D.* 1857 1858 Geo. W. Carter, D.D 1860 1860 Lucius Q. C. Lamar, LL.D.* 1861 1866 Lucius Q. C. Lamar, LL.D.* 1867 >S I NIVBRSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Mathematics. Appointed Vacated 1858 Jordan McCullough Phipps, M.A 1861 Gen. Claudius W. Sears, M.A.*- 1889 1889 Henry Aubrey Strode,* M.A .1890 1890 Alfred Hume, C.E., D.Sc English Literature. 1858. Rev. W. D. Moore, M.A.* 1861 1865 Stanford G. Burney, D.D.* 1872 1873 John L. Johnson, D.D., LL.D 1889 Physics, Astronomy and Civil Engineering. 1865 Alexander P. Stewart* , 1865 1865 Gen. Francis A. Shoup, A.M.* 1867 Natural History and Geology. 1866 George Little, Ph.D ■ 1874 1882 George Little, Ph.D 1889 Analytical Physics and Astronomy. 1867 Landon C. Garland, LL.D.* 1875 1875 Robert B. Fulton. M.A.. LL.D Applied Mathematics. 1867. Gen . Francis A. Shoup, A.M.* 1868 Metaphysics, Logic and Political Science. 1868 Gen. Francis A. Shoup, M.A.* 1869 1870 James A. Lyon, D.D.* 1881 1881 James M. Long, A.M.* 1883 1886 J. J. Wheat, D.D.*. 1899 Latin Language and Literature. 1873 Alexander'J. Quinche, LL.D.* 1876 1882 Alexander^. Quinche, LL.D.* 1889 1889_._ Addison Hogue . 1893 1894 Alexander^. Bondurant, A.M ...... . Acting Professor of Chemistry and Natural History. 1874 Landon C. Garland, LL.D.* 1875 Chemistry and Natural History. 1875 Richard W. Jones, LL.D ■ 1882 1889 Richard W. Jones, LL.D _._ 1894 Acting Professor of Chemistry. 1885 Winn David Hedleston, A.B . 1885 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 89 English and Belles-Lettres. Appointed Vacated 1889 Richard Marion Leavell, A.M 1890 1890 William Rice Sims, Ph.D 1894 1893 Dabney Lipscomb, A.M 1900 Mental and Moral Philosophy, Logic, History and Political Economy. 1889 William Rice Sims, Ph.D -1890 1890 Patrick Henry Eager 1891 1891 Richard Marion Leavell, A.M., LL.D 1897 Pedagogy. 1893 James Underwood Barnard, A.M., P. T.* 1896 1896 J. G. Deupree, LL.D 1905 1908... Robert Torrey Mental and Moral Philosophy, Logic and Political Economy. 1897 Richard Marion Leavell, A.M., LL.D 1909 History and Rhetoric. 1897 Franklin L. Riley, Ph.D 1900 Physics. 1899 John Wesley Johnson, M.A., Ph.D 1902 1903 John Wesley Johnson, M.A., Ph.D 1906 Greek Language and Literature. 1900 Walter A. Montgomery, Ph.D 1901 (Acting in absence of Professor Saunders, abroad.) 1905 John Greer Deupree, M.A., LL.D History. 1900 Franklin L. Riley, Ph.D English and Rhetoric and Belles-Lettres. 1900 Dabney Lipscomb, A.M 1904 1904 David Horace Bishop, A.M 1905 Natural History. 1900 Waller S. Leathers, M.D 1905 Acting Professor of Civil Engineering. 1900 Alfred Hume, C.E., D.Sc_ 1902 Electricity and Electrical Engineering. 1900 Douglas Anderson, A.M 1901 1901 Arthur Whitmore Smith, M.Sc 1902 1903 Eugene Campbell, A.M.* 1906 90 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Acting Professor of Modern Languages. Appointed Vacated 1901 .Calvin S. Brown, D.Sc, Ph.D... 1902 (In absence of Prof. Ferrell, abroad.) Physics and Electricity. 1902 John Wesley Johnson, M.A., Ph.D 1903 Electricity. 1902 Eugene Campbell, A.M.*.... 1903 Anatomy, Pathology and Bacteriology. 1903 James B. Bullitt, M.A., M.D Civil Engineering. 1903 Walter Hugh Drane, A.M 1907 Psychology, and Applied Psychology. 1903 Thomas P. Bailey, Ph.D 1906 English Language and Literature. 1905 David Horace Bishop, A.M Biology and Physiology. 1905 Waller S. Leathers, M.D Materia Medica and Hygiene. 1905 Peter W. Rowland, M.D Geology and Mineralogy. 1905 Albert Foster Crider, A.B., B.S 1906 (Director of State Geological Survey of Mississippi.) 1908 Ephraim N. Lowe, M.D 1909 Germanic Languages. 1905 Chiles Clifton Ferrell, M.A., Ph.D 1908 Romance Languages. 1905 Calvin S. Brown, D.Sc, Ph.D 1909 Rhetoric and Oratory. 1905 Hubert Anthony Shands, M.A., Ph.D 1906 1908 John Clarke Johnson, A.B Psychology and Education. 1906 Thomas P. Bailey, Ph.D 1908 Physics and Electrical Engineering. 1906 John Wesley Johnson, M.A., Ph.D 1907 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 91 Physics and Astronomy. Appointed Vacated 1906 John Wesley Johnson, M.A., Ph.D Acting Professor of Geology. 1906 .Ephraim N. Lowe, M.D 1908 Civil and Municipal Engineering. 1907 Walter Hugh Drane, A.M Psychology and Secondary Education. 1908 Thomas P. Bailey, Ph.D 1909 Municipal and Sanitary Engineering. 1908 John H. Dorroh, B.E Professor of Germanic Languages. 1908 Calvin S. Brown, D.Sc, Ph.D Professor of Pharmacy. 1908 ..Henry Minor Faser, Ph.G Principal of Preparatory Department. 1874 Andrew E. Kilpatrick, A.B 1875 1875-. Lewis T. Fitzhugh, A.M.* 1886 1886. John W. Johnson, A.M 1889 ADJUNCT PEOFESSOBS. 1850 ..Lucius Q. C. Lamar,* Mathematics 1852 1852 Jordan McCullough Phipps,* Mathematics 1858 1872 R. J. Guthrie, B.A.,* Mathematics 1873 1872 R. B. Fulton, M.A., Physics and Astronomy 1875 1872 J. W. Shields, B.A., LL.B.,* English 1873 1872 John B. Adger, M.A.,* Chemistry 1874 1872 M. W. Philips, M.D.,* Agriculture 1875 1872 R. H. Loughridge, B. S., Chemistry 1874 1872 A. H. Whitfield, M.A., Greek and History 1874 1873 A. F. Moore, B.A.,* Mathematics 1874 ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS. 1890 Alexander L. Bondurant, Latin and Greek 1894 1893 John W. Johnson, M.A., Ph.D., Physics and Astronomy .1899 1903 James Warsaw Bell, B.P., Pedagogy 1904 1904 Robert Torrey, Pedagogy 1905 1907 James Warsaw Bell, B.P., Mathematics and Education. -.1908 1908 James Warsaw Bell, B.P., Mathematics 1909 92 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. ASSISTANT PROFESSORS. Appointed Vacated 1851 Oscar M. Lieber,* Geology, etc 1852 B. L. C. Wailes,* Geology, etc ..1854 . Jno. D. Easter,* M.A., Ph.D., Geology, etc 1855 .Burton N. Harrison, M.A., Physics 1861 1869 ... .Eugene A. Smith, Ph.D., Geology 1871 1889 Jno. W. Johnson, M A., Mathematics, Natural History. .1890 18S9 Alexander L. Bondurant, Latin and Greek 1890 .John W. Johnson, M.A., Ph.D., Physics 1893 1892 Thos. O. Mabry, M.A., Natural History 1898 1893 Paul Hill Saunders, M.A., Latin and Greek 1896 L899 Waller S. Leathers, M.D., Natural History 1900 1901 Eugene Campbell, A.M., Chemistry 1903 1905 Beverly W. Bond, Jr., Ph.D., History ( 1906 1905 Robert H. McNeilly, Civil Engineering 1906 1906 John H. Dorroh, B.E., Civil Engineering 1907 1907 John H. Dorroh, B.E., Civil and Municipal Engineering .1908 1908 John L. Deister, A.B., Modern Languages 1909 1908 Claud S. Brother, B.Sc.Did., M.Sc.Did., Philosophy and Pedagogy 1909 1908 Eber Carle Perrow, A.M., Ph.D., English 1909 1908 Christopher Longest, A.B., Latin ASSISTANTS. 1899 In Chemistry, Eugene Campbell,* B.P 1901 1900 In English, Maurice G. Fulton, B.P 1901 1901 In Engineering, Walter Hugh Drane, A.M 1903 1901 In English, Marion Griffin Evans, A.B 1902 1902 In English, V. Otis Robertson, A.B 1904 1903 In Chemistry. Woodson A. Stevens, B.S 1904 1903 In Biology, Harry Rascoe Fulton, A.B 1904 1904.. __In English, Stark Young, A.M 1907 1904.., In Chemistry, Archer Hamilton Roop, B.S 1905 1904 In Biology, Ephraim N. Lowe, M.D 1908 1904 In Mathematics and Engineering, W. L. Fulton, B.S. in M.E_. 1905 1904 In Latin, J. Marvin Furr, A.B 1905 1905 In Chemistry, Chas. W. Martin 1906 1905 In Latin, Howard W. Odum. A.B., 1908 1905 . In Mathematics, J. Gilman Reid, A.B 1906 1905 In Rhetoric. Dudley Howe Miles, A.B., 1907 1906 In Mathematics, Irby C. Nichols 1908 1906 In Chemistry, George Lucas Paddison 1909 1907 In Rhetoric and Economics, John Clarke Johnson, A.B. .1908 1907_. ..In English, Samuel P. Walker, A.B 1908 1908„ In Physics. Samuel P. Walker, A.B 1909 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 93 Appointed . Vacated 1908 In Anatomy, Pathology and Bacteriology, John Cornelius Herrington, Ph.B 1909 1908 In Biology and Physiology, Robert C. Rhodes, A.M 1908 In History, W. C. Sams 1909 INSTRUCTOR IN ELOCUTION. 1885 Sarah McGehee Isom* . 1905 TUTORS. 1850 George Tucker Stainback* 1855 1856. .Wm. Alexander Eakin* ..1857 1856 Charles Hawkins Lee, M.A 1857 1856.. Robert Marmaduke Kimbrough,* M.A 1857 1856 William Robert Barksdale,* M.A 1857 1857 Daniel B. Carr* 1861 1857 W. T. J. Sullivan .1858 1859 Burton N. Harrison, M.A . 1861 1868 Robert H. Loughridge, B.S 1872 1869 Edward Mayes, A.B 1870 1869 R. J. Guthrie,* A.B 1870 1870 Alston M. West. A.B 1871 1871 R. J. Guthrie,* B.A '. 1872 1871 J. W. Shields,* A.B., LL.B 1872 1871 R. B. Fulton, B.A - ...1872 1871 A. H. Whitfield, B.A 1873 1872 J. H. Davidson, B.A 1874 1875 Wm. Addison Alexander, A.B ■_ 1876 1875 Louis L. Mclnnis, A.B 1876 1876 '....Thomas D. Greenwood,* A.B 1877 1876 Samuel A. Witherspoon, A.B ..1879 1876 John W. Johnson, A.B 1881 1877 Thomas W. Stockard, A.B 1881 1877 James M. Buchanan 1878 1877 Wm. E. Martin 1881 1877 Arthur Avent Walter* 1878 1877 Lawson H. Snell 1878 1877 James B. Walter* 1878 1878 Joshua W. Kilpatrick, A.B 1880 1879 Edward C. Davidson, A.M* 1883 1880... Anselm H. Jayne, A.B 1882 1882 Frank E. Larkin, A.B 1887 1883 John Myers Steen, B.P 1884 1887 John L. Johnson, Jr., B.S 1888 1887 Thos. O. Martin ..1888 1887 Charles Firman Smith, A.B ..1888 1888 Jackson Reeves, A.B., B.S 1889 1890 Alfonso B._ Amis 1892 94 l \l VBRSIT V OF MISSISSIPPI. Appointed L888 1S90 1890. 1S90 1S90 1890_ 1891 1892 1892 1892 1895 1895 1895 1897 1900 1901 1904 1906.. 1908 Vacated In Chemistry, John W. Provine, B.S... .1890 In Chemistry, Thos. O. Mabry, B.P 1892 In Natural History, Frank Clark Holmes, B.S 1892 In Physics, Sam Hall Kimmons, B.A. 1891 In Mathematics, Paul Hill Saunders, B.A 1892 In English, Hubert Anthony Shands, B.A 1893 In Physics, Edwin Lee Mounger, B.A 1892 In Mathematics, Eugene Harper Roberts, B.P 1893 In Chemistry, Charles Strong, B.S 1893 In History, Lucien B. Howry, B.P 1893 In Chemistry, Charles Strong, B.S 1897 In History and English, R. E. Wilbourn, A.B 1897 In Mathematics, W. H. Drane, A.B 1897 In Chemistry, Eugene Campbell, A.B 1899 In Mathematics, William O. Pruitt, B.S. 1901 In Modern Languages, James Vance Bowen, B.P 1902 In Mathematics, Irby C. Nichols 1906 In Economics and History, John Clarke Johnson, A.B 1907 In Mathematics, James T. Spann .1909 Other Officers. Proctors. 1848 James M. Howry, Esq.* 1856 1857 John Davis 1858 1858 Jordan M. Phipps 1859 1859 W. T. Molloy* 1861 1865 Albert McMahon 1867 1868-. .J. C.Wallace* 1869 1969 James Brown, Esq.* 1870 1870 Thomas E. B. Pegues* 1875 1876 Martin W. Philips, M.D.* 1880 1883 Aug. Blomgren 1886 1887 O. M. McClarty* '_ 1893 1893 T. P. Scott 1893 1893 F. P. Skipwith 1894 1894 T.P.Scott 1896 1896. ..Phillips Jay 1897 1897 R. D.Lanier 1898 1898 E. F. Rivers 1902 1903 Junius Davidson 1904 Librarians. 1852 Prof. John Millington, M.D.* 1853 1853 Prof. John C. Keeney* 1854 1854 Prof. W. F. Stearns* 1855 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 95 Appointed Vacated 1855. .H.J. Harper* 1856 1856 Charles H.Lee 1857 1857 Prof. Henry Whitehorne 1861 1865.. Prof. A. J. Quinche* 1866 1866 Prof. E. W. Hilgard 1867 1867 Prof. A. J. Quinche* 1868 1868 Prof. E. W. Hilgard 1869 1869 Edward Mayes 1870 1870 R. H. Loughridge 1871 1871 John W. Shields* 1872 1872 John H. Davidson 1874 1874 A. E. Kilpatrick 1875 1875..-. W.A.Alexander 1876 1876 J.W.Johnson 1877 1877 Aug. Blomgren 1882 1882 W. D. Hedleston 1883 1883 John H. Shumaker 1884 1884 ...Miss Julia H.Wilcox 1889 1889 Mrs. Mary A. Beynes 1898 1898 Miss Annye Hardgrave 1900 1900 Mrs. L. M. Hunt High School Inspector. 1904.. Robert Torrey . 1906 Dean of the Department of Science, Literature and the Arts. 1905 Alfred Hume, C.E., D.Sc Dean of the Department of Law. 1897 G. D. Shands, LL.D 1906 1906 Thos. H. Somerville, LL.D Dean of Women and Head of Woman's Hall. 1903 EulaDeaton, M.A 1907 Acting Dean of Women and Head of Ricks' Hall. 1907 Mrs. Z. T. Leavell Superintendent. 1902 H. M. Quin 1903 Business Manager. 1904 D. L. Ross 1907 Secretary. 1907 D. L. Ross 96 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. University Physician. Appointed Vacated 1908 .P. W. Rowland, M.D Matron of the Hospital. 1908 Mrs. Pratt H. Atkinson General Secretary of Y. M. C. A. 1906 J. Arthur Brown, Ph.D.* 1908 1908 E. R. Hibbard, A.B Directors of Gymnasium. 1898 Charles R. White ...1899 1S99 Duke M. Kimbrough 1902 1902 Prof. P. H. Saunders 1903 1903 Robert H. Powell 1906 1906 ..E. C. Hightower 1907 1907 J. R. Haney 1908 1908 E. M. Jones Instructor in Gymnasium. 1902 Robert H. Powell 1903 HONORARY DEGREES CONFERRED. 1854. LL.D. Albert Taylor Bledsoe, M.A.* Baltimore, Md. MA. Jordan McCullough Phipps Key West, Fla. 1856. D.D. Rev. Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, LL.D.* Oxford Rev. Charles Reighly * Natchez 1857. LL.D. Rev. Wm. S. Plumer, D.D.* Columbia, S. C. M.A. G. F. Crawford Wm. Robert Barksdale, LL.B.* Grenada Robert Marmaduke Kimbrough, B.A.* Kemper County Charles Hawkins Lee, B.A Texas William Alexander Eakin, B.A., M.D LaGrange, Tenn. Rev. George Tucker Stainback, B.A.* Dyersburg, Tenn. I VIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 97 1859. LL.D. Hon. C. Pinckney Smith* Woodville Hon. W. L. Sharkey* Jackson Hon. Alex. M. Clayton* Holly Springs Rev. J. H. Ingraham* Holly Springs M.A. W. F. Woodruff Wm. Francis Mellen, B. A. * Natchez Rev. Robert Haskins Crozier, B.A Palestine, Texas Eli Gunn Burney, B.A Tampa, Fla. 1860. LL.I). Hon. William L. Harris* ■_ Columbus Hon. Alex. H. Handy* Canton M.A. Rev. William James Vineyard, B.A.* Helena, Ark. 1861. D.D. Rev. Frederick Augustus Porter Barnard, LL.D.*._ ..New York 1866. D.D. Right Rev. R. H. Wilmer Mobile, Ala. Rev. Joseph H. Calvin, M.A.* Oakland College M.A. Rev. Sidney Smith Gill, B.A _ > _ .Fayette County, Tenn. Prof. John Lennard Dyson, B.A.* Lexington Rev. T. Dwight Witherspoon, B.A.* Louisville, Ky. Rev. William Thomas Jefferson Sullivan, B.A_... West Foint Rev. Richard Hugh Whitehead, B.A Florida Rev. Edward Chaffin Davidson, B.A.* Water Valley Joshua C. Wood Texas 1867. LL.D. Rev. B. W. McDonald, D.D ... Lebanon, Tenn. D.D. Rev. Meyer Lewen Maryland M.A. Thomas R. Dashiel, B.A.* Columbus Rev. H. J. Johnson* Brookhaven T. B. Bailey 7 i) v S ' VIVBBSIT7 OF MISSISSIPPI . 1868. 1. 1..1). Rev. George W. McPhail, D.D.* Davidson College, N. C. Prof. Henry Tutwiler, M.A.* Greene Springs, Ala. d.d. Rev. W. C. Vrsne, M.A.* Jackson Rev. George Tucker Stainback, M.A.* -Dyersburg, Tenn. Rev. John Hunter, M.A.* , Jackson Rev. T. Dwight Witherspoon, M.A.* Louisville, Ky. 1869. i.l.d. Hon. L. Q. C. Lamar, M.A.* Oxford M.A- Rev. Rufus Washington Shive, B.A.* Searcy, Ark. George Edward Critz, B.A Georgetown, Texas Thomas S. Gathright* : Gholson Gen. Josiah Gorgas* University of the South 1872. LL.D. John William Mallett, Ph.D., M.D . University of Virginia 1874. LL.D. Pres. William Leroy Broun* Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn 1875. LL.D. Hon. J. F. H. Claiborne* Natchez 1876 LL.D. Rt. Rev. Alex. C. Garrett '. Dallas, Texas D.D. Rev. Robert Price, S. W. P. University Clarksville, Tenn. 1877. D.D. Rev. John N. Craig* Atlanta, Ga. Rev. William Darnall Lebanon, Tenn. Rev. W. E. M. Linfield* - Canton Rev. Jno. S. Moore Sherman, Texas Rev. W. T. J. Sullivan West Point PH.D. Prof. R. H. Loughridge University of California UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 99 1878. D.D. Rev. J. W. Bozeman Meridian Rev. W. S. Webb, President Mississippi College Clinton Rev. Jas. L. Tucker . Mobile, Ala. LL.D. Hon. J. W. C. Watson* ... Holly Springs Hon. Jas. T. Harrison, St.* Columbus Hon. Horatio F. Simrall* Vicksburg 1879. D.D. Rev." J. W. Lambuth* Shanghai, China LL.D. Prof. Benjamin Meek* University of Alabama 1880. D.D. Rev. George Shotwell Roudebush Madison Rev. Wm. W. Holly Hackensack, N. J. 1882. D.D. Rev. Chas. B. Galloway,* Bishop M. E. Church, South Jackson Rev. D. K. McFarland* Staunton, Va. Rev. T. J. Walne Texas 1883. LL.D. Hon. J. A. P. Campbell Jackson Prof. William J. Vaughn Vanderbilt University 1884. LL.D. Rev. Joseph H. Foy St. Louis, Mo. Prof. Eugene W. Gilgard University of California Rev. John Knowles Turnbridge Wells, Kent, England Prof. Wm. H. N. Magruder Baton Rouge, La. Rev. Thomas Dwight Witherspoon* Louisville, Ky. 1885. LL.D. Prof. Wm. F. Mellen*. . Tulane University, New Orleans 100 ' VIVBRSIT1 OF \tIS8I8SIPPI. L888. LL.D. Judge Thos. S. Maxey, U. S. District Court Austin, Texas 1893. LL.D. Hon. Robert H. Thompson, member Code Commission Jackson 1894. LL.D. Hon. A. H. Whitfield Jackson 1905 LL.D. Hon. Wm. L. Wilson* Lexington, Va. 1896. LL.D. Hon. Charles B. Howry Washington, D. C. 1898. LL.D. Hon, Hannis Taylor Washington, D. C. Hon. Leroy B. Valliant Jefferson City, Mo. Hon. Samuel H. Terral Jackson Hon. Thos. H. Woods .Jackson 1899. LL.D. Hon. Edgar E. Bryant Fort Smith, Ark. Prof. Henry St. George Tucker Washington & Lee University Prof. Eugene A. Smith University of Alabama 1900. LL.D. Hon. Charlton H. Alexander ___ Jackson 1904. LL.D. Hon. John Sharp Williams Yazoo City 1905. LL.D. Prof. C. Alphonso Smith University of North Carolina UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 101 1906. LL.D. President H. H. Harrington -College Station, Texas Hon. Dunbar Rowland.- Jackson Gen. Luke E. Wright- Memphis, Tenn. 1907. LL.D. President John Newton Tillman Fayetteville, Ark. 1908. LL.D. Prof. Lauch McLaurin Austin, Texas Prof. William Howard Magruder Agricultural College Hon. Samuel Andrew Witherspoon- Meridian 1909. LL.D. Prof. John L. Johnson Clinton Dr. Robert B. Fulton Miller School, Va. Senator George E. Chamberlain Oregon Rev. William H. Leavell Carrollton Note. — Post-graduate and other degrees conferred in course are indi- cated later in this catalogue. Alumni and Other Students. DEPARTMENT OF LAW. (Those marked * deceased.) CLASS OF 185G. Benjamin Jay Clanton* Panola County- Henry J. Harper,* (B.A., U. of M., C.S.A., killed in battle) Charleston Flavius Josephus Loveioy,* (C.S.A) Oxford Hon. Charles Purvis Neilson,* (C.S.A) Greenville Lafayette Washington Reasons* Calhoun County Hugh Eugene Weathersby,* (Lieut. C.S.A., killed in battle) Liberty Not Graduating. James Alemeth Green,* (C. S. A., Judge Circuit Court, member Board of Trustees of University, Examiner of Indian dep- redation claims) Corinth John Townes Moseley,* (B.A., U. of M.) Wahalak James Stephens Terral,* (District Attorney, Col. C. S. A., killed at Corinth, Oct. 4, 1864 Quitman Rev. Albert Hiram Thomas* Oxford CLASS OF 1S57. Roger Barton,* (B.A., U. of M.) Hernando Christopher Elison Frith* Liberty Adam Frederick Hiller* Houston John Noble Hodges* Moulton, Ala. John Adair Humphries.* (B.A., U. of M.) Mississippi City James Gustavus Minter* Woodville, Texas Joel Erskine Pearson Owen* Oktibbeha County Hon. Thomas John Walton,* (B.A., U. of M., Maj. C. S. A., late Prof, of Law, U. of M., Judge Chancery Court) McNutt Rev. Richard Hugh Whitehead,* (C. S. A., B.A., U. of M., law- yer 5 years in Carrollton, minister since) Palmetto, Fla. Not Graduating. Hon. Wm. Robert Barksdale,* (See CI. of '59) Grenada Robert Morris Bradford, (B.A., U. of M.) Jackson, Tenn. Samuel Sidney Ford* Madison County Charles Hawkins Lee, (B.A., U. of M., tutor U. of M., Capt. C. S.A.) Galveston, Texas UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 103 Henry Clay Moore*. .._ Monroe County Littleton Wilde Moore,'(B.A., U. of M., late M. C.) Bastrop, Texas Arky Young Partee Arkansas Robert Rochelle Williamson,* (B.A., U. of M.) Marshall County CLASS OF 1858. Hon. John Allen Blair,* (C. S. A., member Constitutional Con- vention, 1890) Tupelo William Henry Dukeminier,* (lawyer, C. S. A.) Columbus and Vinton George Pratt Foote,* (Capt. C. S. A., killed in battle in Virginia).. Panola Charles Cotesworth Marshall* Charleston William Ball Marshall* McNutt Hon. Henry Lowndes Muldrow,* (Col. C. S. A., B.A., U. of M., District Attorney, M. C, 1st Asst. Sec. Interior, 1884, mem- ber Board of Trustees University of Miss., member Consti- tutional Convention, 1890; Pres. Alumni Society, 1897) Starkville William Terry Stricklin* Ripley George Washington Terry* Terry Woodville Ephraim Thompson,* (B.A., U. of M., late Super- intendent Public Instruction) Monticello, Ark. Not Graduating. William Edwin Gibson* Warren County James Austin Leonard* , Panola County John Lewis McClendon* Chickasaw County CLASS OF 1859. Robert Edward Barksdale* Helena, Ark. Hon. William Robert Barksdale,* (M:A., U. of M., Capt. C. S. A., District Attorney and member of Legislature) Grenada Halsey Townsend Edwards* Canton Howell Blunt Harris* Texas John Calvin Russell,* (B.A., U. of M.; C. S. A.) Canton Henry Minor Scales,* (B.A., U. of M.) Hernando Hon. Thomas Ringland Stockdale,* (B.A., Jeff. College, Pa.; Col. C. S. A.; M. C; Justice Supreme Court of Miss.) Summit John W.Thompson,* (B.A., U. of M.;C. S. A., died in service).. Hazlehurst William Wallace Witherspoon,* (Col. C. S. A., killed in battle 1865) Copiah County Not Graduating. Robert Marmaduke Kimbrough,* (M.A., U. of M.) Kemper County Algernon Sidney Pass,* (B.A., U. of M.; Lieut.-Col. C. S. A.; District Attorney, merchant, planter Grenada Benjamin Franklin Standley,* (B.A., U. of M.) Blackhawk James Pickett Vaughan,* (B.A., Irving College, Tenn.)_. Little Rock, Ark. L04 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. CLASS OF L80O. Edward Littleton Belcher 4 Memphis, Tenn. Chas. Augustine Bridewell* (B. A.) ...._._____.___ Claiborne County Andrew Jackson Burgess* Itawamba County William Smith Champlin* (C. S. A., 1861 to 1865; Havana, 1865 to 1872; New Orleans, 1876 to 1889).. Gulfport Frisby Freeland Chew* (B.A.; Attorney, Burleson Co., Texas, I860 to 1870).... Houston, Texas Eugene Leroy Cowan* (Capt. C. S. A.)-- Holmes County William Stokes Cowan* Holmes County James Word Falkner* (Lieut.-Col. C. S. A.) .Tippah County James Thornton Fant* (B.A.; 1st Lieut. C. S. A.; Dist. Atty. for twelve years; Judge Circuit Court; Pres. Alumni Society 1S93) Holly Springs Mordecai Puryear Garrett* (B.A.) Adams County Thomas Jefferson Godbold* Franklin County William Pearson Laughter* Texas Geo. Hamilton Lester* (B.A.; Member Constitutional Conven- tion 1890) . Coff eeville William Henry Luse* (Col. C. S. A. ; State Senator) Benton Hernando DeSoto Money (M. C. 1887 and 1893; U. S. Senate 1898) ..Carrollton James Keeport Morton* JCoahoma County Thos. Marcus Pierce* Noxubee County Fines Ewing Piner* (C. S. A.; Dist. Atty.; Judge Dist. Court; State Senator) Denton, Texas George Washington Rice* Cascilla Hon. Joseph Ferdinand Sessions* (B.A., Centenary College; Maj. C. S. A.; member Legislature; State Senator; Pres. State R. R. Commission 1886 to 1896) .. _Brookhaven Hon. Edward Turner Sykes (B.A., Univ. N. C; Maj. C. S. A.; State Senator; Lawyer) Columbus Stephen Monroe Wells* (B.A.) Tippah County Not Graduating. Lucien Alexander Bowdre* Augusta, Ga. Edwin Preston Harman* (B.A.; Adjt. 3d Miss. Regt., C. S. A.; Alumni Orator 1868; Judge Chancery Court; Register U. S. Land Office Denver, Colo. Alfred Yarborough Harper* (B.A.; Col. C. S. A.; Atty. Interior Department Jackson Rufus Pettis Milam* Lexington, Tenn. Walter Leak Stricklin* Tippah County William Carroll Waldrop* (B.A.) Milam County, Texas James Pinson Wilson* (1st Lieut. C. S. A., killed in battle 1862 Pontotoc County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 105 CLASS OF 1861. Oscar Fitzallen Bledsoe* (B.A.; Lieut. C. S. A.; Pres. Elector 1888 Grenada James Gordon Frierson* (B.A.) Wittsburg, Ark. Jerry Saunders Gage* (B.A.) Holmes County William Jefferson Gray* Macon David Alexander Herring* Franklin County Henderson Madison Jacoway* (B.A.) Denver, Col. Junius Sylvester Meek* Franklin County James Robert Montgomery* (B.A.) Madison County Lemuel Rufus Mullins* (Capt. C. S. A.) Lafayette County Hon. Robert Chas. Smith* (C. S. A.; State Senator) Canton Not Graduating . Joesph Henry Carothers* (B.A.) Jackson, Tenn. Thos. Augustus Cocke* (B.A.)___ Holmes County Peter Daniel Dooly* Natchez Joseph Whetstone Embrey* Wilkinson County John Richard Gladney* (Teacher, Chickasaw County) Houston Geo. Samuel Harper* Gonzales, Texas Hon. Baxter McFarland* (Lieut. C. S. A. 1861-'65; Adjt. and Maj. at close of war; Judge Chancery Court) Aberdeen Hugh Duncan McLaurin* (B.A.; Lieut. C. S. A.) Hinds County Thomas Wilson Webb* (B.A.; Capt. C. S. A., killed in bat- tle) . '___ .Lafayette County CLASS OF 1862. (No class graduated. University exercises suspended on account of outbreak of Civil War.) Juniors in 1861. Joseph Reuben Washington Aldridge* (M.A.) Carrollton Rasselas B oyd* Kosciusko William Brack* (Capt. C. S. A.; Attorney at Law) . West Point, Miss., and El Paso, Texas Chas. Francis Bullock* (Atty. at Law, Memphis, Tenn., 1866- 1869) Cincinnati, Ohio John Blanton Coleman* (died of wounds in C. S. A.) Port Gibson Isaac Newton Davis* (B.A.) Memphis, Tenn. M atthew Leonard Durham* _ Kosciusko Howard Falconer* (B.A.; C. S. A.) Holly Springs Hon. Kinlock Falconer* (B.A.; C. S. A.; Secretary of State 1878) Holly Springs Henry Albert Garrett* (B.A.; Atty. at Law) Adams County James Lockhart Goodloe* (B.A.; Alumni Poet 1890; Atty. at Law; C. S. A.; Dep. Col. of Customs at Mobile, Ala., 1874- 1877) Memphis, Tenn. 10(3 I VIVEBSITJ OF MISSISSIPPI. Burton Norvell Harrison* (M.A., Yale 185!); Asst. Prof, of Physics Univ. of Miss. L859-'61; Private Sec'y to Pres. Jeff. Davis; confined in prison nine months) New York James Jefferson Hyde* (Attorney at Law). Shubuta Edward Augustus Jones* (B.A.) Princess Anne, Md. Monroe Walker Jones* (B.A.) Monroe County Edward Madison McAfee* Holmes County Jefferson Hardin McLemore* Carroll County William Daniel Miller* (Attorney at Law) Sardis John Anthony Pettus* Mobile, Ala. Francis Asbury Pope* (Capt. C. S. A.) Georgetown, Col. Jefferson Bryan Posey* Woodville Armead Price* Lafayette County Francis Asbury Scaife* Lumpkin County, Ga. William James Shilton* Panola County Elhanan Micajah Young* Wilkinson County CLASS OF 18G7. (The Law Department was reorganized in 1867.) Hon. Chas. Bowen Howry (Lieut. C. S. A.; member Board of Trustees of the Univ. of Miss. 1882-'94; U. S. Dist. Atty. 1885; Court Asst. Atty. -Gen. U. S. 1894; Associate Justice U. S.of Claims; Doctor of Laws U. of M. 1896)_. .Washington, D. CLASS OF 18G8. Walter Acker* (Atty. at Law, Paulding, Miss., to 1875; Lam- pasas, Texas, to 1893; Nashville, Tenn., since 1S93; Dist. Atty. from 1878 to 1882; Texas Leg. 1884; Judge Appellate Court 1887-'91.) Nashville, Tenn. Hon. Hiram Cassedy* (C. S. A.; late Judge Chancery Court and District Attorney) Brookhaven Alfred Giles Ellis* (C. S. A.) Scooba Hon. Geo. Robert Hill* (C. S. A.; Clerk U. S. Dist. Court for N. Miss. 1871-'93; Clerk U. S. Dist. Court since 1889. .Gallatin, Tenn. David Geo. Humphreys* (C. S. A.) Port Gibson Robert Augustus McAdory* Birmingham, Ala. Hon. John H. McKie* (C. S. A.) Oxford Hon. Wiley Norris Nash* (C. S. A.; Academic Course 1866-'7-'8; County Atty. and Dist. Atty.; member of Legislature; Attorney General ) Starkville Hon. Samuel Collier Patton* (C. S. A.; Genl. Atty. Aransas Pass R. R.) Hallettsville, Texas Squire Boone Partee* Panola UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 107 Dabney Minor Scales* (Executive Naval Officer C. S. N.; Lieut. U. S. N. 1898) Memphis, Tenn. Hon. Eugene Octavius Sykes* (C. S. A.; Leg. 1880-'82; U. S. Revenue Collector; member Constitutional Convention 1890; Judge Circuit Court 1898) Aberdeen Not Graduating. Hon. Chapman Levy Anderson* (C. S. A.; late M. C; Atty. at Law; see Academic Class 1869.) Kosciusko Francis Durrett Barnes* Yalobusha County Geo. Parker Calhoun* Jasper County Hon. Samuel Ratliffe Coleman* (member Legislature 1896-'00_ .Greenwood William M ontgomery Forrest * Stewart James Albert Hendon, Jr.* (C. S. A.) , West Point David Dickerson Malone* Chickasaw County Freeman Randolph* Panola County Graham Spencer* Pueblo, Col. Albert Miller Stephens* (Judge Circuit Court) Los Angeles, Cal. William Daniel Stephens* Los Angeles, Cal. John Douglass Wilde* (C. S. A.; Judge County Court) Albuquerque, N. Mex. CLASS OF 1869. Harris Parke Branham* (Lawyer and Banker; Pres. First Na- tional Bank) Seymour, Texas Hon. John W. Thompson Falkner (C. S. A.; Asst. U. S. Dist. Atty.; Legislature 1892-'94; State Senator 1896-'00; Pres. Gulf and Chicago R. R.; Atty. for County and for T. C. R. R.; Special U. S. Atty 1896; member Board of Trustees of the State University) Oxford William Richard Barnaby Hatter* Eutaw, Ala. Hon. Green Barclay Huddleston (C. S. A.; late Dist. Atty. and Judge Circuit Court) Union James Franklin McCool* Madison County Thos. Joiner McFarland* (C. S. A.) . Water Valley Chas. Edward Pegues* Booneville William Henry Rees (C. S. A.; Chancery Clerk) Tishomingo County Pickett Leake Stricklin (City Atty., Jackson, Tenn., 1878; Habur, Ark., 1882-'96) Searcy, Ark. Geo. F. F. Thompson* Memphis, Tenn. Not Graduating. Thomas Colin Cox Rankin County Leroy R. Wrenn Verona Francis Asbury Pope* (Capt. C. S. A.) Georgetown, Col. James L. Young Lee County 108 ' VIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. ( LASS OP L870. Hon. John M. Allen (C. S. A.; Dist. Atty.; M. C. 1894-'99) Tupelo Hon. Isaac Taylor Blount (C. S. A.; member Leg. 1876-'90; Pres. Elector L892) Water Valley Joseph Albert Brown (B.A.; State Reporter, Mississippi) Seattle, Wash. Otway Lane Carter (Asst. U. S. Atty.)- - Fort Worth, Texas Hon. Henry Clay Conn* (Judge Chancery Court 5th Dist)_ Hazlehurst Hon. Francis Marion Goar (C. S. A.; Prof, of Law) Little Rock, Ark. Hardy Harry Hargrove* (Journalistic writer; Clerk of Supreme Court of La.; Pres. Board of Administrators of La. Normal College; Brandon, Miss. 1868) Shreveport, La. John Balfour Hobbie Hemingway* (State Reporter, Miss.; U. S. Dist. Atty. ) Arizona Benjamin Ivy Hicks* Vicksburg Edward Paul Jones Sunflower County Hon. Thos. Keith (C. S. A.: Clerk County Court; member of Legislature and State Senate; Atty. at Law) Decatur James Campbell Norwood McNeill* Coffeeville Joseph Warren Matthews* Coahoma County Hon. Edward Mayes (LL.D.) Jackson Edwin Hugh Miller* (C. S. A.) „ .Indian Territory Juniors, 1869-70. J. T. Baggett*.. . Memphis, Tenn. William J. Booth* Winona Rev. Walter R. Branham Oxford, Ga. Shelton Heard (Atty. at Law) _ .Gainesville, Texas William Kellogg Grenada Alexander Stephen Lewis* Oxford Hon. Robert Harvey Thompson (LL.D.) . Jackson CLASS OF 1871. (No class graduated. Law School suspended.) CLASS OF 1872. Bradford Davis Coffee* . Fayette Samuel Cooper Lane* (late Asst. U. S. Court Clerk, Oxford; Banker) Greenville Hon. John Whitfield Shields* (B.A.) Greenville CLASS OF 1878. Geo. C. Alman ' Moulton, Ala. William Boykin Boone* Hernando Hon. Walter McKinnon Denny (Clerk Circuit Court; member Con. Convention 1890; M. C. 1896) Scranton I NIVEBSITT OF MISSISSIPPI. 109 Hon. David S. Fearing* (Atty. at Law; member Con. Conven- tion 1890) Raymond H. W. Freeman* Calhoun County Geo. Cuthbert Groce Waxahatchie, Texas Thos. Emmett Hare Cleburn, Ark. Jas. Adair Lyon (Ph.D; Prof. S. W. P. U.) _.Clarksville, Tenn. Chas. William Schwartz Hernando Not Graduating. Hon. James Cicero Clarke* (Atty. at Law). . Kosciusko James Hunt* Jefferson County CLASS OF 1874. John Edward Madison* Noxubee County Daniel Porter Meyers (Planter) Hattiesburg William Oscar Norrell Salt Lake City Cornelius Suydam Scott (B.A. of College of N. J. of 1872; Atty. at Law) Lexington, Ky . Hon. Albert Hall Whitfield (M.A.; Adjunct Prof. Univ. of Miss 1872; Prof, of Law Univ. of Miss.; Chief Justice Supreme Court of Miss. ) Jackson (Law School suspended from 187 -1-1877. CLASS OF 1878. First Honor — James Carter Longstreet. Leland Bascom Abel* 1 Verona John William Beauchamp* Grenada Warwick' Gatewood Bias (Atty. at Lawj New Albany Hon. Samuel Cook (member Legislature") Clarksdale Hon. John Wesley Cutrer (Legislature, House, 1884-'88; Senate 1888-'92; Pres. Elector 1884; Levee Board 1896; member Con. Convention 1890) Clarksdale Forney Leak Green Corinth Hon. William Andrew Henry (member Legislature) Yazoo City William Wallace Hill* Columbus William Young Hughes (Planter) , Port Gibson Hon. Samuel Richard Hughston__^ Carthage Hon. John Hall Kimmons (Mayor, Oxford, 1883-'91)_. Oxford William Henry Land West Station Hon. James Carter Longstreet (Judge Chancery Court) 1898 Jackson Geo. Fleming Maynard Clarksdale Hon. Monroe McClurg (Res. Vaiden to 1896; Editor Nucleus; Grand Master Odd Fellows; Grand Rep. to Grand Lodge of the World; member Con. Convention 1890; Chairman House Committee on Education 1896; Alumni Orator 1896) -Greenwood Andrew Shelton Meharg (U. S. Agricultural Agt.) Grenada HO I AM WR8ITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Hugh Roderick Montgomery — Sparta Tatton Butler Murray* Oxford John Andrew Nabers (Co. Surveyor; Real Estate Dealer). Vernon, Texas Geo. Rhew Page (Sec. and Treas. Levee Board) Clarksdale David McCaleb Porterfield,. Vicksburg Alfred Benjamin Rawlings* (District Attorney) Spottsylvania, Va. Frank David Robinson Friar's Point Francis Marion Rogers Memphis, Tenn. Hon. Edward N. Scudder (Atty. at Law; State Senate 1894) Vicksburg Thomas Slater Smith* (Speaker House of Representatives) Texas Nicholas Christopher Snider Gainesville, Texas M ar \in Eddy Sullivan . . Sardis John Anderson Tyson (Circuit Clerk) Macon Not Graduating . Henry Lewis Croker Dry Grove Thos. Jefferson Hudson Lamar County Henry Merritte Hunter, Jr .Texas Hubbard Alonzo Parker Lodi Hon. John Hamilton Reagan* (member Leg. and of Convention of 1890) New Ireland James Stone (Atty. at Law) Oxford Samuel Allen Young Winona CLASS OF 1879. First Honor — Charlton Henry Alexander. Hon. Charlton Henry Alexander (Supreme Court Reporter LS94- '96; Author, with Brame, of a Digest of the Supreme Court Reports) Jackson Arthur Stillingf eet Buchanan Memphis, Tenn Hon. Thos. Battle Carroll (Legislature 1886-'90; Atty.) Starkville Chas. Dudley Carter Ripley Daniel Webster Chapman Oxford Chas. Chrisman* Brookhaven John Weems Holliday* Aberdeen Leroy Wesley Kennedy __New Albany Hamilton Lay Land West Station Hon. James Franklin McCool (II.) (Leg. 1882-'86, 1896-'97; Speaker of the House 1896-1900) Kosciusko James Blanton McGeehee Memphis, Tenn. Hon. Graves Henry Shamburger* (Legislature, 1886) Meridian Afton Kane Wooten El Paso. Texas Not Graduating. Thomas Kidwell Downing Okolona James Thomas Halbrook Ripley UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. HI CLASS OF 1880. First Honor — Malachi Christopher Pegues. Lawrence Newton Buford (Deputy 4th Aud. U. S. 1896; Lum- ber Business) Roanoke, Va. Hon. Robert Robson Buntin* (Legislature 1892-'96) Harrison Station William Lonsdale Dyer* Lexington Benjamin Howorth Grimes (Insurance Business) Meridian Francia Marion Hamlet* (member Con. Convention 1890) Belen William Frederick Hamner (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Benjamin Bradford Harrison Brooksville John Leonard Hendrick Fort Smith, Ark. Maxwell Magill Hull Perkinsville Hon. William Augustus McDonald (Leg. 1884-'88; State Senate 1888-'92) Ashland William Francis Millsaps (Asst. in Law Dept. of U. S. Govern- ment 1892-'96) Monroe, La. Malachi Christopher Pegues Abbeville Hugh Seymour Quin (Attorney) Kansas City, Mo. Louis Rankin Quin Pike County Hon. Jos. Carlos Rich (late Mayor of Mobile; Trustee A. & M. College; Trustee Ala. Medical College) Mobile, Ala. Frank Buckner Richardson* (Judge City Court; Adjt. Gen. Kentucky ) 1 Pembroke, Ky . Robert Shotwell* . Jackson John James Stokes Texas James Edward Wheat* Texas Not Graduating. Thos. Kidwell Downing Okolona Millard Fillmore Mitthoff Louisiana CLASS OF 1881. First Honor — Presley Kittredge Ewing. Hon. James Milton Acker, Jr. (Legislature, 1888; Mayor of Aber- deen 1894-'96) Aberdeen Chas. Pinckney Adair (Lawyer, Editor and Publisher) Indianola Hon. James Weston Barron* Aberdeen Hon. Ezekiel Samuel Candler, Jr. (Pres. Elector 1888; Atty. at Law ) Corinth Horace Benjamin Everett Scranton Hon. Presley Kittredge Ewing Houston, Texas John Underwood Foster Memphis, Tenn. John Alcus Lamkin (Deputy Chancery Clerk) Magnolia Beverly Mathews, Jr. (Justice of Peace) Columbus John Land Short, Jr Sharp, Ark. James Simrall (Planter) Mannsdale Albert Theodore Smith Pittsboro 112 ' DIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Presley Stanback (Atty. at Law; Planter) .Byhalia .lames Percival Stiles Birmingham, Ala. Leon Sugar Moorehouse Parish, La. James Burke (Manager Stewart Lumber Co.) Weather ford, Texas Not Graduating. Omar Dieuwis LeReaux Province of Ontario, Canada Julius Augustus Robinson Clarke County CLASS OF 1S82. First Honor — Frank May Scott. Hon. Robert Chas. Lee (Leg., 188G; member Con. Convention 1890; U. S. Dist. Atty. 1893-'96; Trustee of A. & M. Col- lege). Madison Hon. William Tate McDonald Bay St. Louis Hon. William Gates Orr* Okolona Frank May Scott Friar's Point James Rucks Yerger ,. Rosedale CLASS OF 1883. First Honor — John Lewis Dantzler. John Lewis Dantzler (Lumber Manufacturer) Moss Point James Taliaferro Montgomery Chickasaw County Geo. Winfield Robertson* Water Valley Hon. William Pynchon Stewart Ventress (Legislature, 1896) Woodville Hon. William Dowd Witherspoon (Leg., 1890; Con. Convention, 1890) Nashville. Tenn. Not Graduating. Hon. Will Dozier Anderson (Legislature, 1898; Attorney) _. Tupelo John Franklin Dean (Atty. at Law) Senatobia Walter Leak Keirn (Physician) Itta Bena Walter Lynn Kilpatrick Texas John M. P. Parmer* Tunica County William Samuel Richardson Canton CLASS OF 1884. First Honor — Sidney Y. West. Stephen Frank Hampton* (Civil Service, Treasury Depart- ment Washington, D . C . Hon. John Young Murray, Jr. (Secretary State Senate) Ripley William Gray Sears (Attorney at Law) Houston. Texas Hon. John Robert Stowers (1st Lieut. U. S. V. 1898; Sec. and Local Treas. of the University) Oxford Sidney Yancey West* Marshall County Joseph Sidney Wheless Galveston. Texas Not Graduating. Phillip Augustus Rush (Atty. at Law; Pres. Tate Co. Bank) . . _ Senatobia UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 113 CLASS OF 1885. First Honor — Robert Finlay Cochran. William Robert Bridges* : Oktibbeha County Robert Finlay Cochran (Judge) Meridian Hon. Walter Perdew Tackett (Leg., 1888; Trustee I. I. & C.)..- Lexington Not Graduating. William Hill Byers Crawford, Ark. Jos. Conway Dodd Louisville, Ky. Percy Cook Ratliff (State Agent Penn. Mutual Life Insurance Co.) Birmingham, Ala . Cread Wayland Taylor Oklahoma Hon. Augustus Edward Weathersby (State Senate, 1899-1900)- .Columbia CLASS OF 1886. First Honor — Richard Brownrigg Haughton. John Hamilton Barksdale* (Special Circuit Judge and District Attorney ) . . . .Grenada John Bascom Cochran (Presidential Elector 1896) Meridian Richard Brownrigg Haughton (Justice City Court; Vice-Pres. Jefferson Club) .St. Louis, Mo. John Meredith Matthews* Hazlehurst Richard Pettus Moore (Supt. Mutual Life Ins. Co.) Jackson William Young Watson Cuba Edgar Hall Woods Fayette Not Graduating. James Beauregard Goode Upshaw, Texas Robert Jackson Wright (Attorney) Roxie CLASS OF 1887. First Honor — Edward Dickinson Pierce. John David Burge* Corinth Hon. John Lawrence Hebron, Jr. (Lawyer; County Atty.; Planter, Trustee State University) Greenville Edward Dickinson Pierce (Law Book Publisher) Laurel Minter Duke Rayburn (County Attorney) Liberty, Texas Hon. Louis Morgan Southworth (State Senate; Capt. U. S. V. 1898; Trustee of University of Miss.) Manila, P. I. Note. — New students and graduates in the Department of Law for the years following 1887 are recorded in same list with other students for each year later in this catalogue. 114 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. DEPARTMENT OF ARTS. Note. — In the following lists, down to the year 1872, the names of the graduates of each year are placed first, then the names of those who at various times were members of the class, but were not graduated, and then the names of those taking a select course in the year named. CLASS OF 1851. Honor Men. James Jones Quarles, M.A.* John Bannister Herring, M.A.* Joshua Long Halbert.* John L. Hudson.* Jordan McCullough Phipps, M.A. Hon. Thos. Elliott Bugg* (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; ex-member Miss. Leg.; first student enrolled in the University) Starke, Fla. Joshua Long Halbert* (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Corsicana, Texas Hon. John Bannister Herring* (Col. C. S. A.; a noted benefactor of young men) Pontotoc Hon. John L. Hudson* (member Legislature 1859-'61; Capt. C. S. A.) Hudsonville Rev. James William Lambuth* (D.D.; Missionary of M. E. Church, South, to China 1854-'86; to Japan 1886-'92; emi- nent scholar and translator of Bible and various religious and other works into Chinese) China John Sanders McRaven* (M.D.; C. S. A.) Marshall County John Townes Moseley* (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) .Scooba Marlborough Pegues* (C. S. A.; Planter) Marshall County William Claudius Pegues Marshall County Prof. Jordan McCullough Phipps (Adjunct Prof. Mathematics, Univ. of Miss., 1852-'58; Prof. Mathematics at Univ. 1858- '61; Capt. C. S. A.; Judge of County Court of Lafayette County; State Senator of Florida for four years; Atty. at Law) Key West, Fla. James Jones Quarles* (C. S. A.; Planter) Lafayette County John Lewis Webb* (Planter, died before the Civil War).. Lafayette County William James Webb* (C. S. A.) Memphis, Tenn. Beverly Daniel Young* (C. S. A.; Planter) Waverley Thomas Erskine Young* (C. S. A.; Planter) Waverley Not Graduating. J. H. Bramlitt Pontotoc H. M. Cotrell* Hudsonville F. H. Evans* Aberdeen John T. Gilliam Olive Branch W. T. Gordon Canton T. L. Halbert* Aberdeen UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 115 E. P. Kilpatrick* (Capt. C. S. A.; Planter) Hudsonville Hugh Mclnnis* (Planter; Hotel Keeper) Leaksville J. Means Memphis, Tenn. William Owens* Canton Joseph W. Scales (Atty. at Law) Clarksville, Tenn. Rev. J. J. Smiley* Copiah County M. L. Strong Clay County Pursuing Select Studies — 1849. William Fondren* (C. S. A.) Oxford I. F. Ragland Pontotoc Pursuing Select Studies — 1850. Robert H. Bonner* LaGrange, Tenn. J. W. Crisler Warsaw, Ala. W. G. Little, Jr.* Warsaw, Ala. Joshua T. McBee Tchula S. McBee Tchula R. H. McKay (C. S. A.) i Lafayette County Pursuing Select Studies — 1851. T. Havern Jackson J. C. Hicks Greenwood William A. Houston Lamar William Kirk Benton County F. A. Oneal Beckwith M. T. Purnell Grenada W. B. Shields Washington, La. J. R. Youngue* Columbus CLASS OF. 1852. Honor Men. Richard Wright Phipps, M.A. Jackson Roach, M.A.* Brodie Stachan Crump* James Hamilton Mayson.* Brodie Strachan Crump* (C. S. A.; Merchant) Holly Springs John Bayliss Earle* Capt. C. S. A.; Att'y at Law) Waco, Texas William Pendleton Griffin* (M.D.; Capt. C. S. A. ; Atty. at Law) Arkansas Arthur Hambleton Harris* (Major C. S. A.; Dist. Atty.). .New Orleans, James Hamilton Mayson* (Col. C. S. A.; Member of Secession Commission, 1861; Member of Constitutional Convention, 1865; Atty. at Law) Marion County Chas. Smith Morton* (killed, C. S. A.) Lowndes County Richard Wright Phipps (Col. C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Com- manded all the Mississippi troops in the Army of North- HG I DIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. ern Virginia, three brigades in number; present at the cere- mony of stacking arms at Appomattox Court House, April 12, 1S65; member of Constitutional Convention, 1865; mem- ber of Legislature, 1S66-68; President of Alumni Associa- tion of the University of Misssissippi for over sixteen (16) years). Terra Ceia, Fla. Leander Metcalf Rayburn* (C. S. A.) Memphis, Tenn. Jackson Roach* (C. S. A.; Teacher) Oxford Jos. Watkins Scales* (Atty. at Law) Clarksville, Tenn. Solon M. Sykes* (Lieut. C. S. A.) Memphis, Tenn. Not Graduating. John D. Alston* DeSoto County P. G. Alston Mount Pleasant R. C . Andrews* Vernon J. M. Bennett Barton William Boliver Bowen* (C. S. A.) Oxford J. W. Burnett Barton A. S. Burton* Holly Springs W. R. Butler* (C. S. A.) Oxford A. J. Coleman* Memphis, Tenn. Jos. I. Conkey * Oxford A. Ewing* Carrollton T. G. Farrar * Jackson L. Gillespie* Wahalak S. H. Harris* Columbus Finley Holmes* DeSoto County Hammet H. Hurt* (C. S. A.) Texas William Johnson Tchula Hon. Lewis B. Jones* (C. S. A.; Legislature 1882-1883) Taylors J. G. Kirkpatrick (D.D.S.; killed C. S. A.) ...1 Canton W. J. Leak* Salem Church S. P. Lester* (M.D.; C. S. A.) Belmont Robert S. McAllister* Canton Robert McGowan* Abbeville J. M. McKie* (C. S. A.) Oxford C . R. Montgomery* Starkville M. G. Nash* Canton D. M. Oliver Panola County Leroy C. Passmore* Madison County Chas. W. Phifer* (Col. C. S. A.) Water Valley B. L. Phipps* (C. S. A.) Oxford T. J. Puryear* (died C. S. A.) Hudsonville Thomas T. Rogers Oxford R. G. Smither* (C. S. A.) Oxford B. S. Taylor* (C. S. A.) Taylors John Watkins* Waverley William Z. Ware Redland UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 117 Jos. M. Welsh* Wahalak Isaac W. Whitehead Canton T. S. Wyatt (Planter) Tchula W. D. Davis* (C. S. A.) Oxford E . H . Douglass * Canton J. H. Fleming* Camden F. F. Freeman* (Lieut. C. S. A.) Coonewah M. F. Gilchrist Sledgeville H. W. Green Vicksburg William Powel DeSoto County W. B. Ragan Natchez D. H. Ragsdale* Aberdeen W. S. Royall Yazoo City J. F.. Sample Covington, Tenn. William Shields Natchez G . W. Spooner * Macon George H. Stratton Como John W. Todd Bolivar, Tenn. CLASS OF 1853. Honor Men. James Meek Calhoun, M.D.* William Smith Parham.* Franklin Roach.* Thomas William Hunter.* Jefferson Mirabeau Lamar.* James Hamilton Young. Henry Hill Bedford *. Panola County Robert Weakley Braham* (C. S. A.; Planter) Texas Drew William Bynum* (M.D.) DeSoto County James Meek Calhoun* (M.D.; Ass't Surgeon C. S. A.) Preston and Rosebloom Hamilton Henderson Chalmers * (C. S. A.; Chief Justice Supreme Court) Jackson John Burrus Fearn* (C. S. A.; Merchant) Canton James Edward Gatewood* (Capt. C. S. A.; Atty. at Law)..Des Arc, Ark. John Olin Hardeman (Clerk County Court) LaGrange, Tenn. James Nairne Harper* Yalobusha County Thomas William Hunter* Memphis, Tenn. Jefferson Mirabeau Lamar (brother of L. Q. C. Lamar; born 1834; Atty. at Law; Lieut.-Col. C. S. A., Cobb's Legion; killed at Compton's Pass, Md., Sept. 14, 1862) Covington, Ga. William Clark McQuiston Aberdeen Q'dellus Arminius Mann (Teacher) Mannsville, I. T. Clement Lanier Marshall Flower Prairie, Texas 118 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Hon. Robert Muldrow* (Major C. S. A.; member Legislature) -- Paducah , Ky . William Smith Parham* Marshall County Franklin Roach* (killed in C. S. A.) Yalobusha County William James Robson* (C. S. A.; Merchant) New Orleans, La. Edwin Smith Walton (Capt. C. S. A.; Special Ins. Agt.) Sardis Robert Nicholas Joseph Wilson* (M.D.) __.Byhalia John Miller Wright* Yazoo City James Hamilton Young (C. S. A. four years; Planter) Waverley Not Graduating. Eugene Baylor (C. S. A.) New Orleans, La. John W. Bowman Benton Col. Hoggatt Clopton (Anniversarian Hermaen Society 1851; lineal descendant of Sir Hugh Clopton, who is interred by the side of William Shakespeare at Stratf ord-on-Avon ; Banker and Planter) Helena, Ark. Addison Craft (Major C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Ins. Agt.).-Holly Springs B. Cromwell Warsaw, Ala. T. Y. Ellis* (C. S. A.) Oxford A. J. Evans Muldrow Chas. W. Fraser* (Col. C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; eminent private citizen Memphis, Tenn . L. Gillespie Wahalak, Miss. G. F. Hobson * Jackson Henry G. Holmes Spring Ridge R. A. Hope* (C. S. A.) Oxford Lewis B . Janez* Oxford William H. Johnson Tchula A. G . Keyes* Aberdeen I. L. Lewis* (C. S. A.) Oxford J. P. Meaders (C. S. A.) Water Valley Fredinand Molloy * Holly Springs J. Moore Redland Geo. R. Quarles Montrose T. L. Rogers* Aberdeen John Shegog* (C. S. A.) Oxford Thos. P. Shields Memphis, Tenn. Jos. P. Slaughter Philadelphia William Stricklin* (C. S. A.; State Senate 1870-72) Ripl y James C. Williamson Mount Pleasant Pursuing Select Studies, 1853. T. H. Bunch Rutledge, Tenn. F. L. Cameron* Madison County D. H. Creath Washington County Rev. Newton Givens (County Supt. Education) Waxahatchie, Texas J. W. Jones Bladen Springs, Ala. W. P. Ligon Yalobusha County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. H9 John P. Nowell (see Class of '56) Grenada Monroe Pointer* Panola County Philip Pointer. * Panola County CLASS OF 1854. Honor Men. William Alexander Eakin,* M.D. Thomas John Walton,* LL.D. Rev. Sidney Smith Gill. Rev. Geo. Tucker Stainback, *D.D. Hon. Robert Alice Baird* (C. S. A.; Leg. '84, '86, '96) Early Grove Henry Balfour* Holly Springs Hon. William Allen Boyd (C. S. A.; Legislature '85; member Constitutional Convention 1890; State Senate 1896) Ripley Edwin Dancy Boykin* Noxubee County Benjamin Blount Boykin* Noxubee County Robert Morris Bradford (Major C. S. A.) Jackson, Tenn. Thos. Philemon Buford (C. S. A. '61-65; Planter and Farmer). Roanoke.Va. James Brewton Clayton* (C. S. A., Captain) Marshall County Rev. Edward Chaffin Davidson* (Minister and Teacher). Lafayette County William Alex. Eakin* Panola County Robert Jos. Farley Panola County Lucius Featherston* (Col. C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Arkansas James Madison Gates* Chickasaw County Rev. Sidney Smith Gill Hickory Withe, Tenn. Hon. James Alemeth Green (see Law Class of '56) Corinth Erasmus Franklin Griffin* (M.D.; late member Board of Trus- tees of U. of M.) Moss Point Richard Montgomery Harris (M.D.)i Sumterville, Ala. Henry Jones Harper* (Atty. at Law; C. S. A.; killed in battle).. Charleston Rev. Alex. Stuart Henderson (Camden, Miss., to 1883). .Ellis County, Tex. Thomas Hinds* Fayette Hon. Ira Griffin Holloway* (Col. C. S. A.; State Senate 1871-74). .Oxford Laurentius Holmes* (M.D) DeSoto County Richard Francis Irby* Lowndes County Jackson Gill Knox* (M.D.; honored citizen and Physician). Lauderdale Co. William Benjamin Lockett* Noxubee County Richard Robert McMullen* Panola County Richard Henry Parham (Principal City High Schools and County Examiner) Little Rock, Ark. William Henry Randle* (C. S. A.) Aberdeen Hon. Allen Morris Reasons* Calhoun County Thomas Rose Saddler Friar's Point Thomas Rodney Shields* (C. S. A.) Avoyalles Parish, La. Rev. Geo. Tucker Stainback* (D.D.; Chaplain C. S. A.; Pas- tor and Teacher) Dyersburg, Tenn. 120 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Thomas Barrett Sykes* (Inspector-Gen. C. S. A.; Government Agent to Delaware Indians 1S56-61; Mayor of Aberdeen; Lawyer) Aberdeen Hon. Woodville Ephraim Thompson* (LL.B.; Supt. Public In- struction 1885) Monticello, Ark. Rev. William James Vineyard* Arkansas Thomas John Walton* (LLB.; U. S. Dist. Atty.; Judge Chan- cery Court; Professor of Law at University of Mississippi; died of yellow fever, 187S, Grenada) Oxford Not Graduating. Hugh L. Bedford Memphis, Tenn. T. S. Bisland Natchez R. W. Buck* Lexington James R. Burney* (C. S. A.) Oxford J. H. Burt Grenada W. P. Carruth* Marvel, Ark. W. A. Cotter Yalobusha County M. Craton Preston J. Crigler* Columbus A. B. Davidson* (C. S. A.) Oxford D. Mc. DuBose* (Col. C. S. A.; M. C.) Big Creek, Tenn. Isham Harrison Earle* Aberdeen J. P. H. Farr* (Col. C. S. A.; member Arkansas Legislature; member Arkansas Secession) Little Rock, Ark. Geo. W. L. Fly* Sharon J. P. Hamar* Salem R. T. Hibbler (C. S. A.) ___Belmont Hon. A. M. Hicks (State Senate; Planter) Myrtleville W. M. Hodge i Paris L. L. Home Aberdeen G. W. Hudson* Lamar James E. Hunt* Monroe County Hon. Lewis P. Jones* (C. S. A.; Legislature 1882-83) Taylors Rev. G. W. Lane* (C. S. A.) Oxford A. B. McRae* Collins Robert Mitchell Springdale Whitfield Morton* (Lieut. C. S. A.; Blythe's Battalion; killed at Fishing Creek) Columbus Jos. H. Neilson Texas P. Nicholson* Holly Springs Jas. Oswald Woodville Thos. H. Pegues Fredonia, Texas J. W. Rison (C. S. A.) Richmond, Va. W. A. Rison Oxford R. Robson* Charleston M. L. Rogers Chulahoma William Ruffin* Panola County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 121 Thos. R. Sadler* Prairie H. Sanders* Aberdeen W. L. Sharkey* Jackson H. H. Shields* Adams County J. Madison Smith* Woodville John E. Stitt Pleasant Mount S. W. Stitt Pleasant Mount A. J. Sutherland* (M.D.) Canton Edgar Sykes* (C. S. A.; Planter) Grenada Henry Taylor (C. S. A.) Oxford John R. Vaughan* Batesville John J. Walton* Charleston R. R. Williamson* Marshall County J. M. Winston Columbus S. H. Yongue Columbus Pursuing Select Studies, 1854. J. W.Baliey*(C.S.A. 1861-65) Acona Talbert A. Baldwin* Hinds County Shadrach C. Barns* (Atty. at Law) Charleston Hiram A. Binion* Cooksville D. J. Gibbons* Marshall County James M. Hall Cedar View Walter R. B. Hill* Marshall County John W. Lipscomb* ■ Flora Oliver Lumpkin Marshall County Nicholas B. McLean* Holmes County John P. Nowell (see Class of 1856) Yalobusha County Benjamin F. Phillips Hernando James F.' Wade (Planter) Lexington J. R. Williams (1st Lieut. C. S. A.) '_ Williamsville CLASS OF 1855. Honor Men. Charles Hawkins Lee. Littleton Wilde Moore, M. C. Rev. George Poindexter Richardson.* William Robert Barksdale,* LL.B. Calvin Perkins McLeod.* R. M. Kimbrough.* W. F. Mellen,*LL.D. Hon. William-Robert Barksdale* (C. S. A.; LL.B.; Dist. Atty.; member Legislature) Coffeeville Paul Barringer* (C. S. A.) Oxford Roger Barton, Jr.* (LL.B.) Hernando 122 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Jacob Theophilis Brougher*. Ripley Rev. James Hillhouse Gilliard (Presbyterian Minister) Baldwyn Hon. James Gordon (Col. C. S. A.; member Legislature; Trus- tee of the University of Mississippi at present) Okolona John Watson Henderson* Panola County John Adair Humphries* (LL.B.) Harrison County Francis William Keys* (Dist. Atty.) Carrollton Robert Marmaduke Kimbrough* Kemper County Hon. Charles Hawkins Lee Galveston, Texas German Albert Lester* Hinds County John Newton Lyon* (C. S. A.) DeSoto County Calvin Perkins McLeod* (C. S. A.) Brooksville John M cSwine* Yalobusha County Hon. William McDonald Ross McSwine * (M.D.; member Leg- islature 1887-97) Grenada William Francis Mellen*(Col. C. S. A.; LL.D.; Dean of Law Faculty Tulane University) New Orleans, La. Hon. Littleton Wilde Moore (M. C.) Bastrop, Tex. Rev. Hugh McEwen Morrison (Minister and Teacher) Dublin Rev. George Poindexter Richardson* Grenada Henry Minor Scales* (LL.B.) Hernando Rev. Rufus Washington Shive* Searcy, Ark. James Madison Smith* Woodville Chas. Green Smither* (M.D.) Arkansas Rev. Mirza Leander Weller* Halifax County, N. C. Rev. Richard Hugh Whitehead* Plant City, Fla. Robert Rochelle Williamson* Holly Springs Andrew Thomas Wolfe (Accountant and Broker) Crystal Springs Not Graduating. Thomas O. Alford* Madison County J. L. Andrews Madison County William Crump* (C. S. A.) Marshall County David Holmes* DeSoto County J. H. Jeffries* Holly Springs Henry Clay Moore* Aberdeen James S. Nicholson Holly Springs L. H. Oliver Sledgeville John G. Patrick* Jackson E. D. Ragland Shelby County, Tenn. Josephus W. Robertson* (C. S. A.) Oxford William E. Stokes* Macon John David Trotter* Marshall County William D. Whitehead Florida Pursuing Select Studies, 1855. Samuel Lafayette Johnson* (C. S. A.) Bright James McDowell* Rankin County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 123 John McDowell* Rankin County James Goodwin McGeehee Memphis, Tenn. William Thomas McGeehee Como John Leslie McGowan* (Planter) Holly Springs Henry Xenophon McGowen Hinds County Joseph Terry Minter Yalobusha County Nathan Thomas Nelson Tallulah, Miss. Allen S. Pate* Black Hawk Charles A. Pate* Black Hawk Hazen Pomeroy Canada East Augustus Stockard* (C. S. A.) Oxford Samuel Heidelberg Terral* (see Class of '57), Quitman Mark Valentine (see 1857) Little Rock, Ark. Elisha. Warfield Memphis, Tenn. John Robert Williams Graysport CLASS OF 1856. Honor Men. Martin Augustus Oatis.* Rev. Thomas Dwight Witherspoon, D.D., LL.D.* John Lennard Dyson,* M.A. Henry Paul Taylor.* Leonidas Parham.* Chas. Clinton Balfour* ....Madison County James Roach Balfour (Custom House) New Orleans, La. Eli Gunn Burney (Professor Ancient Languages, Bethel College and Cumberland University) Plant City, Fla . Putnam Darden* (C. S. A.; Master State Grange) Fayette David Littleton Dunn* . Memphis, Tenn. John Lennard Dyson* Lexington John Harrison Gatewood* Marshall County William Griffin Gatewood* Marshall County James Hamilton Gillespie* Carroll County John Adam Gray Tupelo Hugh Dunlap Greer* (Col. C. S. A.; distinguished for gallantry; accidentally killed 1899) Buntyn, Tenn. Hon. Geo. Hamilton Lester* Coffeeville Benjamin Means Marshall, Ark. Hon. Henry Lowndes Muldrow (LL.B.; see Class 1858) Starkville John Pipkin Nowell (Planter) Grenada Martin Augustus Oatis* (LL.B.; Cumberland University; Col. 22d Regiment Mississippi Volunteers, C. S. A.) Monticello Leonidas Parham* Fayette County, Tenn. Algernon Sydney Pass* (see Law Class of 1859) Grenada Samuel Wildes Pegues Selma, Ala. John Roach, Jr.* (killed, C. S. A.) Yalobusha County Jos. Ferdinand Sessions* (Capt. C. S. A.; M.D.; Holmes County 1869; died in 1870 in Illinois) 124 I DIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. John Samuel Simmons In Florida Thos. Bannister Simmons* Yalobusha County William Christopher Stuart* DeSoto County •lames Wright Talbert* Yalobusha County Henry Paul Taylor Holmes County Alfred Norman Thomas* (C. S. A.; M.D.) Marshall County Eugene Macon Thompson* (C. S. A.; M.D.) Okolona Leroy Branch Valliant (LL.B. Cumb. Univ.; Capt. 22d Miss. Regt. C. S. A.; Judge Circuit Court, St. Louis, Mo., 1886-'98; LL.D. 1898; Justice Supreme Court of Missouri) St. Louis, Mo. Edward Kindle Ward* (Capt. C. S. A., killed in 1864) Memphis, Tenn. Robert Patten Willing, Sr. (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Hazlehurst Rev. Thos. Dwight Witherspoon* (Chaplain C. S. A.; D.D.; LL.D.; Pastor Memphis, Petersburg, Louisville; Prof. Theo- logical Seminary) Louisville, Ky . Thomas Minto Witherspoon (C. S. A.) Camden, Ala. Ferdinand Augustus Wolfe* Jackson Not Graduating. John J. Ashe Oakland Edwin Marion Baker Somerville, Tenn. William W. Baker Coffeeville John Terrel Bush* Macon Henry S. Butler* (C. S. A.) Oxford Henry T. Calhoun Yalobusha County James W. Coleman (M.D.) Jefferson County William Barnei Davis Grenada Thomas Deveaux Dockery* Hernando Chas. H. Fant (Planter and Merchant) Rogers, Ark. Edward T. Fant* (Teacher and Planter) Holly Springs William Fitzgerald* Panola County C. M. Franklin (Planter) Early Grove Edward L. Frierson* Lafayette County Harry A. Gillespie Yalobusha County Burton Norvell Harrison* (Atty. at Law; see Law Class of 1862 New York, N. Y. Elam J. Hope* (M.D.; C. S. A.) Lafayette County Samuel T. Lockhart* (Lieut. Col. C. S. A.) Carroll County Lewis C. Majet Grenada Hugh McGeehee Como Archibald J. McNeill* (M.D.) Olive Branch William H. Morgan Hardeman, Tenn. Henry Clay Moore* (C. S. A., killed in battle) Monroe County William R. Parham : Fayette County, Tenn. William S. Puryear* Marshall County John H. Quarles* (C. S. A.) Arkansas John Richardson DeSoto County James D. Ruffin Sardis UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 125 J. L. H. Taylor* .. Memphis, Tenn. James N. Thompson* (C. S. A.) Lafayette County John A. Tinnin Oakland Thomas T. Weatherby Charleston C. C. Wilburn* (M.D.) Panola County R. B. Willis Yalobusha County Pursuing Select Studies — 1856. Miles Micajah Cooper* Canton Doanldson Crawford Centerville, La. Jesse Winston Harris Centreville, La. John Robert Hicks* Vicksburg Joshua Hightower* Choctaw County David G. Hilderbrand Memphis, Tenn. Gustavus Frederick Hilgard (Civil Engineer and Surveyor).. Bellville, 111. Robert Bruce Kincaid Ludlow W. W. Leake Leake's Store, Ark. John Walter Lipscomb Flora William Love Lloyd (Planter) Carpenter Francis Marion Looney Memphis, Tenn. James McDowell* Rankin County John McDowell* Rankin County James Goodwin McGehee Memphis, Tenn. William Thomas McGeehee Panola County John Leslie McGowan* (Planter) Holly Springs Frank Nailer . : Vicksburg Richard Valentine Pearson Coffeeville Hartwell G. Pearson Coffeeville Daniel John Salley* Carroll County James Minor Semmes Panola County William Wirt Shaw* . Coahoma County Josiah Aaron Simpson* Madison County William Ragan Stone Madison Parish, La. Mark Valentine, Sr. (Atty. at Law; Lieut. C. S. A.; East Carrol Parish, La., until 1876; Warren County, Miss., to 1869; Chi- cot County, Ark., to 1884 Little Rock, Ark. William Taylor Watson Holly Springs CLASS OF 1857. Honor Men. Alfred Yarborough Harper. Rev. William Thomas Jefferson Sullivan, D.D. Vernon LaGrange Terrell*. John Allen Job Barksdale* Yalobusha County Geo. Washington Brown Arkansas Daniel Berry Carr* (killed in battle C. S. A.) Simpson County 126 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Rev. Jos. Carr* Simpson County James Leper Clowney Water Valley Benjamin Wilkins Cocke* .Holmes County Rev. Robert Haskins Crozier (D.D.; C. S. A.; Pastor; Author of "Confederate Spy," "Bloody Junta," "Fiery Trials," "Araphel" and other stories) Palestine, Texas Thos. Rowan Dashiell* Columbus Geo. Washington Davidson* (C. S. A.) Lafayette County William Dionysius Davis* Panola County Robert Jacob Durr* (M.D.) Simpson County Columbus Meshach Franklin* (Planter) Early Grove Rev. Madison Wilson Frierson* (Chaplain C. S. A., died in service Pontotoc County Benjamin Franklin Griffin Moscow, Tenn. Hon. Alfred Yarborough Harper (Atty. at Law, Interior Dept.) Biloxi Alexander Linnier Kimbrough* (C. S. A.) Carroll County James McWillie McCullough* Madison County Cornelius McLaurin* Covington County Hugh Duncan McLaurin* Covington County Jos. Appenzell Mayer* Marshall County William Xerxes Moseley (M.D.; Surgeon C. S. A.; County Health Officer) Keatchie, La. David Terrel Oliver* (C. S. A.) DeSoto County Rev. John Samuel Park (Chaplain C. S. A.) Corinth Geo. Crawford Phillips (M.D.; Surgeon C. S. A.; County Health Officer Lexington Leonidas Richmond (M.D.) Germantown, Tenn. John Calvin Russell* (LL.B.) Canton Thos. Gilliam Smith-Vaniz (C. S. A.; Planter and Teacher) Canton Benjamin Franklin Standley* (C. S. A.) Carroll County Rev. William Thos. Jeff. Sullivan (D.D.; Chaplain C. S. A.) Jackson Lucian Melville Sykes* Aberdeen Hon. Samuel Heidelberg Terrel* (LL.D.; C. S. A.; Circuit Judge ; Justice Supreme Court) Jackson Hon. Vernon LaGrange Terrell* (Capt. C. S. A.; Banker). .Crystal Springs James Nathaniel Thompson* (C. S. A.) Lafayette County John W. Thompson* (LL.B.; died in C. S. A.) Copiah County Thos. Wilson Webb* (Capt. C. S. A.) Lafayette County Robert Steeel Weir* (M.D.; Merchant) Vaiden Not Graduating. John Henry Abbay * Commerce Hon. Richard F. Abbay (Leg., 1896-1900; Planter) Commerce William Hales Clopton* Aberdeen James Hartwell Dean* Carroll County William Augustus Evans Aberdeen Morgan L. Fitch Lexington John Robert Haynes Clinton, La. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 127 Benjamin S. Herring* Carroll County Grant Hogg " Memphis, Tenn. Samuel Jefferson Humphries Columbus William Washington Humphries Columbus Geo. E. Hunt Sardis James Lyman Kendall Houston, Texas Thos. Benjamin Kennedy* (C. S. A.) Vaiden William Claiborne Leighn Yalobusha County James McClelland West Point Robert S. McLemore* (M.D.; C. S. A.; Texas 1870-71) Minter City Chas. Caleb Mattox* Vaiden Brantlett S. Mullens Houston John Jacob Oatis* (M.D.; Hospital Surgeon C. S. A., died in service in Texas) Monticello John Thos. Oliver (1st Lieut. C. S. A.; Farmer) Hernando Sanf ord Ramey Phillips* (Teacher) Pontotoc William Van Buren Potts* Batesville Milton Newell Shive - Texas Chas. Leon Stuart* (Merchant) Olive Branch S. Turner Sykes (Deupty Clerk U. S. Courts and of Co. Courts) _ Aberdeen Walter Laurens Sykes* Aberdeen Thos. Hugh White Carroll County Pursuing Select Studies. Julius Jesse Bubose (Judge Criminal Court) Memphis, Tenn. John Emerson Butler* Linden Oliver Carsinan Carr Pontotoc Andrew Brown Carson* Greenville William Henry Catchings Georgetown Pennington Cason " Durant James Wilford Clopton Helena, Ark. Powhatan Boiling Dandridge Pontotoc Samuel Donel Lexington James Alexander Ventress Feltus* (C. S. A.; Gen. Mahone's Staff; Planter) Leland James Biddle Ferguson Dyersburg, Tenn. James Garland Hardwick Carthage, Ala. Jesse Winston Harris Centreville, La. James Hays Van Buren, Ark. Theophilus Jones Hunter Sledgeville Geo. Glover Isom* Mt. Pleasant Nathaniel Thomas Jackson . Brownsville Chamberlayne Jones, Jr Memphis, Tenn. Porter Jones Larkin Union Parish, La. Sandy Aaron Lindsey Vicksburg William Thos. McGeehee Shelby 128 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. John Berkeley McKinnon* Marshall County Cyrus M ;irsh Natchez Frank Nailer* Vicksburg Jos. Harrison Neuman Bolivar County Geo. Davis Norris- Columbus Eugene Lenoir Polk Woodville, La. Oscar Pollard Aberdeen Thos. James Potts Woodville Alfred Barnett Pulliam. '. Somerville, Tenn. James Addison Roberts Hamilton Robert Thos. Scott Richmond, La. James Montgomery Selser Warrenton Albert Newman Sharkey Jackson Chas. Farrar Smith (Capitalist) Memphis, Tenn. William Rogan Stone Madison Parish, La. Asbury Tarpley Cayuga CLASS OF 1858. Honor Men. James Henry Jones. Edwin Preston Harman. James Robert Montgomery.* Hon. James Mason Arnold* (C. S. A.; late Justice Supreme Court, Mississippi) Birmingham, Ala. Osceola Bland* Fayette County, Tenn. Jos. Brown Burney* (M.D.; C. S. A.) Lafayette County James Chas. Campbell* (Major C. S. A., killed in 1863) Jackson Frisby Freeland Chew (LL.B.) Houston, Texas Thos. Augustus Cocke Holmes County James Abner Cox* (C. S. A.; Teacher) Pittsboro William Francis Cross* Lexington Abraham Walton Currie Pecan Grove, La. Pitser Miller Davidson* (C. S. A.) Lafayette County Hon. James Thornton Fant* (Capt. C. S. A.; District Attorney; Circuit Judge; Pres. Alumni Society 1893-'94; Law Class 1860) Holly Springs Mordecai Puryear Garrett (LL.B.; Law Class 1860) Adams County Robert Lowry Gavin* Noxubee County Alvarez Harrison Gibson (late Prof. Gibson College) Natchez Claude Gibson Adams County Robert Johnston Gilmer* (C. S. A.) Toccopola Lewis Guion 321 Godchaux Bldg., New Orleans, La. Edwin Preston Harman Denver City, Col. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 129 Robert Leander Harris*... .Carroll County William Henry Harris (C. S. A.; Supt. Education of La.; Com. of Agriculture; Trustee of La. State University; Journal- ist) New Orleans, La. Francis Holmes (Capt. 29th Miss. Regt. C. S. A.; Planter) Plum Point James Thos. Holmes* (D.D.S.; Hinds County) Macon, Ga. Hon. James Henry Jones (Col. C. S. A.; member Leg.; State Senator; member Con. Convention of 1890; Lieut. -Gov. 1896; member Board of Trustees of the Univ.; Lawyer) Woodville James Terrell Key Washington, D. C. William Thos. Lockhart (C. S. A.) Memphis, Tenn. Robert Devlin McClelland Holmes County John Bell McEwen* (M.D.; C. S. A.) Oxtord John Chevis Miller (C. S. A.; 1861-'65; Teacher and Merchant Prairie John Milloy* (M.D.) : Covington County James Robert Montgomery* Madison County Clarence Leoline Moore (Lawyer; Judge County Court). .Sans Sousi, Ark. James Newton* Union County, Ark. John Baxter Paine* . Holly Springs Hon. John Parham (State Senator) Little Rock, Ark. Hephaestion Alexander Stuart* DeSoto County Caswell Macon Thompson* Oxford Morgan Hopson Thompson (C. S. A.; Planter) Pecan Point, Ark. William Carroll Waldrop* (C. S. A.) Milan County, Texas Hon. William Lowndes Young (Col. C. S. A. 1861-'65 Waverley Not Graduating. Marquis DeLafayette Allen* Lafayette County Geo. Thos. Banks Whitehaven Benjamin Berry Memphis, Tenn . James David Bost .- Panola County James Saunders Bradford* Oktibbeha County Robert Lowndes Cannon Shuqualak Felix Carr* : Raleigh Eugene Leroy Cowan* Holmes County John Calhoun Dozier* Pontotoc Robert Henry Edmunds . Grenada William Battle Fort Hico, Texas Chas. Curren Frierson Sumnee William Thos. Gaston Lafayette County Peter Alexander Hairston Perry County Leander Lewis* College Hill Jos. Foster Lipscomb Flora Benjamin Franklin McClellan* Rocky Springs Samuel Martin McKinney* Shelby County, Tenn. Walter Telemachus McLean* Carroll County William Norvell Myrant Macon John Houston Nelson* Somerville, Tenn. 9 130 UNIVERSITY OI<' MISSISSIPPI. William Wiley Newton . Hillsboro, Ark. DeWitt Clinton Shaw* (C. S. A.)-- Lafayette County Norfleet Ruffin Sledge, Jr. (C. S. A., 1861-'65; Planter and Mer- chant) Como Geo. William Smith (C. S. A., see list of A.M. degrees con- ferred) Water Valley Godfrey C. Stancill Sunflower County Dudley W. Steger* Fayette County, Tenn. Thos. Jefferson Stokes .Columbus David Montgomery Thompson* Starkville Gaston Marshall Thompson (M.D.) Lonoke, Ark. Eugene Whitfield* (Col. C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Corinth John Augustus Wray Lambert, Tenn. Pursuing Select Studies. Hon. Pressley Groves (Legislator) Ofahoma William Cyrus Billingsley Carrollton Jos. Richard Bivens Medon, Tenn. Osborn Baldwin Collins (Legislator) Birmingham, Ala. William Connor Ellis Thibodaux, La. Thomas Balfour Sherman, Texas Geo. Caesar Heidelberg Dannisville Samuel Houston Lamb Benton Boiling James Martin Panola County John Groves* Ofahoma Hon. William Henry Luse* Yazoo City Solomon McDowell* (M.D.) Brandon John Berkley McKinnon* Holly Springs Edward Howard Patton Pine Bluff, Ark. John Benjamin Pease Yazoo City- Sam B. Price Shiloh, Ala. Alexander Roberts* Mississippi City CLASS OF 1859. Honor Men. James Hardeman Stuart.* Prof. Richard Marion Leavell, LL.D. Howard Falconer.* Hon. Daniel Perron E-stor (C. S. A.; Mayor of Mobile, Ala.; Trustee Ala. Univc /sity ) Mobile, Ala. James Franklin Brown (C. S. A.) Caldwell County, Texas John Beaufort Buck* (C. S. A., 1861-'65; Teacher) Noxubee County Davis Montgomery Buckner. Greenville UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 131 Hon. Samuel Sample Carter (M.D.; Surgeon C. S. A.; Legisla- ture 1876-'80; Holmes' County to 1885; Banker) Jackson Hon. Geo. Laville Donald (Col. C. S. A.; Sheriff; member Con. Convention 1890) Quitman Chas. Joseph Eggelston (Planter) Lexington Howard Falconer* (C. S. A.) Holly Springs Elijah Fleming (C. S. A., 1861-'65; Teacher and Farmer) Camden Jeptha Vining Harris (M.D.) Florida Henderson Madison Jacoway Denver, Col. Prof. Richard Marion Leavell (LL.D.; member Legislature; Capt. C. S. A.; Professor English, Mississippi College; Pro- fessor English and B.L., University Mississippi, 1889; Pro- fessor M. and M. Phil. Univ., 1894; retired 1908) University Reginald Heber Lipscomb (M.D.; surgeon C. S. A.) Ellwood, Texas Hortensius Wilkins Purnell* (C. S. A.; M.D.) Memphis, Tenn. Caleb Josiah James Shipp* Lafayette County Daniel Edgerley Smith* (M.D.; Surgeon C. S. A.; President Mobile Co. Med. Society) Mobile, Ala. James Hardeman Stuart* (killed in C. S. A.) Jackson John Douglass Talbert* (M.D.; Capt. C. S. A.) Memphis, Tenn. Hugh Reese Vaughan* (killed in C. S. A.) Yazoo County Not Graduating. John James Anderson (C. S. A.; Planter) College Hill Burwell Edward Lumpkin Aycock* . Bolivar County Robert A. Bankhead* (Capt. C. S. A.; killed at Fishing Creek) Yalobusha County Chas. Hardy Banks Hernando Francis Durett Barns (C. S. A.) Yalobusha County John Thomas Brown* (C. S. A.) Hays County, Texas. Hayes Broyles : Savannah, Tenn . William Lee Buford* (C. S. A.) Oxford Smith Buford (M.D.; C. S. A.) Tennessee Adoniram Jesse Bussey Eldorado, Ark. John Calvin Campbell Sarepta James Harvey Cheairs* (C. S. A.) Marshall County Dallas Pickens Coffee* (Judge Chancery Court) Choctaw County Eugene Leroy Cowan* (Capt. C. S. A., killed in battle) -.Holmes County William Stokes Cowan* (C. S. A.) Holmes County Hon. Warren Cowan* (C. S. A.; Chancellor and Circuit Judge) Vicksburg Adolphus Leonidas Crittenden* (M.D.) Holly Springs Robert Fisher Dickins (C. S. A.) Memphis, Tenn. James Oscar Eades* (C. S. A.) Oxford Jas. Thos. Earle* Aberdeen Chas. Clark Farrar Bolivar, Tenn. Jos. William Gilliam DeSoto County James Beckett Gladney (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Superintend- ent Education Houston 132 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Silas Richard Gunn* (M.D.; surgeon C. S. A.; died in service) Chickasaw County William Reed Gunn Chickasaw County Geo. Stovall Hairston (C. S. A.)- Grenada Thos. Holiday* (C. S. A., killed in battle)... Aberdeen Bird Dread Hurt* Lafayette County John E. Josey* (M.D.) Oktibbeha County Augustus Washington Lake (C. S. A.) .Yalobusha County Chas. Gaillard Liddell* Ripley William H. Lile* (killed C. S. A.) Monroe County John Newton McAllister* Aberdeen James Robert McCutcheon* Lafayette County William Spratt McLendon* Aberdeen John Lucien Maples Minden, La. James Martin* (M.D.; surgeon C. S. A., died in service. .Madison County Reuben Vaughan Montague* Brandon Owen Cornelius Newton* (C. S. A.; died in Confederate hos- pital at University; only student interred in soldiers' cem- etery near University, remains later removed to Lawrence County) Lawrence County Hulin Madison Parker Antlers, Texas James Blakeney Perkins* (Atty. at Law) Austin James Fletcher Phipps* Belen Samuel Gabriel Ragsdale* Aberdeen Francis Lackington Randle Washington, Texas Isaac Walton Randle* Aberdeen William Henry Ray Holmes County Henry Clinton Rogers Amory Edward Sheegog* (C. S. A.) Oxford John Neville Simmons Grenada William Henry Sinclair* Lafayette County Ellis Passmore Southerland Rolling Fork Samuel Maverick Thompson ( Capt. C. S. A.; Planter) Florence, Ala. John Dudley Usher Holmes County James Bolton Wade White Sulphur, Ky. Solomon Bennett Weathersby Liberty Geo. Hamilton West West Point, Ark. Patrick Henry Westbrook Nashville, Tenn. James Wightman* (C. S. A.) Monroe County Richard Eggleston Wilburn* (completed with high standing all requirements for graduation; declined to take a diploma; Captain C. S. A. on Stonewall Jackson's staff; was present when General Jackson was fatally wounded and assisted him from his horse; served throughout the Civil War) Torrance Edward Packingham Williams (C. S. A.) ..Grenada Robert Thompson Wilson Lexington Daniel Thomas Yates Jackson James Rucks Yerger* Jackson UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 133 Pursuing Select Studies. William Robert Beasley New Castle, Tenn. Alonzo Bowdre* Blackland Richard Bowdre* .Blackland Thos. Butler Bayou Sara, La. James Butler Bayou Sara, La. Osceola Drane Canton Sampson Bridges Humphreys* Port Gibson John Nevitt Johnson Natchez Thos. Frankland Lindsey Pulaski, Tenn. William Jack McMahon Courtland, Ala. Adin McNeal* (Lieut.-Col. C. S. A., killed in battle) Beaverdam James Anderson Moore Texas John Jay Moore Bay Springs Rev. Tilmon Page* Greenville Aaron Worthington Wickliffe Pt. Worthington CLASS OF 1860. Honor Men. Oscar Fitzallen Bledsoe.* Kinloch Falconer.* Jos. Miles Adams.* Jos. Miles Adams* 1 : Macon Oscar Fitzallen Bledsoe* Grenada Thos. Lowrie Boggan* (C. S. A.) Byhalia Hon. Jos. William Buchanan (C. S. A.; Judge Circuit Court; General Attorney K. C. M.&B. R. R.) Memphis, Tenn. Eugene Leroy Cowan* (LL.B.; Capt. C. S. A., killed in battle).. Holmes County McGeehee Dandridge* (C. S. A., killed in battle) Panola County Hon. Geo. Garrett Dilliard (Capt. C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; mem- ber Code Commission 1890-92; U. S. Consul-General to Equador, 1894) Trimcone, Tenn. Hon. Kinloch Falconer* (Secretary of State of Mississippi 1878 Holly Springs Meshach Franklin (Planter) Early Grove John Perkins Furness (M.D.; surgeon C. S. A.; member Ala- bama State Board of Health) Selma Ala. Jerry Saunders Gage* (killed in C. S. A.) Holmes County James Lockhart Goodloe(Atty. at Law; see Law Class of '62)Memphis,Tenn- William Franklin Hamilton (C. S. A.) Carrollton Wiley Gartman Johnson (Capt. C. S. A.; Teacher, Canton, Miss.) Orlando, Fla. Archelaus Kirkland Jones (Capt. C. S. A. 1861-65; Planter; Chancery Clerk 1878-1900) Port Gibson Thomas Mayfield Lane* ..LaGrange, Tenn. 134 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. James Franklin Mister (Lieut. -Col. C. S. A.; Lawyer ;Coffeeville, 1S65-71 ) .since 1871 Kansas City.Mo. Rev. Wilber Fisk Mister (C. S. A.) Grapevine, Texas Calvin Richard Myers (C.S. A. 1861-65; Planter) Byhalia Henry Franklin Neely* (C. S. A.) Lafayette County Isaac Shelby* Bolivar County Geo. W. Smith-Vaniz (C. S. A.; M.D.; Planter and Physician) .Canton James Madison Sutherland (C. S. A.) .Canton John Franklin Thompson .. Monticello, Ark. Micajah Tomlinson Wade* Copiah County James Olive West Lexington Rev. William Wright Wyatt (C. S. A.; Teacher) Banner Not Graduating. Rev. Thomas Albert Smith Adams* (D.D.; C. S. A.; Author "Aunt Peggey and Other Poems;" late President of Cent- enary College) Noxubee County Collier Benton Allen Georgetown Jos. Bonaparte Allen Moscow, Tenn. David Melancthon Brougher* Tippah County Chas. Archibald Burrus* Bolivar County James Henry Butler* Hamilton William Martin Butler* Hamilton Jos. Thos. Chandler (M.D.; Surgeon C. S. A.) Oxford Chas. David Christian Meridian John Richardson Coffman Grenada Andrew Collins Thibodaux, La. Franklin Newton Cox "_ ----- Chickasaw County Isaac Newton Davis, Jr.* Panola County William Lafayette Davis* Lafayette County Francis Marion Dunklin Texas Timothy Lincoln Dunklin* Aberdeen James Malachi Edwards* Leake County Samuel Rodgers Franklin* Lamar William Henry Foote (C. S. A.) Blue Mountain William Henry Fox* Lafayette County Samuel Sidney Gause Lauderdale County, Tenn. Chas. Edward Gay (A.B. University of North Carolina; C. S. A. 1861-65; Chancery Clerk 1877-1900; banker at present) Starkville William Lucien Gay Washington County Thos. Abner Gilmer* Columbus John Richard Gladney Pickens County, Ala. Hon. James Madison Granberry Grenada William Henry Harrison Green (A.B. Princeton, 1860; A.M. Princeton, 1880; Postmaster at Jackson) Seattle, Wash. Samuel Jackson Harrison* Vaiden Geo. Handy (C. S. A.) Memphis, Tenn. Reuben Acker Higgason * Aberdeen UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 135 John Baker Hogan* (C.S. A.) Oktibbeha County Zadoc Mitchell Holloway * Aberdeen David Edward Jiggits* Madison County Chas. Land Johnson Tchula Robert Alpheus King (M.D.; Surgeon C. S. A.) Oxford James Taylor Lee Abbeville William Harrison Lile* (C. S. A.) Monroe County William Theodore McCann Pirasunringa, Brazil William Washington McEwen* (C. S. A.) Lafayette County Hon. Jos. Tipton McGeehee (Sheriff and Postmaster) Huntsville, Ala. Hon. Jas. Robert Mcintosh* (C. S. A. ; Atty. at Law ; Legislature 1871-73; Trustee of University; General Southern Attorney Postal Tel. Co., Houston and Meridian) Meridian Richmond Alexander McLeod* Yazoo County Hundley Valentine Mayfield* Monroe County Tarrant Henry Mellard Macon County, Ala. Hon. Hernando DeSoto Money (see Law Class of '60) Carrollton Thomas Jefferson Morrow* 1 Choctaw County Smith Murphy* Carrol County John William Nelson Issaquena County Samuel Nelson, Jr Issaquena County William Cowper Nelson (Insurance business; C. S. A.)._New Orleans, La. John Wilber Parker* - Rankin County Lewis Alexander Parker* (C. S. A.) Hinds County Griffin Roberts* - _ Monroe County Josiah Addison Smith* Madison County Samuel Houston Stark Bolivar County Guston Walton Thomas Vernon Rev. Alexander Trotter (D.D.) Langsdale James Fisk Walton* (C. S. A., killed in battle) Holmes County Stephen Kutesoff Watkins • Fayette County, Tenn. Louis West* Wilkinson County William Leftwich Williams Tishomingo County Elias Milford Witherspoon* Lowndes County Pursuing Select Studies. William Absalom Abner Bossier Parish, La. William Esias Brent (planter) Holmesville James Jeremiah White Brickell (C. S. A. 1861-65) Senatobia Daniel Briscoe 326 Guy St., Knoxville, Tenn. Robert Finnie Burt Duck Hill Jeremiah Coleman Charleston William Cook Okolona John Coopwood* Aberdeen Thos. Landrum Darden , Fayette John Kenneth Eastburn Buena Vista James William Eckford* ..Aberdeen Benjamin Smith Ellis* Port Gibson 136 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. David Gibson* Warren County Gadi Gibson Crystal Springs Matthew Atkinson Girault* Port Gibson Benjamin Herbert Hays. Issaquena County Edward Brodie Hull St. Louis, Mo. Robert Ward Johnson Pine Bluff, Ark. William Joseph Lampkin (M.D.) Natchez Edward Madison McAfee* Lexington Roderick Dhu McAfee Claiborne County Hon. John Seymour McNeily (Capt. C. S. A.; member Consti- tutional Convention 1890; U. S. Marshal; member Board of Trustees of the University of Mississippi; Editor Her- ald) Vicksburg Jasper Newton Bastrop, La. Noah Smith Randle Ashwood, La. Andrew Green Sims* Canton Samuel Pinckney Smith* Washington County B. F. Stephens Yazoo County Prentiss Swayze* Yazoo County John Estes Tarpley* (C. S. A.) Jackson William Tate* Macon CLASS OP 1861. Honor Men. Thomas McNeal Peters.* James Fisk Walton.* Andrew Jackson Harris. William Thomas Driver* Memphis, Tenn. William Thomas Ethridge LaGrange, Texas Francis Fentress (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; I. C. & M. V. R. R. Attorney) Memphis, Tenn. Henry Gore Fernandez* (Lieut. C. S. A.) Lafayette County Berkeley Green * Sewanee, Tenn Samuel Donnell Gwin* (C. S. A.) Lexington Hon. William Handy (C. S. A.) Birmingham, Ala. Andrew Jackson Harris (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Belton, Tex. Geo. Christian Heidelberg* (C. S. A.) Quitman James Shannon Jones* Pontotoc County Oscar Alonzo Kibbe* LaFourche Parish, La. William Lea* (C. S. A.; Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. Calvin Breckenridge McCalebb* Kemper County Hon. James Lufkin McCaskill* (C. S. A.; U. S. Consul to Dub- lin ; Lawyer) . Brandon Duncan McCollum Simpson County Albert Thomas McNeal (C. S. A. ; Atty. at Law) Sewanee, Tenn. Thos. Andrew Moore* Issaquena County William Cooper Nelson (C. S. A.; insurance business) __New Orleans, La. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 137 Thos. McNeal Peters* (C. S. A.) Bolivar, Tenn. Reuben Turner Pollard* Whitehaven, Tenn. Francis Asbury Pope (Capt. C. S. A.) Georgetown, Col. Jacob Clark Robertson* Oktibbeha County Rev. Andrew Barton Stewart* (C. S. A. 1861-65) Madison County Jerry Trezevant Talbert (Atty. at Law) Yalobusha County Thomas Emmette Tucker* Byhalia James Fisk Walton* (C. S. A., killed in battle) Holmes County James Alexander Wiley (C. S. A.) Covington, Tenn. James Edward Wilson Russellville, Ala. Not Graduating. Henry .Ludwic Alexander* Marshall County William Brack (see Law Class of 1862) El Paso, Texas DeWitt Clinton Buck* Lexington Edwin Hunter Buck* Lexington Robert Thompson Crenshaw* (killed in battle C. S. A.). ..Tallahatchie Co. John Dawson* (A.B.; class poet Princeton, 1860; Capt. C. S. A., died of wounds) Canton Jackson Evans Garlandsville Henry Alexander Goodloe* Canton John Theodore Gregory* DeKalb Joseph Leonard Griggs* Macon Richard Gilliam Green ...-Memphis, Tenn. Sterling Gorman Harper Macon John Clinton Harris Memphis, Tenn. Chas. LeGrand Hendrick Canton Samuel Albert Hobson* Jackson Augustus Tompkins Holmes Lexington Frederick William Johns (State Librarian- 1859; C. S. A. 1861-65) -.Madison Thomas Lacy Madison County, Tenn. Robert Public McKelvain* (Col. C. S. A., died later) Kemper County Kennon McElroy* Marion Zebulon Butler McLaurin* Simpson County Adin McNeal* (Lieut. -Col. C. S. A., killed at Chickamauga). -Clarke Co. Henry Mills Matagorda, Texas Joseph Terry Moore* Texas Winston Price Parker Lexington William Price* Louisville Stephen Minor Routh Tensas Parish, La . William James Shelton Rabina Samuel Pinckney Smith Greenville Benjamin Eddie Stancill* Carrollton Crozier Minter Stewart Jackson John Henry Tucker* (Teacher) Marshall County William Marshall Webster* Lexington David Egbert Wooldridge* Marshall County 138 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Pursuing Select Studies — 1S61. Chambliss Calhoun* Claiborne County Nathan Alexander Clark* Carroll County William Lewis Duff* Calhoun County William Jabez Foust Weakley County, Tenn. John Henry Graham Clarke County John William Horton* Arizona State Geo. Jos. Miller Minds County Francis Mullins Nabors* (Lawyer) Amory Allen M ather Powell Bankston Jos. Daniel Quin Panola County Mitchell Adrian Reynolds* (C. S. A.) Oxford William Byrd Spight (M.D.) Myrtle William Jaradox Swilley* Sumter County, Ala. CLASS OF 18(52. f Marshall Soule Acee Tunica County Robert Sidney Adams* Kemper County Henry Ludovic Alexander* Marshall County John Rupert Baird (C. S. A., 1861-'65; Circuit and Chancery Clerk Sunflower County 1871-72; County Treasurer 1875; Sheriff 1875-76; member Con. Convention 1890) Baird Hon. David Minyard Ballard (Lieut. C. S. A.; Legislature 1878; Attorney at Law) Raymond Fountain Barksdale, Jr.* (killed in C. S. A. 1864) Yazoo County Sterling Lester Barksdale* Yazoo City John Louis Beavers (M.D.) Wesson Leavens M athison Bisland * Natchez Hon. Hugh Quin Bridges (Lieut. C. S. A.) Kansas City, Mo. Hon. Jos. Frazer Brown (member Legislature; Mayor of Fort Worth) Cherokee, Texas Robert Mansfield Brown Texas William Alfred Brown Grenada Felix Carr * Smith County William Hunter Cochran* (killed at Gettysburg, C. S. A.) _ .Marshall Co. Edwin Israel Coleman* Bolivar County Theophilis Reynolds Deavenport Okolona Andrew Jackson Dew Texas James Franklin Dooley (C. S. A.) Oxford Jos. Evans Douglass Holly Springs William Lewis Duff (Col. C. S. A.)... San Francisco, Cal. Emanuel Alexander Durr* Simpson County John Calhoun Evans* (Capt. C. S. A., killed at Shiloh, 1862) Oxford fNote.- — The exercises of the University were suspended from the fall of 1861 to the fall of 1865. This class would have graduated in 1862 if the exercises had not been interrupted by the war. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 139 Lewis Taylor Fant* (killed at Antietam, C. S. A.) Marshall County Alexander Gregg* (C. S. A.) Austin, Texas Ferdinand Lafayette Griffin Lexington Horace Handy* Canton Joshua Moses Harley* Birdsville, Texas Thos. Allen Henderson* Jackson, Tenn. Abercrombie Holmes DeSoto County Giulio Loring Hubbel Mobile, Ala. Geo. Washington Hughes Phillips County, Ark. Reese Porter Hughes Phillips County, Ark. Benjamin Flavius Josephus Hyatt* Monticello, Ark. Robert Amos Jarman. Egypt Benjamin Smith Johnson Pine Bluff, Ark. Harrison Rufus Johnston . _ _' Columbus Edmund Green Jones* Oxford William Jos. Kerr* (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Sumter County, Ala. Bass Wells Lambuth Canton Junius Madison Lee Abbeville Hon. Thos. Perry Lee* (member Con. Convention 1890) Octavia James Todd Lester Jackson William Benjamin Lowry* (Capt. University Grays; Col. 11th Miss. Regt. C. S. A.) Lowndes County Calvin Yates Marshall '. Grady William Wiley Marshall* Choctaw County William Osborn Martin* (killed in C. S. A. 1862)..., Houston James Fontaine Maury* Claiborne County Adrian Mayer* Holly Springs David McCaleb * Port Gibson Edward Howard McCaleb* (Adjt. C. S. A.) Port Gibson Andrew "William McGowen (killed, C. S. A.) Greene County, Ala. Jefferson McKie Melton* : Canton William Dinguid Mims* Cockrum William Walker Moore (Capt. C. S. A.; Planter and Merchant). Vicksburg William Powell Morris* Jackson George Mickelboro Moseley * Keatchie, La. Patrick Stephen Myers* Hernando William Napoleon Potts (District Attorney) Monroe, La. Phillip Lewis Raiford* Kosciusko Geo. Washington Rea* (1st Lieut. C. S. A., died in service) Copiah County Henry Macon Rice* (C. S. A., killed at Manassas) Copiah County Evan Jeffries Shelby* (Capt. C. S. A.', killed November, 1864). Concordia Benjamin Lafayette Smith (C. S. A., color-bearer 43d Miss.; Teacher and Farmer) West Point James Alexander Smith* Choctaw County, Ala. Hon. Eugene Octavius Sykes (see Law Class of 1868) Aberdeen Jasper DeKalb Terrell* (M.D.)- Mt. Carmel Ruffin Thompson* (M.D.) Lake Weir, Fla. John Marshall Walker* Marengo County, Ala. 140 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Samuel M cElwee Wilson Corinth Ant hony Dyer Whitfield Columbus CLASS OF 1863. (Not graduating. Exercises suspended in 1861 on account of war.) Milton Theodosius Alford (A.Q.M.; C. S. A.) Washington, D. C. James Daniel Allen* Rankin County William Clinton Barnes (Planter) Summitt Alexander Mouton Bickham* (Com. Merchant) New Orleans, La. Oscar Black Bolton Anthony Demelius Bourdeaux* (1) (C. S. A.) Lauderdale County Richard Harris Bourdeaux* (1) (C. S. A.) Lauderdale County Richard Catchings Bridges* (C. S. A., 18th Miss. Regt., killed at Gettysburg) Georgetown Stephen Barefield Bryan Bovina Absalom Carr Homewood Thomas Jefferson Carr Water Valley Hon. Thos. Clendinen Catchings (C. S. A.; Lawyer; State Sen- ator; Attorney-General; M. C. 1885-1900) Vicksburg Thomas Harding Chilton (C. S. A. 1861-'65; Wholesale Drug- gist) Memphis, Tenn. Rev. Richard Anderson Cohron Vicksburg Oscar Fitzallen Coleman Beulah Champ Carter Conner (Atty. at Law) Hernando Pressley Nevel Conner (Capt. C. S. A.; Lawyer) Ripley, Tenn. Green Berry Crane* (killed C. S. A. 1862) Canton James Moore Crump (Capt. C. S. A. ;Traveling Salesman) Memphis, Tenn. Andrew Houston Drake* Aberdeen William Forman Dunbar* Adams County Thos. Coke Durr* (C. S. A.) Oxford Thos. Field Uniontown, Ala. Jesse Franklin Bolivar, Tenn . Colin Worley Gibson Natchez John Richard Gladney (see Law Class of 1861) Saltillo Howard Baldwin Gray Bushy Valley, La. Isaac Ramsey Heggie Vaiden Thomas Heslen Port Gibson Hon. Chas. Bowen Howry (C. S. A.; U. S. Dist. Atty.; Asst. Atty. -Gen. U. S.; member Board of Trustees of Univ. of Miss.; Justice Court of Claims) Washington, D. C. James Henry Howry (C. S. A.; Chancery Clerk) Batesville Jethro Fernando Ingram Nottoway County, Va. Benjamin Jones Jacoway Dardanelle, Ark. Hartwell King Jones San Antonio, Texas Merriwether Lewis Jones* (killed C. S. A. 1862) Claiborne County John Thomas Kerr* West Point James Roddey Kendel Memphis, Tenn. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 141 Simpson Leander Lester-,- Ashland Clarence Carey Malone* Lowndes County John Record Marsh* Memphis, Tenn. Simeon Marsh* (Planter) Holly Springs William Henry McCardle* Vicksburg Leonidas Washington McLemore* Hazlehurst Robert Love McLaurin* Simpson County Henry McLaurin* Covington County William Fulton McMullen* (killed C. S. A. 1864) Greene County, Ala. David Mellville (C. S. A.) New Orleans, La. Geo. Miller* (C. S. A.) Oxford Baldwin O'Callahan* Summit Elbert Oliver (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Little Rock, Ark. Everette Nicholson Pearson* Brandon Richard James Phillips Adams County Augustus Powell Clarksdale William Augustus Raines* (Capt. C. S. A.) DeSoto County James Shepperd Reynolds* Bolton Henry Clay Robertson Jackson Robert Loraine Ross . Canton James Scudday 1826 Clio Street, New Orleans, La. Hon. Ambrose Handley Sevier (Major C. S. A.; Legislature 1891; lawyer, Little Rock to 1880) Texarkana, Ark. Henry Taylor Siebe (Col. C. S. A., died in service) Crystal Springs. Rev. Edward Andrew Smith (C. S. A. 1861-65; Merchant, Teacher President Buena Vista College; Minister) Florence, Ala. Albert Daniel Smith (C. S. A. 1861-65; Chancery Clerk Wayne County) Waynesboro Marion Smith* Jackson Thos. Spight (Atty. at Law; Capt. C. S. A.;M. C.) Ripley Benjamin Franklin Stevens 1 : Yazoo County Oscar Ewing Stewart Claiborne County Hon. Edward Howard Stiles* (C. S. A.; District Attorney) -Claiborne Co. Jos. Lane Taylor* (C. S. A.; Lieut. "University Greys") Taylors Clifton Paley Turnipseed* (Druggist) Holmesville James Boilon Vaughan* Benton Fearn Watkins* Jackson Amelins Claiborne West Vicksburg John Douglass Wilds* (see Law Class of '68) Albuquerque, N. Mex. Reuben Boone Williams* Boonewith Chas. Samuel Work* Jackson William Lafayette Young Lexington CLASS OF 1864. (Not graduated. Exercises suspended in 1861 on account of war.) Edward Anderson* (C. S. A., killed first battle of Manassas). -Hinds Co. Hon. Andrew Jackson Baker (Capt. C. S. A.; member Missis- sippi and Texas Legislatures; Trustee University Mississippi; Commissioner General Land Office. Austin) --San Angelo, Texas 142 * VIVBRBITY OF MISSISSIPPI. William Alexander Barton* (killed C. S. A.). Houston Thomas Bell* (C. S. A ... .Columbus Robert Stanhope Bridges (C. S. A.) ..... New Orleans, La. Edward Buckner * Adams County Oliver Smiley Carothers (C. S. A.; Charleston to 1887) ....... Sardis John William Clark (Lawyer) Texas Napoleon Bonaparte Dean (Planter) Holly Springs William Wash. Durr* - Meridian William Eggleston* (C. S. A. 1861-65) Carrollton Hon. William Stamps Farish (Capt. C. S. A.; State Senate: District Attorney; member Constitutional Convention of 1S!H); dead). .. Mayersville Richard Cocke Gant (C. S. A.; Merchant) Columbia, Tenn. Thos. William Graham Sumterville Benjamin Franklin Griffin Clarksville, Ark. Minge Buchanan Hardeway.. Holly Springs Geo. Jacob Hunsicker* Water Proff, La. James Edgar Jarman Egypt Carter Jenkins* Yazoo City Guston Hartwell Kearney* (C. S. A., killed in battle) Madison County James Gilbert Kearney* (C. S. A., killed in battle) Madison County Sam Houston Kirkland (Lawyer; County Supt. Education) Morton Arthur Perkins Jackson Robert Lee Lambeth Yazoo City Willis Munroe Lea* Marshall County Robert Edward Leachman* Meridian John Young Lilley* (killed C. S. A.) East Baton Rouge Parish, La. Richard Carter Lipsey (County Treasurer) Lexington Thos. Samuel Magruder* (killed C. S. A.) Canton John Elam McCaskill* DeKalb John Winfield McKinzie Ripley Edwin Miller* (C. S. A.) . Pontotoc County Alexander Covington Monette (C. S. A.; Planter) , Natchez John Vincent Moore* Meridian William Taliaferro Morehead* Copiah County Jos. Davis Nicholson* Vicksburg, Warren County James Smith Phillips* Adams County William James Phillips (Capt. C. S. A.) Monticello William Anderson Pickett Carson's Landing, Ark. William Harrison Robertson* (C. S. A.)_. West Point Lewis Taylor Rucks* - Washington County Jones Harvey Sample* Ebenezer James Sillers* Port Gibson Jos. Judson Slack (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; District Attorney) Grenada James Alfred Stevens* West Point Solomon William Swayze* (Circuit Clerk). Yazoo City William Summerfield Sykes* West Point William Henry Thompson* (C. S. A., killed in battle) Copiah County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 143 Rev. Tullius Farquha'r Tupper (D.D.) Atlanta, Ga. Francis Perry Vaughan Little Rock, Ark. Ephraim Mark Wade* Copiah County Anderson West (Farmer) Durant William Absalom West* (C. S. A.; Chief Inspector of Postoffices; Local Treasurer University of Mississippi; Banker) Oxford Zephorniah Wiley Eureka James Hoggat Wright* Natchez Harry Yerger * Greenville CLASS OF 1865. (University resumed exercises in 1865. No class graduated until 1867.) CLASS OF 1866. Pursuing Select Studies. Session of 1865-1866.) Samuel Hulett Aby (Journalist) Crystal Springs John A. Ayers Demopolis, Ala. William H. Bailey* Canton Samuel Bagnell (Sheriff) ....Port Gibson G. W. Bean Okolona Ashley McLuse Bell Hamburg, Ark. Benjamin Lovett Bell Hamburg, Ark. Chester Bond Jackson, Tenn. Oliver Boone Hernando G. G. Bowen* Aberdeen J. F. . Bush Learned Thomas Talbert Butler Jackson, Tenn L. J. Cage* (Merchant) Helena, Ark. Hon. Hiram Cassedy (see Law Class of 1868) Brookhaven Hon. S. R. Coleman (see Law Class of 1868) Greenwood Bowman Darius Deason Hazlehurst R. S. Donelson Fayette County, Tenn. J. M. Elam Memphis, Tenn. R. H. Foote Jackson J. T. Fore* Hazlehurst W. M. Forrest Stewart John Claiborne Gary Winona John Holden Gordon Pine Ridge J. H. Groce Hempstead. Texas T. E. Groome (County Treasurer) Memphis, Tenn. T. E. Hamer* Winona Chas. Burney Hawkins West Point E. Helm* _ .Jackson William Sidney Higginbotham Oxford S. M. Howry (C. S. A.; Dep. Rev. Col.; Postmaster; Merchant) . Oxford 144 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. John Barnes Humphreys (Circuit Clerk) Greenwood William Wofford Humphreys* Memphis, Tenn. Geo. Washington Johnson* Yazoo City J. M. Jones (C. S. A.; Planter and Capitalist) - ...Somerville, Tenn. J. W. Kennedy Natchez T.J. Lawrence Hazlehu rst Edward Morehead Leggett (M.D.)__ Holly Springs William Montgomery Leggett Canto n Francis Marion Lipscomb Vernon C . E . M aynard Tunica G. A. Miller Tunica Victor Montgomery (Lawyer; Pres Board of Education, Green- ville, to 1875) Santa Ana, Cal. R. McSwine* Grenada S. C. Moore .Helena, Ark. Thomas Bedford Moseley Sardis C. B. Neilson (C. S. A.; Merchant) Oxford Albert Gallatin Norrell Plains S. B. Partee* Panola County A. G. Pierce Chas. S. Priestly (M.D.;Health Officer; Pres. Miss. Med. Soc.) Canton Claiborne Booker Pritchard Shoccoe J. H. Quinn McComb City William Lafayette Ragland* Brandon A. E. Raines* Hernando S. L. Raines* (M.D.) Hernando R. H. Reeves* Rankin County J. P. Rhew* Charleston F. Rolfe Hamburg, Ark. A. P. Rose Jackson G. W.Taylor Carrollton Albert Alexander Smith Uniontown, Ala. Chas. McClung Stevens Los Angeles, Cal. Oscar Thomas Canton Albert Theo. Tidwell Madison John Harrison Wall* Friar's Point W. P. Watt .' Asheley County, Ark. H. C. Watlington Hattiesburg John William Waterer (Planter) Edsn William Quitman Wilkins* Oxford Joshua Williams Jackson A. Wallace Wood, Sr New Orleans, La. James Madison Wright* Hazlehurst UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 145 CLASS OF 1867. Honor Men. John Curtis Bush. Thomas Greene Bush. Rev. John Silliman Moore,* D.D. John Curtis Bush (C. S. A.; Cotton Commission Merchant; Mayor of Mobile) Mobile, Ala. Thos. Greene Bush (C. S. A.; Wholesale Merchant, Mobile; Pres. M. & B. R. R.; Iron Manufacturing Business; Legis- lature 1886) Birmingham, Ala. Geo. Edward Critz (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Teacher) Houston, Miss., and Georgetown, Texas Rev. John Silliman Moore* (D.D.; C. S. A.; Pastor First Pres- byterian Church) Sherman, Texas Not Graduating. Chas. Barry Means (C. S. A.; Manufacturer) Nashville, Tenn. Pursuing Select Studies— Session of 1866-'67. J. B. Adams Lexington R. P. Alexander* 1 Ripley G. H. Bell Hamburg, Ark. J. W.Bellamy , , Clarksdale W. P. Boyle Water Valley J. K. Brooks (C. S. A.) Forney, Texas Petre Brooks* Brooksville James Buf ord Pulaski, Tenn . W. N. Cross* (M.D.) Oktibbeha County Murray Stephen Edrington L- Osceola, Ark. J. W. Flowers* (M.D.; C. S. A.) Raleigh Edward Wyche Funchess* Byram William Gates* LaGrange, Texas T. L. Gay Pelahatchie W. A. Gee* (Sheriff Montgomery County) Carroll County H. D. Glass (Merchant). .Ripley, Tenn., St. Louis, Mo., ..Harrison, Ark. F. H. Govan (Clerk Circuit Court 1874-'96) Marianna, Ark. E. M. Grant Oxford D. A. Gray (M.D.) , Little Rock, Ark. Hon. W. B. Gunn Egypt P. M. Hargraves (Banker) Copiah County, now Texas Jack Havlan Saulsbury, Tenn. Giles Munf ord Hillyear Vicksburg Jos. Humphreys Texas M. D. Jones (Jurist) St. Louis, Mo. G. W. Johnston Yazoo City Alfred Hunter Kendel Oxford H. H. McNeill Red Fork, Ark. 10 146 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Thoa. Tabb Meade (Planter) Lexington I '. Millsaps Chairman Drouth Relief Commission) Farmerville, La. S.J. Morehead Crystal Springs S. O. Bloody Davis County, Texas J. J. Neeley (M.D.) Memphis, Tenn. K. S. Newman Franklin County J . Iv . Pickett Yazoo City P.G.Purvis* Benton Giles Reynolds Pulaski, Tenn. R.C.Reynolds . ... Pulaski, Tenn. Beauregard Rhodes* (C. S. A.) j Brandon Hugh Saunders* Madison County L.A.Stevenson* (D.D.S) Holly Springs A. M. Stewart* Bolivar County J. C . Sillers Rosedale Jas. Sims (C. S. A. ; Traveling Salesman) Nashville, Tenn. G. K. Strickland DeSoto County J. W. Vaughan* Oxford J. E. Wood Bolivar, Tenn. CLASS OF 1868. Honor Men. Rev. Cornelius W. Grafton. Joseph A. Brown. Rev. Daniel K. McFarland, D.D.* William Meshach Abernathy (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) . McKinney, Texas Jos. Albert Brown (C. S. A.; State Reporter, Jackson) Seattle, Wash. John Chas. Cameron* (C. S. A.) Madison County William Otho Dodd* (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Louisville. Ky. John Jos. Farr (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Glen Rose, Texas Rev. Chas. Betts Galloway* (D.D.; Bishop M. E. Church, South; Trustee State University; Trustee Slater Fund; Pastor ; Editor) Jackson Rev. Cornelius Washington Grafton (C. S. A.; Pastor; Teacher) Union Church Hon. Robert James Guthrie* (C. S. A.; Legislature; Adjunct Prof. University; Pres. Union Female College; Trustee of the University) Oxford Edwin Paschal Hamblin (C. S. A.; Judge County Court; Atty. at Law) ■ Houston, Texas Christopher Taylor Hill* Columbus Richard Franklin Hud son* Columbus Hon. Edward Mayes (C. S. A.; LL.D.; born December 15, 1846, educated at Bethtny College, Va., 1860-'61; Univ. of Miss. 1865-'68; private C. S. A. 1864-'65; Prof, of Law, Univ. of Miss., 1877-'91; Chairman of Faculty 1886-'89; Chancellor of Univ. of Miss. 1889-'92; member Con. Convention 1890; Attorney before Supreme Court for I. C. R. R.) Jackson UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 147 Rev. Daniel Kimmons McFarland* (D.D.; Pastor).. Staunton, Va. Hugh Sidney McGowan* (C. S. A.; Teacher) .Alabama State Dougald Prosper Montgomery (C. S. A.) Greenwood Hon. Jesse Shivers Montgomery (M.D.; C. S. A.; member of Legislature ; County Health Officer ) Starkville Thos. Van Court Neel (C. S. A.; Planter) White Haven, Tenn. Hon. Samuel Collyer Patton (C.S.A.; Gen. Atty. for Arkansas Pass R. R.) Hallettsville, Texas Hon. John Henry Rogers (C. S. A.; Judge Circuit Court; M. C; U. S. Dist. Judge) Fort Smith, Ark. Henry Sutherland* (C. S. A.) Madison County Rev. Frederick Mayo Taylor*... Fayette County, Tenn. Rev. Geo. Robertson Waddel* (C. S. A.; Pastor; Teacher).. .Fulton, Ark. Baxter Wilson (C. S. A.; Tax Collector Holmes County 1880-'86; Merchant and Planter; Accountant) Lexington Hon. Geo. Winston (Atty. at Law; Circuit Judge) Memphis, Tenn. Not Graduating. James Thompson Austin * Abbeville Stephen Willis Harris Baldwyn Columbus Jacob Phinizy Billups* Columbus James Turner Saunders Billups (Maj.-Gen. State National Guard) Columbus Thomas Billups Bradford* Columbus Robert Stanhope Bridges (C. S. A.) ■. Holmesville William Rasha Cannon* Columbus Rev. Jos. Caldwell Carothers (C. S. A.) Grenada Geo. Washington Cordt.* (C. S. A.) i Canton Frank Houston Emerson Jackson Daniel Evans* (C. S. A.) Newton County Geo. S. Green - Jackson Herbert Pearson Johnson* (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Kosciusko John Clark Kindel* (Sheriff) Greeley, Col. Samuel Blake McConnico (C. S. A.; General Agent I. C. R. R.; New Orleans and Honduras) New Orleans, La. John William McLeod (C. S. A.; Sheriff Lafayette County; Banker) 1 Grenada Thos. Joiner McFarland* (C. S. A. ; Atty. at Law) Water Valley Robert Bowen Sheegog (C. S. A.) Natchez Albert Miller Stephens (C. S. A. ; Judge Circuit Court) Los Angeles, Cal Jos. Stern Thompson Water Valley James H. Watson (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Watson & Fitzhugh) Memphis, Tenn. Harry Seawell Williams Memphis, Tenn. Hon. Luke Edward Wright (C. S. A.; Atty.-Gen; Turley & Wright, Governor-General of Philippines; Minister to Japan; member of Cabinet as Secretary of War) Washington, D. C. Pursuing Select Studies. William Newton Beaucham'p Utica William Bernard Boyle New Castle, Tenn. 148 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. David Thomas Bridgforth__ Horn Lake W. S. Briscoe* Jefferson County A. C. Finney. Vicksburg James Burns : McLemoreville John Balfour Conley Winona William James Cottingham Crystal Springs John Manly Cowan (Planter) Vicksburg Willie Enders Paducah, Ky. David Hewlett Fowler Longtown A. B. Ferrell Grenada L. Gibbs DeSoto County Hon. J. T. Harrison (Atty. at Law; member Legislature and State Senate; Lieut. -Gov.) Columbus Anthony Quitman Hutchins Vicksburg J. T. Irby Melrose William Stewart Johnson* Woodville J. P. Knight : Port Gibson T. F. Lindsay (C. S. A.; see Law Class 1859) Pulaski, Tenn. H. C. Lucas : Hamburg, Ark. G. G. Manlove* Vicksburg J. C. McCaa Ocala, Fla. James McCutchen Vicksburg J. A. Mhoon Canton James Orr Crawford James Hunter Perkins Columbus W. T. Pritchard DeSoto County James Webb Scales Crawford Geo. Oscar Shoup University Henry Smith Canton J. B. Snider (General Insurance Agent) Grenada W. M. Swindoll (C. S. A.) Hatto, Texas R. S. Terrell Noxubee County Frank Pierce Thompson* Crystal Springs Edgar Frederick West (Real Estate) Holly Springs Hardeman White Yazoo City CLASS OF 1869. Honor Men. Chancellor Robert Burwell Fulton. John Whitfield Shields.* Alston Madden West, M.D. Hon. Frank -Archelaus Critz (C.S.A.; Teacher; Lawyer; Judge Chancery Court; State Senator; Trustee I. I. & C; mem- ber Legislature) West Point Hon. James Tickell Downs (Atty. at Law; County Treasurer). .Dallas, Tex Lafayette Graves Durr* (M.D.; C. S. A.) New Orleans, La. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 149 Robert Burwell Fulton (A.M.; LL.D.; Prof. Physics and As- tronomy Univ. of Miss. 1874; Chancellor of the Univ. of Mississippi 1892-1906 ; Supt. Miller School) Miller School, Va. Rev. Z. Butler Graves* (Pastor; Teacher) Summit Rev. Luman Sumter Handley (D.D.; C.S.A.; Pastor) ..Birmingham, Ala. Hon. James Maury Harding (Atty. at Law; State Senator, La.) Port Gibson Rev. Frank Merriam Howell* (died at post of duty of yellow fever, 1878) .Somerville, Tenn. Rev. Milton Calhoun Hutton* (D.D. ; C.S.A. ; Pastor and Author, Mississippi and Texas) .Georgetown, Texas Rev. Jos. James Angus Johnson* (D.D.; Pastor Presbyterian Church) Victoria, Texas Rev. Thos. Chalmers Johnson* New Orleans, La. Rev. William Schenck Johnson* (C. S. A.) Memphis, Tenn. Rev. James Andrew Mecklin (D.D. ; C.S.A. ; Pastor and Teacher) Arp, Texas Hon. Robert N. Miller (C. S. A.; Lawyer; Dem. Pres. Elector 1876 aand 1880; Legislature 1877; District Attorney 1884- 1890) .Hazlehurst Samuel Wilde Evan Pegues (C. S. A.; Interior Dept.)_. Washington, D. C. Hon. John Whitfield Shields* (Atty. at Law) Greenville Rev. John Thompson Stephenson* Grenada Hon. Robert Harvey Thompson (LL.D.; C. S. A.; Lawyer; State Senator 1876-80; member Constitutional Convention 1890; Code Commission 1892; member of Board of Trustees Uni- versity of Mississippi; Chairman Executive Committee) Jackson William Calvin Wells (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law) Jackson Allston Madden West (M.D.; Tutor Univ. 1870; M.D. 1876; Prof. Chem. Memphis Med. Gollege 1887-93; Physician) Memphis, Tenn. Not Graduating. Jesse Franklin Abernathy California Hon. Benjamin C. Adams* (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Mayor) Grenada William Erastus Andrews (Circuit Clerk, Oxford, 1876-90) WaterValley William Hora Armstrong Farmerville Hon. Chapman Levy Anderson (see Law Class 1868) Kosciusko Richards Barnett* (M.D.; surgeon U. S. A.) Vicksburg Thomas Hickman Williams Barrett (C. S. A.) Gulfport Eleazer Crabtree Belcher* Memphis, Tenn. Geo. Boddie Greenwood John Bennett Boddie Demopolis, Ala. William Boddie Greenwood Harris Park Branham (see Law Class of 1869) Seymour, Texas Otway Lane Carter (Atty. at Law) Fort, Worth, Texas Robert Corbin Carter (C. S. A.) Gomez Landon Clanton Cheek* (C. S. A,; M.D.) Canton 150 ' NIVBR8ITY <>F MISSISSIPPI. Richard Henry Cook (C. S. A.; Planter) .Holly Springs William Milus Cook (Traveling Salesman) Oxford William Leonidas Dinkins* (C. S. A.; U. S. Marshal; Real Estate and Insurance) Canton Augustus Meek Duncan* (M.D.; C. S. A.) Green Co., Ala. William Samuel Fore Hazlehurst Joseph Travis Graves Grenada Wiley Pope Harris* Hinds County David George Humphreys* (C. S. A.) Port Gibson Alexander S. Erwin* (C. S. A.) . Carson's Landing Thomas Meriwether Jones (M.D.; C. S. A.) Hernando Benjamin King (C. S. A.; Planter) Beauregard William Marshall (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Judge City Court).. St. Louis, Mo W r illiam Winans Mangum New Albany John William Massey (C. S. A.) Canton Hon. Thos. Shelton Maxey (C. S. A.; Miss. Leg., 1869; Texas, 1874; State Dem. Com., 1875; U. S. Dist. Judge, 1888; LL.D. Univ. of Miss.; LL.D. Tulane Univ. 1897) Austin, Texas Edward Mayes (graduated 1868, see Class of 1868) Jackson Thos. A. McConnico . Water Valley Alexander Blanton McDowell* Brandon John Milton McFarland* (M.D.) California Malcolm McNeill Sunflower Landing Hon. Chas. Carroll Miller* (Atty. at Law; Chairman State Democratic Committee; Executive Committee) Meridian Julian Montgomery* (C. S. A.) Holmes County Hon. Henry Clay Meyers (C. S. A.; Sheriff Marshall County; Secretary of State of Mississippi 1878-86; member of Levee Board 1888-89; General Agent Equitable Insurance Co.) Memphis, Tenn. Chas. Edward Pegues* Oxford John Cain Pickens (President Bank of Holmes County) West Station Rev. Frank Bell Webb (D.D. ; Pastor Union Springs, Ala., Birm- ingham, Ala.) Talladega, Ala. Shelton Withers White (Planter) Memphis, Tenn. Hardeman Harry Hill White* Yazoo City John Meredith Whitson (M.D.) Water Valley John Pickens Wilson Lexington John Preston Young (C.S.A.; Lawyer, Author, Judge) Memphis, Tenn. Pursuing Select Studies. James Bailey Charleston J . M . Buffington* Grenada A. W. Clark Kosciusko William Clowers Lexington John E. Drennan (Accountant) Franklin Wiley Greenville Embrey .- Benela S. S. Ewing* Aberdeen UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 151 J . L. Field " Natchez A. H. Glenn New Orleans, La. J. R. Harrison DeSoto County J. H. Hazard Osceola, Ark. S. Heard (Atty. at Law) Gainesville, Texas Eddie Hicks Fayette Thos. Johnson Hill Memphis, Tenn. William Bolls Johnson Fayette Thos. B. Love* Love Station William Harry Lyons Canton James Thos. McClellan Tallulah, La. Frank P. McFarland (Insurance Business) New Orleans, La. Fulton McRea* (Druggist) Vicksburg James Benjamin Mullens Pine Ridge T. H. Maxwell* Tuscaloosa, Ala. Geo. Falls Neil* Carrollton Thos. Young Nelson Linden William Phipps Oxford J. M. Richardson Hickory Valley, Tenn. D. E. Spencer Calhoun County M . B. Stokes Louisiana F. J. Whitley ' -.-Masons, Tenn. CLASS OF 1870. Honor Men. Hon. Eugene Johnson.* Hampton Mundall Sullivan.* Samuel Bascom "McClellan. Rev. Isaac Shelby Davenport* (Pastor and Teacher)- Veal Station, Texas Thos. Foote* (Atty. at Law) Macon Mac Dougald Haman (Atty. at Law) New York City Rev. Thos. Luther Haman (C. S. A.; Pres. Board of Trustees of French Camp Academy and Central Miss. Inst.) Vaiden Benjamin Johnson Hawkins Hazlehurst William Felix Heathman Memphis, Tenn. Hon. Robertson Horton* (Atty. at Law; Mayor of Grenada; County Supt. of Education) Grenada Hon. Eugene Johnson* (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Judge Circuit Court) Senatobia Andrew Jackson Liddell (C. S. A.; M.D.) Carrollton Samuel Bascom McClellan (C. S. A.) Port Gibson Henry Hart Neill (C. S. A.; Judge County Court; Judge Cir- cuit Court of Appeals) El Paso, Texas Robert Andrew Parker (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Planter) Yazoo City Hon. Robert Powell (Atty. at Law; Judge Circuit Court) Jackson 152 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Thos. Jefferson Ross (Atty. at Law).. Florence, Ala. James Allen Shackelford* (M.D.; C. S. A.) Greenville John William Somerville* Pickensville, Ala. Hampton Mundall Sullivan* (Chancery Clerk; Atty. at Law; member and Secretary Board of Trustees of the University of M ississippi ) Oxford Hugh Lewis Southerland (M.D.; County Health Officer) Rosedale David Seille Switzer (Lieut. C. S. A.; A.M. Univ. of Miss.; Pres. Weatherford College; has taught many years in Texas, at Round Rock, Granberry and Weatherford) Weatherford, Texas Harry Hill Wildy* (Atty. at Law) San Diego, Cal. Thomas Emerson Williams* (M.D.) Meridian Not Graduating. Jos. Luther Abernathy (Judge) McKinney, Texas James Eugene Backstrom (M.D.) Water Valley Prior Lee Bailey* Charleston Chas. Meriwether Bowdre (Cotton Factor) Memphis, Tenn. Stephen Pettus Bowdre (Cotton Factor) Memphis, Tenn. Chas. Edward Butler Oxford Rev. Beverley Caradine (D.D.; Pastor; Author) St. Louis, Mo. Robert Bruce Carson* Benton Hon. William Proby Cassedy (Judge Circuit Court 1896) Summitt John Taylor Crump* West Point Jos. Chessley Daniel (M.D.; member State Board of Health 1889-'93 ; County Health Officer) Holly Springs Thos. Keith Dunn Memphis, Tenn. Hon. Geo. Henry Ellis (member Legislature) Farmerville, La. John Pelham Finlay Finlay William Irwin Gibson (Teacher) Gainesville, Texas Thomas Wiley Hoke Friar's Point Hon. Henry Smart Hooker* (Atty. at Law; State^Senate 1875- 79; member Con. Convention 1890) Lexington Morgan Stuart Humphreys* Port Gibson Samuel Coburn Humphreys* Port Gibson Thos. Pryor Knight Birmingham, Ala. Albert Jackson Lucas Clarksdale Rev. Eliud Saddoc Manning* (Minister and Teacher) DeSoto County James Francis McCool* (1) Attala County Duncan C. McLeod* Carrollton Lee McMillan '. Carrollton James Campbell Norwood McNeill* Carroll County Hon. Thomas Anderson McWillie (Atty. at Law; member Leg- islature 1880; Chairman Legislature Committee on Uni- versity 1880; State Reporter 1895-1901) Jackson Reuben Webster Millsaps (Attorney) Hazlehurst James Alexander Mhoon Monroe, Ala. Samuel William Montgomery Greenville UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 153 John Miller Morrison Jackson John Edward Noble (M.D.) Jackson Robert Paine* (Cashier Bank of Aberdeen, Miss.) Aberdeen Harry D. Priestly, Sr.* Canton Thos. Theo. Pritchett* Memphis, Tenn. Geo. Thos. Robson Tunica Richard Campbell Saunders Canton William Winfield Scott* Canton Ulysses Fitz Short DeSoto County Rev. Thos. Jefferson Sims (Baptist; twenty years Pres. of Fe- male College) Weatherford, Texas James Strong Arkadelphia, Ark. Eugene Leland Taylor. Texas William Hutton Thatcher Chicago, 111. Oscar D. Thomas Canton William Gaston Watt* Carroll County Edwin J. Wendel..- Memphis, Tenn. Alfred Alexander Young (M.D.; Asst. Prof. Memphis Medical College 1894-'96) Oxford Pursuing Select Studies. F. M. Aldridge 708 N. State Street, Jackson A. H. Ball* (Merchant) Meridian G. A. Baldwin (Merchant) New Orleans, La. G. L. Batte* Birmingham, Ala. L.Bell . Texas H. P. Burney (Teacher) Arkansas H. W. Byers Lafayette County W. H. Calhoun* (C.E.; see class of -1872) Verona P. H. Farr* Lexington J. L. Field Natchez J. W. Gaines Memphis, Tenn. J. C . Harris Okolona J. J. Hooker (Planter) Shreveport, La. Madison Conrad Klein Morehead City, N. C. M. H. Mabry Tupelo William D. Peery Winona W. D. Phillips Selma, Ala. W. W. Ratliff e Damascus Chas. Reed* Fayette Walter Sillers (Atty. at Law; Legislature 1886-'88; County Atty. eight years; Atty. for Board of Levee Commissioners) Rosedale W. R. Thompson (M.D.) Moss Point L. T. Ventress (Planter; Banker; Pres. Board of Supervisors).. Wood ville F. J. Whitley Memphis, Tenn. E. D. Woods (M.D.) Bayou Sara, La. K. B. Wright (Banker) San Francisco, Cal. 154 I VIVBRS1TY OF MISSISSIPPI. class OF 1871. Honor Men. Hon. Albert Hall Whitfield. Rev. Cornelius Miller. Marcus Elvis Taylor, M.D.* Bachelor of Arts. Rev. Lewis Martin Ball (Secretary Arkansas Baptist Conven- tion two years; Grand Chaplain of Masonic Grand Lodge, Cherry Creek, Miss., 1871) Paris, Tenn. James H. Barr* (Atty. at Law; Special U. S. Dist. Atty.,) Chattanooga , Tenn . Rev. D. C. M. Bigham (Minister and Teacher; County Superin- tendet Education; C. S. A.) Pontotoc John L. Dodd* (Attorney at Law) Louisville, Ky. Arthur Fant* (Attorney at Law) Holly Springs Rev. J. W. Flinn (D.D.; C. S. A.; student Columbia Seminary and Edinburgh University; Pastor, New Orleans; Professor South Carolina College) Columbia, S. C. Rev. Thomas B. Hargrove* (Pastor M. E. Church) Sardis Hon. Chas. S. McKenzie* (Atty. at Law) Johnsonville Rev. Cornelius Miller Greensboro, N. C. John W. Mhoon* Canton Rev. James K. P. Newton* (County Supreintendent Education; Pastor) Cameron, Texas J. T. Pattison* Texas William Thomas Ross (Bank of Holly Springs) Holly Springs Rev. J. J. Shirley (Late President and Vice-President Gran- bury High School) Alvin, Texas N. E. Taylor* (M.D.; Assistant Surgeon U. S. A.) Booneville J. W. Thompson (LL.B.; Cumberland, Miss.; Atty. at Law; State Attorney for R. G. Dunn & Co.) Dallas, Texas Edmund Watkins (Atty. at Law; Miss. Leg. 1876-77; Mayor City of Chattanooga; General Law Counsel Guarantors Liability Indemnity Ins. Co., Atlanta, Ga.) Chattanooga, Tenn. Hon. A. H. Whitfield (Atty. at Law; Prof, of Law University of Mississippi 1891-94; Judge Supreme Court 1894; Chief Jus- tice Supreme Court) Jackson Bachelor of Science. Hon. Walter Lucas Clapp* (Atty. at Law; Speaker House of Representatives of Tennessee; Mayor of Memphis). -Memphis, Tenn. Robert Hills Loughbridge (C. S. A.; Ph.D.; Assistant Professor University of Mississippi; Professor S. C. College; Pro- fessor University of California) Berkeley, Cal. Horatio Fleming Simrall (Teacher) Columbus UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 155 Not Graduating. Frank Minter Aldridge Greenwood Gustavus Adolphus Baldwin* Madsion County Thomas DeJarnett Barton* Macon John Thomas Bivins (Atty . at Law) Texas Edwin Bradford Bolton (Major C. S. A. ; Captain U. S. A. ) _ .Philippine Isls. Richard Harrison Bridges* Holmesville Prentiss Buie (Treas. Lincoln County; Farmer) Caseyville Zachary Taylor Buie* Lincoln County Albert Peyton Bush (Mobile, Ala.; St. Louis, Mo.; President of the Cattle Raiser's Association of Texas) Colorado City, Texas Bradford Davis Coffey* Jefferson County Chas. Clark Coffey (Clerk Circuit Court 1884-96; Sheriff 1896- 1900) Fayette Charles C. Campbell (A.B. and A.M. Roanoke College; Book- keeper Auditor's office; Deputy Clerk Supreme Court 1879 to present; Clerk R. R. Commission 1884-85) Jackson Edgar Nathaniel Coffey* Jefferson County Rev. John Randolph Crowder* (C. S. A.; Atty. at Law; Min- ister) Yalobusha County Hiram Walter Drane Hernando James Manly Dunlap* Paris, Texa s Robert Kennon Evans (Major U. S. A.; Military Attache Am. Legation, Berlin, 1892-96) . Washington, D. C. John McGeehee Farrington* (A.B.; Emory College; Cotton Fac- tor; Banker) Memphis, Tenn. Henry Arthur Finch (Atty. at Law; seepage 157) McKinney. Tex. Gen. Geo. Yates Freeman* (Member Board of Trustees of Uni- versity of Mississippi ) Jackson William Alfred Galloway* (M.D.)--"- Jackson Harris Allen Gant (M.D.; member State Board of Health) _Columbia,Tenn. Chas. Barnett Gilmer* Crawford Chas. Eggleston Grant Rosedale Chas. Harvey Hart* St. Louis, Mo. Edwin Calvin Hart Choctaw County Henry Prentiss Harvey* (M.D.; Assistant Surgeon U. S. N.) Lowndes County John Henry Hazard Mississippi County. Ark. Rev. Daniel Scott Hearon (A.B., A.M. and D.D., Emory and Henry College; Pastor and Teacher; President Sullin's College Bristol, Tenn. John Balfour Hobbie Hemingway* (State Reporter, Mississip- pi; U. S. District Attorney Arizona Beverly Stowers Hicks* Jefferson County Harper S. Hunt* Vicksburg Thomas Andrew Hutchinson* Lafayette County Calvin Jarnigan (M.D.; Surgeon R. & D. R. R.; Medical Ref- eree Mutual Life Insurance Co.) Atlanta, Ga. Hampton Jarnigan* M aeon 156 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Fanning Emmett Jones* Panola County Glover Johns* Hinds County Geo. Pink Lake* (M.D.) Carroll County Alexander Barr McCaw* Pontotoc James Edward Marshall* Choctaw County Chas. Albert Neely Bolivar, Tenn. Lawrence Sims Pearce (M.D.) Falkner Herbert Lemuel Petrie* (M.D.) Jackson Henry Jonathan Ray* (M.D.j Carrollton Leonidas Sebastian Sledge* Como Walton Long Sink Selma, Ala. Frank Dulaney Smith* Lexington Rev. James George Snedecor (LL.D.) Tuscaloosa, Ala. Oscar Stansberry Chuca, Cal. Francis Marion Stowers (Merchant) Oxford John Slack Tatum Charleston Ransom James Thatcher (Atty. at Law) Houston, Texas Walter R. Thompson (M.D.) Moss Point Hon. William Dougald Torrey* (Atty. at Law; Legislature 1880 and 1896) Fayette James Harvey Viser Paducah, Ky. Hugh Robertson Walsh Memphis, Tenn. Thomas Jefferson Wharton* Jackson Shelton Malachi White (Captain U. S. A.) Washington, D. C. Kirkham Brantley Wright Lexington Arthur Rucks Yerger* (Atty. at Law) Jackson Rev. Henry Sale Yerger (D.D.) Pensacola, Fla. Pursuing Select Studies. W. C. Casteel Meridian Milton Darnall Fannin, Texas W. M. McKie* Chulahoma Rev. J. B. Moody Olive Branch Demosthenes Paterachi Syra, Greece Hon. S. M. Roane* (Atty. at Law; County Supt. Education; State Senator 1882-84; Attorney for I. C. R. R. and Southern Railway West Point Nye Wilson* Yazoo City Unclassified List 1870 and 1871. John Edward Ashcroft (Circuit Clerk and Sheriff) Lexington Rev. Nicholas Gaines Augustus (Minister M. E. Church) Holly Springs William N. Beauchamp Utica Rev. Eber Elam Bigger (Minister, Pres.) Corsicana, Texas William Morgan Blakeley Magnolia, Ark. John Frederick Carlock Hernando Edwin B . Comfort Jackson Jesse Darden Fayette UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 157 Lawrence Gadbury* Yazoo City Jefferson Pearson Holden* Brandon William McL. Hutchinson Nashville, Tenn. Luke Whitfield Keithley (Accountant) Crystal Springs Robert J. Lum* Port Gibson Elisha Willis Lott Selma, Ala. A. B. Magee Utica David Hughes Morrow (Atty. at Law) Dallas, Tex. Winfield Scott Newman Franklin County Rev. Samuel Washington Newell* (see Class of 1874) Newell, N. C. Emmet O'Neal Florence, Ala. Thomas Herbert Pickens*. Pickens Frank Oliver Robertson (Planter) Tunica Gustavus Russell Sylersville, Ark. James Outen Sawyers Corinth Rev. Geo. Baxter Sergeant (Minister C. P. Church) Union City, Tenn. James Conroe Simpson* Meridian John Adair Skipwith (Cotton Buyer) Fort Smith, Ark. John A. Q. Thurmond Lexington Arthur Ross Whitehead Jackson Geo. Gillespie Buford (M.D.; Vanderbilt, Founder's Medal; Lecturer Memphis Medical College) Memphis, Tenn. William Fendall Carothers* (M.D.) Lafayette County David B. Cummins 1 Covington, Tenn. Walker Durf ey * Canton James M. Dyer (Chancery Clerk 1888-'96; Bank Cashier) Lexington Henry Arthur Finch (Atty. at Law; Texas Leg. and Senate 1882-'90; State Democratic Executive Com.) McKinney, Texas John Thomas Fondren* Lafayette County Marshall Ney Gaines Meridian James Gibson (Mining) Irington, Col. Thos. Brooks Harvey* St. Louis, Mo. Selwin Marshall Jones* Grenada Robert Campbell Lyles Oxford Joshua Thompson McKinnis Bryan, Texas William Pines McKie Oxford Richmond Alexander McKinnis Bryan, Texas Louis Lowry Mclnnis (A.M.; late Chairman Faculty A. & M. College) Bryan, Texas William Phif er Ecru Sidney Freeno Porter Huntsville, Texas Richard L. Powell Helena, Ark. Rev. Hosea William Rockett Harrison Station Frederick Robert Simmons Sardis Isaac Taylor Smith (City Treasurer) Macon Newton Alexander Taylor (Attorney at Law) Senatobia William "Vaughan* Yazoo County Eddie Watson (Planter) Strong's Station 158 ' VIVBRS1TY OF MISSISSIPPI. John Watson* Monroe County Andrew Jackson West Searcy, Ark. William Rowe Wharton Jackson Edwin Cary Wilbourn* (Planter) .Torrance Ernest Janes Wilbourn* (Traveling Salesman and Planter) Torrance CLASS OF 1872. Honor Men. Samuel S. Scales. Rev. Jerry Witherspoon, D.D.* John Hill Davidson. Bachelor of Arts. Rev. Samuel Craighead Caldwell (D.D.; Pres. Minister) Hazlehurst Hon. James Cicero Clark* (Atty. at Law; State Senate 1895; Mayor) Kosciusko John Stone Collins (Teacher) Kirksville, Mo. John Hawthorn Davidson (Teacher) Homer, La. Charles Carter Ewing (M.D.; Planter and Banker) Aberdeen Hon. Thos. B. Garrett (member Miss. Legislature; Mayor and Postmaster) Fort Smith, Ark. Hon. Robert G. Hudson (Atty. at Law; member State Con. Convention 1890 Tacoma, Wash . Richard H. Jones* Grenada Chas. Douglass Newman* Crystal Springs James Monroe Quin* Summit Samuel S. Scales (Merchant and Planter) 1 Columbus Rev. Jerry Witherspoon* (D.D.; Pastor Pres. Ch., Jackson Tenn.. Nashville, Baltimore and Richmond) Richmond. Va. Bachelor of Science. Iddo Baliou* Canton Frank Harwell Bates (Farmer and Stock Breeder) Hamburg, Ala. William Francis Bradshaw (Atty. at Law) Paducah, Ky. William Clark Buford (Atty. at Law) . . . Henderson, Tenn. Civil Engineer. William Henry Calhoun* (Planter and Civil Engineer). ..Memphis, Tenn. Not Graduating. John Williamson Caldwell (Merchant) Senatobia Frederick Clark (Atty. at Law) Cleveland William A. Dye Ripley Warren Ferrell 1 Water Valley Rev. Enos. Blair Foust Louisiana Thos. Ware Fullilove* (M.D.) Vaiden UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 159 William Iveson Gayden Rosedale Geo. Massie Gilmore Crawford James Bowmar Harris (Atty. at Law; U. S. Dist. Atty.) Jackson James Parmenas Harrison St. Joseph, La. Robert Eugene Harris* Marshall County James Hamilton Hearon* Columbus Wilson Hemingway (Judge Supreme Court, Arkansas; Atty. at Law) Little Rock, Ark. John Hall Kimmons (Atty. at Law; see class 1878) Oxford Rev. Zachary Taylor Leavell* (D.D.) Jackson James Monroe Liddell (Attorney at Law; Major U. S. A. 1898 Washington, D. C. John Dougald McArn Union Church Thos. McNeal Caldwell County, Texas Jackson Dove Millsaps Crystal Springs William Amos Moore Haywood County, Texas Sidney Turner Moreland (A.B., M.A., C.E., Washington and Lee University; Prof. Natural Philosophy, Washington and Lee University; Principal McDonough School) Baltimore, Md. Thos. Edgar Murrill Austin County, Ark. John E. Paine* (M.D.; County Health Officer) Aberdeen Oscar Bowles Polk LaGrange, Tenn. William Everett Quinn (M.D.; Mayor) Fort Payne, Ala. Rev. Benjamin Shattuck Rayner* (Minister M. E. Ch.)._. Holmes County Geo. Alexander Searcy (Banker) Tuscaloosa, Ala. John Winter Watkins* (M.D.) New Orleans, La. Benjamin Joel Wade Cherokee County, Texas Hon. Geo. Ashe Wilson (Dist. Atty.; Atty. at Law; Capitalist) . Lexington Note. — The change from the close curriculum to the University system in 1872 renders a new and different classification of students necessary. The following lists contain the names of all new students admitted during the session ending in the year stated, and of all the graduates of each year. The names of the graduates of 1875 or 1876, and all succeeding years, are therefore found twice in the lists — once as new students, then as graduates. New Students. Geo. Dudley Able (Mayor and Banker) Water Valley Rev. William Addison Alexander Clarksdale William James Alexander Marshall County Thomas H. Allein (Salesman) Vicksburg Benjamin Alexander Allen Hernando Riley H . Allen Durant John H. Alsworth Llano County, Texas Chas . M . Anderson Sartartia David 0. Andrew Memphis, Tenn. James A. Andrus (Pharmacist) Canton Jos. M . Atkinson Columbus 160 ' yiVBRBITV OF MISSISSIPPI. William Augustus Ayres (Physician).. Frankston, Texas Albert King Barmore* (Editor) Pontotoc Lawson Ballou* .Canton Julian Barnett Vicksburg Joseph T. BealL Hernando William H. A. Bemiss Charleston James Russell Berry (M.D.) Columbia William E. Bingham Northport, Ala. Lewis M . Bledsoe Texas F. H . Bowen __ Brookhaven William C. Bowen (County Attorney) Texas Sidney G. Boyd* Kosciusko William A. Briggs (Physician) Memphis, Tenn. Frederick M. Brougher (Physician) Belen W'ebst er Brown * Canton Geo. F. Brown* Vicksburg Amos W. Burnett Kansas Noah G . Burt Arkansas William A. Callicoate* (Merchant) Coldwater Hon. Robert Bond Campbell (Atty. at Law; late Code Commis- sioner; member Con. Convention 1890) Greenville James S . Carleton Sardis N. S. Carr (Banker and Merchant) Crawford St. Leger L. Carter New Mexico Henry A. Charles Vicksburg Nicholas Cheatham* Yazoo City W. T. L. Cofer (Attorney at Law) Cullman, Ala- Elias T. Coleman Canton Hon. Samuel C. Cook Clarksdale Chas. C. Cooper Mifflin, Tenn. Chas. Thos. Cooper (M.D.) Holly Springs James Crawford (M.D.) Hernando William R. Cross (Cashier Security Bank) Memphis, Tenn. Alexander Davison Hot Springs, Ark. John B. Dillard* Memphis, Tenn. Hon. Edwin Hamilton Dial* Meridian William I . Dodson Corinth Henry Falconer* Holly Springs Carey H. Fant New York, N. Y. Jos. C . Foster* Louisville Leonidas B. Foster Cameron, Texas Rev. Daniel C. Foust (Minister M. E. Church) Aberdeen Columbus Galloway Canton Rev. James B. Gambrell (D.D.; Capt. C. S. A.; Pres. Mercer University; Editor; Minister) Dallas, Texas Daniel M. Gardner (M.D.; Pres. Board of Health; Director City Hospital ) Fort Smith, Ark . James S. Gibson Enterprise UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 161 Hal. Inscoe Gill (Merchant) Sanatobia William H. Gilmer* (Atty. at Law) Crawford Harry A. Gould (Atty. at Law; Circuit Clerk). Eupora Malcom M. Grant .Greenwood Lewis Green* Columbus William Grimes Vicksburg Theo. Habicht Greenville Edwin A. Hamblin Houston, Texas Thos. W. Hamilton (Insurance Agent) Okolona Matt Claudius Harper Fayette Evans Braseal Harvey* Meridian John J. Harry (M.D.; County Health Officer) Handsboro Jesse Falkner Heard .. Little Rock, Ark. Elisha N. Henderson Sardis Lewis W. Herring Vaiden Albert Potts Hill* Canton James A. Hill Grenada John J. C. Holman* Chester William Walton Hoskins* Lexington Giles G. Houston McKinney, Texas John James Houston (Merchant) New Albany Thomas A. Howard Lexington Isham R. Howze (Atty. at Law) 709 Peoples Bank Bldg., Denver, Col. James Hunt Fayette Benjamin W. Hodges (1st Lieut. U. S. N.) .' Washington William Blanton Hodges Okolona Chas. Spencer Hudson* (Physician) Vicksburg William Alfred Hudson : Batesville Rev. James A. Isom* Oxford Robert S. Jamison , Houston Anselm H. Jayne (A.B., Harvard; Atty. at Law) Houston, Texas Huff Jelks (Planter) Whitaker William C. Jelks* McComb City Wiley J. Jenkins Hattiesburg William T. Jenkins (M.D.) New York City Byron G. Johnson Vicksburg Fred W. Jones Lafayette County Kavanaugh Kennedy Washington, D. C. Joshua William Kilpatrick Fayette, Mo. Luther T. Kline* Columbus Richard G. Latting South McAlester, I. T. David N. Lawrence Lake Charles, La. Hugh W. Lawson* Canton Jesse M. Ledbetter Scott County Henry Lengsfield Greenville Chas. H. Leonard* Memphis, Tenn. E. G. Leonard Bridgeport, Texas Rev. William C. Lester Crawford 11 1(52 UNIVERSITY (>/•' MISSISSIPPI. Francis E. Love* Vicksburg C. Melville Lyon (Supt. City Schools) Waxahatchie, Texas William E. Martin. _ Birmingham, Ala. Leon H. Matthews (Merchant) Copiah County Jos. A. Maupin* .__, Coahoma County Edward F. Maury Macon Matthew H. Maury* Kemper County Watt . McCain* Lexington Edward S. McDaniel Los Angeles, Cal. Robert W. McGuirk* Marshall County Alexander J. Mcintosh Crystal Springs Frank M c Kee (Merchant) Oxford William A. McLean Winona William A. McLeod . - Hattiesburg John Mitchell* Florence, Ala. William A. Mitchell Florence, Ala. John F. Montgomery West Point, Miss. Benjamin F. Moseley * Meridian Henry Clay Moseley Oxford John R. Nicholas DeKalb James T. Nolan Memphis, Tenn. Jesse C. Norfleet (Wholesale Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. Robert B. Oliver Dallas, Texas Clarence D. Owens Red Leaf, Ark. Alfred D . Pace Greenville Guilford A. Park Scott County William R. Pearce Como Alexander H. Pegues (Merchant) Columbus Lucius T. Pegues Arkansas Paul E. Pegues (Merchant) Winona Hon. James H. Phelan* (M. C; Author of History of Ten- nessee) Memphis, Tenn. Thomas J. Phillips Vaiden Pierce W. Pinnell* (Teacher) Calhoun County Walter W. Pinson Grady James M. Plant* Oxford Theo. W. Potts Nashville, Tenn. William Hamilton Powell (Atty. at Law) Canton Robert O. Price Vicksburg Albert E. Priddy* Charleston Lewis R. Quinn (Atty. at Law) Kansas City, Mo. Evan Leonidas Ragland (Insurance Business) Jackson Chas. D. Richardson* Brandon Hon. William Arthur Roane (Atty. at Law; State Senator; Dis- trict Attorney; Grand Master Grand Lodge Masons; Cir- cuit Judge Oxford James F. Robertson Helena, Ark. Andrew Sandidge Olive Branch UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 163 James E. Saunders*'. Aberdeen Noah Scales (Merchant and Stock Raiser) Macon Gus R. Scott (Atty. at Law; County Atty.) Corpus Christi, Texas Isaac Sessums* _Oktibbeha County David Shelby St. Loius, Mo. Thomas Simmons Oxford Frank Simms (General Life Ins. Agent) Columbus Geo. S. Singleton New Orleans, La. Eagleton Montgomery Smith (Lawyer) Holly Springs Ebn W. Smith* (Banker; Grand Reporter K. of H.; Trustee University of Mississippi) Hernando Robert E. Smith (Atty. at Law) Sherman, Texas Rev. Lawson Harvey Snell Grenada Alfred H. Somerville* (Atty. at Law) Carrollton John H . Stagg Okolona Thos. W. Stockard Washington, D. C. James Stone (Atty. at Law; see Law Class of 1878) Oxford Rev. Granville T. Story 1 Searcy William V. Sullivan (LL.B. Vanderbilt University; Atty. at Law; member National Democratic Executive Committee; M. C; U. S. Senate) Oxford Simpson Tate (Cotton Factor) -Memphis, Tenn. John C. Torrey (Planter) Hermanville Edward Meek Townes (Planter) Minter City James Trotter (Atty. at Law; County Attorney; Mayor Vaiden, Miss. ; City Attorney) Bessemer, Ala. Richard Henry Tunstall* Holly Springa Rev. Edward D. Viser* Pine Ridge Frank C. Walter* Holly Springs James F. Ware Vicksburg Fred Edgar West Vicksburg James E. Wheat* University Rev. Thos. H. Wheat Arkansas Henderson McC. White Oxford Simeon Orr Wiley Leflore County Elijah J. Wilkerson* Marshall County Hon. Chalmers Meek Williamson (Atty. at Law) Jackson James Freeman Williamson (M.D.) Pleasant Grove Samuel A. Witherspoon (Atty. at Law) Meridian Rev. Geo. S. Wyatt Texas William Prince Yongue Greenwood 164 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. CLASS OF 1873. Honor Men. Alexander Fox Moore.* Andrew Edmondson Kilpatrick. Silas Catchings Padelford. Bachelor of Arts. Spencer Bailey* (Atty. at Law) Charleston Cranmer Ridley Boyce* (Atty. at Law) Hernando Matthew Claudius Harper (Professor Jefferson College; Mer- chant) Fayette John Ellison Joiner (Atty. at Law) Bayou Metre, Ark. Andrew Edmondson Kilpatrick (Lieut. C. S. A.; Acting Profes- sor Central College ; Principal High School) San Antonio , Texas Greenwood Ligon Mobile, Ala. Alexander Fox Moore* (Atty. at Law) Marshall County Rev. Robert Orlando Baxter Morrow (Minister Presbyterian Church) Demopolis, Ala. Silas Catchings Padelford (Atty. at Law) Cleburne, Texas Rev. Jos. Sloan (Presbyterian Minister) Alderson, W. Va. John Baptist Tunstall* Holly Springs Hon. James Harper Wynn (Atty. at Law; Circuit Judge) Greenville Bachelor of Science. Robert Frederick Bernard (M.D.) Lake Providence, La. New Students. Jeff Davis Adams Durango, Col. John Bailey* Charleston Henry M. Barrentine Columbus William Monroe Block (Clerk Circuit Court) Wittsburg, Ark. Hon. Jordan M. Boone (Atty. at Law; member Legislature) Corinth Geo. W. Boothe Guntown Jas. M. Brabston* Vicksburg Andrew L. Bradley Flora Horace C. Brashear Winterville Baldwin W. Brown Meridian Horace F. Buie* (Atty. at Law) Corpus Christi, Texas Henry T. Buie Buffalo, Ark. Ezra J. Burnett Terry Jos. T. Burnett* Terry Hon. John Newton Bush (Atty. at Law; member Legislature). .Vicksburg James R. Campbell* Macon Luke L. Catea (Merchant) Columbus Hon. William A. Causey* (Atty. at Law; State Senate) Summit William Cochran Texas UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 165 Stansel Leonidas Cockroft_, Near Memphis, Tenn. Geo. H. Collins Davis, I. T. Moses B. Collins (Planter) Jonestown I. H. C. Cook (M.D.) Hattiesburg Henry W. Cook* Vicksburg James C. Cowan Memphis, Tenn. William Aubrey Cowan* Vicksburg Rev. R. B. Craig (Presbyterian Minister) Lafayette County Andrew E. Creighton* (Atty. at Law) Warsaw, Ohio Jos. Currie Utica Frederick A. Dantzler (M.D.) Jasper County Russell H. Dean (M.D.) Gainesville, Fla. William C . Devours Clarksdale Jos. O . Denton Oxford Stephen B. Duncan Hampton Robert R. Eggleston Vicksburg Frank C. Englesing (C.E.) .' Port Gibson Mortimer T. Enoch Columbus Thomas W. Foster (M.D.; Postmaster) Tchula Hartley W. Freeman Pittsboro William McM . French Grenada Theo. P. Gibbs* (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Jos. L. Gray (Stock Breeder) Temple, Texas Thos. Dale Greenwood* (Tutor U. M.) : Okolona Samuel Neel Hare Whitehaven, Tenn. Thomas Emmett Hare Cleburne, Ark. David Wilbur Harris* Oxford Thos. Brooks Harvey (Atty. at Law) St. Louis, Mo. William Ray Harvey (Contractor) .. McComb City Leven Perry Hayes (I. C. R. R.) Shreveport, La. Asa Boyd Heard Byram Walter W. Hedrick* Port Gibson Rev. Geo. S. Inge* Corinth Prof. John Wesley Johnson (Ph.D.) University Francis L. Jones (Lieut. U. S. A.) Washington, D. C. Frederick A. Juny Oxford Geo. Ousley Juny Oxford Madison W. Juny Oxford William C. Keene Vicksburg Justin K. Kimmons (M.D.) Fort Smith, Ark. Robert T. Lamb (Planter) Walls Lucius L. Lampton (Banker) Magnolia Samuel Leonidas Ledbetter (M.D.) Birmingham, Ala. John E. Madison* (Atty. at Law) Macon William W. Matthews Panola County Dougald A. McCallum (M.D.) Edwards Henry Alex. Miller* '. Marshall County William H. Montgomery (Merchant; Cotton Broker) .Yazoo City 166 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Zachary T. Morrow Boston, Texas Hon. Stephen W. Mullins (Mississippi Legislature 1879, 1883; County Supt. Education 1889-91; Sheriff 1895; State Dem- ocratic Executive Committee; Banker) Holly Springs John A. Nabors (Atty. at Law) Vernon, Texas William Warren Nash* (M.D.) Pheba Jos. Edward Neilson (Merchant) Oxford David J. Newell (M.D.) .. Eliasville, Texas Archie Munroe Newman (M.D.) _Franklin County Thomas C. Newsom Tyro William O. Norrell Salt Lake City William McK. Paine (M.D.; Pres. Miss. Med. Ass'n) Aberdeen Thos. H. Perkins* Tunica Don Jose de Meranda Pereira Pinto Rio Janeiro, Brazil David Porterfield (Atty. at Law) Vicksburg William Porterfield* (C.E.) Vicksburg C. K. M. Powell Port Gibson Jos. H. Ragland* Oxford Frank L. Ratliff (Planter) Smedes Hon. John Fletcher Rives* (Atty. at Law; State Senator) ___Searcy, Ark. James Rucks Greenville Edgar James Sarrett Utica Hon. James S. Sexton (Atty. at Law; member Constitutional Convention 1890) Hazlehurst Caleb C. Shive (Atty. at Law) Lafayette County Chas. Shreve* (Druggist)- Port Gibson A. N. W. Smith (Teacher) Cameron, Texas Eugene M. Smith (M.D.) Canton William J. Smith* Ludlow Isaac D. Steele Birmingham, Ala. Rev. Samuel M. Stuart Texas Chas. C. Stockard (M.D.; Supt. Atlanta Retreat) Atlanta, Ga. John A. Stockard Greeley, Col. Bartley B. Sullivan Aberdeen Geo. Augustus Sykes (B.A. Washington and Lee University; B. L. University of Louisville; Manager St. Louis Commis- sion Co.) St. Louis, Mo. William H. Tegarden* (Insurance) Crystal Springs John H . Terry Hernando Walter N. Thatcher Greene County, Ala. Samuel F. Tipton* Oktibbeha County Chas. H. Townes Sunflower County Moses Unger. Port Gibson UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 167 CLASS OF 1874. Honor Men. Leon Sidney Hayes.* Marion Lafayette Dye. Frank Cary Walter.* Bachelor of Arts. William Austin Allen Amite City, La. White Bedford* Hernando Baron DeKalb Bishop Monticello Bennie Tombs Bowdre Memphis, Tenn. Jos. Brown* Indianola Frank Whitfield Cannon (Merchant) Dubbs Cornelius William Carothers* (Atty. at Law) ..Chattanooga, Tenn. Andrew Eggleston Creighton* (Atty. at Law) Warsaw, Ohio Harris Warren Crenshaw Garner Station John Rufus McDuffie Currie* Jasper County Jesse Dwight Davidson* Oxford Walter Shields Davis Louisiana James Burns Devours Cleveland Robert Alexander Dodd Willmore, Ky . James Brown Dowd (Atty. at Law) Seattle, Wash. Marion Lafayette Dye (Atty. at Law) Dallas, Texas Walter Benjamin Ellis (Atty. at Law) Iuka Henry Clay Farr (Merchant) Edwards Rev. Harvey Wilson Flinn (Presbyterian Minister) Bessemer, Ala. Edward Anthony Gibson Conway, Ark. Thaddeus Alexander Gibson Collins William Franklin Gwin* (Civil Engineer) Marshall County Edward Anderson Halsey Chicago, 111. Leon Sidney Hayes* (Atty. at Law) Pensacola, Fla. Nathan Whitehead Heard Washington State Jos. Warren Huff Centerville Frank Pierce Holloman* .Sartartia Frederick Wax Howrey Birmingham, Ala. Percy A. Howrey* Oxford Chas. Chamberlain Hull • Kansas City, Mo. Edward Sealey McDaniel (Atty. at Law) Los Angeles, Cal. Hon. Frank Alexander McLain (Member Legislature 1882; Dis- trict Attorney 1884-96; member Constitutional Conven- tion 1890; M. C. 1896) Gloster Laughlin McLaurin (Judge Chancery Court) Dallas, Texas David Hughes Morrow (Atty. at Law) Dallas, Texas Rev. Samuel Washington Newell* (Pastor and Teacher) Newell, N. C. Robert Elon Rhodes* ■- .Brandon 1(58 VNIVMKS1TY OF MISSISSIPPI. Eagleton Montgomery Smith (Atty. at Law; Attorney for M. & B. R. R.) .Holly Springs Robert Emmett Smith (Atty. at Law) Sherman, Texas Simpson Tate (Cotton Factor) Memphis, Tenn. Frank Carey Walter*.. Holly Springs Bachelor of Science. Leon Sidney Hays* (Atty. at Law) Pensacola, Fla. Frank Carey Walter* Holly Springs Civil Engineer. John Hall Wildy* Los Angeles, Cal. New Students. Charleton Henry Alexander Jackson Thomas Dudley Isom, Jr.* (M.D.) Oxford Franklin P. Jenkins* (LL.B. Lebanon; Atty. at Law; Banker) Aberdeen Frank Beal Jones Sardis James Oliver Jones Hernando Walter Frederick Kennedy* Meridian John Thomas Leonard Memphis, Tenn. Thomas Roe Maxwell (Chancery Clerk) DeSoto County Daniel Porter Meyers (Planter) McCallum Andrew Shelton Meharg (Atty. at Law) DeSoto County Rev. Henry Miller Middlesboro, Ky. Chas. Gibson Murray Okolona Scott A. Murray* Oxford Alexander Gallatin Paxton (Atty. at Law) Greenville Andrew Jackson Paxton (Planter) Areola William Franklin Paxton* Washington County Malachi Christopher Pegues Abbeville John Watson Perry Sardis Richard Franklin Pierce Oxford Frank Quarles College Hill Hugh Seymour Quin (Atty. at Law) Kansas City, Mo. Geo. McElroy Ragsdale* Meridian William Newton Roberson Oxford William B. Roseborough (Merchant) Senatobia James Mortimer Saunders Oxford John Shaw Brandon Rev. William Isodore Sinnott Talladega, Ala, John Anderson Southerland* (Merchant) Canton Chas. Randolph Symons Columbus William Josiah Taylor Houston, Texas Chas. Carroll Terry Hernando Jacob Thompson Memphis, Tenn. Peyton Gaston Thompson Dancyville, Tenn. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 169 William Hunt Thompson* Oxford Edward Everett Tucker* Batesville William Womack Watson* Byhalia Charles Micajah Webb Escota, Texas Robert Mclnnis Whitfield* Meridian Rev. Elias Boudinot Witherspoon (Presbyterian Minister). .Jackson, Mo. Frank Witherspoon* Paris, Texas David Mendel Woolerstein (Merchant) Yazoo City CLASS OF 1875. Honor Men. Thomas Walter Stockard. William Addison Alexander. Louis Lowry Mclnnis. Bachelor of Arts. Rev. William Addison Alexander (Presbyterian Minister, pastor in Lexington, Yazoo City, and Canton, Miss.; Prof. L. W.; Pres. Univ.; D.D.; Davidson; Stated Clerk General Assem- bly 1898) Clarksville, Tenn. Rev. Elam Eber Bigger (Presbyterian Minister) Corsicana, Texas Chas. Henry Leonard* Memphis, Tenn. Louis Lowry Mclnnis (A.M.; Chairman of Faculty A. & M. Col- lege ; Banker) Bryan, Texas William Hamilton Powell (Atty. at Law) Canton James Madison Sharp (Professor of Mathematics) Mississippi College Thomas Walter Stockard (Treasury Department) Washington, D. C. Rev. Granville Theodore Storey (Pastor and Teacher) Searcy, Ark. Rev. Henry Skipwith Taylor Weatherford, Texas William Mortimer Viser Paducah, Ky. Hon. Chalmers Meek Williamson (Atty. at Law; State Senator; member of Board of Trustees of University) Jackson Bachelor of Science. Lewis Green, Jr Columbus Louis Lowry Mclnnis (see above) Bryan, Texas New Students. Robert Davis Anderson Oxford William Preston Anderson Morganfield, Ky . William Franklin Bell* Verona Clauselle Puryear Black North Carolina David Reese Bowen (Planter) Wall Hill Robert Nealy Bramlitt Okolona Thomas Jefferson Briggs Memphis, Tenn. James Henry Chapman Pope Hon. John Wesley Cutrer Clarksdale 170 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Richard Harrison Davis, Jr .. Chickasaw County Thomas M arion Dillsworth Rienzi Charles Hubert Fee (Banker) Cisco, Texas Albert Leon Fischell (Merchant) Vicksburg Walter Tiptonne Flynt Hernando Alfred Daniel Galloway Canton Rev. James Betts Galloway Canton John Enos Garrett* Coldwater Geo. Yancey Gillespie (M.D.) Duck Hill John Kirk Graves Jackson Robert Hall Gresham (Civil Engineer). Houston, Texas John David Hamilton 1 Waterford John Wesley Harley Atlanta David Bell High Tupelo Robert Franklin Jarvis (Druggist) Greenville, Ky. Rev. Edward DeS. Juny Baltimore, Md. William Elejius Martin (Atty. at Law) Greenville. Ky, John Yates Mitchell Grenada Chas. Percival Montgomery* Starkville Robert Lacey Moss College Hill Frank Alexander Neilson (Merchant and Planter) Claremore, I. T. Lee Graham Nisbet (D.D.S., Univ. of Tenn.; Secy. Board of Dental Examiners) Aberdeen Geo. Rhew Page (Atty. at Law) Clarksdale John Henry Rhodes* (M.D.; Health Officer Hinds County) Jackson Elliott Wallace Richards Sardis Chas. Jacob Ries* Vicksburg William Edward Ritz (Teacher) Corpus Christi, Texas John Cochran Scott (Atty. at Law) Brownsville, Texas Joseph Welsh Scott (M.D.) Houston, Texas Samuel Ernest Shackelford (Traveling Salesman) Schlater Alexander Stewart (M.D.) Biloxi Marvin Eddy Sullivan (Atty. at Law) Oxford Geo. Clurk Vance Memphis, Tenn. James Brown Walter* Holly Springs CLASS OF 1876. Honor Men. Thomas Dale Greenwood* Samuel Andrew Witherspoon. John Fletcher Rives*. Bachelor of Arts. William Ellison Bingham Tuscaloosa, Ala. Hon. Edwin Hamilton Dial (Atty. at Law; Mayor) Meridian Jos. Clayton Foster* Louisville Thomas Dale Greenwood* (Tutor University of Miss.) Oxford UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 171 Rev. James A. Isom* Oxford John Wesley Johnson (A.M. ; Ph.D. ; Prof, of Physics and Astron- omy) University Joshua William Kilpatrick* (Prof. Natural History, Central College) Fayette, Mo. Samuel Leonidas Ledbetter (M.D.) Birmingham, Ala. Francis Emmett Love* Vicksburg John Fletcher Rives* (Atty. at Law) Searcy, Ark. Richard Henry Tunstall* Holly Springs James Freeman Williamson (M.D.) Pleasant Grove Samuel Andrew Witherspoon (Atty. at Law) Meridian Bachelor of Science. Chas. Thomas Cooper (M.D.) Texas Albert Newton Waddell Smith Texas New Students. James Hamblen Alford Oxford Dewitt Herbert Archibald* Oxford William Baxter Batte Birmingham, Ala. Robert Anderson Bettis , Chattanooga, Tenn. James McQueen Buchanan (M.D.; Asst. in Chemistry at Univ. of Miss.; Prof, of Chemistry at Ark. Med. College; Supt. East Miss. Insane Asylum) Meridian Rev. William Henry Buntin (Pastor and Teacher) West Point Henry Merriwether Carr Winchester, Tenn. Henry Thomas Cook* Oxford Ephriam Edward Davidson Oxford Miles Edward Davidson Helena, Ark. James Drane * French Camp Enoch Asbury Enochs (Lumber Business) Natchez James Luther Enochs Jackson John Preserved Enochs * Terry Emil Friend (Banker) * Sardis Rev. Joel Halcyon Gambrell Gainesville, Ga. Louis Ball Gambrell (Minister) Texas Phipps Brevard Hill (Atty. at Law) Moscow, Tenn. William Moore Hudson (Banker) Yazoo City Samuel Richard Hughston Ackerman James Andrew Jenkins New York City Willie Franklin Johnson Grenada Joseph Blake Jones* Madison Station LeRoy Wesley Kennedy (Atty. at Law) New Albany Albert Sidney Kyle Batesville William Lewis* (Merchant) Oxford Herman Bowmar Mayes* (Atty. at Law) Jackson Samuel Eddins Montgomery (Merchant) Yazoo City 172 ' NIVBB8IT7 OF MISSISSIPPI. William Dilliard Moore Oxford Alexander Pattison Charleston William Scovel Power* Jackson John Ragsdale* - .Grand Gulf Samuel Richardson* Fayette Samuel Burnham Riddick Pelahatchie Chas. Roberts, Jr.* Abiline, Texas Geo. Fairfax Sears* (Attorney at Law) University of Mississippi William Gray Sears (Attorney at Law) Houston, Texas Martin Luther Sexton (M.D.; Prof. Tulane Univ.) New Orleans, La. Robert Shotwell* (Atty. at Law) Jackson Albert Theo. Smith (Lawyer) Pittsboro Chas. Albert Smither* Oxford Rudolphus LeRoy D. Stephens (Deputy County Clerk) Water Valley Thomas Malery Stowers (D.D.S.) Jackson, Tenn. Harry Warren (Attorney at Law; Teacher) El Paso, Texas Olive West Summit Albert Hurger Weston (D.D.S.) Oxford William M illsaps Wheat James Gaston Williamson (Atty. at Law) Monti cello, Ark. CLASS OF 1877. Honor Men. Charlton Henry Alexander. Rev. William Isidore Sinnott. Rev. Henry Miller. Bachelor of Arts. Charlton Henry Alexander (Atty. at Law; State Reporter; see Law Class of 1879) Jackson William Thomas Jenkins (M.D.; Health Officer of the Port and Health Commissioner) New York City Rev. Henry Miller (Presbyterian Minister) Middleboro, Ky. Rev. William Isidore Sinnott (Presbyterian Minister) .Talladega, Ala. Bachelor of Science. Robert Hall Gresham (Civil Engineer) Houston, Texas New Students. John Anderson Bessemer, Ala. Theophilus B. Anderson (City Clerk) Palatka, Fla. John Harvey Archibald* Oxford John Armistead Vaiden William Rushton Baker (Planter) Grenada William . Beanland Waco, Texas William Martin Berry (Commercial Traveler) Ecru UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 173 Rev. Upton Beall Bowden* (Clergyman Episcopal Church) Napoleonville, La. Chas. Dubs Butler* - Fayette Jos. Meredith Catching (M.D.) Hazlehurst Paschall B. Childress Batesville Robert Lee Chilton '. Memphis, Tenn. Arthur Campbell Chisolm Fort Smith, Ark. William Garrett Dunlap Greenwood Guston Thomas Fitzhugh (Atty. at Law; Capt. U. S. V.)_ .Memphis, Tenn. Edward Everett Frantz (Editor) Jackson John E. Garrett* Tyro Willis Clark Gaulding Cincinnati, Ohio William Cothran George (Tax Collector, Leflore County; Capt. U. S. V.) Greenwood Leeren Golladay* Coffeeville Thomas Baker Graham (Banker) Bryan, Texas Edward H. Gray* Grenada Jos. N. Gray* Grenada William Robert Harper (Atty. at Law) Jackson James Lyon Harris* Dallas, Texas Lawrence Edmund Heath Memphis, Tenn. Rev. Winn David Heddleston (D.D.; Presbyterian Minister) Oxford Chas. Isaacs (Merchant) - Vicksburg Richard Walter Jones (Banker) New York City Roland Walter Jones (Planter) ' Grenada Daniel McL. Mayers (Insurance; Planter) Brandon Newton Franklin McAlpine California State Delos Carpenter Mellen (Attorney at Law) Natchez Augustine O' Connor * Aberdeen Bloom Jefferson Pate* (M.D.) Winona Rev. Alonzo Miles Robertson Helena, Ark. Rev. Peter Gray Sears (Principal St. Thomas Hall, Episcopal Clergyman) Houston, Texas Enoch Davis Stephens Cherry Creek Augustus W. Swindoll Knoxville, Tenn. William B. Taylor (Contractor) Jackson John Franklin Thomas Grenada Ebenezer Augustus Torrance Abbeville William Carhot Townes* (M.D.; Prof. Med. College) -.Chattanooga, Tenn. Albert Sidney Trigg Pine Bluff, Ark. Cowles Meade Vaiden* Vaiden James Brown Walter* Holly Springs John Jackson Wheat Geo. M . Wilson* Independence Robert LeGrand Wilson Brandon William Dowd Witherspoon (Atty. at Law; member Constitu- tional Convention of 1890; see Law Class of 1883) Meridian 174 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. CLASS OF 1878. Honor Men. Hon. John Wesley Cutrer. William Elejius Martin. i Bachelor of Arts. Hon. Jordan Mitchell Boone (Atty. at Law) Corinth Hon. John Newton Bush (Atty. at Law; member Legislature; Judge Circuit Court) Vicksburg Hon. John Wesley Cutrer (Atty. at Law; member Constitu- tional Convention 1890; see Law Class of 1878) Clarksdale Geo. Yancy Gillespie (M.D.) Duck Hill William Elejius Martin (Atty. at Law; Judge City Court)Birmingham, Ala. Chas. Percival Montgomery* Starkville Rev. Lawson Harvey Snell (Clergyman Episcopal Church) Columbus James Brown Walter* Holly Springs Bachelor of Science. James McQueen Buchanan (M.D.; Supt. E. Miss. Insane Asylum; Asst. Prof. Chem. Univ. of Miss.; Prof. Chem. Ark. Med. College) Meridian David Bell High (Merchant) Polk County, Fla. Andrew Shelton Meharg (Atty. at Law) Hernando Samuel Richardson* Fayette Bachelor of Philosophy. Arthur Avent Walter* Holly Springs New Students. Hon. John Uriah Abernathy (M.D.; Miss. Legislature 1891-92) Troy James Milton Acker, Jr (Atty. at Law; see Law Class of 1881) ..Aberdeen William Davis Adair Lodi Rev. Junius Wilson Allen (see Law Class of 1881) Water Valley Leroy Barton Allen Banner John Walter Anderson Floyd, La. James Buchanan Andrews Tacoma Geo. Harrison Armistead (Editor) New York City Jeff Davis Attlesey (Real Estate) Greenwood Thomas Wesley Avent Oxford Clifton Baker* Duck Hill Aaron Pendleton Baldwin (Physician) Texas William Edward Barker (Physician) Plaquemine, La. Fountain Barksdale, Jr.. Yazoo City Geo. Hiram Barney, Jr Gloster Batt Barron (Planter) New Rovers, La. Hon. James West Barron* (State Senate 1886-90; District At- torney 1896) Aberdeen UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 175 William Yancey Barron Whitefield Hon. William Shelby Barry (Atty. at Law; member Legislature 1888; Planter) Greenwood Chas. Carroll Bates Liberty Daniel William Beall, Jr. (Hardware Merchant) Lexington Chas. Newton Beard Lismore, La. Marcus Wayland Beck Oxford, Ala. William Samuel Bolls . Smith Station Vol. Meriwether Bowdre '. Senatobia Reece Bowen Hernando James Robert Bowles Texas Howard Alfred Bowman Kingston Robert Bowman, Jr. (Atty. at Law; Secretary to Senator Wal- thall) Yazoo City James Carson Bowmar (Atty. at Law) Vicksburg William Henry Bradley Jackson Gerard Brandon (Atty. at Law) Natchez John William Towles Brandon Woodville John Ryan Brittain DeKalb James Leonidas Brownlee Sparta Walter Eldridge Brumby (Mail Carrier) Goodman Edgar Eugene Bryant* (Atty- at Law) Fort Smith, Ark. Willie Clarence Bryant Coff eeville Robert Lewright Buck* Jackson Lawrence Newton Buford (see Law Class of 1880). Bristol, Tenn. Robert Lewis Buford. College Hill William Theo. Bulloch Bovina Hon. Robert Robson Buntin* (see Law Class of 1880) Harrison Station Jos. Burgess Burkitt Palo Alto John Burnet, Jr. (Merchant) . Greenville Herbert Shirley Butler (U. S. Weather Bureau) Washington, D. C. Walter Cain Memphis, Tenn. William Walter Cain* (Sheriff 1886-'88) West Station Robert Cornelius Caldwell Lexington Henry Calhoon* Paulding Leonidas Felix Calhoun (M.D.) Jonesville, La. James Calvert Palo Alto Chas. Green Caruthers (Insurance) Montgomery, Ala. Chas. Wesley Carter Goodman William Leon Caston Centreville Daniel Webster Chapman (see Law Class of 1879) Panola County Luther B. Chapman .Panola County. Volney Ogle Chase (Lieut. U. S. N.) Washington, D. C. Calvin Chears, Jr Michigan City Thomas Lipsey Cheatham (Merchant and Planter) Tallulah Frederick Smith Chew Florida William Locke Chew* (M.D.) Birmingham, Ala. Thos. Tillery Chiles Wakalak 176 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. John Gillington Chisolm .Sheffield, Ala. Duff Clement .Lake Charles, La. Garnett Smith Clopton (Merchant) Aberdeen Benjamin Franklin Clower (Planter) Lexington James Richard Coffey Abbeville Walter Collier Brandon Francis Marion Cordill (American Express Company).. New Orleans, La. Walter Carnelius Augusta, Ga. Stephen Alexander Crump Macon, Ga. Edward Currie Clinton, La. Eucid Elijah Curtis* Winona Rufus Hoten Darling Kalamazoo, Mich. Geo. H. D'Armond, Jr* Clinton, La. James Giedon D'Armond, Jr* Clinton, La. Lewis Lawson Davidson Water Valley Vandyke Davidson Helena, Ark. Richard Harrison Davis, Jr Atlanta, Ga. William Denton Oxford Hon. Thomas Amherst Dickson* (State Senate 1884-'88; Atty. at Law) Westville Ivy Hamilton Douglass (Planter) Benton Joel Nelson Dulaney (Merchant; Mayor) Okolona Marcellus Taylor Dunlap Waxahatchie, Texas Jos. Edwin Eggleston Garners's William Carey Eggleston Garner's Edward Elliott Edwards Thos. Boswell Enochs* Benela Chas. Edward Epperson* Yazoo City Robert Cage Epperson Yazoo City James Arden Evans (Planter) Muldon James Sidney Evans Houston Fayette Clay Ewing (M.D.) Baltimore, M. D. Presley Kittridge Ewing (Attorney at Law; see Law Class of 1881) Houston, Texas John Gail Fairley Enon Rice Turner Fant (Attorney at Law; Banker) Memphis, Tenn. John Evans Fargason Dangerfield, Texas Frank Rogers Farrow* Whitehaven, Tenn. Geo. Dawson Fee (Banker) Cisco, Texas William Yancey Fennell* Holly Springs Vollie Flowers* Crystal Springs Calvin Ebenezer Ford Chapel Hill John Wesley Ford Chapel Hill Geo. Dent Forman Fayette Harry Freese* Edwards Jos. Friend Fort Smith, Ark. Robert Douglass Gage Pecos, Texas Alfred Daniel Galloway Jackson UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 177 Geo. Gamble Winona Ros Gamble Winona John Ebenezer Gaston Benela William Gilchrist Como James Thomas Glenn* Middleton, Tenn. Jos. Franklin Gooch Oxford Timothy Goodwin* Columbus James Morris Granberry Collierville, Tenn. Hardy Stricklin Green Collierville, Tenn. Andrew Thomas Greer Coleman's Benjamin Howorth Grimes (see Law Class of 1880).-. . .'. - .Meridian Willie Bolin Gunn Egypt Geo. William Hairston (Merchant) Crawford William Leonidas Ham .Memphis, Tenn. Francis Marion Hamblet* (see Law Class of 1880). . Belen Geo. Washington Hamblet __Paris Joshua Pleasant Hamer ...... Winona Robert Solon Hamer Memphis, Tenn. John David Hamilton . Waterford William Frederick Hamner (see Law Class of 1880) Memphis, Tenn. Stephen Franklin Hampton (Civil Service) Washington, D. C. John Stonewall Hanna New Orleans, La. William Olin Hardeman LaGrange, Tenn. Dudley E. Hargrove (Planter) . _- Columbus James Thomas Harper Rocky Springs Thomas Harris New Albany Wiley Pope Harris, Jr.* Jackson Gilbreath Neil Hart _ Lodi Jones Harvey (Drummer) .Winona William Hilliard Hawkins ". Oxford Jos. Jefferson Henderson (Planter) Sardis Samuel Evans Hendrick Columbus Hon. Patrick Henry (Atty. at Law; late State Senator; Dist. Attorney) Vicksburg Jefferson Davis Herrod* Edwards Frank B. Herron (Merchant) . Coffeeville James Ford Hodge Downsville, La. John Mook Hodo* West Point David Henry Hogin Vicksburg Joel Wilson Holbert (Atty. at Law) Shreveport, La. Walter Raleigh Holliday * Aberdeen James Robert Holmes Oxford Andrew Thomas Hooker Fisherville, Tenn. Rev. Milton Monroe Hooper* . . Pontotoc Robert Parish Houston* (City Clerk) Aberdeen John Leigh Hyland (Civil Engineer) Vicksburg Frederick Hugh Ivy (Farmer and Merchant) Leland William Edwin Ivy Pontotoc 12 17S UNlVItliSITT OF MISSISSIPPI. James Ephraim Jagers, Jr Zion Hill Robert Bowman Jenkins* (Planter) ..Lexington William Wiley Johnson (Merchant) Sybleton Benjamin Franklin Jones, Jr New Orleans, La. John Shaw Jones (A.B. and M.A., La. State Univ.; Com. Cadets, La. Univ.; Stock Farming) ...West Monroe, La. Oscar Parham Jones Rosedale John Wesley Kea Minden, La. Willie Kelley (Planter) Yazoo City Eugene Kennedy (Southern Express Company) Washington, D. C. LeRoy Wesley Kennedy (Atty. at Law; Law Class of 1879).^ .New Albany Rev. Milliard Henry Kennedy Oxford Andrew Armstrong Kincannon (A.B; M.S.; LL.D.; Supt. City Schools, Meridian; member of Miss. Leg.; State Supt. Edu- cation; Pres. I. I. & College, Columbus, Miss.; Chancellor of University of Mississippi) University Chas. Richard King Buena Vista James Gaston Kirkpatrick (Real Estate) Jackson Robert Fairchilds Kirkpatrick Auburn Walter Gill Kirkpatrick (B.S., B.E., M.S., C.E., Vanderbilt; Prof. Civil Engineering, Union College, New York City; City Engineer) Jackson Robert Norman Kittrell* (M.D.) Black Hawk James Haywood Koen Menphis, Tenn. Jacob Kuykendall (Merchant) Enid Hugh Campbell Lane McKenzie, Tenn. Alvis Davis Langston (Farmer) Calhoun City Robert Singleton Lawton Madison Station Robert Layton (M.D.) Monroe, La. Chas. Purnell Lee Meadville Clarence Percy Lee Greenville Hon. Robert Chas. Lee (U. S. District Attorney; see Law Class of 1882) Madison Hon. Abraham Lewenthal (Atty. at Law; Mayor Brookhaven to 1871; State Senate 1895-'99) Greenville Dabney Lipscomb (see Class of 1879) Columbus Joseph Lowenberg (Vicksburg Bank) Memphis, Tenn. Willie Loggins Greenwood Edmund Peyton Lowe (M.D.) Ignacio, Col. James John Lum (Merchant) Vicksburg Sterling Hayden Lusk Silver City David Maas Canton Benjamin Hughes Magruder (Banker) Port Gibson Robert Harper Magruder Port Gibson William Howard Magruder (Professor In Louisiana State Uni- versity) Baton Rouge, La. James Walter Malone* Corinth John McCoy Marshall Brookhaven UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 179 Edward Louis Martin (Business College) Macon, Ga. Geo. Pierce Martin Houston, Texas William Conner Martin (Atty. at Law) Natchez Chas. Saunders Massey Jackson Benjamin Newton Matthews Oakland Albert Sidney May Trinity, La. Joseph Richard May* Brooksville Thomas Edward Mayson* Canton Newton Franklin McAlpin California State Robert Orlando McCarley* Ripley John Lucius McClellan (Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. John Thomas McClure (Deputy Sheriff) Shuqualak William Burnham McConnico New Orleans, La. Quitman McDaniel Meadville Frank Pargoud McFee* Monroe, La. John Simmons McFee* Monroe, La. William Joseph McGee . Goodman James Blanton McGehee (Atty. at Law; see Law Class of 1879) Memphis, Tenn. John Scott McGehee New Orleans, La. William Edward McGehee (Merchant) .. Memphis, Tenn. Thomas Franklin McGill Palo Alto William McGowan* Holly Springs Nott Mclnnis -. Mississippi City John McKay, Jr.* Goshen Springs Geo. Cornelius McLaurin Bolton Hugh Love McLaurin (M.D.) Dallas, Texas Robert Beauregard McMahon (Merchant) Greenville Thomas Peters McMahon (Merchant) Greenville Elijah Newton McMath 1 ". Winona Lorenzo Dow McNair, Jr Raymond Benjamin Franklin McWhorter, Jr Amory Minos Ebenezer Miller Leesburg, Fla. Thomas Frederick Millsaps* Trenton, La. William Edward Milton Hot Springs, Ark. Chas. Percival Montgomery* Starkville John McMillen Montgomery Starkville Bruce Marcus Moore* Yazoo City James Alexander Morris Burtonia Sheldon Alexander Morris Burtonia Henry Clay Morton Moscow Louis Samuel Myer (Editor) Ellisville William Helm Noble* Dover Perry Hardeman Nugent New Orleans, La. John Alexander O'Neill (M.D.) Cumberland Chas. Verelle Oswalt Tula William Johnson Overstreet (Merchant) Ebenezer Thomas Clay Owen Collierville 180 ' DIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. William Price Owen Wall Mill John Franklin Park Glenville Pet or Anderson Parker (Real Estate) Biloxi Harry Scott Perkins .. Clinton, La. John Pollock Petty (Real Estate).. .1140 Park St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Livingston Peyton (Planter) Mayersville Thomas Emmett Phillips* Canton Jos. Henry Plunkett (M.D.) Flora Laurens Toomer Postell (M.D.; City Physician). Plaquamine, La. John Anderson Potts Okolona Joseph Paschal Potts Corinth Samuel Frederick Potts (Merchant) Crawford David Smith Powell* Canton Daniel Thompson Price Mississippi William Montgomery Priestley* Canton Geo. Wren Pryor* (Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. Chas. Henry Purvis Monroe, La. William Sharkey Raiford Liberty Eugene Carothers Randle* Cedar Bluff Henry Randolph West Point Cornelius Alexander Ray Columbus Alfred Hussey Raymond Verona Abram Beach Reading, Jr.* Vicksburg William Calvin Red, Jr.* Durant William Henry Scott Reid "Vicksburg Chas. Blair Richards Columbus William Edwards Ritz Houston, Texas Henry Clay Roberts (Insurance) Jackson Hiram Taliafero Roberts Hazlehurst Elijah Sparks Robinson, Jr Trinity, La. Albert Sidney Robinson* West Point James Marcellus Robinson Winona Osborn Rogers Verona Stuart Douglas Rollins 6123 Magazine St., New Orleans, La. Samuel Freeman Roseborough Austin, Tex. Jos. Rosenbaum DeKalb Lewis Rosenbaum DeKalb Hon. W. Terrell Rush* (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Jasper Willis Russ (Accountant; Treasurer G. A. Debenture Co.) New Orleans, La. William Dorn Rutledge Harrison Station John Dickey Ruffin Saunders Glennville Hastings Dejournette Shipp (Planter) Pickens Station Robert Shotwell (Atty at Law)* Jackson Wilburn Benedict Simms New Orleans, La. William Howard Sims Raymond James Mortimore Sinnott New Orleans, La. John Quitman Sloan Pontotoc UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 181 William Edward Small Corinth Eugene Alexander Smith. . . Australia Lee Albertus Smith* Mayersville Preston Hall Smith*.. Mayersville Robert Burton Smith, Jr ..Booneville Thomas Rutland Smith. Callton, La. Chas. Albert Smither* Oxford Archibald Henderson Sneed (Traveling Salesman) Memphis, Tenn. John Myers Steen (Atty . at Law ; see Academic Class of 83) „ Memphis, Tenn . Hon. William Thomas Stegall (Member Legislature 1896-1900) _. Pontotoc Daniel Webster Stewart Minden, La. Geo. Childs Stewart Baltimore, Md. Walter Stewart Natchez Walter Stith (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Benjamin Arthur Stockard 452 Oak St., Chattanooga, Tenn. James Stone (Atty. at Law) Oxford Graham Surghnor (M.D.; City Physician) Monroe, La. Hon. Walter Joseph Suthon (Late District Attorney; State Senator) ..New Orleans, La. Josephus Swaim Rienzi Chas. Madison Swindoll Cisco, Texas Collin Southall Tarpley (See Class of 1879).. . Columbus, Ga. Kinchen Kearney Taylor (Insurance Agent) ... Jackson, La. Murray Taylor (Druggist) Hot Springs Albert Corelle Temple . .Monroe, La. John Woodman Temple Monroe, La. William Francis Terry Ashland James Walker Thomas Line Creek James Gray Thompson (Traveling Salesman).. Memphis, Tenn. James Hugh Thompson . Buena Vista John Nixey Thompson .Kosciusko Lewis Weldon Thompson Durant Albin Lee Thornton Lake Hon. James Clinton Totten (Atty. at Law; State Senator) Holly Springs William Wilder Trice Tupelo Richard M. Trotter (Circuit Clerk Clay Co.; Sheriff since 1896) West Point Julius Vairin, Jr (Auditor New Orleans Traction Co.) New Orleans, La. Nugent Beverly Vairin (Chief Accountant A. S. Baldwin & Co.) New Orleans, La. Cecil Cropper Wailes* Plaquemine, La. Harvey Walter (Stenographer) San Francisco, Cal. Geo. Boswell Warren .Jonestown John Bell Watts Memdeau James Alexander Watson Columbus Sidney Welsh Shuqualak Madison Wallace Wilburn Australia Howard Baker Weir Fort Smith, Ark. 182 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Thomas Hill Wooding Williams Point Jefferson. La. U. S. Williams, Jr Eupora Clarence Mitchell Williamson Dangerfield, Texas Geo. Edward Williamson (Druggist) Greenwood Milton William Wilson. Lismore, La. Nisbet Winfield Cloverdale, Ga. Henry Barrett Winn Memphis, Tenn. Afton Kane Wooten (see Law Class of 1879) California John Wilkinson Wooten .Okolona William Render Yeager Coffeeville Samuel Allen Young (Merchant) Lodi CLASS OF 1879. Honor Men. Rev. Edward DeSeebach Juny. William Robert Harper, Esq. William Howard Magruder.* Bachelor of Arts. Rev. William Henry Buntin (Pastor and Teacher) West Point John Kirk Graves Jackson William Robert Harper (Attorney at Law) Jackson Rev. Edward DeSeebach Juny (M.A.; Headmaster of Trinity School, San Francisco, Cal.; of Worthington Academy, Lin- coln, Neb.; of St. Paul's School, Baltimore, Md.) Baltimore, Md. Dabney Lipscomb (M.A.; Prof. A. & M. College, Miss., 1882-'95; Prof, of English, University of Miss., 1895-1905; Prof, of History, I. I. & College, 1906) Columbus William Howard Magruder* (M.A.; Prof, in Louisiana State University) Baton Rouge, La. Malachi Christopher Pegues (see Law Class of 1880) Abbeville Bachelor of Science. Collins Southall Tarpley (Planter) Columbus, Ga. Bachelor of Philosophy. Alexander Davison Hot Springs, Ark. Howard Baker Weir Fort Smith, Ark. New Students. Edward Roby Albin (M.D.) St. Louis, Mo. Addison Browning Allen* Sallis Joseph Crawford Allen Vaiden Lawson Erastus Allen (Teacher).. Arizona State Wallace Atkinson (Merchant) Summit Pinkney Stanford Baker (Planter) Acona UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 183 Samuel Smith Barbour Lexington Thos. Franklin Barding Hickory Withe, Tenn. Louis Arthur Barkhau Holmes County Henry Clay Barksdale Mississippi City Geo. Hiram Barney, Jr Gloster Hugh Walter Barry* (manager W. U. Tel. Co.) Hot Springs, Ark. Benjamin Watkins Bedford, Jr Horn Lake Julius Daniel Blythe Horn Lake William Samuel Bolls Smith Station Albert Reese Bowdre* Memphis Tenn. Thos. Benjamin Bowdre Memphis, Tenn. John Jehu Boyd - Oxford Robert Nathan Boyd Oxford William Wesley Boyd Oxford William Robert Bridges* Starkville Walter James Brown (Merchant) Schlater William Terrell Brown (Merchant) Sallis Needham Henry Bryant* (Merchant) . Oxford Arthur Stillingfleet Buchanan (Attorney at Law; see Class of 1879) Memphis, Tenn. William Ernest Butler (U. S. Weather Bureau) Caleb Jerome Byrd Macon Lorenzo Dow Carleton Sardis Thomas Battle Carroll (Atty. at Law; see Law Class of 1879) --Starkville Chas. Dudley Carter* (see Law Class of 1879).^ Ripley James Burt Cassedy* Summit James William Childress Oxford Robert Lee Chilton Memphis, Tenn. Chas. Chrisman (Atty. at Law; see Law Class of 1879) Brookhaven John Clark, Jr Mount Carmel, Tenn. Stonewall Jackson Clark ". Vicksburg William Henry Clark Dallas, Texas Benjamin Franklin Clayton Cleburne, Texas Samuel Washington Conroy Crystal Springs Clarence Sidney Cullins (Chancery Clerk) New Albany Robert E. Lee Daniel Areola Harry James Dashiell (Planter) Columbus Jeff erson Taylor Davis Harrison Albert Tatum Dent (Atty. at Law; Mayor; Legislature)- ..Macon James Willis Dickerson* (Teacher) Ashland Bonnie Mars Dillard Memphis, Tenn. Thomas Kidwell Downing Okolona Hon. William Lansdale Dyer (Atty. at Law; Mayor of Lexing- ton, Miss.; member of State Legislature) Lexington James Marcus Edwards ...Winona James Henry Ely* -Vaiden William Simeon Ely* Vaiden John Ferguson* .Coffeeville Chas. Louis Fields ...Texas 184 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Ernes Almerion Foster New York, N. Y. John Underwood Foster (Atty. at Law; see Law Class of 1881).. Memphis, Tenn. James Abner Gilliland (Traveling Salesman) Kosciusko David Elijah Glass (Broker). Tampa, Fla. Thorn as Franklin Glass Shuqualak William Shelby Graham Lafayette County Richard Foote Greer* Vaiden James Thomas Halbrook Ripley Peter Harrison Hansborough Pearlington Edward Brassey Hargrove*. Columbus Henry Hughes Harper (Principal High School) Ingleside William Ray Harris Deasonville Alexander Moore Harris Deasonville John William Harrison Edwards William Hilliard Hawkins Oxford John William Heard (Capt. U. S. A.) Fort Ethan, Ala. David Lyon Heath* Como Andrew Bowles Holder* (M.D.) Memphis, Tenn. James King Holder Jackson John Weems Holliday (see Law Class of 1879) Aberdeen William Jefferson Hoover Summit James Edward Hope Water Valley Andrew Frank Fletcher Houston Decatur, Ala. Edward Brown Hunt Lees Landing James Alston Hunter (Planter) Mathiston, Route No. 1 Harris Hyman (Cotton Factor) New Orleans, La. Rev. Crawford Jackson Catala, Ga. Robert Edward Jackson . Indian Bay, Ark. Henry Jinkins* . Aberdeen John Paul Jones, Jr Little Springs Samuel Jones Denmark John Davis Kent Valley Hill Rev. Levi Hope Kimmons* Oxford William Wallace Lake Greenville Robert Edwin Legg Dublin David Wendel Longstreet New Orleans, La. Benjamin Franklin Looney. Lasater Station, Texas Edmond Peyton Lowe (M.D.) Ignacio, Cal. Thomas Dabney Marshall (Atty. at Law; member Legislature). .Vicksburg James Edward Mayes Goodman Chas. Henry McColloch Hot Springs James Franklin McCool (Attorney at Law) Kosciusko James Thomas McCracken Australia William McElroy Burgess William Baxter McFarland Oxford Luther Lafayette Meggs Sallis James Oliver Meriwether (Planter) Senatobia I NIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 185 Geo. Etter Miller • Baldwyn Jesse Clay Miller (Sheriff Marshall County; Planter) Holly Springs William Francis Millsaps (Atty. at Law; see class of 1880) Monroe, La. Percy Latham Moore (Editor) Clarksdale William Hudson Moore Aberdeen Bangamon Harris Morehead Hazlehurst Henry Hugh Mullen Carrollton William Lloyd Mullen St. Louis, Mo. John Boon Needham ..Star Place James Andrew Nicks Friar's Point James Davis Norwood Salisaw, Okla Richard James Nugent, Jr Rosedale Edward Herbert Ohleyer (Merchant) West Point John Henry Pahlen (County Superintendent Education; Mer- chant) Lexington Geo. Beverley Parker Shubuta Joseph Hopson Peace _. .Friars Point Chas Augustus Pegues* Abbeville James Scudday Perkins, Jr Richland, La. Benjamin McCulloch Pettis College Hill Samuel Austin Poole (M.D.) Rayville, La. Hugh Seymour Quin (See Class of 1880; Atty. at Law). .Kansas City, Mo. RobertClarke Redus (Atty. at Law) Birmingham, Ala. Richard Forman Reed (Atty. at Law; Vice-President American Humane Association) N atchez Jos. Carlos Rich (Atty. at Law; Mayor; see Law Class of 1879) Mobile, Ala. William Samuel Richardson Calvert's Store William Franklin Riley (M.D.) Tupelo Geo. Winfield Robertson Pickens Thomas Needham Robertson (see Class of 1882) Arkansas Louis B. Rosenthal (Merchant) ' Memphis, Tenn. Jos. Blanton Salmon.. Raymond Walter Battle Samuell* Corinth Eugene Murilla Saunders Columbus Thomas Wessenger Schlater Plaquemine, La. Graves Henry Shamburger (Atty. at Law) Toomsuba William Aurent Shelby . Riverton Henry Holmes Sykes* (Planter) Starkville John James Screven Smith Macon Richard Russell Smith Columbus William Andrew Smith Batesville James Burrus Steele* Rockport Chas. Spyker Stewart (Physician) Amite City, La. Walter Monteith Stewart Natchez James Alexander Terrell (Banker) Quitman Swepson Threlkeld Richmond Jesse Goodwyn Tomkies . Shreveport, La. William Baxter Turner . ._.. Indianola 186 ' DIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. J amea Roane Vineyard* (Atty. at Law) Lexa, Ark. John Anderson Vineyard* Vineyard, Ark. John Selden Vineyard Vineyard, Ark. William Burwell Walker* (Pres. Elector; District Attorney) ...Aberdeen Edward Conover Walton Bolton Zenas Edgar White Toccopola William Henry Whitney* Fayette Nathan Atwell Williams Carrollton William Welch Williams* Carrollton Richard Floyd Williamson Rio Remus Milton Wilson Palo Alto Edgar Gillam Wood Rodney William M adison Woodward Oxford James George Worley (M.D. Tulane University; U. S. Pension Surgeon ) Verner, Ark. Francis Josiah Wright Mississippi CLASS OF 18S0. Honor Men. Edgar Eugene Bryant.* Robert Shotwell.* Joseph Blake Jones.* Bachelor of Arts. Edgar Eugene Bryant* (Judge Circuit Court; Alumni Orator 1899) Fort Smith, Ark. Walter Cain (Editor Nashville American; Editor Memphis News-Scimitar) .Memphis, Tenn. Jos. Blake Jones* Madison Robert Shotwell* (Atty. at Law) Jackson Alexander P. Stewart, Jr. (M.D.) Biloxi New Students. Sidney Alexander Able (Sec. Standard Coal and Ice Co.). .Little Rock, Ark. Fidelio Swanzy Abney Toccopola James Milton Acker, Jr Aberdeen William Davis Adair Texas J. C. Applewhite Kilmichael Amos Acker Armistead (Atty. at Law; Banker) Memphis, Tenn. Dennis Newton Arnold (Planter) Mark Quez, Tex. Cornelius Alexander Austin Vaiden Algeron Jasper Aven Clinton John Nelson Bacot* Osyka Junius Laban Bacot. Enon Caleb Sanford Bailey Lee County James Preston Bailey Indianola Hon. Jos. W. Bailey (M.C.) Gainesville, Texas UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 187 John Mass Baker*_... Lee County John Hamilton Barksdale Grenada Samuel McCorkle Barr Pontotoc James Weston Barron* (See Law Class of 1881) Aberdeen Oscar Lee Barron* (M.D.; Examiner for Life Insurance Co.) Sturgis John Washington Beattie Lawrence Walter Echols Beatty Texas Jonathan Milton Bell (M.D.) Iowa Park.Texas Robert Duffield Bennett (Mayor) Cooper, Texas Joseph Thompson Bell Berry (M.D. Tulane) Brandon William Martin Berry Cherry Creek Lorenzo Franklin Bowling Raleigh Geo. Franklin Boyd (Teacher; Principal Kosciusko High School) • Kosciusko John Davis Bradford Atlanta, Ga. Geo. Clifton Briley (Drummer) Fort Worth, Texas Ewing Earla Brougher Linden Robert Lewis Buford Bristol, Tenn. Robert Robson Buntin*.. . Harrison Station Jos. Burgess Burkitt Palo Alto Robert Burns Brandon Chas. Caffall Greenville Richard Barry Callaway Lafayette County Chas. Hardee Campbell, Jr Kosciusko Christopher Neal Davis Campbell . Greenwood William Franklin Campbell Iuka Willie Beauregard Carter Springport Jesse Daniel Cauthen Elliott's Mill Rufus Chambers Fort Worth, Texas Arthur Lee Ch apman Oxford Volney Ogle Chase ". U. S. Navy Thos. Tillery Chiles (M.D.; City Hospital, Mobile, 1885-1886) Wahalak James Chas. Chisolm Tuscumbia John Gillington Chisholm Tuscumbia Eugene Lusk Clarke* Clarksdale James Edward Clark Water Valley John Vance Clark Tupelo Richard Leroy Cleveland Union Samuel Alexander Cocke (Drummer) Memphis, Tenn. Andrew Byrn Cock (Farmer) Clarksdale Edward Henry Coker* Hinds County John Bunyan Cole Durant Jos. Absalom Comfort* Center John Robert Beauregard Cooper (Farmer) Holly Springs Robert Eli Cortledge* Montgomery, Ala. Edward Payson Cortwright* Rolling Fork Jefferson Davis Crisler Terry Jos. Lawrence Crudup Forest ISS UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Linburn Cullen Oxford William Dunnica Cutrer (Atty. at Law) ..Xlarksdale Albert Dowd Dalrymple* .. . Amory David Daniel Mathiston William John Daniel Ackerman Vandyke Davidson Helena, Ark. William Hith Davis Lake Providence, La. Benjamin Hampton Day Gloster James Thomas Dean North Carrollton Edward James Deloney Lake Providence, La. Silas Barhabas Dobbs (County Superintendent Education; Circuit Clerk) Ackerman Jos. Conway Dodd (Atty. at Law) Louisville, Ky. John Marshall Dodds (Planter) Hazlehurst Boen Driver r Caswell Hon. William Jasper East (Atty. at Law; State Senator; Mayor; member Legislature 1896) Senatobia Jeptha Napoleon Edens (Planter) Strongs Station Jos. Slack Eggelston Little Rock, Ark. Louis Cunliffe Eggleston Grenada George Hutchinson Ellard* Banner Obern Sumpter Evans* Marshall County Gerard Creagh Falconer (Bookkeeper) Guanamo.Cuba Chas. Herbert Fee Cisco, Texas Geo. Dawson Fee Cisco, Texas Henry Flowers (M.D.; Eye, Ear and Nose Specialist) Brookhaven Augustus Hunter Foster* Louisville John Angus Fowler Kemper County Louis Durward Freeze Edwards Obern Lafayette Fulgham* Hinds County Paul Barringer Furr Oxford Geo. Edwin Gholson (Atty. at Law) Cincinnati, Ohio James Maurice Granberry Collierville, Tenn. John Madison Greaves Mississippi Willie Robert Greenlee* Port Gibson Hill Guy* Grenada Washington Hamlet Paris Thompson Johnson Hamilton Houston James Lewis Hammond (Merchant) Kosciusko William Frederick Hamner Memphis, Tenn. Stephen Franklin Hampton (Civil Service) Little Rock, Ark. Harry Green Harlan Milan, Tenn. Henry Eugene Harlan (B.A., Vanderbilt, 1882) Harlan James Thomas Harper Rock Springs Henry Hill Harrington (M.S.; Assistant Professor Chemistry A. & M. College, Miss.; Professor Chemistry Texas A. & M. College) College Station, Texas Ki Harrington (Planter) Goodman Aaron Harris _. .Thyatira UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 189 Hon. James Chesley Harris (LL.B. Cumberland University; Atty. at Law; member Mississippi Legislature 1888) -.Sheffield, Ala. James Lyons Harris (Atty. at Law) Dallas, Texas Benjamin Bradford Harrison Jackson, Tenn. William Hilliard Hawkins Lafayette County Cassander Heath..., Grenada John Leonard Hendrick (Atty. at Law) Fort Smith, Ark. Frederick Luther Hennington Crystal Springs Green Berry Hill Weatherford, Texas Jos. Washington Hill Dallas, Texas James Henry Hodges, Jr Lee County, Ark. John Caleaway Hodges* Pike County Thomas Jefferson Davis Hogg '..Banner Lott Warren Holliday* Copiah County John William Hoyle (Grocer) Tupelo Hon. Eugene Victor Hughston (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Maxwell Magill Hul - Perkinsville David Smith Humphreys (M.D.) Greenwood Theo. Louis Hurlbutt (Accountant) Mobile, Ala. Alvin Whit Irving Kosciusko Thos. Dudley Isom, Jr.* (M.D.) Oxford John William Jennings Chickasaw County Friley Jones Jiggitts (M.D.) Bolton William Johnston . Columbus James Henry Jones Fort Smith, Ark. Rev. Paul Mitchell Jones Morton Southerland Burke Joyner* Magnolia Rev. Milliard Henry Kennedy Fulton, Ky. William Baxter Kerr (Planter) Attala County Thos. Land (Atty. at Law) : Kosciusko Kirby Lann (Merchant) Aberdeen Samuel Watson Lawler (Merchant) Clarksdale Jos. Lipscomb Vernon Purnell Lockley Macon Robert Lowry, Jr.* Jackson Mannoy Hartrog Manning Washington, D. C. John McCoy Marshall Hazlehurst William Franklin Martin (Sheriff) Grenada Bryant Wesley Mathis (Planter) Crystal Springs William James Mayo* (Atty. At Law) Clarendon, Ark. John Clarke McClinton (Merchant) Newton Andrew Jackson McClure Barksdale John Abraham McCorkle Water Valley Hon. William Augustus McDonald (Atty. at Law) Ashland James Dudley McDowell Summitt John Alexander McKinnon Ackerman Robert James McKinnon* Newton Francis Napoleon McMullen (Merchant) Newton Archibald Douglass McNeel Arkansas 190 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Granville Duke Mebane (Drummer) Collierville, Tenn. James Oliver Meriwether . Senatobia Jesse Clay Miller (Sheriff Marshall County; farmer) ...Holly Springs Rufus Beall Mitchell Tishomingo County Millard Fillmore Mithoff Louisiana State Fielden Henry Mitts (County Supt. Education) Tupelo Herbert Mixon Osyka James Taliaferro Montgomery Okolona William Thomas Morris Etta Benjamin Duke Nabors Calhoun Miles Thaddeus Newton, Jr Hazlehurst Allen Augustus Odom Grenada James Sims Oliver* Hernando Willis Martin Perkins Smithville William Belton Permenter Holmes County Herbert Irving Phillips Opelousas, La. Sumpter Phillips Washington, D. C. John William Porter Fayette County William Armstrong Powel (M.D.) Hernando Louis Rankin Quin (Atty. at Law) Kansas City, Mo. Hugh Erving Reed* (Merchant) Eupora Bardine Richardson* ..Glendale Frank Buckner Richardson (Law Class of 1880) Pembroke, Ky- Rev. Chas. Nichols Riggan St. Louis, Mo. Oscar Dawson Riley (Planter) McCool William Walter Rivers- (Supt. City Schools) Helena, Ark. Thomas Legan Roberts West Point Chas. Lewis Rogers... Toccopola Samuel Taylor Rucks Memphis, Tenn. Phillips Augustus Rush (Atty. at Law) Senatobia William Everett Saunders (Planter) West William Franklin Scales West Point Hon. Seaborn McKinley Shankle (M.D.; member Legislature 1896-1900) Hollandale Rev. John Howard Shumaker Nashville, Tenn. Eugene Alexander Smith Australia Walter Franklin Smith ..Monroe County Louis Morgan Southworth (Atty. at Law) Manila, P. I. Daniel Edmond Spearman Calhoun County James Holman Stevens, Jr. (Cotton Factor; Lumber Mer- chant) New Orleans, La. John James Stokes.. Osyka Richard Henry Stokes Grenada George Washington StovalL. Pike County Edward Parker Stratton Magnolia John Henry Sullivant (Merchant) Kosciusko Alfred Boyd Swayze* Natchez William Ernest Swift (Stationer) Palestine, Texas Edward Aquilla Tabor Fort Smith, Ark. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 191 Arthur Robert Tankersley .Childress, Texas Henry Martin Tankersley (Planter) Verona James Monroe Tankersley* Calhoun County Douglas Fuqua Terrell* (Lieut. U. S. N.) Crystal Springs Daniel Harrison Thomas (M.D.) Sturgis George Washington Tindall (Hotel) Calhoon City Abraham Thompson Townsend* Kosciusko Phillip Henry Trawick* Gallman Francis Theo. Loraine Tynes Pike County Nathaniel Collins Tynes* Terry James Meriwether Walker Aberdeen William David Waugh* Attala County John Robert Weissinger* Winona Chas. Marcus Whitworth (Atty. at Law) Mendenhall Frank Lampkin Wier (Druggist) Starkville William Benson Wier Fort Smith, Ark. Mason Lee Wiggins Pocahontas Robert Wilkinson Hernando Geo. Marion Williams Sumner County, Texas Jeff Davis Williams Mooresville Marquis de Lafayette Wilson (Teacher) Toccopola Richard Wilson* (Cotton Business) Memphis, Tenn. Thomas Bell Winningham DeSoto County Ftanklin Dawson Winter (Retired Merchant) . Jackson Buckner Lenigher Hill Wright, Jr Memphis, Tenn. William Benjamin T. Wright (Merchant) Grenada William Liter Wright Sardis Myar Yaretsky. Selma, Ala. James Rucks Yerger, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Greenville Walter Yerger* -. Washington County Class of 1881. Honor Men. John Pollock Petty. Perry Hardeman Nugent. Milton Monroe Hooper.* Bachelor of Arts. Rev. Junius Wilson Allen (Pres. Minister and Teacher) Booneville Lawson Erastus Allen (Teacher) Ferris, Texas Clifton Baker* Texas Robert Anderson Bettis (Chief Clerk, Accounting Department, Southern Express Co.) Chattanooga, Tenn. John Davis Bradford Atlanta, Ga. Jos. Meredith Catching (M.D.) Hazlehurst Rev. Milton Monroe Hooper* Texas Hugh Love McLaurin (M.D.) Dallas, Texas William Connor Martin (Attorney at Law) Natchez 192 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Perry Hardeman Nugent .Florida John Pollock Petty (Real Estate) Brooklyn, N. Y. Benjamin Arthur Stockard (Broker) Chattanooga, Tenn. Rev. Elias Boudinot Witherspoon Jackson, Mo. Bachelor of Science. Jos. Welch Scott (M.D.) .Houston, Texas Bachelor of Philosophy. James Milton Acker, Jr. (see Law Class of 1881) Aberdeen Pressley Kittredge Ewing (see Law Class of 1881) Houston, Texas Hon. Robert Douglass Gage (Atty. at Law; County Judge; Banker ; State Senator) Pecos, Texas David Wilbur Harris* Oxford Theo. Lewis Hurlbutt (Accountant) Mobile, Ala- Frederick Hugh Ivy (Farmer and Merchant) Leland Edmond Peyton Lowe (M.D.) Ignacio, Cal. Rev. Alonzo Mials Robertson Arkansas Albert Theo. Smith (see Law Class of 1881) Pittsboro Daniel Webster Stewart Webster Parish, La. Harry Warren (Deputy Collector U. S. Cus- toms Lajitas, Brewster Co., Texas Department Diplomas. Jefferson Davis Anderson Germantown, Tenn. Frederich Smith Chew Florida James Edward Clark (Teacher) Texas William Henry Clark (see Class of 1882) ..Dallas, Texas Richard Foote Greer* Carroll County Henry Hughes Harper (Principal High School) Helena, Ark. Frederick Lane Henington Copiah County James Simeon Hudson (American Book Company) Oxford Thomas Dudley Isom, Jr.* (M.D.) Oxford Andrew Armstrong Kincannon (see Sketches of Chancellors in this volume) University Geo. Walter McLaurin (R. R. Commissioner) Brandon New Students. Albert Sidney Allen r Banner Frank Lee Allen Banner Jefferson Davis Anderson Germantown, Tenn. Isaac Jackson Bailey (Planter) Texas Eppie Rhodes Baker (Planter) Vaiden Chas. James Baldwin New Orleans, La. Thomas F. Barry Benoit Robert Madison Bates Grenada Frederick Chambers Baum * Vicksburg Lawrence Milton Black Kosciusko Walter Clarke Boswell* Winston County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 193 Geo. Young Bowen (Farmer) Itawamba County David Wesley Boyd* Choctaw County Jos. C. Bradley* (Druggist) Ellisville Andrew J. Brooks Madison County Jesse T. Brumfield (Planter) Summit Giles S. Bryan (M.D.) Monroe County John Lewis Buckley (Circuit Judge 16th District) Enterprise Henry T. Calhoun* Jonestown C. C. Callicoate Oxford Malcom Cameron Cameta Matthew Geo. Campbell (County Supt. Education) Kosciusko Newton Nash Campbell Jackson Hon. Ezekiel Samuel Candler (Atty. at Law; M.C.) Corinth Chas. Wesley Carter* Attala County Robert Eli Cartledge* Montgomery County Batheir Kotzebue Caruthers Como William T. L. Clark Hinds County William Judson Crutcher Emberson, Texas William R. Davenport* Texas Preston B. Davis Hinds County William Parham Davis Hinds County Robert Kennon Dent Washington County Malvern Dimmick Flagstaff, Ark. James Robert Dominick (Banker) . Kansas City, Mo. Martin Lee Donald Sallis Robert Eddie Duval Paris, Texas Hon. William Jasper East (Atty. at Law; State Senator; mem- ber Legislature 1896) Senatobia William Calvin Easterling Jackson William Madison Eastman -_ Sumner County, Tenn. Jos. Edwin Eggleston Yalobusha County Theo. Carson Eggleston (Stock Raiser) Fort Worth, Texas Daniel Julius Ellzey Osyka Jos. Augustus Evans Houston Horace B. Everitt (Attorney at Law) Scranton Geo. William Ewell Dallas, Texas Leonard Jerome Farley (Attorney at Law) Hernando Wirt Adams Figg (Planter) Courtland William Flewelen Fowler Panola County Chas. Rawls Foxworth (Attorney at Law) Columbus William Luther Ganong* Jonestown John Wade Gilliland* Kosciusko Robert William Gray Orrwood James Madison Gregory (Farmer) Wamba Alexander Gillespie Gunter Lowndes County Jos. Jefferson Ham* Tate County John Alexander Hannah (Merchant) Ackerman William Harris Hardage .Ackerman 13 194 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Thomas B. Harris Yazoo City William Hart Yazoo City Geo. Adams Hartley Yalobusha County Wirt Adams Harvey Lowndes County Chas. Andrew Heard* Leland Walter Leonidas Heff ner Arkansas State Mascus A. Henderson Madison County Paul Holder Herndon Florida State Jos. M. Hill Washington County Hon. William Shed Hill (Legislature, 1889, 1891, 1895; District Attorney; Congressman from Fourth District; Practicing Attorney at Law at present in Greenwood) Greenwood Lee Douglass Hines (Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. Benjamin Humphreys Holder St. Louis, Mo. John F. Hollowell Yazoo City Amzi Waddell Hooker Tennessee James A. Hopper* Dealb Frederick Gray Hudson (Deputy U. S. Marshall) Utah James Simeon Hudson Oxford Spencer S. Hudson (District Attorney) Vicksburg Benjamin Geo. Humphreys (Congressman) Greenwood James Humphreys Guadaloupe, Texas Jos. H. Irby - Collierville, Tenn. Ausbon Augustus James Decatur Thos. G. James Sharkey John William Jennings Chickasaw County Samuel Warren Johnson Llano, Texas Eugene Benjamin Kennedy Oxford Newton Arthur Kimbreel Webster County William Eddie Lampton (Merchant) Columbia Kirby Lann (Merchant) Aberdeen Frank Ernest Larkin* (Atty. at Law) Greenville Geo. Henry Lee (M.D.) Galveston, Texas Henry Monroe Lee (Merchant) Pike County Sidney Clinton Lenoir (Merchant) Greenwood William Chapman Linch Winston County Rev. James Mitchell Magruder Spartanburg, S. C. John Meredith Matthews* (Atty. at Law) Hazlehurst Simon Suggs Matthews (U. S. Marshall 1889-'91; Deputy In- ternal Revenue Collector 1892-'93) Winona John N. Meismer* Washington County John Bunyan Mills* Pike County James Dykes Millsaps (Atty. at Law) St. Anthony, Idaho Andrew Alonzo Moore Holmes County Green Harris Moore Yalobusha County William Hudson Moore Monroe County Bingamon Harris Morehead Cincinnati, Ohio William Brent Norman* Hazlehurst UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 195 Wiley Napier Ouslay Madison County Samuel F. Packwood* Pike County John F. Park Pleasant Grove Toliver Johnson Park Pleasant Grove Rev. Byron Pinckney Patterson Pittsboro Lewis D. Pepper (Mgr. Cumb. Tel. & Tel. Co.) Lexington Albert M. Phillips Oxford Dabney M. Phillips Newport, Ark. John R. Pollan Webster County B. F. Porter Fayette County Madison Pulley (Planter) Pheba William S. Raiford Amite County Giles Chapman Rush Winston County Thomas M . Rutledge Texas James A. Salmon (Merchant) Pontotoc John Henry Salmon (Merchant) Pontotoc Daniel Scarborough (Teacher) Wiggins Felix Dabney Seward* : Choctaw County John Morgan Shaw Yalobusha County John Henry Smith Oxford Singleton S. Spencer Shaw Jesse Ford Statham Pike County Hon. Jos. Dudley Stennis (Member Legislature 1896) Bailey John Thomas Swain (Sec. andTreas. Compress Co. ; Banker), -New Albany Walter Perdew Tackett (see Class of 1884) Lexington Albert B. C. Taylor* Taylor's Robert F. Terrell (Planter) Winston County Asa Richardson Tinnin Hinds County Wesley Norman Townsend Attala County John C. Underwood Brazoria, Texas Lawrence T. Wade Claiborne County Mitchell Emmett Ward Amite County Hon. David Monroe Watkins (Atty. at Law; State Senator) -_Hattiesburg John McLemore Wells (M.D.) Cleveland Sidney Yancey West* Holly Springs Andrew White Yazoo City Henry Ricks Wiggins Benoit Hon. John Lawrence Wiggins (Atty. at Law) Okolona B. B. Wilkes, Jr Durant Walter Erskine Williams Fort Worth, Texas Robert Patton Willing, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Jackson Jos. Beauregard Wilson Yazoo City Ferney Wood (Planter) Eupora JohnW. Wooten (Atty. at Law) New York, N. Y. Jos. Richard Wooten Livingston, Ala. Patrick Henry Wright (D.D.S. Vanderbilt) Oxford 196 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Class of 1882. Honor Men. George Harrison Armistead. Thomas Dabney Marshall. Robert Norman Kittrell, M.D.* Bachelor of Arts. Geo. Harrison Armistead (Sec. Commercial Club) Nashville, Tenn. Gerard Brandon (M.A.; Supt. City School; Atty. at Law; Pub- lic Administrator) Natchez William Clarence Bryant (Planter) Coffeeville Stephen Franklin Hampton* (Civil Service) Washington, D. C. Eugene Victor Hughston (Atty. at Law) Louisville Robert Norman Kittrell* (M.D.) Black Hawk Frank Ernest Larkin* (Atty. at Law) Greenville Hon. Thomas Dabney Marshall (Member Legislature; Atty. at Law) Vicksburg Robert Clark Redus (Atty. at Law) Birmingham, Ala. Thos. Needham Robertson Arkansas Hon. W. T. Rush* (Sheriff Kemper County 1883-85; Legislature 1886; Atty. at Law; State Senator 1892) Greenwood Jos. Beauregard Wilson (Atty. at Law; planter; Real Estate) .-Yazoo City Bachelor of Science. William Locke Chew* (M.D.) Birmingham, Ala. Geo. Beverly Parker (County Supt. Education) DeSoto Chas. Spyker Stewart, Jr. (M.D Amite, La. Bachelor of Philosophy. William Henry Clark (Atty. at Law) Dallas, Texas Bonnie Mars Dillard (Mayor of Baldwin; Banker; Traveling Salesman) Memphis, Tenn. Richard Foote Greer Carroll County Hon. James Chesley Harris (Atty. at Law; member Legislature; LL.B. Cumberland University; President Sheffield Land Company) Sheffield, Ala. Geo. Henderson Lee (M.D.; Professor Medical College) ..Galveston, Texas William Burwell Walker* (Atty. at Law; District Attorney; University Trustee) Aberdeen Hon. William Dowd Witherspoon (Atty. at Law; member Con- stitutional Convention 1890) Meridian Department Diplomas. William Robert Davenport* Prentiss County New Students. Julia Augustus Allard McCracken, Ky. Edward Forest Allen* Noxubee County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 197 Will Dozier Anderson (see Law Class 1883) Tupelo William Loring Archibald Oxford Caleb Sanford Bailey Leake County- Benjamin Franklin Baird, Jr Hardeman, Tenn Edgar Banks (M. D.) Bassfield Lee Loring Beard (Planter) VanBuren, Ark. Benjamin Oliver Bickham Pike County Walter Lafayette Birdsong* Copiah County Oscar Anatole Bourg Lafourch Parish, La. William Jeremiah Bowen* Catulla, Texas Sampson Holmes Bradford Coahoma County Chas. Logan Bradley (Spengler House) Jackson Richard Lee Bradley Flora Benj. McAdory Brown (Merchant) Schlater Eddie Caldwell Oregon State Berkeley Carter* Oxford and Ft. Smith, Ark. Thomas Dick Cathey (Merchant) Tyro Thomas Arthur Chichester Edwards Bennie Moore Cochran Texas Herbert Ruffin Cocke (Deputy U. S. Marshal) Atoka, I. T. William Gabriel Connor Bessemer, Ala. Jos. Cook, Jr.* Jasper County Thos. Jefferson Curry Grenada Rev. Harry Stonewall Davidson (Presbyterian Minister) __Bowie, Texas Thomas Jefferson Davidson* Lafayette County John Franklin Dean* (Law Class 1883) Senatobia David Franklin Dixon Centreville Perry Merryville Doyle Kansas City, Mo. William Drane* Choctaw County Robert Edwin Evans Pontotoc County Frank Forest Figg (Planter) : Panola County Guston Thomas Fitzhugh (see Class of 1886 and Law Class of 1889) Memphis, Tenn. Samuel Preston Forsee Kansas City, Mo. James Swauptuer Gadberry* Yazoo City Samuel Johnson Goodrich Madison, Tenn. Horace Gumbel Orleans Parish, La. Thomas Hampton Toccopola James Elton Harrel Collierville, Tenn. James Norfleet Harris Halifax, N. C. John L. Hebron (see Law Class of 1887) Greenville Thomas Carmichael Hindman (Insurance business with Mutual Life of New York and Aetna of Hartford) Nashville, Tenn. Noah Blanchard Hinton Flora Walter Hinton Flora Samuel Francis Howard Fort Smith, Ark. Geo. Lipscomb Izard (M.D.) Mobile, Ala. Thomas Walter James Bee Lake 198 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. James Stewart Johnson Raw Landing, La. Samuel Allen Johnson Carthage Walter Leake Keirn (see Law Class of 1883) Lexington William Arthur Kelley Walnut Grove Oliver Newton Killough Cross, Ark. Walter Lynn Kilpatrick (see Law Class of 1883) Texas John Francis Latham (Planter; Capitalist) Calhoun County Robert Lewis Lenoir, Jr. (Planter) Magnolia Matthew Forest Locke* Senatobia Robert William McAfeee (Planter; Capitalist) Grenada John Abraham McCorkle Winona William Tate McDonald (see Law Class of 1882) Bay St. Louis Daniel McLaurin McDowell Hinds County William Woodruff McDowell Yazoo County Albert Thomas McElrath Yalobusha County John Bell Moseley Sulphur, Okla. William Shapes Murphy Holmes County Hon. John Young Murry, Jr. (Law Class of 1884; Atty. at Law) Ripley Halbert Hale Neilson* (Merchant) Crystal Springs Edward Percy Oatis (Civil Service) Orleans Parish, La. Hon. William Gates Orr* (Atty. at Law; LL.B. 1882; Legislature 1884; Special Judge Supreme Court) Okolona John Mason Phillips (Farmer, see Law Class of 1883) Tunica County David Arthur Phillips* Fort Smith, Ark. Dabney Milton Phillips Newport, Ark. Eddie Lacey Phillips Newport, Ark. Robert Lewis Pritchard Texas Hon. Hillrie Marshall Quin (Class of 1886) Jackson Samuel Thomas Randle (General Agent Mutual Life Insurance Co.) Fort Worth, Texas Hon. Edgar Holloway Ratcliffe (see Class of 1884) Natchez Ethan Allen Riggs Orleans Parish, La. Thomas Lawson Robinson Waterf ord Thomas Henry Roger Thibodeaux Parish, La. Larkin Seymour Rogers (M.D.) West Chas. Jordan Rootes Grand View, Texas James Bouldin Ross (Fire Insurance Special Agent) Jackson Frank May Scott (Atty. at Law; Law Class of 1885) Rosedale Paul Remi Seely Lafourche Parish, La. William Tipton Sealy Lafourche Parish, La. Madison Yates Shannon* Sharkey County Thomas Theatrick Shipp (M.D.) Collenston, La. John McMillion Simonton, Jr Lee County Henry Lee Standley Wittsburg, Ark- William Forest Stevens* (Atty. at Law; see Class of 1885 and Law Class of 1888) Carrrollton William Garrett Stone West Virginia State Clifton Rivers Sykes (Banker and Planter) Aberdeen UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 199 Columbus Edmonds Sykes* (name changed to Augustus James Sykes by Chancery Court) Aberdeen James Truitt Talbert (U. S. National Bank Examiner; Cashier Commercial National Bank) Chicago, 111. Shelton Minor Thomas (County Superintendent Education) Macon Cecil Reese Thompson (D.D.S.) Cockram James Thomas Walker (M.D.) Hazlehurst Jos. Brown Whitehead (Attorney at Law; Law Class of 1888) Chattanooga, Tenn. Chas. Marcus Whitworth Centreville Chas. Edwin Williams Franklin County Robert Lee Winchester Natchez Francis Gordon Wingfield Areola Thomas Wallace Yates Oxford James Robert Yerger (Law 1882) Rosedale CLASS OF 1883. Honor Men. Robert Patton Willing, Jr. Rev. Winn David Heddleston, D.D. Augustus Hunter Foster. Bachelor of Arts. William Robert Bridges* Starkville Augustus Hunter Foster . Louisville Rev. Winn David Heddleston (Principal Toccopola College; Acting Professor Chemistry University of Mississippi; Presbyterian minister) Oxford Rev. Chas. Nicholas Riggan (Minister M. E. Church) St. Loius- Mo. Hon. Robert Patton Willing, Jr. (Principal City Schools, Fort Worth, Texas 1884-87; Atty. at Law; State Senator) Hazlehurst. Bachelor of Philosophy. William John Daniel Choctaw County John Kennedy Harrington (Civil Engineer) San Francisco, Cal. Rev. Levi Hope Kimmons* (Presbyterian Minister) Oxford Hon. John Young Murry, Jr. (Atty. at Law; see Law Class of 1884). .Ripley John Franklin Park (Planter) Harve William Armstrong Powel (M.D.) Hernando Phillip Augustus Rush (see Law Class of 1884) Senatobia John Myers Steen (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Hon. John Robert Stowers (Atty. at Law; Editor; see Law Class of 1884) ...Oxford Department Diplomas. Rev. James Garvin Chastain (Baptist Minister) Mexico Ella McFarland (Mrs. Cato) .Crystal Springs Thomas Peters McMahon Indianola Samuel Milledge Stewart New Albany 200 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. New Students. Samuel William Abney (Merchant) Heidelberg Robert Lee Adams* Choctaw County M adison Lee Allen* Sallis Waddell Patton Andrus Fort Smith, Ark. James Drury Armstrong* Monroe County Edgar Poe Avent Newcomb, Tenn. Geo. Annie Avent (Mrs. A. A. Newell) Pittsboro Walter Milton Bailey Doddsville, Tenn. Annie Corinne Baker (see Class of 1886) San Angelo, Texas Henry Fenn Banks Marion County Clarence Victor Beadles (Cotton dealer) Coffeeville Eugene St. Clair Beadles (M.D.; member Am. Medical Asso- ciation 1892; Water Valley 1889-1898) Los Angeles, Cal. Mat Bedford (Planter) Thomastown, La. Jesse Birdsong Bolton James Carson Black* Lafayette County Walter Morgan Box Johnson, Texas Alexander Easly Boyd* Choctaw County Jos. Clanton Boykin* Oktibbeha County Adolphus Evans Brown* (Merchant) Jackson James Innes Brown Oxford Wiley Bush Brown (Chem, Mfg. Fert. Co.) Meridian William Anderson Buchanan* Calhoun, County Richard Sutton Buck, Jr. (C. E.) Vicksburg Robert Mansfield Buck (Atty. at Law) Birmingham, Ala. Matthew Burns New Orleans, La. Thomas Jackson Bush Hinds County James Richard Campbell Memphis, Tenn. Matthew George Campbell (Farmer) Attala County Chas. Warren Carleton Mississippi, Ark. Walter Marion Chandler Hinds County Rev. James Garvin Chastain Alcorn County Hon. Jefferson Davis Childs (Atty. at Law; member Legis- lature) San Antonio, Texas Rufus Phillip Clayton (Merchant) Heidelberg William Sabina Cook Water Valley Frederick Cox Dailey, Jr Torrance Lorenzo Nolley Dantzler, Jr., (Lumber Business; see Class of 1885) Moss Point Edward Orsinus Davidson (Bookseller) Oxford Lovie Elizabeth Davidson (Mrs. J. P. Coats) Louisiana State Sallie Allen Davidson (Mrs. Arthur Marshall) Oxford Ovid Sample Davis (Railroad business) Memphis, Tenn. Walter Putnam Dawson (Merchant and planter) Cary James Tobias Dean (Farmer) Shaw William Dean (M.D.) Forest Hill, La. Thos. Henderson Deloney Lake Providence, La. Stonewall Jackson Dilliard Union Parish, La. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 201 Frank Maxwell Dootey (M.D.) Arkabutla Rev. William Franklin Dowd* (Presbyterian Minister) Aberdeen William S. Ely Carroll County Robert Lee Embrey East Carroll Parish, La. Wade Hampton Embrey East Carroll Parish, La. Albert George Eyrich (Merchant) Jackson Lewis Thomas Fitzhugh (Merchant) Jackson Eugene Amzi Ford New York City Charles Friend 4220 A. Evans Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Chas. Gray Gillespie (Cotton Buyer) Greenwood Jos. Nares Gipson (Merchant) Oxford Gordon Lee Greene (Surveyor) Aberdeen Walton Silas Greene* (M.D.) . Aberdeen John Victor Hamilton* (M.D.) Newton William Adair Harding (M.D.) Sunny Side Isham Harrison* (M.D.) Deer Brook Nannie Virginia Harrison Leland Geo. Yerger Hicks (M.D.; Louisville Med. Col. 1893; County Physician, Warren County; Regimental Surgeon Miss. N. G.; Trustee State University) . Vicksburg Harry Lee Hill (Attorney at Law) Okolona Sallie Vick Hill (see Class of 1885, Mrs. R. W. Jones) New York City William Randolph Hill Sharkey County Edward B. Holman Galveston, Texas Fannie Powell Hooper (see Class of 1885) Jackson John Harvey Johnson (M.D.) Brookhaven Friley Jones (see Class of 1887) Madison Henry Mounger Jones (Insurance Agent) Vicksburg William Bennett Jones (see Class of 1887) Canton Thomas Joyner Memphis, Tenn . Guston Thomas Kearney* " Madison County Anthony Cabiness Kuykendall* Harrison Jos. Franklin Lauderdale* (LL.B., Cumberland Univ., 1894; Attorney at Law) DeSoto County Rev. William Lawrence Linfield (Minister M. E. Church) ..Copiah County Rev. Plautus Iberus Lipsey (see Class of 1886) Murfreesboro, Tenn. John Lockheart Logan (Prof. Miss. College) Clinton William Alexander Mabry Lafayette County James Andrew Madden Scott County Walter Malone (Atty. at Law; see Class of 1887) Memphis, Tenn. Hon. Thomas Oliver Martin (see Class of 1888) Glen Rose, Texas William Franklin Martin (Attorney at Law). ..Mineral Wells, Texas Ella McFarland (Mrs. Cato) Crystal Springs Robert Love McLaurin (Attorney at Law) Vicksburg Sidney Lee McLaurin (Atty. at Law; Secretary State Railroad Association) Brandon Wallace McLaurin* (late Receiver of Public Moneys; Private Secretary of United States Senator A. J. McLaurin; U. S. Mineral Land Inspector)^ Jackson 202 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Emma Wynne McLeod* (Mrs. Harland) Macon William Eggleston Meade 1223 N. Seventeenth St., Birmingham, Ala. Richard Pettus Moore (Attorney at Law; Law Class of 1886) Jackson Burton Ward Morphis (Attorney at Law) Pawnee, Okla. Louis Bunyan Morphis (M.D.) Blackburn, Okla. Hardy Felts Mullikin Lafayette County William Alford Parsons (Attorney at Law) ...Summit Archie Peteet (Merchant) Greenwood Andrew M . Phipps Greenwood Robert Lee Pitchford (Planter) Shoccoe Albert Thomas Porter Franklin County John Franklin Posey Union City, Tenn. Annie Eugenia Quinche Union City, Tenn. Chas. Horace Ramsey (M.D.) Collins Rufus Winans Ratliff Arkansas James S. Reid Hazlehurst John R. Richards (Wholesale Broker) Columbia William Samuel Richardson (see Law Class of 1883) Canton Whittaker Riggs New Orleans, La. M argaret E . Roberson Oxford William W. Robinson* Clay County John Bennett Ross (Attorney at Law) Memphis, Tenn. John Wesley Rutledge Hazlehurst John Henry Salmon (Merchant) Pontotoc Jos. Blanton Salmon Parchman Gervais Michel Schlater Iberville Parish, La. Thos. Courtney Sears Texas Bartlett W. Sharbrough (Atty. at Law) Laurel Chas. Daniel Shipp (M.D.) Big Creek Rev. Alphonzo Virgil Sizemore Sardis Andrew Smith Copiah County Chas. Firman Smith (Atty. at Law; see Class of 1887) .. Nashville, Tenn. Sidney Clarence Smith Bolivar County John Wagner Smither Waxahatchie, Texas William Allious Spencer (Teacher) Troy William Hardy Stevens Troy Darius Jefferson Sullivan Johnson, Texas John Magruder Sullivan (M.A., 1888) Jackson, La. Jamie Thompson (see Class of 1885) Sardis Randolph Young Thompson Vicksburg Waddie Morgan Toney Pine Bluff Clem Clayton Walker* (Planter) Hemingway Lloyd Tilghman Ward Shelby, Tenn. Shepherd Deloney Wheat Grenada Frederick Redding White Avoyelles Parish, La. Henry Pitman Whitehead* Glen Rose, Texas Isaac Van Willingham, Jr Somerville, Texas Edward T. Wooldridge (Custom House) New Orleans, La. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 203 Thos. Nathan Word..- Oxford John Bell Worley Ripley CLASS OF 1884. Honor Men. Friley Jones Jiggitts. Leonard Jerome Farley. Crawford Jackson. Bachelor of Arts. Algernon Jasper Aven (Prof. Latin Miss. College 1894) Clinton John Hamilton Barksdale (Attorney at Law) Grenada Rev. Crawford Jackson Fayetteville, Ga. Friley Jones Jiggitts (M.D.) Flora William James Mayo (Atty. at Law; County and Probate Judge; Judge Common Pleas Court). Clarendon, Ark. Evan Leonidas Ragland (State Manager F. M. Ins. Co.) Brookhaven Rev. John Howard Shumaker Nashville, Tenn. Bachelor of Science. Leonard Jerome Farley (Atty. at Law; Co. Supt. Education). ..Hernando Bachelor of Philosophy. Robert Mansfield Buck (Atty. at Law) Birmingham, Ala. James Robert Dominick (Cashier American National Bank Kansas City, Mo. Richard Walter Jones, Jr. (Cashier M. & F. Bank, Macon; Vice- Pres. American National Bank, Kansas City, Mo.; Banker) New York City Ephraim Noble Lowe (M.D.; Prof, of Geology, Univ. of Miss., 1906-'09) ' University Hon. Edward Holloway Ratcliffe (Atty. at Law; Pres. Elector). . Natchez Hon. Walter Perdew Tackett (Atty. at Law; Leg. 1980; Pres. Elector 1892; Trustee I. I. & C.) Lexington William Carnot Townes* (M.D.; Prof. Med. College) Chattanooga Department Diplomas. Bettie Douglass . Water Valley Willie Maria Douglass Water Valley Walton Silas Greene* (M.D.) Aberdeen John Marquis Hodo* West Point New Students. William Gee Abbay * Tunica James Alcorn* (Planter and Capitalist) Eagle's Nest Amos Ackerman Armistead (see New Students, 1880) Vicksburg Edgar McRaven Beard. Oxford William Thomas Brown .Oxford John David Burge* (Atty. at Law) Corinth 204 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Minnie Myrtle Burge (now Mrs. Jones) Corinth Rev. William Caldwell (A.M., S. W. P. Univ. ; Pres. Min.)-- Baltimore, Md. Jos. William Chalmers : Memphis, Tenn. John Williams Chalmers Lafayette County Hattie Belmont Cook Memphis, Tenn. Warren Cowan, Jr.* Vicksburg Chas. W. Crisler (Minister and Teacher; Prof. Whitworth Col- lege and Centenary College) Jackson William Crump Memphis, Tenn. Lacy Walter Dalton (Atty. at Law) Plainview, Texas Morgan Davis New Orleans, La. William Leguire Davis Lee County Robert Lee Dilworth* Rienzi Martin Lee Donald . Attala County Bettie Douglass . Water Valley James H. Douglass Water Valley Willie Maria Douglass Water Valley John Herring Draughon Richland Parish, La. William Augustus Drennan, Jr. (Insurance) New Orleans, La. Jos. Turner Dunn Eupora Janie Bessie Edwards South Carolina State Jos. Slack Eggleston Torrance Arthur Peebles Ganong Memphis, Tenn. William Marion Gill Dublin Carrie Ellen Gillespie (Merchant) Greenwood Ed Cross Gilliland Memphis, Tenn. James Stedman Givhan Round Lake Jettie Cooper Givhan Meridian Thos. Jefferson Grafton Pickens Arthur Alonzo Graham (Cashier Bank) Blue Mountain Bailey Allen Guess . Attala County Pearl Lorraine Guy (see class of 1906) Vicksburg Laura Kate Hall (now Mrs. Busby) Chicora Robert Edward Halsell (Law Class 1897) Laurel Madden West Hamilton Lexington J. Randolph Hampton (Atty. at Law) Clifton, Arizona Rev. William Iverson Hargis (Baptist Minister) Oxford L. M. Harley (Atty. at Law) South McAlester, I. T. Sidney James Harper McComb Webb Harris (Sergt.-at-Arms State Senate and Constitutional Convention 1890; U. S. V. 1898) Jackson William Hilliard Hawkins Lafayette County Jefferson Franklin Hill (Oculist) Memphis, Tenn. Amzi Wadel Hooker Tennessee Harris Christian Hoover (Druggist) Natchez Arthur Hull* Lamar Epsie Alexander Jennings Water Valley John Lipscomb Johnson, Jr Clinton Julia Toy Johnson (see Class of 1886, Mrs. Lipsey)..Murfreesboro, Tenn. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 205 John Siebe Johnson* Madison William C. Joeliff Texas Ernest L. Jones (D.D.S.; M.D.) Hermanville John Calhoun Jones Madison County William Richard Jones New York City Wirt Addison Jones Madison County Samuel Houston Jones Hardeman County, Tenn. James Trotter Kirk Aberdeen William Woods Kirk West Point John Henry Krebbs* Choctaw County Alfred Gideon Kyle Sunflower County John C. Langford (M.D.) Conehatta Edward Lee Lashbrooke New Orleans, La. Janie Law* Madison County James T. Lucas Calhoun County William Robert Mabry * Sardis William Wailes Magruder (see Law Class of 1895; Atty. at Law).Starkville John Prentiss Matthews* Winona Lewis James Mathison* Covington County Hon. William Henry Mabin (Atty. at Law; member Legislature) __Biloxi William Webster Mayes (Planter) Hazlehurst Francis C. McBride Webster County Ewing Franklin McCafferty* Choctaw County Walter Price McCall (M.D.; Memphis, 1894) . Ennis, Texas Francis Hardy McClellan Memphis, Tenn. William B. McLeod Mississippi Walter B. McMahon (D.D.S.; Dentist) Oxford William B. McMahon (Dentist) Greenville Reuben M. Mitchell Brazonia, Texas Ulcie Wilson Mitchell " Enid Ulcie Cameron Montgomery (Planter; Professor) Natchez Hon. S. A. Morrison (see Law Class of 1898) Grenada Clifton L. Moss Grenada William Dantzler Mounger (Atty. at Law) Vicksburg Chosen Hutson Myers (Furniture Dealer) Dallas, Texas James P. Oliver*. Lafayette County Ernest Etienne Ortego St. Landry Parish, La. Harry Payne , Hot Springs, Ark. Joseph Payne Hot Springs Irene Pipes (Mrs. Thos. H. Kingston) Louisville, Ky. Albert Louis Pittman Columbia William Plant* Oxford Victor L. Pritchard* Marion County John A. E. Pyle (Atty. at Law) Winston County Helen Marianne Quinche (Late Professor of Chemistry I. I. & College; Mrs. McLean Blair) Cincinnati, Ohio Jackson Reeves French Camp Sarah Alice Reeves Vaiden 206 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. William Herring Ricketts North Carrollton Chas. Macon Rivers* Oxford Thompson Lamar Ross Jackson Braxton Bragg Sale* Aberdeen James Freeman Sellers (Professor Howard College) Macon, Ga. Louis Kerre Sharpe Frogmore, La. Thomas Spencer Sharpe Natchez Calvin R. Skinner Lauderdale County Hugh McLaurin Smith (Minister) Texas John J. L. Spence (see Class of 1889) Monticello, Ark. Augustus James Sykes* Aberdeen Jos. Truett Talbert (see New Students 1882) Chicago, 111. Charles Marcus Taylor Corinth James Martin Taylor* (M.D.) Winona Scurry Terrell Houston, Texas Hugh Grame Thompson Horse Cove, N. C. James Henry Tyson Baldwyn James Willis Townsend Winona Osborne Moore Turner (M.D.; Asst. Surgeon State Asylum for Insane ; Pension Examiner Jackson James Blackburn Ulman New Orleans, La* Geo. Allen Vancleave (Merchant) Ocean Springs Robert Adrian Vancleave (Merchant) Ocean Springs Nicholas Stubbs Walker Dyersburg, Tenn. Moses Geo. Waugh (Traveling Salesman) West Point Chas. Witfield West McCarley Daniel Coney Weston Hancock County Andrew White (Planter) Silver City Edmund Payne Williams Graham, Texas Florence Minnie Williams Graham, Texas Leon Wolfe (Merchant) New Orleans, La« William M. Woodward Madison County Amelius Nicholas Young Iberia Parish, La. Clearmont Gall Young Iberia Parish, La. Willie Henrietta Youngblood (Mrs. Geo. M. Bright) Abington, Va. CLASS OF 1885. Honor Men. Sallie Vick Hill. Byron Pinckney Patterson. Peter Gray Sears. Bachelor of Arts. Rev. Byron Pinckney Patterson (Minister M. E. Church, South) Mathiston Rev. Peter Gray Sears (Episcopal Clergyman; Principal St. Thomas Hall Houston, Texas James Freeman Sellers (Professor Mercer University) Macon, Ga. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 207 Bachelor of Science. Sallie Vick Hill (Late Professor I. I. & C; now Mrs. R. W. Jones, Jr) Kansas City, Mo. Bachelor of Philosophy. Hon. John Lewis Buckley (Atty. at Law; Legislature 1896-1900) -Enterprise Hon. Jefferson Davis Childs (Member Legislature; Atty. at Law San Antonio, Texas Lorenzo Nolloy Dantzler, Jr. (Lumber business) Moss Point Henry Flowers (M.D.) Liberty Chas. Rawls Foxworth (Atty. at Law) Columbia Fannie Powell Hooper (Professor Belhaven College) Jackson Hon. William Forest Stevens* (Atty. at Law; member Legis- lature; Circuit Court) Carrollton Janie Thompson (Professor Bailey Springs University; Mrs. Laird) Oak Cliff, Texas Walter Erskine Williams (Atty. at Law; special Judge). -Fort Worth, Texas Department Diplomas. Janie Bessie Edwards South Carolina State Hon. John Lawrence Hebron, Jr. (Atty. at Law; Planter; mem- ber Legislature; Trustee of University of Mississippi) Greenville John Henry Salmon (Merchant) Randolph New Students. William T. Adair (Merchant and planter) Doddsville Henry M. Anderson Spartanburg, S. C. Walter Eugene Anderson* (see Class of 1989) Oxford Thomas Taylor Bonner Tupelo William James Boone ." Vernon, Tex. Ewing Earle Brougher Linden, Texas Jefferson Davis Brown* Hazlehurst Robert Jones Brown Jones County William Ernest Butler (U. S. Weather Bureau) William Thomas Calvert West Point Adolphus L. Cannon (M.D.) Indianola Greene Croft Chandler (M.D.) Shreveport, La. Thomas William Chandler* Oxford William Alfred Dockery (Merchant) Boyle Thomas Richmond Eason* Tate County Charles Franklin Edwards Rodney Richard Cornelius English Sardis William Shackelford Evans* Monroe County Dudley McEwen Featherston (Atty. at Law) Holly Springs William Fort Fitzhugh* Vicksburg Cortez Petro Gilmer* Toccopola James Beauregard Coode Upshur County, Texas Richard Clay Gulledge (Teacher) Bowling Green 208 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Walter Abner Gulledge Georgia James T. W. Hairston Columbus James P. Hamer* Montgomery County William Warren Harvey .Bovina Sanford Bartow Henton (M.D.; County Health Officer) Decatur Benjamin Iverson Hicks (D.D.S.) Vicksburg Samuel Holloway (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. George Whitley Holmes (Merchant) Hernando John Rule Hoover (Merchant) Pickens Charles Richard M. Hoye (Merchant; University Trustee) Newton Stephen M . Jackson Johnsonville Maxime Jacobs Vicksburg Newnie David Johnson Hillsboro, Fla. Jacob Jones* Carroll County Oliver N. Killough Cross County, Ark. Robert Franklin Kimmons (Atty. at Law) Water Valley Sam Hall Kimmons (Principal City Schools) Galveston, Texas Andrew Brown Learned Natchez Howell Simpson Lester Batesville Chas. Eugene Lowe* Orwood William Alexander Martin Lee County Jessie M atthews Winona Hon. Robert Burns Mayes (Judge Supreme Court Miss.) Jackson Charles Clinton McCafferty Ruff James Thomas McCafferty Moorehead James Bassett McElroy (M.D.) Arkansas Chas. Gilmer McGee New York, N. Y. John Mcintosh (Atty. at Law)._- St. Louis, Mo. Emma Wynne McLeod (Mrs. Harlan) Macon James Harrison McWhorter Tupelo Samuel Madison McWhorter Tupelo Rev. Robert Abner Meek Greenville Walter Pelham Mills (Merchant) McComb City Chas. Dennis Mitchell (M.D.; County Health Officer) Pontotoc Hampie Mitchell Lafayette County Jonas Patrick Moore (M.D.) Yazoo City Milto Uriah Munger (Lawyer) Collins Lillian Leavell Orr* Lee County George Washington Pearce* Monroe County Edward Beauchamp Pierce (Attorney at Law) Van Buren, Ark. William James Pierce (Merchant) Godfrey, Ga. Joseph B. Perkins, Jr Crawford Edward Walton Pickens (President Bank) Goodman Eugenia Jackson Pipes (Mrs. Albert L. Howe) Natchez Paul Mayne Roby Matchen, Ga. Edgar Thomas Salter Sardis James Zachariah Scott (Planter) Crystal Springs Thomas F. Shackelford DeSoto County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 209 William Timmans Smith Lamar Walter Spiva Oak, Texas William Edward Stuart Lyon John Robert Tackett (M.D.; Asst. Supt. E. M. Insane Asylum; Surgeon U. S. V. 1898) Meridian Laurence Eugene Thompson* St. Louis, Mo. Robert Torrey (Prof, of Psychology and Education) University William Young Watson Cuba, P. I. Robert Paine Wendel (M.D.) , Aberdeen Frederick Brown White* DeSoto County John Raif ord Whitley (Accountant) DeSoto County Chas. Marcus Whitworth Madison County Walter David Williams (see Class of 1888) Fort Worth, Texas Andrew Marshall Winstead Hattiesburg William Wallace Witty Winona Robert Jackson Wright Roxie Alexander Hillman Yates - Utiea CLASS OF 1886. Honor Men. Guston Thomas Fitzhugh. Rev. Plautus Iberus Lipsey. Wiley Bush Brown. Bachelor of Arts. Annie Corinne Baker (Mrs. Wingfield; Teacher Mathematics, Literature and History, Memphis, Brownwood and Dal- las) Austin, Texas Guston Thomas Fitzhugh (Atty. at Law; Capt. U. S. V.)_.Memphis, Tenn. Cortez Pedro Gilmer* Toccopola Rev. Plautus Iberus Lipsey (Baptist Minister) Murfreesboro, Tenn. John Thomas Lowe (Atty. at Law) Helena, Ark. James Dykes Millsaps Idaho Hillrie Marshall Quin (Journalist; Trustee University of Miss.). ..Jackson William Walter Rivers (Supt. City Schools) Helena, Ark. William Hardy Stevens* West Point Bachelor of Science. Wiley Bush Brown Meridian Malvern Dimmick Flagstaff, Ariz. William Robert Mabry* (A.M.;Prin. City Schools) Sardis Willie Henrietta Youngblood (Mrs. Geo. M. Bright) Abingdon, Va. Bachelor of Philosophy. John David Burge* (Attorney at Law) Corinth Julia Toy Johnson (Mrs. P. I. Lipsey) Murfreesboro, Tenn. Helen Marianne Quinche (late Prof. Chemistry, I. I. & C; Mrs. McLean Blair). .... Cincinnati, Ohio 14 210 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Department Diploma. Lillian Leavell Orr* Lee County New Students. Hon. John Hodge Arrington (Atty. at Law; member Leg.) . .Monticello William Frank Ashley (M.D.) Lexington John Castello Barfield* Montgomery County Thomas Eugene Barron (Planter) Sturges Walter Shipp Bayliss* West John Carroll Bryson (Atty. at Law) Vicksburg William Anderson Buchanan* Calhoun County Luther Manly Burge Wheeler, Texas Lawrence Paul Busby 407 Union Street, Memphis, Tenn. Hiram Cassedy, Jr Brookhaven Turner Ashby Chancellor Chickasaw County James Gilbert Couillard Natchez Hon. Geo. Oscar Davis* (member Legislature) Lafayette County Frank Dimmick Shuteston, La. Martin Lee Donald Attala County Edgar Campbell Dooley Route No. 3, Oxford William Henry Duncan Sunflower County David Cornelius Easley (Insurance Agent) Hot Springs, Ark. Hon. John Brooks Eckles (Atty. at Law)_. Sardis Will am Wickliff Edwards Texas Matthew Henry Elliott Sumter County, Ala. Edward Clifford Finley (Civil Engineer) Tupelo Charles David Flowers (M.D.) Kilmichael Willie Knox Flowers* - Montgomery County James Hamilton Fraiser (Capitalist) Jackson John Argyle Franklin (Atty. at Law; Dist. Atty.) El Paso, Texas Chas. Wesley Fraser Memphis, Tenn. James Benjamin Gulley (Atty. at Law) Louisville Chas. Henry Hamner* Montgomery County Walter Harris* (Railroad Business) Ripley Frank Wilmot Henington (M.D.) Tryus Jos. Clarence Higdon (M.D.) Belzoni Thos. Wang Huey (M.D.) Gallman Bartlett Fulton Jones (Merchant, Planter) Hernando Jacob Milton Jones* Carroll County Edwin Morgan Kidd Sherman, Texas Thaddeus Booth Lampton Tylertown Otway Latham Nashville, Tenn. John Lehman (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Mary Little* University Edward L. B. McClelland California David Denon McRee* (Atty. at Law) Water Valley William Erwin Meek (Banker) __Clarksdale James Bright Morgan, Jr Hernando UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 211 George Walter Morgan (Merchant and Planter) Rich John Walkins Moseley, Jr Okolona Frank Lyde Munnerlyn Selina Charles Monroe Murray Courtland John Madison Oliver Orlando, Fla. John William Provine (Ph.D.; Professor Mississippi College) Clinton Reuben Oscar Reynolds, Jr* Aberdeen Eugene Harper Roberts (President Bank of Orleans).. New Orleans, La. Mc. Rogers* Smith County Samuel Leonidsa Rowan Baldwy n James Henry Russell, Jr.* Oxford Isaac Fitch Scott (D.D.S.) Crystal Springs Edward Abernathy Sears (Cotton Broker) Houston, Texas Hon. Walton Shields (Dist. Atty.; Capt. U. S. V. 1898) Greenville Rev. Milton Samuel Smith .- Collins Mattie James Smythe (Mrs. E. C. Gilliland) Memphis, Tenn. Joseph Johnston Stevens (M.D. Tulane) Hattiesburg Charles Calvin Swinney (County Supt. Education; Merchant; Druggist) Lexington Chas. Alexander Tate Amite County Ashley Dozier Taylor Lee County Lafayette Duncan Terrell Collins Benjamin Franklin Toler Louisiana State Benjamin McCulloch Watson* .. Coxbury Rev. William David Wendel Areola Armand Saunier White* Utica Robert Dennis Williams (M.D.) Love Station Victor Wyatt Williams (Merchant) Jackson Julian Cooper Wilson (Atty. at Law) Oxford Allie Young (Mrs. H. Hoover) - Natchez SESSION OF 1886-87. (NOTE — From 1887 names of those receiving medals and distinctions of any kind are inserted after the list of graduates of each year.) Honor Men. Chas. Firman Smith. William Bennett Jones. John Lipscomb Johnson, Jr. Bachelor of Arts. William Bennett Jones (Teacher; County Supt. Education; Circuit Clerk) Canton Malcolm Campbell Montgomery (Teacher, journalist, Planter). .Natchez Jonas Patrick Moore, Jr. (M.D.) Yazoo City Chas. Firman Smith (Atty. at Law) Nashville, Tenn. 212 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Bachelor of Science. Carrie Ellen Gillespie (Merchant) Greenwood John Lipscomb Johnson, Jr. (Atty. at Law; Teacher) Clinton Bachelor of Philosophy. William David Berry Florence Friley Jones (Clerk to U. S. District Attorney) Jackson Walter Malone (Atty. at Law; Author; Alumni Poet) Memphis, Tenn. John Franklin Posey Union City, Tenn. Distinctions and Medals Awarded at Commencement in 1887. Senior Speakers. William David Berry Oration . John Lipscomb Johnson, Jr Oration. Friley Jones Oration William Bennet Jones Oration Walter Malone Oration Edward Dickinson Pierce.First Honor Man and Valedictorian of Law Class Chas. Firman Smith^First Honor Man and Valedictorian of Literary Class Medalists foe Excellence in Elocution. Hermaen Society Freshman Medals. Crawford Toy Johnson First Medal James Lusk Alcorn* Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Thomas Lamar Ross First Medal John Argyle Franklin Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Robert Edward Halsell First Medal William David Wendel Second Medal Medals Awarded for Excellence in Original Debate. Charles Firman Smith Phi Sigma Society Medal William David Berry Hermaean Society Medal Anniversary Orators-Elect for 1888. John Madison Oliver Hermaean Orator Robert Abner Meek Phi Sigma Orator New Students. James Lusk Alcorn* (Atty. at Law) Clarksdale Lawson Burfoot Aldrich (Atty. at Law) Baton Rouge, La Alfonso Bobbitt Amis (Atty. at Law) Meridian William Arnot Anderson Huntsville, Ala. Cade Lee Armstrong (Merchant) Vaiden UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 213 Thomas Bell Atkins (Merchant) Dockery Thomas Catchings Baird (M.D.; Surgeon U. S. V. 1888) Baird Charles Baskerville (Asst. Prof. Chemistry Univ. N. C; Chem- ist N. C. Geol. Survey; Secretary Sec. C, A. A. A. S. 1898 University of North Carolina Joseph Bien (Atty. at Law) Denver, Col. James S. Bryant Memphis, Tenn. William Edward Chisholm ... .Sheffield, Ala. Hugh Linwood Dickson Memphis, Tenn. Robert Edward Evans* (Merchant) Artesia Richard Vaiden Evans Artesia Walter Benjamin Faison Indianola John Clayton Fant (Supt. City Schools Meridian; member State Board of Examiners) Meridian Henry Driver Ferrell Vernon, Texas James Walter Furr (Merchant) Toccopola Henry Thomas Gaines (Merchant) Timberville Lawrence Dillon Gwin * Washington^ County Horace Hall, Jr Houston, Texas Chas. Eaton Hamilton (Banker) Aberdeen George Bunyan Hebron Leland William Shryoc Hemingway Jackson Finlay Nance Holmes (Merchant) Blue Point Frank Clarke Holmes (Atty. at Law; University Trustee) Hernando Samuel Francis Howard Lafayette County Lucien Beverley Howry Washington, D. C. Steve Mason Jackson Sunflower County Barney Triplett Johnson (Journalist) Winston County Crawford Toy Johnson Chattanooga, Tenn. James Taylor Jones -_ Wheeler Kinjiro Kawasaki Tokio, Japan Edwin Mounger Kidd . Sherman, Texas James Monroe Kyle Sardis Lemuel Braxton Lester, Jr. (Traveling Salesman) Batesville Lem Hall Lipsey (Teacher) Clinton Benson Mott Lockwood* (M. D., St. Louis) Copiah County Charles Phillip Long (Atty. at Law) Tupelo John Waddell Lowry (Insurance) Atlanta, Ga. Thomas Oliver Martin (Atty. at Law). Granbury, Texas Chas. Glenn Mayson Purvis Robert Burton Meek (Bookeeper) Clarksdale Ellis S. Middleton, Jr Meridian Henry Thomas Millsaps (Atty. at Law) Hazlehurst James Bright Morgan, Jr.* (Planter and Merchant) Rich Joseph Moyse (Merchant ; Broker) New York City William Barron McEwen* (Druggist) Oxford Herbert Edward McGuire Hancock Count Samuel Pate McMinn Eureka 214 ' DIVERSITY <>/' MISSISSIPPI. George Franklin Nixon (Druggist). Tchula Lemuel Earle Oldham Oxford Archie Poteet (Merchants Greenwood Francis Mason Phillips* Lexington Walter Chew Phillips St. Louis, Mo. William Plant* Oxford Eddie Mooring Pointer Como William Fair Posey* Lexington. Ky. Logan Postell (Druggist) Plaquemine Lake, La. Minter Duke Rayburn Charleston Clarence V. Riggs Woodville Edmund L. W. Rootes Grandview, Texas Thompson Lamar Ross Jackson Dunbar Rowland (LL.D.; Director Department of Archives and History, State of Mississippi) Jackson Thomas Buchanan Sadler (M.D.) Hubbard City, Texas William Edward Savage (Banker) Okolona Isaac Fitch Scott (D.D.S.) Crystal Springs Thomas Percy Scott (Supt. Schools) Brookhaven Fisher Morgan Southworth (Merchant) Sidon Ernest Spiva* Winston County Iva Howard Sternberger...' Tangipahoa, La. Archibald Stewart Water Valley Edgar Dudley Stone (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Rev. James Lundy Sykes West Point William McQuiston Sykes (Salesman) Birmingham, Ala. John Robert Tackett (M.D.; see New Students 1885) Meridian Chas. Alexander Tate Liberty Ernest Goodrich Taylor (Merchant) Como Robert Torrey (Professor of Pedagogy) University Clifford Hoddick Trotter (M.D.)-- Helena, Ark. Arthur Cornwall Tuttle Clarksdale Jos. Venn (M.D., University of Penn.; Resident Physician Mercy and Roselia Hospitals) Memphis, Tenn. Henry Winston Weir (Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. Lula Ann Whitten (Mrs. W. J. East) Senatobia Julian Cooper Wilson (Atty. at Law). Memphis, Tenn. William Hull Withers (Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. William Nugent Yerger* (Real Estate) Greenville NOTE — From the year 1888 degrees conferred each year in the Law and Academic Departments will be stated in the same place in this cata- logue. The list of new students for each year following 1886 includes both Law and Academic students. The awarding of "First, Second and Third Honors" was discontinued in 1888, and "Distinctions" named instead. Bachelors with "Special Distinction" are those whwse average grude equals or exce ds 95 per cent of the maximvm. Bachelors "With Distinction" are those whose average grade equals or exceeds 90 per cent of the maximum and falls under 95 per cent of the maximum. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 215 - SESSION OF 1887-88. Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Laws— Honorary. Hon. Thomas S. Maxey (U. S. District Judge) . ..Austin, Tex. Master of Arts. Cortez Pedro Gilmer* (B.A. University of Mississippi) Toccopola Bachelor of Laws. Joseph Bien (Atty. at Law) Denver, Col. James Benjamin Gulley (Atty. at Law) Louisville Chas. Phillip Long (Atty. at Law) Lee County Hon. Robert Burns Mayes (State Senate; Chief of Div. Treas. Dept. Judge) Jackson Haden Mathews McKay (Atty. at Law)_„_ Memphis, Tenn. Ellis Stuart Middleton (Atty. at Law) Flora Jos. Olan Napier, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Covington County Willie Kirk Nettles Liberty Isaac Aloysius Oliver (Atty. at Law) Houston, Texas Dunbar Rowland (LL.D.; Director Department of Archives and History, State of Mississippi) Jackson William Forest Stevens* (Judge) . Carrollton Hugh Chalmers Watson (Atty. at Law) Greenville Jos. Brown Whitehead* (Atty. at Law; Back Tax Collector). Atlanta, Ga. William Richardson Woods (Atty. at Law) .- Meridian Marcus Jos. Wright, Jr. (Weather Bureau). Washington, D. C. Bachelor of Arts. Jackson Reeves (Prof. Jefferson College; Principal of F. C. Academy ; Teacher) Lynnville, Tenn. Sarah Alice Reeves (Teacher) 1 Vaiden Mattie James Smythe* (Mrs. E. C. Gilliland) Memphis, Tenn. Bachelor of Science. John Carroll Bryson (Atty. at Law) /Vicksburg Hon. Thomas Oliver Martin (Atty. at Law; member of Texas Legislature; County Attorney) Granbury, Texas James Bassett McElroy Clarksdale John William Provine (Ph.D.; Professor of Chemistry; Chairman of Faculty) Clinton Jackson Reeves (see list of B. A.'s.) Lynnville, Tenn. Walter David Williams (Principal City Schools) Fort Worth, Texas Bachelor of Philosophy. James Walter Furr (Principal Toccopola College) Toccopola Eddie Cross Gilliland (Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. William Alexander Martin . ...Lee Rev. Robert Abner Meek (Minister M. E. Church) Greenville Robert Paine Wendel (M.D.) Aberdeen 216 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Distinctions and Medals Awabded. Department of Law. Ellis Stuart Middleton, Jr LL.B. with Special Distinction Robert Burns Mayes LL.B. with Distinction Hugh Chalmers Watson __.LL.B. with Distinction Department of Literature, Science and Arts. Miss Mattie James Smythe B.A. with Special Distinction Senior Speakers and Essayists Appointed. Robert Burns Mayes .._. Valedictorian of Law Class Mattie James Smythe Valedictorian of Literary Class John Carroll Bryson Oration Joseph Bien Essay Thomas Oliver Martin Oration John William Provine Essay S arah Alice Reeves Essay Robert Paine Wendel Oration Medalists fob Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. William Michael Durr First Medal William Hull Withers Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medal. Thomas Buchanan Sadler First Medal Edwin Lee Mounger Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. James Lusk Alcorn, Jr* First Medal John Argyle Franklin Second Medal Senior Medals fob Excellence in Obiginal Debate. Robert Paine Wendel Phi Sigma Society Medal Joseph Brown Whitehead* Hermaean Society Medal Anniversary Oratoes-Elect for 1889. John Bennett Ross Hermaean Orator Walton Shields Phi Sigma Orator New Students. Robert Elmore Alcorn Little Rock, Ark. Lawrence DeSaix Anderson* (Planter) Sumner John Campbell Applewhite (Atty. at Law)-_ _ San Francisco, Cal. Oliver Monroe Armstrong* Lawrence County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 217 Hugh Torrance Arvin Torrance Thomas Eugene Barron (Farmer) Sturges William Sciaf Beatty Arkansas Roane Calhoun Bell Pine Bluff, Ark. Russell Billiu (Banking Business) Shreveport, La. Willie Thomas Brown Oxford Rufus Elbredge Bruce (U. S. Surveyor, central office, 506 Coy- dras St.) New Orleans, La. James Walter Buchanan (Merchant) Eupora William Anderson Buchanan* Calhoun County Edward Jeffries Buck (Banker) Mobile, Ala. Nathaniel Jeffries Buck (Physician) ,1127 N. Carolina Ave., Baltimore, Md. Ernest Lott Carter (Banker). Meridian Silas S. Chaney East Baton Rouge, La. Henry Hargrove Davidson Helena, Ark. Edgar Campbell Dooley Oxford Frank M. Dooley ...Oxford William Henry Duncan* _ . Baird William Michael Durr (Merchant) Pinola Richard Baugh Eggleston .Torrance William Edgar Enochs* (Lumber Business). Fernwood Thomas Jehu Evans (Surveyor) Alaska Murray Cuthbert Falkner Oxford William Maxey Falls* , Hinds County Chas. Lee Fondren Mathiston Robert Friend (Merchant) St. Louis, Mo. Jos. W. George (Atty . at Law) Yazoo City Chapin M. Gerdine ..West Point John Franklin Gilliland, Jr. (Merchant) Coldwater Duncan D. Griffin (Merchant) *_ Griffin James Benj. Gulley (Atty. at Law) . Winston County Samuel Gwin (Atty. at Law) 1 Greenwood Eddie Hirsh (Atty. at Law) Dallas, Texas John Hamilton Hobbs* Bentonville, Ark. John W. W. Holt* Lafayette County Leighton Hope Washington, D. C. Robertson Augustus Horton, Jr Grenada John Jos. Huddleston Memphis, Tenn. Jesse Shirley Humphries Shafter, Texas George Hunt Greenville Thos. Henry Hutchinson Little Rock, Ark. John L. Jackson (Merchant; Accountant). Summitt Bernard Edward Jarratt (Teacher) Jackson John Clarke Johnson (Prof. Oratory and Rhetoric) University Samuel Hall Kimmons... Fort Smith, Ark. John Claude Latham Scott County Robert Edmund Latham. Memphis, Tenn. William Henry Lee Greenville 218 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Edward Lehman (Druggist) „215 Union Street, Memphis, Tenn. Emile Levy (Banker) Canton Daniel Doak Little (A.B., Univ. of Ala.; Theological Stu- dent Tuscaloosa, Ala. Thomas Ovid Mabry Rock Hill, S. C. Edwin Galtney Martin Loveman Joaquin Martinez* Ruatan, Honduras William Hammond Marshall (Dentist) Little Rock, Ark. Nancy Cora McClelland (Mrs. W. F. Stevens) Millikens' Bend, La. Hon. Robert Burns Mayes Jackson Marshall William McCormick Scott County James Richard McCravey (Banking Business) Forest Daniel McEachern Vaiden Haden Mathews McKay Madison Chas. Gilmer McGee Columbus James Greer McGowan (Lawyer) Water Valley Frederick Zollicoff er Mills Texas William Minor Mitchell (Attorney) Grenada Geo. Peyton Moore* Red Banks Edwin Lee Mounger Greenwood William Austin Murch (Attorney) Vicksburg Robert Preston Nail (M.D.) Memphis, Tenn. Jos. Nolan Napier (Farmer) _R. F. D. No. 3, Collins William Kirk Nettles Amite County Eudora Ordonez Trujillo, Honduras Isaac Aloysius Oliver Houston, Texas Isaac Caldwell Pattison Charleston Edward Peeples Peacock (Banker) Clarksdale Robert Edwin Perry (Merchant) Williamsville James Ellen Pope Jackson, Tenn. Chas. Calhoun Provine Cole's Creek Geo. Hiram Provine (M.D.) Cole's Creek James Neeley Provine (Planter) Cole's Creek Robert Foster Provine Cole's Creek Frank McCagger Purnell (Banker) Winona Byron Darius Rivers (Dentist) Louisville, Ky. Edgar Sanders (Atty. at Law) Kosciusko John Wright Sandidge Fort Worth, Texas Paul Hill Saunders (Banker) Laurel Wirt Adams Scott (Teacher) Austin, Texas Richard Dunkley Sessions (M.D., Tulane) Natchez Hubert Anthony Shands Georgetown, Texas Edward Robert Shepherd 1 Cyprement, La. Clarence Lee Sivley (Asst. Genl. Solicitor for Y. & M. V. R. R. and I. C. R. R.) Memphis, Tenn. Augustine Jacqueline Smith Franklin, La. Neulan Smith Crystal Springs Lawrence Yates Spann (Capt. U. S. A.) Washington, D. C. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 219 Chauncey Hardee Stevens Richton Chas. Zollicoffer Stevens Hattiesburg Jos. Johnston Stevens Hattiesburg Samuel Overton Stockett (Planter) Turnbull William Johnson Stockett - Okolona Paul Guilford Stocks* Prentiss County Alfred Holt Stone (Atty. at Law) Greenville Clarence Tillman Trotter* Winona Hiram Clarke Tye (Merchant) Pickens Geo. Hodge Vineyard Helena, Ark. Samuel Powell Walker University Benj. Needham Ward (M.D.) Como Jas. . Nicholas Ware Clarksville, Ark. Geo. Hanson Warfield. Lexa, Ark. Hugh Chalmers Watson Greenville Lyman Weller Memphis, Tenn. Ludie Eggleston Williams . ^ Grenada William Richardson Woods Indian Territory Walter Cannon Wooten Richardson's, Tenn. John Halbert Wright Memphis, Tenn. Marcus J. Wright, Jr. _ Washington, D. C. Willie Barr Wright Greenville James Allan Yerger* Greenville SESSION OF 1888-89. Degrees Conferred. Master of Arts. Algernon Jasper Aven (B.A., Univ. of -Miss.). Mississippi College, Clinton William Walter Rivers (B.A.. Univ. of Miss.) Helena, Ark. Bachelor of Laws. Evan M. Barber (Atty. at Law) Martins Edward Jeffries Buck (Banker) St. Francisville, La. Hon. John Brooks Eckles (Atty. at Law) Sardis Guston Thomas Fitzhugh (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn- William Minor Mitchell (Atty. at Law) Grenada William Austin Murch (Atty. at Law) Vicksburg John Bennett Ross (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Chas. Firman Smith (Atty. at Law) Nashville, Tenn. William Johnson Stockett (Atty. at Law ) Okolona James Barnett Thompson* Yazoo City Samuel A. Wilkinson (Atty. at Law) ..South McAlister, I. T. John Fernanders Williams* Pontotoc County Bachelor of Arts. Samuel Holloway (Atty. at Law) . . _ Memphis, Tenn. 220 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Bachelor of Science. Samuel Madison McWhorter Tupelo Chas. Calvin Swinney (County Supt. Education) -Lexington Lula Ann Whitten (Mrs. W. J. East) Senatobia Bachelor of Philosophy. Lawson Burfoot Aldrich (Atty. at Law) Baton Rouge, La. Walter Eugene Anderson* (Atty. at Law) Clarksdale Hon. John Hodge Arrington (Atty. at Law; member Leg.) Monticello William Frank Ashley (M.D.) Lexington Jefferson Davis Brown* Copiah County Edwin Clifford Finley (Civil Engineer) Tupelo William Shryoc Hemingway (Atty. at Law) Jackson Thaddeus Boothe Lampton (Merchant ; Banker) Magnolia M ar y Little * University Walter Pelham Mills (Merchant) McComb Edward Beauchamp Pierce (Atty. at Law) Van Buren, Ark. Eugene Harper Roberts (Ph.D.; Banker; Merchant) Bay St. Louis Walton Shields (Dist. Atty.; U. S. V.) Greenville Rev. Milton Samuel Smith Collins John Jefferson Lee Spence (Supt. City Schools) Monticello, Ark. Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Law Department. Guston Thomas Fitzhugh LL.B. with Special Distinction Chas. Firman Smith LL.B. with Special Distinction James Barnett Thompson* ..LL.B. with Special Distinction William Minor Mitchell LL.B. with Distinction Department of Literature, Science and the Arts. Lawson Burfoot Aldrich _B.P. with Special Distinction Eugene Harper Roberts . B.P. with Special Distinction Walton Shields B.P. with Special Distinction Lula Ann Whitten B.S. with Special Distinction Senior Speakers and Essayists Appointed. John Bennett Ross . Valedictorian of the Law Class Walton Shields Valedictorian of the Literary Class Edwin Clifford Finley Oration Samuel Holloway .Oration William Shryoc Hemingway. Oration Charles Firman Smith Oration James Barnett Thompson. __ .Essay UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 221 Medalists for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Eugene Lanier Sykes First Medal Thomas Brady Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Medals. John R. Cocke First Medal John R. Turner Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Edwin Lee Mounger First Medal Edwards Peebles Peacock Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Original Debate. Guston Thomas Fitzhugh Phi Sigma Society Medal John Bennett Ross Hermaean Society Medal Anniversary Orators-Elect for 1890. James Lusk Alcorn, Jr.* Hermaean Orator John Argyle Franklin Phi Sigma Orator New Students. John Franklin Allen Hallam, Texas Walter Campbell Allen (Atty. at Law) Tuscon, Arizona Theo. Edgar Backstrom Water Valley E. M. Barber (Atty. at Law) Biloxi John Thomas Barry (M.D.) Paris Elias Beasley (Physician) r Coal Creek, Tenn. Percy Bell Greenville Theo. Borroum Corinth Thomas Brady (Lawyer) Brookhaven Charles Evans Catchings (Physician) Woodville John Cock (Atty. at Law) Atoka, I. T. Reuben Davis (Mail Clerk) Jackson, Tenn. Mark Stovall Dougherty (Merchant) Coldwater Thomas F. Elkin (M.D.) Nettleton Fletcher Enochs (Lumberman; Supt. F. & G. R. R.) Fernwood Thomas Edwin Enochs (Accountant) Fernwood Chas. Joseph Gee Carroll County William Shields Goodwin Bradey, Ark. J. B . Hopson Pittsboro Clarence Richard Hoye (Merchant) Newton Ethel Hutson (Teacher and Artist) A. & M. College, Texas Jesse Walker Ivy (Planter) Mount Pleasant Joseph Lamar Lee Inverness Thomas Thaddeus Lewis Copiah County 222 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. William Bryan Lockwood (Atty. at Law)... Crystal Springs Horace Arthur May Clarksville, Ark. William Murphy Melton .Holmes County Mack Allen Montgomery* (U. S. Dist. Atty.)-- Oxford William Flowers Nelson (Atty. at Law) Hazlehurst Thomas Norman Ardmon, Okla. Edmond Beaman Oldham Nashville, Tenn . Harrison Orr Crawford James Richard Parker .Webster County Wade Hampton Pevey... Forrest Thomas Franklin Pettus Newton Thomas M. Reddick Coffeeville Geo. James Robertson . Deer Brook William Lloyd Sadler (Cotton Broker) ..New Albany Walter Scales (Cotton Mill Supt.) Starkville Edward Abernathy Sears Holly Springs Francis Polk Skipwith Oxford Jentie Hull Smithers (Teacher) Goodlands, I. T . James Milton Spence Etta James Henderson Stafford Stafford Adam Tonquin Stovall Okolona Chas. Strong (Lawyer) Macon Eugene Lanier Sykes (Atty. at Law ) New York City Cora Tapscott Searcy, Ark. Walter Stonewall Terrell Utica D. Herndon Thomas (Merchant) Baldwyn James Barnett Thompson* (Atty. at Law) Yazoo City John Kennon Townes (Planter; Merchant) Minter City Richard Carnot Townes (Planter; Merchant). Minter City William Feemster Tucker (Lawyer) Woodville John Rittenhouse Turner Lee County Samuel A. Wilkinson Fort Smith, Ark. Boone Williams Alcorn County B. Gilmore Williams (M.D., Bellevue Hospital, Erlanger, Ger- many; L. I. State Hospital) Brooklyn, N. Y. John Fernanders Williams* Pontotoc County William Franklin Williams Louisiana State Nathaniel Howard Williamson (Cotton Business) Memphis, Tenn. William Townes Wynn (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Robert Jackson Young (Lumberman ; Planter) . Crystal Springs SESSION OF 188&-90. Degrees Conferred. Master of Arts. John William Provine (B.S., Univ. of Miss.).. Mississippi College, Clinton John Magruder Sullivan (B.A.) Centenary College, La. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 223 Bachelor of Laws. Levi Holloway Bird (Atty. at Law) Manilla, P. I. Ewing Earle Brougher (Atty. at Law ; Teacher) Linden, Texas William Bullard (Atty. at Law) Scranton Henry Thomas Millsaps (Atty. at Law) Hazlehurst Mack Allen Montgomery* (U. S. Dist. Atty., 2d term) Oxford Edward Beauchamp Pierce (B.P.; see Class of 1889) Van Buren, Ark. James Houston Price (Atty. at Law) Magnolia Walton Shields (see Class of 1889) Greenville Adam Tonquin Stovall (Atty. at Law) Okolona Lawrence Eugene Thompson (Atty. at Law) Texas Henry Jones Woods (Atty. at Law) Meridian Bachelor of Arts. Bartlett Fulton Jones (Merchant) Hernando Samuel Hall Kimmons (Teacher; Atty. at Law) Fort Smith, Ark. Paul Hill Saunders (M.A. 1891; Ph.D. 1894; Fellow in Math. Univ. of Miss., 1890-92; Asst. Prof. Latin and Greek, 1892- 95; Prof. Greek 1895-1905) Laurel Hubert Anthony Shands (M.A. 1891; Ph.D. 1893; Fellow in En- glish 1890-93; Banker; University of Miss.; Prof. English S. W. University 1893-1905; Prof, of Rhetoric and Oratory Univ. of Miss. 1905-06) Georgetown, Texas Robert Dennis Williams (M.D.) .' Love Station Bachelor of Science. James Lusk Alcorn, Jr.* (Atty. at Law) Clarksdale Frank Clarke Holmes (Trustee of University; Fellow in Natural History and Geology, Univ. of Mis's., 1890-92; Atty. at Law; Local Attorney for I. C. R. R.) Hernando James Monroe Kyle (Planter) Batesville Chas. Calhoun Provine Austin, Texas Bachelor of Phiilosophy. Lucien Beverley Howry (Department of Justice) Washington, D. C. Crawford Toy Johnson (U. S. Commissioner's Office)-. Chattanooga, Tenn. Thomas Ovid Mabry (Fellow in Chemistry Univ. of Miss. 1890- 92; A.M.; M.S.; Asst. Prof. Natural History Univ. of Miss. 1892-98; Educator) _Rock Hill, S. C. Thompson Lamar Ross (First National Bank) Jackson Edgar Dudley Stone (Atty. at Law) Greenville Department Diplomas. Rev. Harry Stonewall Davidson Bowie, Texas John Argyle Franklin (Atty. at Law; see New Students 1886) Hot Springs, Ark. 224 I NIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. DlSTlN< riONS and Medals Awarded. Levi Holloway Bird William Bullard .... Edward Beauchamp Pierce Henry Thomas Millsaps Walton Shields LL.B. with Special Distinction LL.B. with Distinction LL.B. with Distinction ..LL.B. with Distinction LL.B. with Distinction Department of Science, Literature and the Arts. Paul Hill Saunders B.A. with Special Distinction Thomas Ovid Mabry B.P. with Distinction Hubert Anthony Shands B.A. with Distinction Senior Speakers and Essayists Appointed. Levi Holloway Bird Valedictorian of the Law Class Paul Hill Saunders Valedictorian of the Literary Class James Lusk Alcorn, Jr* Oration Frank Clarke Holmes Oration Crawford Toy Johnson Oration Edward Beauchamp Pierce Oration Thompson Lamar Ross Oration Hubert Anthony Shands Oration Walton Shields Oration Medalists for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medal. William Harrison Carter First Medal Walter Claude Blount Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Garland Mordecai Jones First Medal Milling Marion Satterfield . Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Percy Bell First Medal Harry Stonewall Davidson Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Original Debate. Thompson Lamar Ross Phi Sigma Society Medal Crawford Toy Johnson Hermean Society Medal Anniversary Orators-Elect fob 1891. Alfred Holt Stone Hermaean Society Orator James Ellen Pope Phi Sigma Society Orator New Students. John Franklin Adams Madison County John Mosby Alford (M.D.) Copiah County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 225 William Blair Alford (Merchant) Gallman John Welcome Allen Kosciusko Lomax Strudwick Anderson*(M.D.) ...Port Gibson Jacob Vastine Austin Raleigh Jennie May Austin Raleigh Walter Winfield Barber* Meridian Austin Fowlkes Barbour (Insurance) Yazoo City Jesse Richard Barry, Jr Phillipine Islands William Jasper Beasley (Planter) Hazlehurst John Henry Beavers (M.D.) Caseyville Thomas Bell Benson (M.D.) Eufaula, I. T. Bertie Lynn Beynes University William Spurzheim Biles (Real Estate) Memphis, Tenn. Levi Holloway Bird Manilla Walter Lee Bird Monticello Walter Claude Blount Water Valley Estelle Boothe* Sardis William Edwin Boothe (Atty . at Law) Attala County Luther Rawls Briscoe* Attala County J. F. Brown* Meridian William Bullard (Atty. at Law) Scranton Chas. Roby Bush M aeon Chas. Otway Carter Fort Worth, Texas Eugene Hutson Carter (Cotton Broker) Meridian William Harrison Carter (Merchant) Columbus Erasmus Glass Caston (Lawyer) Jasper County Richard Oscar Catchings (Planter) Georgetown Robert Hamilton Christian. Panola County Rev. Nimrod Lafayette Clarke Gunter, Texas Sudie Combs (Mrs. S. C. Pratt) .- Lake Creek, Texas Walter Clarence Coney (M.D.) Pike County John Kuhl Cowan (U. S. Army) Washington, D. C. William Buford Cowan, Jr. (Teacher; Lawyer) Nashville, Tenn. H. R. Craig New Orleans, La. Edgar Franklin Crawford (Teacher) Coldwater Rev. Harry Stonewall Davidson Bowie, Texas William Peyton Dobbins (Supt. City Schools) Corinth Louis Nivem Doyle Montgomery County Walter Hugh Drane (Professor of Civil Engineering) University Thomas Haywood Emerson* Cub Lake Dora Evans (Mrs. Applewhite; Teacher) Attala County Thomas Carlyle Fairly* Union Church Harry Lee Ferguson Panama Zone Frank Ferrell (Physician) Ashland William Blount Folsom (Journalist, Argus) Brinkley, Ark. John Brooks Fontaine (Lawyer) Pontotoc John Taylor Foxworth Stratford, Texas Walter Lenoir Foxworth (Accountant) Lake Charles, La. 15 226 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Weston Miller Fulton Birmingham, Ala. Joseph Bacon Garrard (Banker) Ocean Springs Lynne Van Horn Gerdine West Point William Ewell Gill* Gillsburg James Alcorn Glover Fork Land, Ala. Edward Lee Grady* Cochrum Columbus Kilgor Hall (Planter) Waterford John H. Hammack Texas Elizabeth Hampton (Mrs. E. E. Brougher) Hughes Springs, Texas William Carroll Handley Grand View, Texas Jeff Davis Hardy (Civil Engineer) Honduras Edwin Thomas Hayes Wayne County John Isom Hayes Wayne County John Lawrence Hemby Lawrence Robert Hiram Henry, Jr. (Secretary Clarion Ledger Co.) Jackson Thomas Wang Huey (M.D. Tulane) Dentville L. Jenkins* (Planter) Colbert Ulysses Wharton Johns Madison Garland Mordecai Jones Newnan, Ga. Henry Spratley Jones* (Asst. Cashier Chem. Nat. Bank, St. Louis, Mo.; Cashier Bank of Commerce) Hattiesburg Rev. Neville Joyner Kelley Mozart Kauff man Greenville James Isaac Kendrick Steel Creek, N. C. Duke McDonald Kimbrough (Atty. at Law) Oxford Jesse John Lee (Teacher; Planter; Co. Supt. Education) Magnolia James Stephen Logan Fayette Tucker Madison Brooksville Rev. Albert Martin Yazoo City Sam Chapman Massingale (Atty. at Law) Fort Worth, Texas Alice Miller Smith County Francis Miller Smith County James Andrew Murray Eugoly, La. Moses Walter Murray (D.D.S.) I. T. Annie Musselwhite Holmes County John Ignatius McCormick (M.D.) Yazoo City Milton Wade McCrorey Calhoun City Alexander Blanton McDowell Bolivar John Lee McFarland (Southern Express Co.) Nashville, Tenn. Ernest W. McClelland (Merchant) Durant Lewis Marshall Nance (Salesman, Norvell, Shapleigh Hard- ware Co.) Palestine, Texas Geo. Blocker Neville (Atty. at Law) Meridian William Lewis Nugent, Jr Jackson Howard Jones Perkins Batesville Joseph Ambrose Posey Union City, Tenn. James Houston Price Amite County William Turk Priestley (Cotton Broker) Yazoo City UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 227 Katie Rayburn* (Mrs. J. N. Webb) Toccopola Harrison Patton Reid Holly Springs Learned D. Rineheart (Merchant) Booneville James Henry Russell* Lafayette County Samuel Jackson Sanderson (Teacher Central University).. Richmond, Ky. Milling Marion Satterfield Port Gibson Vines Jones Satterfield (Dentist; Physician) Marion, Ark. James Sharman* Clarke County Daniel Hugh Shipp (Planter) Zieglerville Richard Oliver Simmons (M.D. Louisville) Alexandria, La. Edgar Jos. Simmons (Atty. at Law) Magnolia Frank Calhoun Smith Memphis, Tenn. James Walton Smith (Sec. State Convention of La.) Baton Rouge, La. Leon Stein (Merchant) Greenwood. . Chas. Bryan Stewart Memphis, Tenn. Thomas Bryan Stewart* Memphis, Tenn. Daniel Turnbull Stirling Bayou Sara, La. Aubrey Ellis Strode (Atty. at Law) Amherst, Va. Hampton Mundall Sullivan Memphis, Tenn. William Alfred Sykes* Aberdeen Clarence Cleveland Taylor (Merchant) Hope, Ark. Eugene Dudley Taylor (Banking Business) Sardis Jos. Rodgers Taylor Jackson Robert Lee Thomas .. Memphis, Tenn. Jos. Winter Thorington Montgomery, Ala. William Shepherd Vancleave (Merchant) Ocean Springs Erastus Duncan Vineyard Lexa, Ark. Frank S. Wall Scott County Jennie Wall Sardis James Langdon Wardlaw z Winslow, Arizona James Buchanan Warren (Traveling Salesman) Bloomington, 111 . Asa Haswell Weatherly (Atty. at Law) San Angelo, Texas Charles Fenner Webb (Teacher) Fort Worth, Texas Charles Bell Williams (Atty. at Law) Chickasaw County Geo. Davis Woolard San Antonio, Texas Henry Jones Woods Meridian SESSION OF 1890-91. Degrees Conferred. Master of Arts. Paul Hill Saunders (see Class of 1890; B. A. Univ. of Miss. 1890) Fellow in Mathematics 1891) Laurel Prof. James F. Sellers (B.A. Univ. of Miss.) Miss. College Hubert Anthony Shands (see Class of 1890; B.A. Univ. of Miss. 1890; Fellow in English Univ. of Miss. 1891) Georgetown, Texas 228 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Bachelor of Laws. James Lusk Alcorn, Jr.* (B.S. 1890; Atty. at Law) Clarksdale Walter Eugene Anderson* (B.P. 1890; Atty. at Law) Clarksdale Hon. James Aleorn Glover (Atty. at Law; member Legislature; Capt. U. C. V. 1898) Clarksdale Samuel Holloway (B.A. 1S89; Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Little Berry Moody (Atty. at Law) Houston, Texas Samuel Davi j Neill (District Attorney) _. Indianola Lewis Ernest Sawyer (Atty. at Law; U. S. V. 1898) Hot Springs, Ark. James Logan Stephens (Atty. at Law) Fayette Alfred Holt Stone (Insurance; Planter) Greenville Hon. Jesse Britain Webb (Atty. at Law; member Legislature; District Attorney) Summitt Bachelor of Arts. Nathaniel Jefferies Buck (M.D. Univ. of Penn.) Baltimore, Md. John Clark Johnson (Teacher; Prof. Oratory and Rhetoric). .University Edwin Lee Mounger (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Bachelor of Science. Edward Galtney Martin Lee Daniel McEachern Carrollton Frederick Zollicoffer Mills Texas James Ellen Pope (Principal City Schools Oxford; Atty. at Law) Jackson, Tenn. Wirt Adams Scott (Prof. Institute for Deaf and Dumb) Austin, Texas Hon. John Black Vineyard (Atty. at Law; member Legis- lature) Marianna, Ark. Department Diplomas. Richard Baugh Eggleston Yalobusha County Robert Torrey (Prof. Pedagogy) University Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Department of Law. James Lusk Alcorn, Jr* LL.B. with Special Distinction Walter Eugene Anderson* LL.B. with Distinction Samuel Holloway LL.B. with Special Distinction Little Berry Moody LL.B. with Special Distinction Alfred Holt Stone LL.B. with Distinction Department of Literature, Science and the Arts. Wirt Adams Scott B.S. with Distinction John Black Vineyard B.S. with Distinction Senior Speakers and Essayists Appointed. Little Berry Moody Valedictorian of the Law Class Wirt Adams Scott Valedictorian of the Literary Class UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 229 James Lusk Alcorn, Jr* Oration Walter Eugene Anderson * Oration Nathaniel Jefferies Buck Oration Samuel Holloway Oration John Clarke Johnson Oration Daniel McEachern Oration James Allen Pope Oration Medalists fob Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshmen Medals. John A. Hammack First Medal Samuel Powell Walker Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshmen Medal. Rosswell Valentine Booth, Jr.* First Medal John Nathaniel Flowers Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Garland Mordecai Jones First Medal Milling Marion Satterfield Second Medal Senior Medals fob Excellence in Obiginal Debate. Little Berry Moody Phi Sigma Society Medal Walter Eugene Anderson* Hermaean Society Medal Annivebsary Obatoes-Elect fob 1892. William Harrison Carter Hermaean Society Orator Percy Bell Phi Sigma Society Orator New Students. Wilmer VanLear Alexander* Ripley Sidney Melvin Austin ; Madden Robert Lee Bartels (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. James Warsaw Bell (B.A., Univ. of Miss.; Prof. Secondary Ed- ucation) University David Blackburn Conehatta Benjamin Roscoe Blankenship Harrison County Ben Edwards Blow (Atty. at Law) St. Louis, Mo. Eva Lillian Boothe (Mrs. Pepper) Lexington Roswell Valentine Booth, Jr.* Vicksburg Dudley Isom Branham (Merchant) Seymour, Texas Frederick D . Brown Natchez Leon Suggs Brown (U. S. Mail Service) Siloam Springs, Ark. Claudius Isaac Brumfield (Principal Tylertown Institute; Ac- countant) Tylertown Daniel Clyde Brumfield (Teacher; Medical Student; State Hospital..) Vicksburg 230 I w I ERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. John Bunch (Circuit Clerk)-- Yazoo City Thomas Bentley Butler Amite County Edward Gaines Carter (Cotton Broker) Memphis, Tenn. Albert M. Cartwright, Jr. (Teacher) Collierville, Tenn. William Franklin Cleveland Atkins, Ark. James William Collier (M.C.) Washington, D. C. Minnie Cowan ...Oxford Samuel Neill Craig Bright James Crockett (D.D.S.) Texas Marie C. Curtis New York, N. Y. George Dooley Oxford Oscar Lee Dooley Oxford James Daniel Duncan Baird William Murff Faison Indianola Nathan Baer Feld Vicksburg Hubert Ferrell Vernon, Texas James Nathaniel Flowers Jackson Miss Charlie Helen Garner (Mrs. Jas. Finley, Tupelo, Miss.; Instructorian Elocution ; Author) Tupelo Albert Garratt Carroll County Lee Gibbs (Deputy Chancery Clerk) Yazoo City Quesney Dibrell Gibbs Oklamoha State Elton John Gilmer* Toccopola Georgia Goodloe (Mrs. William Cole Early) Memphis, Tenn. Paul Flemynge Green (B.S.; Law Class) Greenville Curtis Scurlock Guy (Planter) . Holcomb John Davis Hawkins Vaiden Will Saunders Horton Dallas, Ark. Williard Carter Howry (U. S. V. 1898) Washington, D. C. Edwin William Hunter Texas Edwin Lee Johnson Oxford Thomas Hill Johnson Chickasaw County Dudley W. Jones, Jr. (M.D.) Brookhaven Nina Jones (Mrs. J. W. Melter) Hillsboro, Texas Hugh Clinton Kelley* Raleigh Thomas Charles Kimbrough West Point Thomas Preston Kimbrough Itta Bena Jos. Chandler Knight Dublin, Texas Leon Lewis 340 Canal Street, New Orleans, La. Alonzo William Little Trenton Oliver Anderson Lomax (M.D.) Copiah County Minnie Markette (Mrs. T. D. Ruffin) Memphis, Tenn. Chas. Weaver Melton* Holmes County Calvin Miller (Attorney at Law) Sardis M. Bascom Miller (Merchant and Planter) Cockrum Thomas Bell Miller (Dairyman) Buntyn, Tenn. Albert C. Mitchell (Artist, Commercial Appeal) Memphis, Tenn. Little Berry Moody Houston, Texas UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 231 William J. Mosby, Jr.' Canton Benjamin Freeland Moseley (Druggist) Gulfport James Thomas McCafferty Moorehead William Buford McCorkle (Pharmacist) Fort Smith, Ark. Juliet McKie (Mrs. C. O. Williams) Oxford Needham Raiford Packwood China Grove William Barksdale Parker Grenada Charles Gale Petrie (Merchant) St. Louis, Mo. Wayland Howard Poole Wilkinson County Edgar Braxton Provine (M.D.) Big Creek Clem V. Ratcliffe (Court Stenographer) Summitt John Charles Ratliff Scott County Percy Ray (Planter) Indianola William James Rogers Baldwyn William Watkins Rogers Winona Alfred Holt Roudebush St. Louis, Mo. William Barton Rundle (Accountant; Lawyer) Vicksburg William S. Bailey Russell (Teacher) _ Texas Samuel Clark Russwurm (M.D.) Latonia, Ark. William Harrison Rutland Pleasant Hill Lewis Ernest Sawyer Friar's Point John Sidney Sharpe (M.D., Tulane) Grenada Joshua Harper Smither (Planter) Corsicana, Texas Robert Eugene Smither Missouri John Alexander Smylie (Atty. at Law) : Crystal Springs John Matthew Sparks Oxford David Newton Stinson West Point Sam Durr Terrell Crystal Springs William Gerard Thompson Enid Trochu Stonewall Turner Canton Jesse Marion Vineyard (Atty. at Law) Helena, Ark. Edward Wallace Oxford Pearl Walter (Poultry Farmer) Route No. 4, Newark, Conn. Jesse Britton Webb Brookhaven Thomas Charles White (Druggist) New York City James Porter Wilkins* (M.D.) Oxford Hardy Jasper Wilson (Atty. at Law) Hazlehurst William Wilson Arkansas John Arche Wise (Merchant) Hazlehurst Chas. T. Woolfolk Flagstaff, Ariz. Pierce Berdy Woolard Cleveland Station Thomas Carey Wynne (D.D.S.) Holly Springs 232 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. SESSION OF 1891-92. Degrees Conferred. Master of Arts. Samuel Hal Kimmons (B.A., Univ. of Miss., 1S90) Fort Smith, Ark. Thomas Ovid Mabry (B.P., Univ. of Miss., 1890; see Class of 1890) Rock Hill, S. C. Bachelor of Laws. Chas. Bismark Ames (Atty. at Law) Oklahoma City, Okla. Alfonzo Bobbitt Amis (Atty. at Law) Meridian William Haycraft Archer* (Atty. at Law) Greenville Hon. Earle Leroy Brewer (Atty. at Law; State Senator; District Attorney) Clarksdale Stone Deavers (Atty. at Law) Laurel Jos. Walton Drake* Jackson, La. Sylvester Copell Gardner (Atty. at Law) Texas Frank Clarke Holmes (see Class of 1890; Atty. at Law; A.B., 1890) Hernando Hon. Pleasant Zebulon Jones (Atty. at Law; member Legisla- ture; Farmer) Brookhaven William Flowers Nelson (Atty. at Law) Crystal Springs Simeon Ezekiel Travis (Atty. at Law) Hattiesburg Julian Cooper Wilson (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Chas. T. Woolfolk (Atty. at Law) Arizona State Bachelor of Arts. Weston Miller Fulton (U. S. Weather Bureau, in charge of Knox- ville; Instructor in Meteorology, Univ. of Tenn.)...Knoxville, Tenn. Geo. Peyton Moore* Red Banks William Turk Priestly (Cotton Buyer) Yazoo City Thomas Percy Scott (Proctor University, 1894-'96; Principal City Schools, Brookhaven) Brookhaven Walter Stonewall Terrell (Atty. at Law; City Attorney) ..McKinney, Tex. Bachelor of Science. William Harrison Carter (Professor Mathematics, Centenary College) Columbus John Jos. Huddleston (M.D.) Memphis, Tenn. Byron Darius Rivers (Principal City Schools) Amory Chas. Strong (A.M.; Principal City Schools) =. Macon Bachelor of Philosophy. Percy Bell (County Supt. Education; Atty. at Law) Greenville Department Diploma. Minnie Cowan (Professor of Latin) Sherman, Texas UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 233 Distinctions and Medals Awabded. Department of Law. Charles Bismark Ames .LL.B. with Special Distinction Alfonso Bobbitt Amis :LL.B. with Special Distinction Stone Deavors LL.B. with Special Distinction Jos. Walton Drake* LL.B. with Special Distinction Frank Clarke Holmes LL.B. with Special Distinction Julian Cooper Wilson LL.B. with Distinction Department of Literature, Science and the Arts. William Harrison Carter B.S. with Distinction Senior Speakers and Essayists Appointed. Joseph Walton Drake Salutatorian Weston Miller Fulton _ Valedictorian Chas. Bismark Ames Oration Percy Bell Oration Frank Clarke Holmes Oration William Turk Priestley Oration Thomas Percy Scott Oration Medalists for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Junius Taylor Ireys First Medal John Stacy Hibbler Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Thomas Charles Kimbrough First Medal Camillus Kaizbue Caruthers, Jr ". Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Roswell Valentine Booth, Jr* First Medal William Lewis Nugent, Jr Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Original Debate. William Harrison Carter Hermaean Society Medal Jos. Walton Drake Phi Sigma Society Medal Anniversary Orators — Elect for 1893. Sidney McCain Smith Hermaean Society Orator Garland Mordecai Jones Phi Sigma Society Orator New Students. Chas. Bismarck Ames Oklahoma City, Okla. Alvin Woodson Amis Connehatta James Buford Anderson College Hill 234 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Ruf us Johnson Applewhite Brookhaven William Haycraf t Archer Greenville Jesse Franklin Ball Pike County Rev. Vance Bailey (Planter) Senatobia William Lee Bankston (Planter) Tunica Luella Barnett Booneville Robert Mitchell Baum (Druggist) Seattle, Wash. Washington Lovett Bell Hamburg, Ark. George Perkins Bondurant Birmingham, Ala. Andrew Bostwick* Ripley Earle Leroy Brewer Clarksdale Jos. C. Caldwell Panola County Vernon Jones Caldwell Courtland Camillus Kotzebue Caruthers, Jr. (M.D.) Pine Bluff, Ark. Isham Pinkney Clayton (D.D.S.) ...Hattiesburg Nannie Cox* Booneville Edgar Lawrence DeArman Johnson County, Mo. Stone Deavors (Chancellor Second District) Laurel May Donaldson Rosamond, 111. Jos. Walton Drake* Jackson, La. James Torry Drennan New Orleans, La. Violet Dyer St. Louis, Mo. J. E. Fisher Oxford John Wheat Fitzhugh Jackson Henry Sarsfield Flood (Atty. at Law) Natchez Patrick Henry Fontaine Madison William Albert Gaddis (Merchant) Bolton Sylvester Copell Gardner Amite County John Starr Gilmer* (Atty. at Law) Stephensville, Texas Patrick Henry Griffin* Meridian Malcolm Smith Graham Forest Andrew Alexander Hall* Noah Henry Coleman Hamilton (Planter) Aberdeen Edward Daniel Heine Natchez Lindsey Herring (Merchant) Courtland John Stacy Hibbler (see Class of 1898) West Point Frank Roscoe Holloway (Merchant) Richton Dabney Howard Hood Greenville Samuel Marion Houston (See Class of 1897) West Point Junius Taylor Ireys Greenville Pleasant Zebulon Jones Monticello Richard Barrington Kemp (I. C. R. R.) Canton Leslie Benjamin Lampton (Merchant) Tylertown John Harvey Landrum Clark Richard Eugene Leigh (Teacher) Houston, Texas Robert Paine Linfield (Supt. Schools) Scranton Miss M. M. Little Collins Thaddeus Constantine Lockard (Atty. at Law) Meridian UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 235 Walter Washington Lockard (Atty. at Law) Yazoo City Garland Gordon Lyell Jackson John M. Matthews (Postmaster) Wesson Chas. Edwin McCord Copiah County William Hamilton McEachern Vaiden Frederick Dabney Miller (Atty. at Law, Vicksburg to 1894) McHenry James Montgomery _ _ _ I Potts Camp Richard Semmes O'Leary (Musician) Vicksburg William Harper Pope* Brandon Ira Sandifer Pressley Dallas, Texas Mary Puckett . Hinds County Arthur Ray Carrollton Hugh Anthony Reynolds (Merchant) Braden, I. T. Daniel Dupree Richards (Chancery Clerk) Columbus Thomas Perry Richardson Memphis, Tenn. Stanford Lee Rivers (D.D.S.) Jackson, Tenn. Johnson Jameson Rogers, Jr Tupelo Edmund Wilcox Rootes Grand View, Texas Harry Burdell Sanford (M.D.) Memphis, Tenn. Oliver Abbott Shaw (Supt. Schools) Winona Benjamin Paxton Smith (Farmer) Brookhaven Robert C. Smith (Merchant) Canton Lynn Donelson Spight (M. C.) Ripley Albert Whitfield Sullivan* (Atty. at Law) Oxford James Edward Torrey (Atty. at Law) Fayette Simeon Ezekiel Travis Hattiesburg John Dabney Turley (Cashier Bank of Coldwater) Coldwater Robert L. Waugh (Drummer) Kosciusko William Moore White (Electrician; Mgr. L. W. R. R.) McComb City Richardson Eggleston Wilbourn (Atty. at Law).. Meridian Wallace Wilkinson (Atty. at Law) South McAlester, I. T. James Eldin Woodward Eucutta SESSION OF 1892-93. Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Laws (Oper is Causa). Hon. Robert Harvey Thompson (A. B. 1869; member of State Senate; member of Constitutional Convention of 1890; member of Code Commission 1891-92; Trustee of Univer- sity 1890-1906) Jackson Doctor of Philosophy. Hubert Anthony Shands (A.B. 1890; A.M. 1891; see Class of 1890) Georgetown, Texas Bachelor of Laws. Walter Campbell Allen (Atty. at Law) Roswell, N. M. Hon. John Hodge Arrington (B.P. 1889; Atty. at Law; member State Legislature) Monticello 236 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Geo. M. Brown (Atty. at Law) Gloster Jesse Freeman Durham (Atty. at Law)... Clarksdale Joseph W. George (Trustee University; Atty. at Law) Yazoo City Hon. Samuel Anderson Jackson* (Member Legislature; Atty. at Law) Kosciusko James A. Ramsey (Atty. at Law) Collins Edgar Sanders (Atty. at Law) : Kosciusko Alexander Yerger Scott (Atty. at Law) 56 Pine St., New York Clarence Lee Sivley (Prof, of Law Univ. of Miss. 1906-07; Asst. Genl. Counsel I. C. R. R. and Y. & M. V. R. R.).. Memphis, Tenn. Sidney McCain Smith (Atty. at Law; Supreme Court Judge) Jackson Edgar Dudley Stone (B.P. 1890; Atty. at Law) Greenwood Aaron Franklin Strawn Arizona State Bachelor of Arts. Estelle Boothe* Sardis Lillian Boothe (Mrs. A. M. Pepper) Lexington Garland Mordecai Jones (Atty. at Law) Newnan, Ga. Francis Polk Skipwith (Cotton Broker) Arkansas Joseph Rogers Taylor (Journalist and Author; Mississippi cor- respondent N. O. Times-Democrat) Jackson Samuel Powell Walker (Principal City Schools) Oakland Bachelor of Science. Theodore Borroum (M.D.) Corinth Wade Hampton Pevey (Teacher; Medical student Tulane, 1899) Forest Bachelor of Philosophy. Jesse Richard Barry, Jr. (Principal City Schools, Senatobia; Associate Principal Oxford Schools) Phillipine Islands Chas. Fenner Webb (Professor Latin, etc., Whitworth Col- lege) Gallatin, Tenn. Department Diplomas. Milton Wade McCrory Texas Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Walter Campbell Allen LL.B. with Dist George M. Brown LL.B. with Special Dist Joseph W. George LL.B. with Dist Samuel Anderson Jackson LL.B. with Dist Edgar Sanders LL.B. with Dist Alexander Yerger Scott LL.B. with Special Dist Clarence Lee Sivley LL.B. with Special Dist Edgar Dudley Stone LL.B. with Special Dist Aaron Franklin Strawn LL.B. with Special Dist Sidney McCain Smith LL.B. with Dist Estelle Boothe* B.A. with Dist Lillian Boothe B.A. with Dist Wade Hampton Pevey B.S. with Dist nction nction nction nction nction nction nction nction nction nction nction nction nction UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 237 Senior Speakers and Essayists Appointed. Chas. Fenner Webb Salutatorian George M. Brown Valedictorian Alexander Yerger Scott Oration Francis Polk Skipwith Oration Sidney McCain Smith Oration Samuel Powell Walker Oration Medalists for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Charles Turner Cottrell* First Medal Anthony Daniel Bourdeaux Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. John C. Carraway.Jr First Medal Walter Washington Lockard Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. John Stacy Hibbler First Medal Garland Gordon Lyell Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Original Debate. Joseph W. George ...Hermaean Society Medal Garland Mordecai Jones Phi Sigma Society Medal Anniversary Orators for 1894. Dudley W. Jones, Jr Hermaean Society Orator Samuel Lizzie Gwin Phi Sigma Society Orator New Students. Robert Buckner Anderson (Lawyer) Port Gibson Milton McLeod Bardwell Louisville, Ky. Ernest Neilson Beard* (Merchant) 1 Columbus Anthony Daniel Bourdeaux New Orleans, La. Richard Harris Bourdeaux II Oklahoma City, Okla. George M. Brown . Gloster Rev. Joseph Buie (Minister M. E. Church; Texas 1893-94) Potter Valley, Cal. John C. Carraway, Jr. (Banker) New York. N. Y. Guy Peace Clark (Merchant) Clarksdale Walter Leonard Clifton Grenada Chas. Turner Cottrell* West Point Alexander M. Denny* Moss Point John Lane Denson Texas Redman Renn Eason (Drummer) Memphis, Tenn. Frank Henry Ervin, Jr.* Columbus Junius Ward Erwin Erwin 238 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Thomas Gaines Fewell (Atty. at Law) Meridian Lucie Gay (Mrs. J. W. Fox) .Greenville Vergil Alexis Griffith Biloxi Frank Harris Essex Edwin King Holloway Oxford John Lamar Hopkins Chicago, 111. Thomas Gates Ivy West Point Samuel Anderson Jackson* Kosciusko Harper Johnson (Atty. at Law) Indianola Joseph Albert Johnson Oxford Chas. Randolph Jones (Banker) Webb City, Mo. Stanley Branch Jones (M.D.) Salisaw, I. T. James George Leavell (Broker) Houston, Texas George Davidson M cLean Winona Albert C. Melchoir (Asst. U. S. Atty.) Rosedale Ira D. Oglesby, Jr. (Merchant) Fort Smith, Ark. Eugene Palmer Jackson Marshall Lewis Perkins Dallas, Texas Albert Gallatin Petty (M.D., Memphis) Connehatta Ephraim Geoffrey Peyton (Capt. U. S. A.) Columbus Samuel Ernest Ragland (Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. James Ramsay (Lawyer) Fayette William Davis Richards (Planter) Inverness John R . Rogers Arkansas William Alonzo Rogers (Planter) Belief ontaine Alexander Yerger Scott Rosedale Chas. Scott, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Rosedale Audley William Shands (Atty. at Law) Sardis James Rushing Shinault Oxford Laurin L. Smith* Madison Lemuel Owen Smith (Planter) Yazoo City Clarence Dudley Sneed (Journalist) New Orleans, La. Edgar Spinks (U. S. Land Office) Jackson Claude Still* (M.D.) Memphis, Tenn. Aaron Franklin Strawn Arizona State Sidney Rosser Thompson Meridian Julius Robertson Tipton (Atty. at Law) Hernando Harden Kimbrough Toney (Merchant) Pine Bluff, Ark. Robert Wade Sunflower County William P. Webster (M.D.) Tula Harry Lon Wetherbee (Merchant) Greenville Peyton Henry White (Pharmacist) West Point Edward Ball Williams (Atty. at Law) Meridian Wrennie Williams ( Dentist) Senatobia Nathaniel Edwards Wilroy Hernando UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 239 SESSION OF 1893-94. Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Laws. (Honoris Causa). Hon. Albert Hall Whitfield (A.B., 1871; A.M., 1873; Prof, of Law, Univ. of Miss., 1891-'94; Judge Supreme Court of Miss., 1894; Chief Justice Supreme Court of Miss.) Jackson Doctor of Philosophy. Paul Hill Saunders (see Cass of 1890; A.B., 1890; A.M., 1891, Univ. of Miss.; Fellow in Mathematics, 1891; Asst. Prof, of Latin and Greek, 1894-'95; Prof, of Greek, Univ. of Miss., 1895-1905; Pres. Laurel Bank) Laurel Master of Arts. Miss Eula Deaton (Graduate I. I. & C; Prof, of Mathematics, Converse College; Asst. Prof, of English, I. I. & C; Teacher in Chicago High Schools; Dean of Women, Univ. of Miss., 1903-'07) San Antonio, Texas Bachelor of Laws. Seddon Akin* (Atty. at Law) Greenville Thomas Brady (Atty. at Law) . Brookhaven Joseph Buie (Minister M. E. Church) Potter Valley, Cal. Hon. James William Collier (Atty. at Law; member Legisla- ture; M. C.) Vicksburg John Starr Gilmer* (Atty. at Law) Stephensville, Texas Garland'M. Jones (A.B.,1893; Atty. at Law) Newnan, Ga. David Lyles Lowry (Atty. at Law) " Vaiden Henry Mounger (Atty. at Law) Columbus Milling M. Satterfield (Atty. at Law) Port Gibson Fisher M. Southworth (Atty. at Law) Atlanta, Ga. John Willis Stovall (Atty. at Law) Stovall Simon Eddings Turner (Atty. at Law) Carrollton Bachelor of Arts. Walter Hugh Drane (Fellow in Mathematics, 1895-'97; A.M., Univ. of Miss., 1897; Prof, of Mathematics, Jefferson Col- lege, 1897-'98; A.M., Harvard, 1900; Asst. in Mathematics and English, 1901-'03 ; Prof, of Civil Engineering since 1903) _ . -University Edwin William Hunter Texas Edwin Lee Johnson (Asst. in Greek, Vanderbilt Univ.) .-Nashville, Tenn. Alfred Holt Roudebush (Teacher) St. Louis, Mo. Bachelor of Science. Walter Lenoir Foxworth (Accountant) Crystal Springs 240 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Bachelor of Philosophy. Roswell Valentine Booth, Jr.* (Atty. at Law; Class of 1896) ...Vicksburg Samuel Lizzie Gwin (Atty. at Law; Capt. U. S. V. 1898 ( Greenwood Dudley W. Jones, Jr. (Physician; County Supt. Education) Hazlehurst William Lewis Nugent, Jr. (Atty. at Law)... .Jackson Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Seddon Akin* LL.B. with Special Distinction Joseph Buie LL.B. with Special Distinction Henry Mounger LL.B. with Special Distinction Milling M. Satterfield LL.B. with Special Distinction John W. Stovall LL.B. with Special Distinction Thomas Brady LL.B. with Distinction James W. Collier LL.B. with Distinction Garland M. Jones LL.B. with Distinction Walter Hugh Drane B.A. with Distinction Edwin Lee Johnson B.A. with Distinction Senior Speakers and Essayists Appointed. Walter Hugh Drane Valedictorian Alfred Holt Roudebush Oration Edwin Lee Johnson Oration James William Collier Oration Garland Mordecai Jones Oration Medalists for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Edward Ball Williams First Medal Talbot Greer Hibbler, Jr Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Thomas Benton Dudley First Medal Stanford Newman Collier Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Duke McDonald Kimbrough First Medal Junius Taylor Ireys . Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Original Debate. Henry Mounger Hermaean Society Freshman Medal John Starr Gilmer* Phi Sigma Society Medal Anniversary Orators for 1894r-95. Manford Esca Denton Hermaean Society Orator George Thompson Mitchell Phi Sigma Society Orator UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 241 New Students. Seddon Akin* Greenville James Edward Alderman (Atty. at Law) Leakesville John Franklin Allen (Atty. at Law) Goodman Alvin Woodson Amis Conehatta William Lane Austin Harperville James Lewis Backstrom Water Valley James Warsaw Bell (Prof, of Secondary Education) University David Blackburn Conehatta Walter Greene Blake Greenville Lucius Lamar Blount Water Valley Thomas Brady Brookhaven Mary Brown Siloam Springs, Ark. Ella Cairns Florida Eugene Stewart Carothers West Point Samuel Slaughter Caruthers (U. S. V. 1898; Physician) Duck Hill Stanford Newman Collier Vicksburg Charlie Compton Natchez William Henry Cook Hattiesburg William Stead Craig (Banker) Tallulah, La. Hiram Dees Cudabac (Mechanic) .Ocean Springs John Sidney Davis Gulfport Mark Ashley Dees Midlothean, Texas Manford Esca Denton : Belen Walter Hugh Drane University Thomas Benton Dudley (Atty. at Law) Friar's Point Malcom Wade Ervin (Merchant) Columbus Marion Griffin Evans (Atty. at Law) ' Memphis, Tenn. Maurice Garland Fulton Danville, Ky. William David Gillespie (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Calvin Ervin Glidewell* Okolona George Paine Hamilton (M.D.) Aberdeen William Maurice Hamner (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Talbot Greer Hibbler, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Scran ton David Alexander Hill (Teacher) Booneville Mrs. David Alexander Hill Booneville J. Allen Hunt Greenville Garnett Logan Jackson (D.D.S.) Dublin, Texas Atlas Jones, Jr. (Teacher) Corrizo Springs, Texas Corrie Jones Booneville Jeff Kent Forest Ollie Lester (Teacher of Elocution) Texas John Laton Lovett (Editor) Memphis, Tenn. Daniel Lyles Lowry Vaiden Charles Maas Canton James Milton McKinney Holly Springs Charles Almo McPherren Pilot Point, Texas Irene Meek (Mrs. Geo. B. McLean)^ Winona 16 242 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. George Thompson Mitchell (Atty. at Law) Tupelo Henry Mounger (Atty. at Law) Columbia Elack Chastain Patton Yale Edith Petrie St. Louis, Mo. Robert Sidney Powell Jackson Harry D. Priestley, Jr. (Banker) Vicksburg Archie Gilbert Roane (Atty. at Law) _ Grenada Lucius Thompson Russell Clarksville, Texas George Marion Ryan (Teacher) Texas William Martin Sanders Porterville Ewell Dal ton Scales Crawford William Edward Segrest (Physician) Brandywine Robert Lee Sims (Accountant) Greenwood Kate A. Skipwith Oxford Kate Smith Nashville, Tenn. William Reid Smith-Vaniz Natchez Thomas Cornelius Spence Pass Christian Dudley Stennis Moscow John Willis Stovall Stovall James Benjamin Stowers (Broker) Morrillton, Ark. Elnathan Tartt (Merchant) Lauderdale Carey Davis Terrell (Electrician) Jackson John Harvey Thompson, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Jackson Simon Eddings Turner Carrollton Hugh Albert Walker Senatobia William Bismarck Watkins Aberdeen Samuel Thomas Watts Scooba Richard Eggleston Wilbourn (Atty. at Law) Meridian Joel Elisha Williams Alligator Hardy Jasper Wilson Gallatin Harriet Wilson Hickman, Ky . William Reuben Wilson Connehatta SESSION OF 1894-95. Degrees Confebbed. Doctor of Laws (Honoris Causa). Hon. William L. Wilson* (Postmaster-General of the United States) Washington, D. C. Doctor of Philosophy. Eugene Harper Roberts (B.P. 1889 Univ. of Miss.; Fellow in Mathematics 1893; Banker) New Orleans, La. Bachelor of Laws. James Edward Alderman (Atty. at Law) Leakesville Cornelius Esco Castle (Atty. at Law) Wagoner, Okla. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 243 Manford Esca Denton (Atty. at Law) Marks Henry Sarsfield Flood (Atty. at Law) Natchez Samuel L. Gwin (Atty. at Law; Capt. U. S. V. 1898) Greenwood Robert Henry Hester (Principal City Schools) Taylorsville Jeff Kent (Atty. at Law) Forest James Owen Lamkin (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Moses David Landau (Atty. at Law) Vicksburg Willis Monroe Lea (Atty. at Law) Clarksdale Willis Newton Lewis (Atty. at Law) Congress William Wales Magruder (Atty. at Law) Starkville Daniel McEachern (Atty. at Law) Carrollton George Thompson Mitchell (Atty. at Law) Tupelo Edwin Lee Mounger (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Elack Chastian Patton (Atty. at Law) Guthrie, Okla. Archibald McDowell Pepper (Atty. at Law) Lexington Frank M. Peyton (Atty. at Law) Jackson William H. Watkins (Atty. at Law) Jackson Wallace Wilkinson (Atty. at Law) S. McAlester, I. T. Bachelor of Arts. Rufus Johnson Applewhite* (M.D.) Brookhaven Miss Luella Barnett * Booneville Walter Washington Lockard (Principal City Schools; County Supt. Education) -. Yazoo City Richard Eggleston Wilbourn (Atty. at Law) Meridian Bachelor of Philosophy. Samuel N. Craig Bright Edwin. Lee Grady* (Teacher City Schools) Greenville David Alexander Hill (Principal City Schools) Booneville Thomas Charles Kimbrough (Atty. at Law; Clerk R. R. Com.) West Point Thaddeus Constantine Lockard (Principal City Schools) Ellisville Oliver Abbott Shaw (Supt. City Schools) Winona Distinctions and Medals Awarded. William H. Watkins LL.B. with Special Distinction William Wailes Magruder LL.B. with Special Distinction Moses David Landau __ LL.B. with Special Distinction James Owen Lamkin LL.B. with Special Distinction Samuel Gwin LL.B. with Distinction Edwin Lee Mounger LL.B. with Distinction George Thompson Mitchell LL.B. with Distinction Daniel McEachern LL.B. with Distinction Senior Speakers. Richard Eggleston Wilbourn Salutatorian William H . Watkins Valedictorian 244 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. David Alexander Hill Oration Samuel N . Craig Oration Edwin Lee Mounger Oration Edwin Lee Grady* Oration Medalists fob Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. William Augustus Cheek First Medal Benjamin Jacoway Allen Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Lowry Rudisville Powell First Medal Kenneth A. Jones, Jr Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Stanford Newman Collier First Medal William Morris Hamner Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Original Debate. Richard Eggleston Wilbourn Hermaean Society Medal Walter Washington Lockard Phi Sigma Society Medal Anniversary Orators for 1895-96. Hardy Jasper Wilson Hermaean Society Audley William Shands Phi Sigma Society OratoJ New Students. Hulette Fuqua Aby Crystal Springs Benjamin Jacoway Allen Oklahoma Jack Avant (Planter) Minter City James McLemore Baird (Merchant) Oxford Jeptha Fowlkes Barbour (Atty. at Law) Yazoo City Ernest Beadles (Banker) Coff eeville Hon. William A. Belk (Atty. at Law; Trustee State Univer- sity) Holly Springs Joel Nelson Berry Noxapater Bertie Lynn Beynes Memphis, Tenn. Oscar Columbus Brothers (Atty. at Law; Pres. City R. R.) Washington, D. C. Frank Cashman (Journalist) L Vicksburg Cornelius Esco Castle Eupora Annie Jones Chandler (Teacher) Oxford William Augustus Cheek Millville John Neely Clagett Natchez Walter Leonard Clifton (President Grenada College) Grenada John Charles Cox Columbus Hiram Hubert Creekmore (Lawyer) Water Valley UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 245 Clarence Dougherty U. S. A. Phillipines John A. Donaldson DeLeon, Texas John Gayle Duke* (Merchant) Scooba Benjamin Howard Durley (M.D.) Aberdeen Jesse Hardy Durley* (U. S. V. 1898) Oxford Eugene Prentiss Eagan Crystal Springs Howard Edmondson (Cotton Compress) Memphis, Tenn. Joel Thomas Ely Oxford James Pellew Faison Indianola Ellington McClellan Fant Clarksdale Hubert Fisher (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Margaret Fitchett _■ Canton Harry Sarsfield Flood Natchez Charles Lowry Garnett Paris, Texas Irma Garrett (Mrs. Irma Ball) Columbia Carrie B. Gary Tupelo Oscar Knox Gary Tupelo Alonzo Graves Mathiston William Nelson Green Stevens, Ark. Robert Hardy (Planter and Lawyer) Byhalia Lucie E. Hawkins (Mrs. Wortley Johnson) ...Water Valley Robert Henry Hester Taylorsville William Hazar Hickey Shawnee, Okla. Robert A. Hill, Jr.* (U. S. V. 1898) . ; Oxford Kenneth A. Jones, Jr Water Valley Lutie Jones (Mrs. Stairs) New York, N. Y . Nina Jones (Mrs. Miller) Hillsboro, Texas Stewart Marvin Jones Laurel James Robert Kennedy (Teacher) Clark County Thomas Hills Kimbrough * Wills Point, Texas Walter S. Knotts (Teacher) Belzoni Wilson Prim Kretschmar (Banker) Greenville James Owen Lamkin Friar's Point Moses David Landau Vicksburg Willis Monroe Lea Clarksdale Memory Ernest Leake Tupelo Carrie Leavell (Teacher Ward's Seminary) Nashville, Tenn. Mrs. Lillie Lewis Oxford Robert Lee Lewis (Oil business) Waco, Texas Willard Newton Lewis Congress Frank Jefferson Love (Accountant) Yazoo City Joseph Wall Luckett, Jr. (Salesman) Gulfport Malcolm Lyell (Accountant) Wesson Daniel McEachern Vaiden William Wailes Magruder Starkville Mamie J. Martin (Mrs. Conn) Corinth Elma Coleman Meek Oxford Isaac Casper Melchoir Rosedale 246 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Joseph Fredie Miller Forest William Henderson Monette* (M.D.) Deasonville John Linson Morris Oklahoma State Maud Morrow (Mrs. C. S. Brown)- University Edwin Lee Munger Vicksburg Julia Miller Murray Ripley Walter Thurston Pate ... Jackson Archibald McDowell Pepper Lexington Howard Jones Perkins_ _. Marks Charles Roberts Pettis West Point, N. Y. Frank M. Peyton (Atty. at Law) Jackson Henry Phillips* Ellisville James Fernandis Pope Birmingham, Ala. Thaddeus W. Pope Medon, Tenn. Lee McGeehee Porter Aberdeen Lowrey Rudisville Powell (Teacher) Wesson Relbue Price (Merchant) . Oxford George Latham Ray_ . Greenwood Juett Revis* (Accountant) Pittsboro Edmund Wilcox Rootes Pontotoc Donald G. Ross 1 Grenada Thomas Percy Scott (Teacher) Brookhaven Troy Curtis Sexton Wesson Fred P. Shelby Shelby Samuel Tilden Shinault Holder, Texas William Percy Shinault (Lawyer) . Oxford Leonard L. Shoemaker (Teacher) New Orleans, La. Cecil Lane Simpson (Atty. at Law) Texas Faison Heathman Smith Oxford Julius M . Smith Coff eeville Katie B . Smith Wesson Minnie Smith (Mrs. W. J. Holt) Indianola James Baker Smylie Wesson Edgar Spinks Toomsuba Hubert Durrett Stephens (District Attorney) New Albany Clarence P. Still (Drummer) Senatobia W. P. Stribbling (Atty. at Law) Columbus Maud M. Sullivan* Oxford Albert Lucius Sutherland Booneville Winnie Tapscott Searcy, Ark. Beda Torgerson * Oxford Clarence Henry Townes Minter City Alden Percy Trotter (U. S. A.) Winona William Franklin Turner Carrollton William Alfred Walker Hutton William H . Watkins Jackson James Brown Wendel Kansas City, Mo. Lynne Barnham West (Mrs. C. W. Hinton) Vicksburg UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 247 John James White, JrT (Supt. Cotton Mills) ... McComb City Albert Wilkinson Washington, D. C. Wallace Wilkinson South McAlester, I. T. Andrew Murray Williams ..Crawford William Aubrey Williamson (Merchant) Pleasant Hill Wildurr Willing (U. S. A. Captain) Hazlehurst Walter H. Witty (Merchant).. ..Winona Chas. Edwin Wright (Journalist) Vicksburg James Brownlow Yellowly Ridgland SESSION OF 1895-9fi. Commencement Preacher. Rt. Rev. Davis Sessums, D.D. Commencement Orator. Rev. Thos. Dwight Witherspoon, D.D., LL.D.* Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Laws. Hon. Charles Bowen Howry (Asistant Attorney-General; Jus- tice, Court of Claims) Washington, D. C. Master of Arts. William R. Mabry* (B.S. Univ. of Miss.).. Senatobia E. L. Sherwood Okolona Charles Strong (B.S. Univ. of Miss. 1892) Macon Bachelor of Laws. Jeptha Fowlkes Barbour (Atty. at Law) Yazoo City Thomas Hickman Barrett (Atty. at Law) Gulfport James W. Bolen (Atty. at Law) Randolph Roswell Valentine Booth, Jr.* (Atty. at Law) Vicksburg Oscar Columbus Brothers, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Washington, D. C. Walter Robert Chapman (Atty. at Law) Indianola Charles Francis Engle (Atty. at Law) Natchez Thomas Gaines Fewell (Atty. at Law) Meridian James Nathaniel Flowers (Atty. at Law) Jackson Charles Lowrey Garnett (Atty. at Law) Holly Springs William Nelson Greene (Atty. at Law) Ripley Memory Ernest Leake (Atty. at Law) Tupelo Abner John Mclntyre (Atty. at Law) Ripley John Linson Morris (Atty. at Law) Etta Edwin Hartsfield Mounger (Atty. at Law) Columbia Howard Jones Perkins (Atty. at Law) Batesville Thompson Lamar Ross (Atty. at Law) Jackson Cecil Lane Simpson (Atty. at Law) Dallas, Texas Hubert Durrett Stephens (Atty. at Law) New Albany Thomas Percy Scott (Supt. City Schools) Brookhaven 248 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Bachelor of Art*. William Henry Cook (Atty. at Law) Hattiesburg John Kuhl Cowan (U. S. Army),.. Oxford Redman Renn Eason Memphis, Tenn. Will Morris Hamner (Atty. at Law) Greenwood John Lamar Hopkins (Teacher; Fellow University Chicago). .Chicago, 111. Harper Johnson (Atty. at Law) Indianola Duke McDonald Kimbrough (Atty. at Law; Trustee State University) Oxford John Laton Lovett (Editor) Memphis, Tenn. Audley William Shands (Atty. at Law) Sardis James Porter Wilkins* (Physician) Oxford Wrennie Williams ( Dentist) Gulfport Bachelor of Science. Nick Wilson Campbell (Electrician) Little Rock, Ark. Junius Taylor Ireys (Physician) Easton, Pa. Gordon Garland Lyell (Chancellor 15th District) Jackson William H. Rutland (Teacher) Pleasant Hill Bachelor of Philosophy. William Lee Bankston Meridian Walter Leonard Clifton (President Grenada College) Grenada William Buford Cowan (Teacher; Lawyer) Nashville, Tenn. Thomas Gates Ivy (Atty. at Law) West Point Edgar Braxton Provine Cole's Creek Hardy Jasper Wilson (Lawyer) Brookhaven Department Diplomas. Bertie Lynne Beynes (Mrs. Hal Hart) Kansas City, Mo. Benjamin George Humphreys (Member of Congress) Greenwood Carrie B. Leavell (Teacher Ward's Seminary) Nashville, Tenn. James Rushing Shinault (Merchant) Oxford Beda Torgerson * Oxford Edmund Ball Williams (Atty. at Law) Meridian Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Charles Lowrey Garnett LL.B. with Special Distinction Jeptha Fowlkes Barbour LL.B. with Distinction Charles Francis Engle LL.B. with Distinction Senior Speakers Appointed. Charles L. Garnett Salutatorian Gordon Garland Lyell Valedictorian Walter Leonard Clifton Oration Audley William Shands Oration John Laton Lovet t Oration UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 249 Hardy Jasper Wilson Oration Harper Johnson Oration Jeptha Fowlkes Barbour Oration Thompson Lamar Ross Oration Walter Robert Chapman Oration Charles Francis Engle Oration Edwin H. Mounger Oration Medalists fob Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Pat Henry, Jr First Medal Edwin R. Holmes Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Landrum P. Leavell First Medal Clarence H. Townes Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Harry D. Priestly, Jr First Medal Wildurr Willing Second Medal Senior Medals fob Excellence in Original Debate. Gordon Garland Lyell Hermaean Society Medal Audley W. Shands Phi Sigma Society Medal Annivebsaby Orators fob 1896-97. Robert Edward Halsell Blackstone Society Orator Maurice Garland Fulton Phi Sigma Society Orator Junior Medalist for 1896-97. William Albert Lucas Washington New Students. Roderick Allen (R. R. Agent) Nettleton, Ark. Thomas Hickman Barrett Edwards Ledru White Bayne (Doctor) Hattiesburg Gayle Carothers Beanland (Theological Student in Louisville Ky. ). Oxford John Hargrove Beard (Merchant) Columbus James Washington Beard (Teacher) Mud Creek James W. Bolen (Lawyer) Randolph Jos. M. Bonelli (Teacher) Vicksburg Roswell Valentine Booth, Jr.* Vicksburg Alice May Borchert Vicksburg Erma Borchert (Teacher) Vicksburg Isaac D. Borders (Minister M. E. Church, South) Holly Springs Walter Chew Brewer Black Hawk David Oliver Bridgf orth . . _ Natchez 250 ' MIVBRSITY OP MISSISSIPPI. Minnie Brown Tyro Walter Augustus Brown. Meridian Edward Eugene Bruner* .Banner Jos. Medicus Bynum, Jr. (Physician) Booneville Penquite Cameron (Farmer). Canton Eugene Campbell* ...University Thomas J. Campbell (D.D.S.) Okolona H en ry Walter Carothers Tupelo James William Cassedy (Lawyer) Brookhaven Kyle Chandler (Merchant) West Point Walter Robert Chapman Indianola Marlin Townes Collier Sherman, Texas Elizabeth Cowan (Teacher) Oxford Julius Davidson Arkansas Hugh Linwood Dickson Water Valley W 7 . Emmett Dukeminier (Salesman) Meridian Nina Elmer Biloxi Chas. Francis Engle Natchez Frank Henry Ervin* Crawford Alexander W. Evans (Cashier Bank) Mount Olive William Van Fant Newton Frank Billups Ferrell Ellisville Thomas Gaines Fewell Meridian Robert Smith Finley Tupelo Charles Newman Flowers Crystal Springs James Nathaniel Flowers Jackson Harry Rascoe Fulton (Assistant Professor of Botany in Penna. State College) State College, Pa. Willis William Garth (Planter) Columbus Edward Buell Gibson Holly Springs Sarah E. Gillespie (Mrs. I. D. Borders) Holly Springs Mamie Graham Ruston, La. Robert Edward Halsel - Laurel Lamar Hardy (Atty. at Law) New York City William Henry Hargrove( Minister M. E. Church, South). .California, Mo. Gideon Dowse Harris, Jr.* (M.D.) Columbus Rowe Hays Winona Pat Henry, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Monticello, Ark. Edwin Ruthven Holmes (Atty. at Law) Yazoo City Henry Smart Hooker, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Lexington Joseph E. Houston (Atty. at Law) Aberdeen Samuel M arion Houston Meridian Holloway Percy Huff (Planter) Woodville Robert Earl Humphries (Atty. at Law) Crystal Springs Albert W. G. Hurt Memphis, Tenn. R. Melmuth Hutchins (Merchant) Ash Phillips Jay St. Louis, Mo. Hugh J. Jennings (Merchant) Water Valley UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 251 Clyde Johnson (Presbyterian Minister) Marianna, Fla. Alma Jones - Greenville George Piecre Jones (Physician) Lula Lipman Miller Kahn (Physician) New York City Eugene Young Kelley (Merchant) Memphis, Tenn. Bradley Thomas Kimbrough, Jr. (Baptist Minister) Louisville, Ky. James Rucks King St. Louis, Mo. Lomax Benjamin Lamb (Atty. at Law) Frederick Sylvester Lamed Langdon, Jr. (Hotel Proprietor) Magnolia Landrum Pinson Leavell (Secretary Southern Baptist Church) _ Oxford James Victor Leitch Canton Geo. H. Lester Coff eeville Ervin Wadsworth Lipscomb (Minister M. E. Church, South) Biloxi Henrietta Corinne Little (Mrs. B. B. Templeton) ..Waxahatchie, Texas Jesse Thomas Lockhart (Preacher) Pontotoc William Albert Lucas (Teacher, Jefferson College) Washington William Alexander McCain (U. S. Army) 1 Carrollton Hugh Lufkin McCaskill, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Brandon Abner John Mclntyre (Atty. at Law) Booneville Gabe Herman McMorrough (Atty. at Law) Lexington Theo. J. McMorrough (Atty. at Law) Nashville, Tenn. Warren Maybin Biloxi Samuel J. Mayo (Cotton Buyer) New Albany Robert Muldrow Mecklin 1 : College Hill William Hays Miles Banner Calvin Miller* Sardis Mary Morgan Water Valley Julian Knox Morrison (President Stanton College) Natchez Russel Adair Moss* College Hill Edwin Hartsfield Mounger (Atty. at Law) Columbia Isaac Lytle Mulcahy Holly Springs Andrew Ashbell Newell Pittsboro Mrs. Andrew Ashbell Newell (Teacher) Pittsboro Emma Oswalt Jonesville Edwin W. Patterson* Pontotoc William Murff Pearman* Cleveland Clifford Polk Perkins (M.D.) Batesville Henry Trader Perkins (Cash. Sen. Bank) Senatobia Hugh Hamil Posey Henderson, Ky. Ira Sandifer Pressley Carthage Guy Hartwell Price (D.D.S.) Rosedale Edward W. Rainwater Clarendon, Ark. Joseph Buie Reid Holloday W. Mandeville Richmond ( Planter) Hermanville Roy Rogers* New Albany Thompson Lamar Ross (Atty. at Law) Jackson Joseph Shelby Hattiesburg Robert Wheless Shipp (M.D.) ._ Gulfport 252 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Lemuel Augustus West Smith (Atty. at Law) Holly Springs William Calvin Smith .Jackson John Alexander Smylie (Atty. at Law) ..Union Church Cut hbert Spencer Oxford John Morgan Stevens (Atty. at Law) Hattiesburg Eugene Octave Sykes, Jr. (Lawyer) Aberdeen Daisie Taylor ,_ Sardis Robert Hudson Taylor Sardis George Oscar Robinson Crystal Springs Robert Patterson Thompson Jackson Lacey C. Townes Minter City Sherrod Ross Townes Union Church Bessie Lee Tucker Jackson William Elbert Utterback (Atty. at Law; U. S. V. 1898) Durant Anna Vineyard Helena, Ark. Wallace R. Walker Colon, Panama Edward Minor Watson Memphis, Tenn. William Calvin Wells, Jr Jackson James Porter Wilkins*. .-. Oxford Norma Wilkins - Memphis, Tenn. David Eugene Williams Oxford George G. Williams Crawford Annie B. Wilson Sardis Calhoon Wilson (Accountant) Greenwood SESSION OF 1896-97. Commencement Preacher. Bishop E. R. Hendrix, D.D. Commencement Orator. Hon. John Temple Graves. Degrees Conferred. Master of Arts. W. H. Drane (English, Logic, Mathematics) University T. C. Lockard (Latin, Greek, English) Meridian R. E. Wilbourn (English; History, Political Economy) Meridian Bachelor of Arts. Hiram Hubert Creekmore (Atty. at Law) Water Valley Marion Griffin Evans (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Miss Sarah E. Gillespie (Mrs. I. D. Borders) Holly Springs Vergil Alexis Griffith (Atty. at Law) Gulfport Miss Maud Morrow (Mrs. C. S. Brown) University Walter Thurston Pate T Jackson William Edward Segrest (Physician) Brandywine UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 253- Benjamin Paxton Smith (Law Student; Planter) Brookhaven John Alexander Smylie (Atty. at Law) Crystal Springs William B. Watkins (Atty. at Law; Banker) Aberdeen Bachelor of Philosophy. William Lane Austin (Teacher) Harperville Samuel Marion Houston (Atty. at Law) Meridian Geo. Davidson McLean (Physician) Oklahoma City, Okla. Julius Robinson Tipton (Atty. at Law) Jackson Department Diplomas. John Galye Duke* ,_" Scooba Miss Henrietta C. Little (Teacher) Oak, Texas William Albert Lucas (Teacher, Jefferson College) Washington Ewell Dalton Scales Crawford John Harvey Thompson (Atty. at Law) Jackson Bachelor of Laws. Robert Buckner Anderson (Atty. at Law; Mayor) Port Gibson Stanford Newman Collier (Atty. at Law; U. S. V. 1898) Vicksburg Robert Edward Halsell (Atty. at Law) Laurel Rowe Hays (Atty. at Law) Van Buren, Ark. Jos. E. Houston (Atty. at Law) Aberdeen Samuel Marion Houston (Atty. at Law) Meridian Eugene A. Howell (Atty. at Law) 1 Raymond Phillips Jay (Atty. at Law; Claim Agent I. C. R. R.) Stonewall Lomax Benjamin Lamb (Atty. at Law) Batesville William Milford Lofton (Atty. at Law) Meridian Clifton Lamar Lomax (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Larkin Tarrant McKenzie (Atty. at Law) Lamar James O. S. Sanders (Atty. at Law; U. S. V.) Jackson William Calvin Smith (Accountant) Laurel James Gordon Smythe (Atty. at Law) Kosciusko Hiram Stuart Stevens (Atty. at Law) Augusta William Parkman Stewart* (Atty. at Law) Dry Grove Eugene Octave Skyes (Atty. at Law) Aberdeen Condie L. Tubb (Atty. at Law) Aberdeen William Elbert Utterback (Atty. at Law; U. S. V. 1898) Durant Edward Minor Watson (Atty. at Law) Honolulu, Hawaia Edmund Ball Williams (Atty. at Law) Meridian Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Hiram Stuart Stevens LL.B. with Special Distinction Stanford Newman Collier LL.B. with Distinction Eugene A. Howell LL.B. with Distinction Lomax Benjamin Lamb LL.B. with Distinction Eugene Octave Sykes LL.B. with Distinction Condie L. Tubb LL.B. with Distinction Miss Maud Morrow (Mrs. C. S. Brown) B.A. with Distinction 254 ' VIVBRSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. si Mm; sn \kkiis Appointed. Miss Maud Morrow Salutatorian Eugene A. Howell Valedictorian Hiram Stuart Stevens . ...Oration Clifton Lamar Lomax . Oration Miss Sara Gillespie .Essay William Edward Segrest Oration Hiram Hubert Creekmore Oration Medalists for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. John D. Miller First Medal John H. Sumrall Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Manly B. Leavell First Medal Wilie B. Hogg Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Landrum P. Leavell First Medal Harry Rascoe Fulton Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Debate. Marion G. Evans Phi Sigma Society Medal Samuel Marion Houston Hermaean Society Medal Anniversary Orator for 1897-98. Will Morris Hamner Blackstone Society Orator Junior Medals for 1890-97. William Albert Lucas . Hermaean Society Medalist George Latham Ray Phi Sigma Society Medalist New Students. John Franklin Allen (Atty . at Law) New Port Alvin Woodson Amis Gulf port Andrew^ Carl Anderson <___ Indianola, Iowa E. Maude Anderson Indianola, Iowa Robert Buckner Anderson (Atty. at Law) Port Gibson Katie Archibald Alabama Howard Eugene Barry Blue Mountain Joel Nelson Berry Blue Mountain Samuel Wilson Bigger Winona Theophilus Russell Bishop McComb City Matney Bowles* Corsicana, Texas William Britton Madison Station Harden Hairston Brooks Macon Howard W. Brown Memphis, Tenn. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 255 Walter Fletcher Brown (Atty. at Law) Eagle Lake, Texas Daisye Wills Buck (Mrs. J. O. Lamkin) Friar's Point Clara Helen Burt (Mrs. T. H. Johnston) Corinth John S. Burton, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Cleveland George Holloway Cairns (Civil Engineer) Memphis, Tenn. Milton Asa Candler Iuka Albert M. Cartwright, Jr Overpark Frank Paul Cashman (Clerk; Insurance Company) Vicksburg Stewart Phillip Clayton Tupelo Edgar Rufus Creekmore Pittsboro Dudlay D. Daniel Vicksburg James Edgar Davis (Atty. at Law) Plattsburg Thomas Dick Davis McAlester, I. T. Albert Wall Dent (Atty. at Law) Mendenhall James Monroe Dyer Lexington Andrew Wilson Eason (Pharmacist) ...Memphis, Tenn. Amos Kendell Eckles Cleveland James E. Edmonds Rosedale James Howard Edmondson Memphis, Tenn. Hiram R. Elliott (M.D.) Eureka Springs Cora V. Elmer . Biloxi Daniel Hugh Fairley Wesson William Ernest Floyd Coweta, I. T. John W. Green... Jackson Jasper Felix Guynes Hazlehurst Lovick Pierce Haley Okolona Ethelbert Barkdsale Hall Meridian Willie J. Hays Lespedeza Mary H. Herron -. Trezevant, Tenn. Robert A. Hill, Jr.* (U. S. V. 1898) Oxford Charles Wheat Hinton Vicksburg John Samuel Wynne Hodge Delay Willie Bennett Hogg Wesson William Edgar Hopkins Meridian W. S. Horton Marianna, Ark. Eugene A. Howell Canton Ethelbert Jackson Hubbard (M.D.) Texas George Gibson Hurst (Editor Lafayette County Press; Princi- pal University Training School) Oxford Nugent Nathan Isenberg Greenville Joseph Albert Johnson Cotton Plant Prather D. Johnson Tremont, Ark. William Raymond Kimbell (Insurance Business) Atlanta, Ga. Elbe Kimbrough (Mrs. H. H. Thomison) Oxford Kate Kimmons (Teacher) Oxford James Rucks King ..Greenville Samuel Ralph Knox (Atty. at Law) New Albany Isaac R. Land * Boykin 256 I MYNRSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Robert D. Lanier (Atty. at Law) ...Brookhaven Manley Berry Leavell Birmingham, Ala. Robert Gresham Ledbetter .Booneville Armistead M aeon Leigh Charleston William Stew art Lester Edwards Willia in M i If ord Lofton Mendenhall Clifton Lamar Lomax. .Greenwood Albert Gallatin Love Trezevant, Tenn. Edwi n Lewis M abry Senatobia Richard Cunliffe McBee (District Attorney). Lexington James R. McDowell (Atty. at Law).. Jackson Ben McFarland (Atty. at Law) Aberdeen Larkin Tarrant McKenzie . Ashland Geo. Davidson McLean Winona C harles Hastings M cLeod Grenada Oliver Clifton McRaney (Merchant) Collins Ivy Pauline Manning (Teacher) Blue Mountain Benjamin Thaddeus Markette Water Valley William Lee Matthews Coff eeville James V. May Brookhaven Mary Lamar Mayes Jackson Alphonse E. Mayor Greeneville Warren Thomas Meek Oxford Durell Miller Shannon Hugh Barr Miller (Atty. at Law) Hazlehurst John D. Miller Jackson Irvin Miller Moody Meridian Charles B. Neilson, Jr.(U. S. V. 1898) Oxford Will Neville (Physician) McComb City Elliott Parker (Atty. at Law) Houston Francis Harper Pepper Deasonville Burchet Naomi Peters Senatobia Annie Winifred Phillips Monticello, Ark. Robert Lesley Pillow (Planter) Greenwood Frank King Pittman (Towpah Exp. Co.) Towpah, Nev. Sara Ola Price (Mrs. W. S. Leathers) Oxford James Thomas Rankin (Merchant) Columbia Benjamin Sherrod Ricks, Jr Canton William Temple Roane* . Oxford Donal d G. Ross Grenada Lee Vincent Russell (Planter) Eldorado Fannie Rutledge New Albany Irvin Binard Salmon (Cashier Commercial Bank) Senatobia James O. S. Sanders Charleston James Wiley Scott Lyons Robert Andinoram Segrest Brandy wine Harley R. Shands (Physician) Jackson Elmer Clinton Sharp (Atty. at Law) , Booneville UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 257 William Percy Shinault (Atty. at Law) Oxford James Simrall Glass Preston Edward Sloan Hattiesburg George Kinnebrew Smith Indianola James Gordon Smythe (Atty. at Law) Kosciusko Edgar Spinks Jackson Mary H. Stackhouse (Mrs. J. W. D. Black) Crystal Springs Edgar Jacob Stephens (Atty. at Law) New Albany Hiram Stuart Stevens Augusta Dallas E. Stewart Damascus William Parkman Stewart Dry Grove William Evans Stone (Atty. at Law) Oxford William VanAmberg Sullivan, Jr.* Oxford John H. Sumrall Brookhaven Percy Sutherland Rosedale Leroy Alexander Taylor (Cotton Broker) Memphis, Tenn. Duncan L. Thompson (Deputy Auditor) Jackson James Edward Torrey Union Church Hiram Fletcher Traywick Memphis, Tenn. Condie L. Tubb Aberdeen William Bynum Walker (Planter) Horn Lake Margaret Wardlaw (Mrs. R. P. Wendel) Aberdeen Wade Leroy Watkins Aberdeen Fred Milton West Jackson William Alfred West Grenada Charles Ruffin White (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. William Russell Saunders Wilbourne Winona Edgar Greene Williams (Atty. at Law) McComb City John A. Wills , Aberdeen Solon G. Wilson (M.D.) Bogalusa, La. Mary Sue Woods* Meridian Stark Young (Prof. English Literature, Univ. of Texas).. .Austin, Texas SESSION OF 1897-98. Commencement Preacher. Rev. J. B. Hawthorne, D.D. Commencement Orator. Hon. Hannis Taylor. Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Laws. Hon. Hannis Taylor Mobile, Ala. Hon. Leroy H. Valliant (Justice Supreme Court) Jefferson City, Mo. Hon. Thomas H. Woods (Chief Justice Supreme Court) Jackson Hon. Samuel H. Terral (Justice Supreme Court) Jackson 17 258 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Bachelor of Laws. William Lane Austin (Teacher) Harperville George Perkins Bondurant (Atty. at Law)... Birmingham, Ala. Lex Brame, Jr.* (Atty. at Law) Jackson Hardin Hairston Brooks (Atty. at Law) Macon Howard Willet Brown (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. John Shields Burton (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. William Henry Cook (Atty. at Law) Hattiesburg Hardy Clay Dear (Atty. at Law) Newton H. Winburne Magruder Drake (Atty. at Law) Port Gibson James Word Falkner (Atty. at Law) Madil, Okla. Will Morris Hamner (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Clifford Edgar Harris (Atty. at Law) Charleston Samuel Ralph Knox (Atty. at Law) New Albany Robert D. Lanier (Atty. at Law) Brookhaven Gordon Garland Lyell (Chancellor 5th District) Jackson Hugh Kirby Mahon (Atty. at Law) Holly Springs Benjamin Thaddeus Markette (Atty. at Law) Markette Hugh McAul Mcintosh (Atty. at Law) Collins John Gray Millsaps* (Atty. at Law) West Point Hon. S. A. Morrison (Atty. at Law; University Trustee) Grenada Francis Harley Pepper* (Atty. at Law) Deasonville Lee Vincent Russell (Atty. at Law) Eldorado Audley William Shands (Atty. at Law) Sardis Thomas M. Shelton (Atty. at Law) Fayette John Harvey Thompson (Atty. at Law) Jackson William B. Watkins (Atty. at Law; Banker) Aberdeen Fred Milton West (Atty. at Law) Jackson Bachelor of Arts. Joseph Medicus Bynum (Physician) Booneville Jesse Hardy Durley* (U. S. V. 1898; Physician) Tyre Hubert Frederick Fisher (Atty. at Law) Memphis, Tenn. Carrie B. Gary (Teacher) Crystal Springs Jasper Felix Guynes (Atty. at Law) Hazlehurst William Henry Hargrove (Minister, M. E. Church, South). .California, Mo. Clyde Johnson (Presbyterian Minister) Marianna, Fla. Stewart M arvin Jones Laurel Wilson Prim Kretchsmar (Banker) Greeneville Ervin Wadsworth Lipscomb (Minister, M. E. Church, South) Biloxi William Albert Lucas (Teacher, Jefferson College) Washington Isaac Lytle Mulcahy (Accountant) Holly Springs Ira Sandifer Pressley Carthage Benjamin Sherrod Ricks, Jr. (Cotton Broker) Canton John Morgan Stevens Hattiesburg Bachelor of Science. Al vi n Woodson Amis Gulf port Francis Henry Ervin* Columbus Anna Vineyard (Teacher) Helena, Ark. . UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 259 Bachelor of Philosophy. James Warsaw Bell (Prof. Secondary Education, University of Miss. ) University Eugene Campbell* (Fellow in Chemistry) University Clarence A. Dougherty (Teacher; U. S. Army) Coldwater Maurice Garland Fulton (Prof, of English, Davidson Col- lege) Davidson, N. C . James Stacy Hibbler (Atty. at Law; State Senate) West Point Charles Wheat Hinton (Episcopal Minister) Vicksburg Lee McGeehee Porter (Miss. Cotton Oil Co.) Aberdeen Harry D. Priestley, Jr. (Cotton Broker) Yazoo City Geo. Latham Ray (Atty. at Law) Greenwood Archie Gilbert Roane (Atty. at Law) Grenada William Martin Sanders Porterville Nathaniel Edward Wilroy (Chancery Clerk) Hernando Department Diplomas. Walter Chew Brewer Columbus Minnie H. Brown Oxford Clara Helen Burt (Mrs. T. H. Johnston) Corinth Elizabeth Cowan Sherman, Texas Edgar Ruf us Creekmore* Pittsboro Lamar Hardy (Atty. at Law) 35 Nassau Street, New York City George Pierce Jones (Physician) Grenada Lipman Miller Kahn (Physician) New York City James R. McDowell (Atty. at Law; State Senator) Jackson Julian Knox Morrison (President Stanton College) Natchez Julia Miller Murry (Mrs. R. A. Cox) Hico, Texas James Fernandis Pope Columbus Minnie H. Smith Oxford Joseph Baker Smylie Wesson Robert W. Shipp Yazoo City Alma Virginia Jones (Diploma with title "Licentiate Instruct- or;" Teacher) Greeneville Distinctions and Medals Awarded. John Gray Millsaps LL.B. with Special Distinction Audley William Shands LL.B. with Special Distinction William B. Watkins LL.B. with Special Distinction James Word Falkner LL.B. with Distinction Senior Speakers Appointed. Audley William Shands Salutatorian John Morgan Stevens Valedictorian W. M. Hamner... Oration E . W. Lipscomb Oration Anna Vineyard Essay 260 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Medalists fob Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Ulpian E. Cross J First Medal Samuel Lamb Rowan Second Medal Ph i Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Robert H. Sultan First Medal Arnaud B. Leavell Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Edwin R. Holmes First Medal N. R. Drummonds Second Medal Seniob Medals foe Excellence in Debate. George L. Ray Phi Sigma Society Medal John M. Stevens Hermaean Society Medal Anniversary Orator for 1897-98. John Elmore Holmes Blackstone Society Junior Medalists foe 1896-97. W. Calvin Wells Hermaean Society Medalist (Phi Sigma Society Medal not Awarded.) New Students. Randle Woodford Alcorn Clarksdale James Miller Arnold Ellisville Clarence Tucker Beckett West Point F. P. Boatner, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Sumner James Wesley Prentiss Boggan (Atty. at Law) Tupelo George Perkins Bondurant (Atty. at Law) Birmingham, Ala. George C. Bostwick Memphis, Tenn. Lex Brame, Jr.* Jackson Eugene S. Bramlett (Physician) Oxford John May Broach New Orleans, La. Harry S. Buford Memphis, Tenn. Edmond Thomas Bush Macon Jos. Webster Butler* Hickory Flat Benjamin Vergil Causey Bowling Green Ella Clingan (Mrs. Frederick) Jackson Marlin Townes Collier Memphis, Tenn. Julia E. Compton Oxford Abe Cohn (Atty. at Law) Hazlehurst William Henry Cook Hattiesburg Alice McDonald Cooper Oxford William Arthur Cox (Cashier Bank) Marks Ulpian Evans Cross (Insurance) Jackson . UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 261 Erasmus Manly Croxton Heath Springs, S. C. Hardy Clay Dear Newton H. Wilbourne Magruder Drake (Atty. at Law) Port Gibson John Middleton Foster* Zieglerville Hirschell A. Gassoway (Merchant) New Albany John Marshall Gatlin Biloxi Walter Jos. Gex (Atty. at Law) Bay St. Louis Isaac Newton Gilruth (Merchant) Yazoo City Robert Jesse Grisham (Atty. at Law) Senatobia Genevieve Hanson (Mrs. Bloodworth) North Carrollton James Ernest Hargis University Mattie Lack Haralson ■_. Biloxi Clifford Edgar Harris (Dist. Atty., Seventh Dist.) Charleston Lucius Lamar Hennington Columbia John Elmore Holmes (Prof, of Law) University Robert Huntington Okolona Amy Hustace Oxford William Nelson Hutchinson (Planter) Columbus Thomas Gates Ivy (Atty. at Law) West Point E. Price Ivy (M.D.) Muldon William W. Johnson Verona Thomas Stuart Johnston (Civil Engineer) St. Louis, Mo. Arthur Heath Jones New York City Elwyn Thornton Jones (Atty. at Law) Helena, Ark. Edward Hulle Kershaw Oxford Pinkney M. King (Atty. at Law) Durant John Curtis Kyle, Jr.* Sardis Richard Henry Lake Memphis, Tenn. Sylvester Lamed Langdon _- Magnolia Arnaud Bruce Leavell California Christopher Longest (Asst. Prof, of Latin) University Robert L. Longino Silver Creek Vastine Lucius West Point Hugh Kirby Mahon (Atty. at Law) Holly Springs Henry Edison Marshall (Atty. at Law) Harrisburg, Ark. James Deroux Mays Lula Herbert Lynn McCleskey (Supt. Public Schools) Fayette Lanis Hooker McGehee (Atty. at Law) Summitt William Irving McKay (Atty. at Law) Forest John Gray Millsaps* Cairo Edgar Misterfeldt Plains Monroe Goodbar Morgan (Drummer) Hernando S. A. Morrison Grenada Russell Moss* College Hill Wilson Durham Myers (Cotton Broker) Houston Fredalma Parsons Natchez William Spencer Pettis Ellisville Mary Louise Phillips Monticello, Ark. 262 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. William Oregon Pruitt. Houston Edward Shelby Rauch* (Physician) Vicksburg William Barry Ricks*.. Canton John B. Riley (Lawyer) Hebron Hugh B. Rose Vaiden Samuel Lamb Rowan (M.D.) Wesson William Charles Rowland Pontotoc D. M. Russell Magee Lee Maurice Russell Oxford William Ormsby Rutledge Collins N. F. Scales Crawford Chalmer Patton Seabrook Grand Junction, Tenn. Andrew Jackson Seale Shannon Doyle Seward Eden Thomas M. Shelton Brookhaven James Simrall (Planter) Glass Corrie Dow Smith Learned Hugh Vassar Somerville Oxford Joseph A. Spann, Jr. (Merchant) Pelahatchie Henry Rucker Spight (Atty. at Law) Ripley John Nabors Standifer Gulfport Robert Herman Sultan (Merchant) Walter, Okla. J. Burrus Sutherland University Howard Davis Thames Picayune James Murphy Thomas Tupelo Duncan L. Thompson (Deputy Auditor, New Capital) Jackson Hiram Phinazee Todd (Teacher) Natchez Enola Turner* Swift Water William Franklin Turner* Carrollton Anthony W. Wadlington Oxford George A. Wagner Water Valley J. D. Wallace Macon J. T. Wallace Clinton Wade Leroy Watkins (Merchant) Aberdeen Walter Weatherby* (Atty. at Law) Durant Rachael Whiteway (Mrs. 0. Q. Poindexter) Ravine Richard Noble Whitfield Florence Robert Webb Williams (U. S. Army) Phillipine Islands Samuel A. Witherspoon, Jr Meridian Cecile Woods Meridian UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 263 SESSION OF 1898-99. Commencement Preacher. Rev. Chas. R. Hemphill, D.D. Commencement Orator (Semi-Centennial Oration). Bishop Chas. B. Galloway, D.D.* Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Laws (Honoris Causa) . Hon. Edgar E. Bryant* Fort Smith, Ark. Prof. Henry St. George Tucker Washington & Lee University Prof. Eugene A. Smith University of Alabama Master of Arts. Oliver Abbott Shaw Winona William D. Shue* Okolona Bachelor of Arts. David Oliver Bridgforth Pleasant Hill Thomas Dick Davis Sherman Bradley Thomas Kimbrough, Jr. (Minister) Louisville, Ky. Albert Gallatin Love Trezevant, Tenn. Charles Roberts Pettis, Jr. (U. S. Army) _. West Point, N. Y. Annie Winifred Phillips Monticello, Ark. William Calvin Wells, Jr. (Atty. at Law) Jackson William Webb Venable .... Meridian Bachelor of Science. Herbert Lynn McCleskey Fayette William Oregon Pruitt Houston Bachelor of Philosophy. Patrick Henry, Jr r Brandon Landrum Pinson Leavell (Secretary Sunday School Work South- ern Baptist Church) Oxford John James White, Jr McComb City Norma Wilkins Oxford Bachelor of Pedagogy. Thomas Percy Scott (Supt. Schools) Brookhaven Department Diplomas. Ben McFarland (Atty. at Law) Aberdeen Mary Louise Phillips Monticello Lemuel Augustus West Smith (Atty. at Law) Holly Springs Margaret Wardlaw (Mrs. R. P. Wendel) Aberdeen 264 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Bachelor of Laws. James Miller Arnold Walthall James Wesley Prentiss Boggan Tupelo Brannon Curry Bowen Ellisville Jesse M . Brooks Glenville Hugh R. Brown Holly Springs Edwin Luther Calhoun Mt. Olive William Arthur Cox Harrison Johnson E. Emerson Pope Hazlewood P. Farrish Mayersville Nathan Baer Feld Vicksburg Walter Joseph Gex Bay St. Louis Wilmer Lee Godbold Allen Robert Jesse Grisham Ashland Lucius Lamar Henington Tryus John Elmore Holmes (Professor of Law) University Duke McDonald Kimbrough Oxford William Barry Ricks Canton Henry Rucker Spight Ripley James Murphy Thomas Shannon Walter Weatherby Durant Charles Ruffin White Memphis, Tenn. William Madison Whittington Roxie Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Herbert Lynn McCleskey B. S. with Distinction Albert Gallatin Love B.A. with Distinction Charles Roberts Pettis, Jr B.A. with Distinction William Oregon Pruitt B.S. with Distinction Senior Speakers Appointed. Herbert Lynn McCleskey Salutatorian Duke McDonald Kimbrough Valedictorian William Madison Whittington Oration William Barry Ricks Oration John Elmore Holmes Oration Landrum Pinson Leavell Oration Albert Gallatin Love . .Oration Medalists for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Murray Sullivan First Medal V. Otis Robertson Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Hugh Barr Miller First Medal Marks Y. Blum Second Medal UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 265 University Sophomore Medals. Stark Young First Medal Mattie Lack Haralson Second Medal Senior Medals fob Excellence in Debate. Bradley T. Kimbrough, Jr Phi Sigma Society Medal William Calvin Wells, Jr Hermaean Society Medal Junior Medalists foe 1898-99. Edwin R. Holmes Hermaean Society Medalist Harry Rascoe Fulton Phi Sigma Society Medalist New Students. William Franklin Allen Hattiesburg Guy C. Anderson Abbeville Samuel Wilburn Baker Woodson William Alfred Bean Cardsville Bergie Barry Beckett (Electrical Engineer) California James Sykes Billups Columbus Marks Y. Blum Nitta Yuma Brannon Curry Bowen Beaumont, Texas James Vance Bowen (Professor Modern Languages) .-Agricultural College Jesse M.Brooks Glenville Hugh R. Brown Holly Springs William Edward Bray Winona Edwin Luther Calhoun Mt. Olive Alice Campbell Sherman Edwin Patterson Campbell '.-. Greenville Oliver Franklin Carr Pontotoc Woody Lawrence Childress Harmontown Tom James Collier Oxford William Dow Conn (Attorney at Law) Corinth Ollie Bingham Cowan Moss Point Francis Marion Curlee Corinth Lula Key Davis Sherman William Vassar Dubard Dubard Frederick William Elmer, Jr Biloxi Johnson E . Emerson Pope Hornsby Evans Oxford Thomas Airey Evans Memphis, Tenn. Davis L. Fair Louisville Hazlewood P. Farrish Mayersville Percy Hawthorne Ford* Columbia Rossie Douglas Ford Scranton John DeWitt Furr Oxford Clinton L. Gee Carrollton Kate Gentry «. Oxford 266 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. W i 1 mer Lee Godbold _ Hazlehurst Thomas Luther Haman, Jr Vaiden Sam in if Handley Oxford Addison Harvey* Canton Cowlea Edwards Horton.. Grenada James William Hutchinson .Oxford Alfred Jamison Riverside Annie Johnson Oxford Thomas H. Johnston, Jr Coldwater Cabell Calhoun Jones Port Gibson Lou Neal Jones Hillsboro, Texas Sidney Walter Jones Independence William Harrington Kier Crawford Otto Mayfield Lawrence ' Columbus Henry Oscar Leonard, Jr Coffeeville William Edwin Bates Leonard Coffeeville Albert Gallatin Love Trezevant, Tenn. Bettie T. Lyon Houston Samuel William McCorkle* Jackson John Daniel Mclnnis* Meridian M arcus Li verman Marks Riverside Nannie Meek* Oxford Rebecca Nichols Oxford Arthur Wellesley Oliver Courtland Marshall Louis Perkins Dallas, Texas J. B. Poindexter Crawford William Green Poindexter Carrollton Bern Price, Jr Oxford John Agrippa Redhead Centreville Herbert Poindexter Ricks Canton Vivian Quarles Ricks Canton Froste Roane Oxford John Westbrook Robertson* ■. Hernando Virgil Otis Robertson Jackson George Oscar Robinson Brandon Samuel Webb Scales Starkville Joe Price Sexton Wesson Luther Seymour Sexton . Hazlehurst Cecil Shands Laurel Katie Eva Shepherd Lexington Carl C. Stingily Pelahatchie James Stone, Jr Greenwood Murray Sullivan Oxford Alexander Ewing Swinney Lexington Jack Quitman Taggart Tchula Evans Townes Minter City William Webb Venable Meridian John William Wade (Lawyer) Little Rock, Ark. ^UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 267 Mary Emma Wadlington Nacogdoches, Texas Lillian F. Walker Increase Maggie Elizabeth Walker Increase Edith Wardlaw Oxford Hugh Larson White McComb City William Madison Whittington Roxie Henry Cuthbert Williamson, Jr Memphis, Tenn. Charles A. Wilroy Blythe Charles William Yates Starkville SESSION 1899-1900. Commencement Preacher. Rev. T. A. Wigginton, D.D. Commencement Orator. Hon. Charlton H. Alexander, LL.D. Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Laws (Honoris Causa). Hon. Charlton H. Alexander Jackson Master of Arts. Mary B . Bynum * Columbus Eugene Campbell* University Cora Walker Columbus Bachelor of Arts. Andrew Wilson Eason Arkabutla Harry Rascoe Fulton (Assistant Professor of Botany) State College, Pa. William Stewart Lester Plum Point Christopher Longest (Asst. Prof, of Latin) University Robert Adoniram Segrest Gershom Harley Roseborough Shands (Physician) Jackson Preston Edward Sloan Hernando Leroy Alexander Taylor. _ Senatobia Mary Sue Woods* Meridian Bachelor of Science. William Van Fant Newton Kate Kimmons (Teacher) Oxford Sylvester L. Langdon, Jr Magnolia Armistead Macon Leigh Charleston Bachelor of Philosophy. Edwin Lewis Mabry Senatobia Elliott Parker Houston Sara Ola Price (Mrs. W. S. Leathers) Oxford 268 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Department Diploma Awarded. William Percy Shinault Oxford Bachelor of Laws. Stewart Philip Clayton Tupelo G. Odie Daniel Starkville Walter S. P. Doty Grenada Eugene Shelby Fairmen Monticello Thomas Luther Haman, Jr Vaiden John Lewis Heiss Meridian Patrick Henry, Jr Vicksburg Henry Smart Hooker, Jr Lexington Thomas H. Johnston, Jr Corinth Cabell Calhoun Jones Port Gibson William Harrington Kier Crawford Otto Mayfield Lawrence Caledonia Walter Washington Lockard Yazoo City Richard Cunliffe McBee Lexington James R. McDowell Jackson Gabe Herman McMorrough Ebenezer Marvin Thomas Ormond Tuscaloosa, Ala. Marshall Lewis Perkins Batesville George Latham Ray Carrollton Victor Mills Roby McComb City Luther Seymour Sexton Hazlehurst Benjamin Paxton Smith Brookhaven H. Cuthbert Williamson Memphis, Tenn. James Nicholas Yawn Bogue Chitto Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Harry Rascoe Fulton B.A. with Distinction Thomas H. Johnston, Jr LL.B. with Distinction Walter Washington Lockard LL.B. with Distinction Senior Speakers. George Latham Ray Oration Mary Sue Woods Oration Harry Rascoe Fulton Valedictorian Medals for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. William Otey Crisman First Prize Adolph Herrman Stephen Second Prize Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. James Berry Leavell First Prize William Lawrence Fulton ..Second Prize . UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 269 University Sophomore Medals. James Thomas Mcintosh First Medal Virgil Otis Robertson Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Debate. Harry Rascoe Fulton Phi Sigma Society Medal William Van Fant Hermaean Society Medal Junior Medalists. Lee Maurice Russell Phi Sigma Society Medalist Frank Roberson Hermaean Society Medalist Bryan Medalist. William Stewart Lester DeSoto County Edward Thompson Law Prize. Thomas H. Johnston, Jr Tate County New Students. Emma Abramsohn Arkansas Charles Fisher Ames (Merchant) .. , Hattiesburg Arthur Edward Arledge (See Class of 1903) Delaware John Edward Ashcraft (Bank Cashier) Lexington Edward Saunders Balthrop Jackson, Tenn. James Fountain Barksdale Hardy Anna Barns Oxford Paul Byron Barringer ■ Atlanta, Ga. Laurence H. Bass Benoit Benjamin Franklin Bell, Jr (Lawyer) Starkville Marcus Sidney Benson (Lawyer) Yale Edward Crosland Berwick Franklin, La. Roy Whitfield Bew Greenwood Cary N. Bird Tryus Thomas Kendal Boggan (Supt. Schools) Biloxi Eugene Sherman Bramlett Oxford Carl Bratton (Lawyer) Pontotoc Helen Alice Bridger Sardis James Henry Broome Senatobia Marvin Holloman Brown Phoenix Fred Zollicoffer Browne (Theological Student) Princeton, N. J. Sallie Falkner Burns (Teacher) University William Grey Cavitt .University Kyle Chandler West Point Robert Parker Clapp Memphis, Tenn. Martin Linn Clardy, Jr Farmington, Mo. William Roger Cochran Daleville 270 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Samuel James Collier Oxford J. Rochester Collins Jonestown Elizabeth Cowan (Teacher) Sherman, Texas William Otey Crisman (Civil Engineer) Selma, Ala. Frank Archelaus Critz, Jr . West Point Archie G. Crockett New Orleans, La. C best er Dare Curtis Tupelo G. Odie Daniel (Lawyer) Starkville John Hazard Dorroh (Professor) University Walter S. P. Doty Grenada Willie Byrne Dougherty Vicksburg William Emmette Dukeminier Strongs John M arion Edwards Scooba William Dudley Erwin Erwin Eugene Shelby Fairman Monticello Albert Edward Fant Gulfport William Robert Farish (Lawyer) Beaumont, Texas Samuel Lamar Field Madison Thomas Finley (Banker) Holly Springs Ashley M. Foote Hattiesburg Charles Robert Freeman (Lawyer) Shawnee, Okla. Edwina Fulton (Mrs. Dabney Lipscomb) Columbus William Lawrence Fulton Iowa City, Iowa James Edmund Gartrell (Accountant) Jamestown Will M. Garrard Indianola Isaac Newton Gilruth Yazoo City John Fletcher Goodwin Longtown James Shaw Gwin (Accountant) Lexington John Peyton Hall (Merchant) Holly Springs Lewis Bingham Harris (Attorney) Jackson Charles Thomas Haynie (Physician) Olive Branch John Lewis Heiss Gulfport William Andrew Henry, Jr., (Lawyer) Yazoo City Tolbert Greer Hibbler. Scranton Robert A. Hill. Jr.* Oxford Lemuel R. Hogan (Presbyterian Minister) McMinnville, Tenn. Oliver Sidney Hopkins Hickory Guy Hunt Memphis, Tenn. Robert Howard Huntington Okolona Eugenia Floride Hutton Oxford Oscar Goodbar Johnston Friar's Point Ebb Pharen Kitchell Harmontown James Berry Leavell (Baptist Minister) Oxford Willie Nelson Leavell Oxford Walter Washington Lockard Yazoo City Edwin Lewis Mabry Senatobia John Martin Magruder Port Gibson Walter Drane Magruder Ripley, Ohio UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 271 Francis Connor Martin Vicksburg Joseph Gaillard Martin New Orleans, La. Winfield Scott Martin Okolona James Vernon May Port Gibson Richard Cunliffe McBee Lexington E. Jack McCabe (Lawyer) Vicksburg George McCallum Edwards Thomas Alexander McCaskill Meridian James McGovern, Jr.* Burney James Thomas Mcintosh Holladay Gabe Herman McMorrough Ebenezer Frederick Hugh McMurphy Harperville John Warren McNair (Lawyer) Brookhaven J. Harvey McNeill (Physician) Olive Branch Helen Mai McWhorter New Orleans, La. Charles Venable Mercer . Jackson, Tenn. Overton Harris Miller Okolona Eli Bingham Mitchell Rienzi Allan Montgomery Shaw Goode Montgomery Ellisville Edna Evins Moore* - Red Banks Fannie Lee Mosby Oxford Radford Murphree (Planter) . Cascille George Boggan Myers (Episcopal Minister) Greenwood Stanley Myers* Byhalia Wilson Durham Myers (Cotton Factor) Byhalia Harry Edwin Nash Starkville Shirley Sue Neill (Mrs. T. K. Boggan) Biloxi William Warren Nichols Oxford James W. Norment (Lawyer) Starkville Marvin Thomas Ormond Meridian Charles Worsham Phillips Tupelo Arthur Hopkins Rice (U. S. Navy) Oktoc See Rice Sardis Archie Gilbert Roane (Lawyer) ' Grenada Ralph Hugh Roane* Oxford Victor Mills Roby McComb Cfty Joseph Gist Roseborough Meridian Harvey Shannon Coff eeville H. Thomas Smith Oxford James Martin Smith Oxford Sidney Walter Smith Independence Adolph Herman Stephen Collins Thomas Ringland Stockdale (Civil Engineer) Summit Edward Strickland (Superintendent Schools) Kossuth Calvin Fort Stubblefield Deasonville Lynda Katrina Sultan (Mrs. H. M. Faser) .Oxford Travis Henry Taylor, Jr Como 272 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Lee Thornton (Civil Engineer) Kosciusko C harles L. Tubb (Lawyer) _ Amory Benjamin Archer Tucker, Jr. (Lawyer) Senatobia Ralph Wainwright* Stonewall Guy H. Watkins El Paso, Texas Thomas Binford Watkins (Lawyer) Clarksdale Thomas William White, Jr. (Lawyer) St. Louis, Mo. Eugene Nelms Williams-.. Clarksdale Wesley J. Williams Okolona Calhoun Wilson Greenwood Harvey Newton Wilson Crystal Springs Warren A. Woods (Planter) Esporto, Cal. Albert Young Woodward (Lawyer) Louisville William Townes Wynne Coffeeville James Nicholas Yawn (Lawyer) Bogue Chitto SESSION 1900-1901. Commencement Preacher. Bishop Thomas F. Gailor, D.D. Commencement Orator. Hon. Guston T. Fitzhugh. Degrees Conferred. Master of Arts. Maurice Garland Fulton (Professor of English) Davidson, N. C. David Alexander Hill (Supt. of Schools) Booneville Byron Darius Rivers (Dentist) Louisville, Ky. Bachelor of Arts. Norvel Roberson Drummond Columbia Julian K. Morrison (College President) Natchez William Spencer Pettis Pass Christian Anthony Wayne Wadlington Fort Worth, Texas Stark Young (Professor) Austin, Texas Bachelor of Science. Robert Herman Sultan (Merchant) Walter, Okla. Bachelor of Philosophy. Samuel Wilson Bigger (Engineer) Winona James Vance Bowen (Professor) Agicultural College George Holloway Cairns (Civil Engineer) Memphis, Tenn. Robert Howard Huntington (Physician) Okolona Thomas Stuart Johnston (Civil Engineer) .St. Louis, Mo. m UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 273 FrankTRoberson" (Lawyer) Pontotoc Lee Maurice Russell (Lawyer) Oxford John William Wade (Lawyer) Little Rock, Ark. Bachelor of Pedagogy. Lowery Rudisille Powell (Supt. of Schools) Wesson Depabtment Diploma Awarded. Samuel Slaughter Caruthers (Physician) Duck Hill Bachelor of Laws. "George Harrison Butler (Asst. Atty. Gen'l) Jackson Rosser Alexander Collins Meridian Thomas Dick Davis Okolona William Stamps Farish Mayersville Charles Robert Freeman Maben John Hinds Howie Morton Ackland H. Jones Woodville Sidney Walter Jones Independence Edward Jack McCabe Vicksburg Ben McFarland Aberdeen Allan Montgomery . Greenville Edward Patty Macon Guy Jack Rencher Scooba Archie Gilbert Roane Grenada Vernon Dodds Rowe Winona Thaddeus William Scott Hohenlinden Elmer Clinton Sharp .- Corinth Charles L. Tubb Aberdeen Hiram Lee Wilkinson Gloster William Thomas Wynne Coff eeville Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Lowery Rudisille Powell B.Ped. with Distinction Archie Gilbert Roane LL.B. with Distinction Senior Speakers. Law Department. Archie Gilbert Roane Valedictorian Vernon Dodds Rowe Oration Academic Department. Lowery Rudisille Powell Salutatorian Stark Young Oration Lee Maurice Russell Oration Robert Herman Sultan Oration 18 274 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Medalists fob Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Leon Roseborough First Medal Clyde Galbrath Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Houston Potts First Medal Ira Thompson Gilmer Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Jas. Berry Leavell First Medal William Lawrence Fulton Second Medal Senior Medals fob Excellence in Debate. Norvel Robertson Drummond Phi Sigma Society Medal Frank Roberson Hermaean Society Medal Juniob Medalists. James Thomas Mcintosh Phi Sigma Society Medal Marvin Holloman Brown Hermaean Society Medal Bbyan Medalist. Norvel Robertson Drummond Columbia Edwabd Thompson Law Peize. Edward Campbell Patty Macon School of English Pbize. William Otis Crisman DeSoto County New Students. Loula Alexander Jackson Edward Atkinson Houston Edwin Lee Barber Port Gibson May Boatner Potts Camp James Wiley Bounds (Pharmacist) Bounds Julian Bramlett Oxford O. T. Breland* Dixon Charles Shields Brothers , Cedar Bluff Martin Davis Brown Gulf port George Harrison Butler, Jr. (Asst. Atty. Genl.) Jackson Thomas H. Campbell, Jr. (Lawyer) Yazoo City Margaret Caruthers Sardis William Woods Carr Lewisburg Lula Cassell Canton Miss L. C. Cassell Canton Rosser Alexander Collins Meridian E. Earl Conner (Merchant) , Hattiesburg Richard W. Cutrer (Lawyer) Magnolia . UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 275 John Taylor Dabbs Nettleton Moncure Dabney Crystal Springs Mrs. M. L. Dancey Greenville Mrs. E. T. Darling Greenville Frank Oliver Davis Como James Monroe Dyer, Jr. (Accountant) Lexington Annie Ellis (Teacher) Yazoo City Eugene Stewart Enochs Natchez Clinton V. Ervin Crystal Springs Frank Ervin Crawford Claude Fair Shaw William Stamps Farish Natchez Angus G. Ferguson (Minister and Teacher) Leakville William Groves Fields (Physician) Madison S. E. Frierson Tupelo John Marvin Furr (Physician) . Pontotoc Clyde Galbraith Union Church William Morgan Garrott Senatobia J. E. Gibson Quitman Victor Wirt Gilbert _. Meridian William David Gillespie Greenwood Ira Thompson Gilmer (Teacher) Columbus Wallace Floyd Goodwin _- Oxford Norvin E . Greene Oxford Alma Gresham Booneville Miss L. G . Hagin Crawford Toney A. Hardy Gulfport Mrs. Mary Lipscomb Hargrove (Teacher) Kansas City K. Harmon .* . Gulfport Mattie Moss Harris Oxford Alma Lula Hill Booneville John Samuel Wyman Hodge (Teacher) Delay William Oscar Holman Tula Gabriel Houston Oxford Mattie Houston Oxford John Hines Howie (Lawyer) Jackson Virgil Rufus Howie Trenton Maggie N . Howze Macon Dorsey A. Joiner Sunny Side Ackland H. Jones (Lawyer) Woodville H. Neil Jones Cantril, Iowa Miss M. M. Jones (Mrs. McFarland).- Winona Robert Lee Jones (Accountant) Oklahoma Selwyn Marshall Jones Torrance Sidney Walter Jones Independence Catherine Lacey Kosciusko M abel Lauderdale Hollandale J. Addison Leathers Gulfport 276 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Lizzie Lester Black Hawk Henry Francis Lipford Oxford Mrs. Bessie W. Lipscomb (Teacher) Brookhaven Gertrude Lockard Tupelo Pat F. Luther (Lawyer and Mayor) Winona Florence Malloy (Teacher, I. I. & C.) Columbus T. E. Martineau (Lawyer) Belzoni John Walter McCorkle Water Valley Robert Davidson McLean Grenada George D. McNeill Newton Egbert Answell Meadors Grenada Garner Meaders Grenada Aurora Medford Tupelo Mrs. M. M. Mitchell Monroe, La. Inez Montgomery Natchez Rupert Clark Morris Caledonia Sallie Morris Itta Bena James Knox Morrison (College President) Natchez Robert Prosser Morrow West Point, Ga. T. E. Mortimer Blue Mountain Maude Augusta Mosby Oxford Virgie B. Mosby Oxford Bernards. Mount (Insurance Agent) Atlanta, Ga. Annie Mozinsky Greenville Daniel J. Murphy (Physician) Houston Hugh Lewers Murphy Looxahoma Virgie Louise Neill (Teacher) Oxford Ava Enta Nickle Oxford Cecil Carday Norfleet Memphis, Tenn. J. M. O'Brient Hollandale Tyna Amelia Pate (Teacher) Coffeeville Edward Campbell Patty Corinth A. B. Payne (Merchant) Plumerville, Ark. Mary Eleanor Pearce Gloster Fred P. Perkins Batesville Marion McGehee Petrie Kirkwood, Mo. Thomas Dudley Petrie St. Louis, Mo. Daisye Belle Plant Oxford Myrtle G. H. Plant Washington, D. C. Ethelbert Joyce Pollard (Lawyer)... Hernando Houston Potts (Merchant) Kosciusko Robert Hamilton Powell (Lawyer) Canton Susie Virginia Powell Brookhaven Sarah Alive Reeves Vaiden Guy Jack Rencher DeKalb Harry A. Rightor Helena, Ark. Guy Crockett Rogers Water Valley Leon Roseborough Senatobia UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 277 Elias Alford Rowan, Jr. (Lawyer) Wesson Vernon Dodds Rowe (Lawyer) Winona Thaddeus William Scott (Lawyer) Eupora William Alexander Scott Cleburne, Texas Mary Alma Sims Oxford Baxter Sparks Oxford Clyde Herman Spearman Air Mount Rufus Madison Standifer, Jr Gulfport William Steen Lumberton William Isaac Stone Vaiden Thomas Coleman Strawn Memphis, Tenn. Vince Strieker Plaquemine, La. George Clinton Stubblefield French Camp James E. Tanner Nettleton Willie Tinsley Ponta James Monroe Wallace Como Mrs. A. F. Watkins Hattiesburg Telfair M. Whetstone (Lawyer) Greenwood Leland Noel White (Abstractor, Local Districts) Lexington Marion Crawford Wilbourn Oxford Hiram Lee Wilkinson Shelby Victoria Wiss Meridian Edwin Michael Yerger Friar's Point Tandy Casey Young Corinth SESSION 1901-1902. Commencement Preacher. Bishop W. A. Candler, D.D. Commencement Orator. Hon. Adonirum Judson Russell.* Degrees Coneebbed. Master of Arts. Thomas Stewart Johnston (Civil Engineer) St. Louis, Mo. Maude Morrow (Mrs. C. S. Brown) University Robert Herman Sultan (Merchant) Walter, Okla. John William Wade (Lawyer) Little Rock, Ark. Jesse Thomas Wallace (Teacher) Centerville Bachelor of Arts. Bergie Barry Beckett (Civil Engineer) California Eugene Sherman Bramlett (Physician) Oxford William Edward Bray (Teacher) Winona Thomas James Collier Oxford Roscoe Douglas Ford Scranton 278 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. William Irving McKay Forest J. Harvey McNeill (Physician) Olive Branch Andrew Jackson Seale.. San Francisco, Cal. Cecil Shands (Lawyer) Laurel Mary Emma Wadlington Fort Worth, Texas Bachelor of Science. Virgil Otis Robertson (Lawyer) Jackson Woodson Anderson Stevens (Physician) Greenville John DeWitt Furr (Supt. Power Plant) University Bachelor of Philosophy. Marvin Holloman Brown (Lawyer) Indianola Oliver Bingham Cowan Moss Point Arthur Heath Jones . New York City Katie Eva Shepherd Lexington Thomas Binford Watkins (Lawyer) Clarksdale Bachelor of Pedagogy. Edward Saunders Balthrop (Professor) Jackson, Tenn. Bachelor of Civil Engineering. Sam William McCorkle* Jackson Bachelor of Laws. John Lee Bates Coles Creek Charles Hillman Brough (Professor) Fayetteville, Ark. Charles Shields Brothers Cedar Bluff Edmond Thomas Bush, Jr , Macon Thomas Grover Carr Williamsburg William Grey Cavett Memphis, Tenn. Frank Marion Curlee Corinth Marion Griffin Evans Memphis, Tenn. Emile Joseph Gex Bay St. Louis Victor Wirt Gilbert Meridian Joseph Felix Guynes Hazlehurst Thomas Caleb Hannan Sturgis Thaddeus Constantine Lockard Meridian Walter James McMurry Union City, Tenn. Joseph Henry Mize Forest Guy Henry Mitchell Guntown James Milton O 'Brian t Hollandale James Clark Pinson Grady David Franklin Spradling Banner William Isaac Stone Vaiden Edward Wilson Taylor Winona Clinton Thompson McComb City John William Wade Little Rock, Ark. Hugh Vernon Wall Gillsburg Telfair M . Whetstone Woodville UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 279 Distinctions and Medals Awarded. William Edward Bray A.B. with Distinction Charles Hillman Brough LL.B. with Distinction Marion Griffith Evans LL.B. with Distinction Thaddeus Constantine Lockard LL.B. with Distinction Telfair M. Whetstone LL.B. with Distinction John William Wade LL.B. with Special Distinction Senior Speakers Elected. Law Department. John William Wade Salutatorian Charles Hillman Brough Oration Frank Marion Curlee Oration Thaddeus Constantine Lockard Oration Alternates James Milton O'Briant Oration Guy William Mitchell Oration Academic Department. William Edward Bray . Valedictorian Bergie Barry Beckett Oration Marvin Holloman Brown Oration Mary Emma Wadlington Oration Alternates. Woodson Anderson Stevens Oration Thomas Binford Watkins 1 Oration Medalists for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Albert LaFayette Hopkins First Medal Stokes Vernon Robertson Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Abye Albert Cohn First Medal Dan I. Sultan Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Huston Potts First Medal Ira Thompson Gilmer Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Debate. Roscoe Douglas Ford Phi Sigma Society Medalist Virgil Otis Robertson Hermaean Society Medalist Junior Medalists. William Edward Bates Leonard Phi Sigma Society Medalist William Otey Crisman_. Hermaean Society Medalist 280 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Bryan Medalist. W. I. McKay. Edward Thompson Law Prize. Telfair M. Whetstone. School of English Prize. Marvin Holloman Brown. Early English Text Society Prize. Mary Emma Wadlington. New Students. Janie Andrus (Mrs. H. M. Love) Yazoo City Walter Preston Armstrong Coff eeville Nicholas Gaines Augustus (Minister) Durant Laura Ella Balthrop Jackson, Tenn. Garrard Montjoy Barrett Greenwood Henry S. Barron (Attorney) Crystal Springs Vernon Derward Barron* Crystal Springs John Lee Bates (Lawyer) Pittsboro Annie Berry (Mrs. Bradley) Hernando William Edwin Blackmur Water Valley Robert Montgomery Bordeaux, Jr Meridian Charles Hillman Brough (Prof. University of Ark.) Fayetteville, Ark. Ernest Wyndham Brown Oxford Leonidas Sutton Brown Oxford James Washington Bruister Texas Edward Jeff Bruister, Jr Texas John Baylis Burkett (Real Estate Agent) Hattiesburg Sudie M. Burt (Mrs. S. V. Robertson) Hattiesburg Edmond Thomas Bush, Jr Macon Charles Thompson Butler (Lawyer) Brookhaven B. F. Capps Hinds County Thomas G. Carr (Lawyer) Oklahoma Walter Spinks Carter Scooba William Grey Cavett Memphis, Tenn. Lillian Cearley Oxford Daniel Otis Clark Vernon, Texas Matthew Clay, Jr.* Brooksville Clarke Brewer Coffee Vicksburg Abye Albert Cohn (Lawyer) Brookhaven Abe H . Cohn Hazlehurst Clyde R. Conner (Lawyer) Hattiesburg Robert Clifton Cowan (Lawyer) Gulfport Albertus Bruce Crowell Orrwood UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 281 A. Rush Davis Tula Guy Douglass Dean (County Supt. Education) Scranton James Andrew Drane Kosciusko Charles Ira Eddins* Otoe Ellie Elkin Okolona Mary Kendall Elkin Okolona Hugh Rascoe Enochs Natchez James Haughton Ervin West William Nathaniel Ethridge, Jr Meridian Marion Griffin Evans Memphis, Tenn. Edwin James Ezell, Jr Okolona John Edward Fanning Buena Vista Gerald Fitzgerald Friar's Point Wayne Flowerree Vicksburg Emile Joseph Gex (Lawyer) Bay St. Louis Guy T. Gillespie (Ministerial Student) Richmond, Va. Jasper Felix Guynes Hazlehurst Joseph D . Guy ton Vossburg Thomas Caleb Hannah (Lawyer) Brookhaven Thomas Bailey Hardy (Planter) Columbus William Harris Hardy Ellisville Tom Paschal Harris Louisville Robert Henry Harrison (County Supt. of Education) Charleston Ben L. Hatch, Jr. (Principal of Schools) Greenville Edmund Gaines Hightower (Minister) Hattiesburg Hinkle Patton Heidelberg (Lawyer) Leakesville Albert Lafayette Hopkins Chicago, 111. Gabriel Jacobson Meridian Benjamin Franklin Johnson, Jr. (Physician) Hazlehurst James Lucius Johnson* : McComb City Rosa A. Johnson Sardis Marshall Drane Jones Sallisaw, Okla. Morris Freiberg Kahn Memphis, Tenn. Laurenso Thompson Kennedy Guntown Emma Kate Kimmons , Oxford Carl D. Kirby Carrollton Dewitt Knox Pontotoc Rush Hightower Knox Houston Thaddeus Constantine Lockard Meridian Oscar Locke Columbus Robert Frazier Belle Logan (Circuit Clerk) DeSoto County Joseph Turner Lowrey Gloster Kate Lundie Oxford Carleton B . Lynch Delay John Sydney McCain U. S. Navy Dick Cauthen McCool Canton William Thomas McGehee Memphis, Tenn. Gamble McLean Winona 282 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Leland O. McLean ..Auburn, Ky. John Dabney M cLemore Greenwood Albert Luther McMillin Louisville Walter James McMurry Union City, Tenn. Lawson William Magruder Vicksburg Walter Drane Magruder Vicksburg James Arthur Mann Chatham Maynard Fitzgerald Marshall Charleston Henry L. Martin* N. Carrollton Jim Morgan M ason Artesia Lee Miles Forest William Brooke Miller (Lawyer) Hazlehurst Joseph Henry Mize (Lawyer) Gulfport Charles T. Mitchell (Lawyer) Oklahoma City George B. Mitchell New Albany Guy William Mitchell Lee County Robert Edgar Moss (Merchant) Oxford Robert Paine Neblett Water Valley Samuel William Newell (Supt. Schools) Tupelo J. M. Newton Copiah County Irby Coghill Nichols (Teacher) A. & M. Texas Samuel Lafayette O'Bannon (Lawyer) Shawnee, Okla. James Milton O'Briant Hollandale James C. Pinson (Lawyer) Cometah, Okla Charles Maury Powell (Lawyer) Jackson J. N. Powers Jackson James Dwight Priestley , Canton John George Quekemeyer Fort DuChesne, Kan. Mary Lula Rea (Teacher) Wesson John Rice Sardis Stokes Vernon Robertson (Lawyer) Hattiesburg J. Acker Rogers (Mgr. Cotton Seed Oil Co.) Aberdeen D. Townes Sayle Coff eeville Isaac Lewis Scherck Seattle, Wash. Andrew Jackson Seale California James Martin Smith Oxford Mary Hartwell Somerville University James T. Spann (Asst. in Mathematics) University David F. Spradling_- Banner Clint C . Steinberger Okolona William Isaac Stone Coff eeville Dan Isom Sultan (U. S. Army) Oxford Edward Wilson Taylor (Newspaper Publisher) Winona Clinton Thompson McComb City Fletcher F. Veazey Coldwater George A. Wagner Water Valley Robert Bradford Walker (Supt. Schools) Gulfport Hugh Vernon Wall Brookhaven UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 283 Elmer Ruel Walton . Yale Univ., New Haven, Conn. W. B. Webber Houlka Edgar Webster (Lawyer) Oxford Oscar Wilkinson Memphis, Tenn. James Lafayette Williams (Lawyer) Indianola Edward Clyde Wright (Lawyer) Holly Springs SESSION 1902-1903. Commencement Preacher. Rev. George W. Truitt, D.D 1 Dallas, Texas Commencement Orator. (No Oration.) Degrees Conferred. Master of Arts. Andrew Jackson Seale San Francisco, Cal. Bachelor of Arts. Thomas Humphreys Campbell, Jr . ...i Yazoo City William Byrne Dougherty (Physician) Vicksburg Samuel Lamar Field Madison William Morgan Garrott Senatobia William Andrew Henry, Jr Yazoo City Oliver Sidney Hopkins Hickory William Edward Bates Leonard_.__' Coffeeville Goode Montgomery Pontotoc Russell Moss (Merchant) Oxford Charles Worsham Phillips Chulahoma Benjamin Archie Tucker, Jr. (Lawyer) Senatobia Thomas William White (Lawyer). St. Louis, Mo. Bachelor of Philosophy. Thomas Kendall Boggan (School Superintendent) Biloxi Clinton V. Ervin Crystal Springs Alfred Jamison Riverside Ely Bingham Mitchell (Lawyer) Rienzi Shirley Sue Neill Oxford Adolph Herman Stephen (Lawyer) Fayette Oscar Wilkinson (Physician) Washington, D. C. James LaFayette Williams (Lawyer) Indianola Bachelor of Pedagogy. Edward Strickland (School Supt.) Kossuth 284 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Bachelor of Civil Engineering. Arthur Edward Arledge (Supt. Fourth Lighthouse District.) Wilmington, Del. William Otey Crisman (Civil Engineer) Selma, Ala. Bachelor of Laws. L. Money Adams Ackerman Robert Montgomery Bordeaux Meridian John Percy Boyd Oklahoma Martin Davis Brown Kemper County Marvin Holloman Brown Indianola John Booth Carothers Panola County Robert Clifton Cowan Scranton Guy Douglas Dean (County Supt. Education) Scranton O. B. Dorris* Montgomery County Gerald Fitzgerald Friar's Point Anthony S. Graham Broadalbin, N. Y. J. E. Harrington Chickasaw County John Lynn Harris Water Valley Charles H. Hudson Tippah County Gabe Jacobson Meridian Robert Fraiser Bell Logan DeSoto County Joseph Turner Lowery Smithdale George Boggan Myers Greenwood Lee Maurice Russell Oxford Edward Andrew Sawyer Kosciusko William Percy Shinault Oxford Julius Roberston Tipton Jackson Luther A. Whittington Roxie Distinctions and Medals Awaeded. James Lafayette Williams B.P. with Distinction Robert Montgomery Bordeaux LL.B. with Distinction Seniob Speakers Elected. Academic Department. James Lafayette Williams Salutatorian Shirley Sue Neill Oration Thomas Kendall Boggan Oration Ben j amin Archer Tucker Oration Alternates. Adolph Herman Stephen Oration Thomas William White Oration Law Department. Robert Montgomery Bordeaux, Jr Valedictorian L. Money Adams Oration Marvin Holloman Brown Oration Luther A. Whittington Oration UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 285 Alternates. Joseph Turner Lowery Oration John Percy Boyd Oration Medals Awarded fok Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Richard Capel Beckett, Jr First Medal Orman L. Kimbrough Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Prather S. McDonald First Medal Duncan Holt Chamberlain, Jr Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Stokes Vernon Robertson First Medal Leon Roseborough Second Medal Seniob Medals fob Excellence in Debate. William Edwin Bates Leonard Phi Sigma Society Medal William Otey Crisman Hermaean Society Medal Bryan Medal. Thomas William White. Edwabd Thompson Law Pbize. Robert Montgomery Bordeaux, Jr. School of English Pbize. William Andrew Henry, Jr. O. G. ROBEBTSON PBIZES. Mary Alice Haley Sophomore Rhoetric Prize Richard Capel Beckett, Jr Freshman Rhetoric Prize New Students. L. M. Adams Ackerman John Rogers Anders* Wilkinson County Percy Harmon Anderson Marshall County Nannie Louise Andrus Oxford Gresham D . Bates Oxford Richard Capel Beckett, Jr. (Rhodes Scholar) Oxford, England Edward Jefferson Boatner Potts Camp John B . Bordeaux Meridian John Percy Boyd So. McAlister, Okla. J. W. Bradford Calhoun County James Burton Canfield (Farmer) Columbus 286 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. John Boot he Carothers , Sardis Duncan Holt Chamberlain, Jr Houston Bettie Sue Chambliss Laurel Albert DeChabrun 1 Lafayette County Blanche Childress Battsville Mary Helon Childress Batesville Charles Clark Cleveland Charles Banister Cochran Guthrie, Okla. H. Rimmer Covington , Canton Fred White Cox* Kelly William Clarence Cox Columbus Walter Barker Critz* West Point Clyde Harwell Dabbs (Cashier Bank) Nettleton James Fort Daniel (Bookkeeper in Bank) Marshall County James Thomas Dees Lauderdale County Allen Peeler Dodd (Lawyer) Kosciusko Harvey Dodd (Lawyer) Kosciusko 0. B. Dorris* Phoeniz, Ariz. Robert Jones Enochs (Physician) Barlow Ashby Minor Foote (Banker) Hattiesburg Esta S. Furr (Physician) Pontotoc Laurie Marion Gaddis Bolton Menza Bertramb Grace, Jr Greenwood Anthony S. Graham Broadalbin, N. Y. John Moseley Hairston Gulf port Robert Ervin Hairston* Lowndes County Mary Alice Haley (Mrs. W. L. Fulton) Iowa City, Iowa John Turner Haney (Physician) Hattiesburg J. E. Harrington Chickasaw County John Lynn Harris Water Valley George Harvey, Jr Canton Roy Lester Heidelberg (Merchant) Hattiesburg Maud Vernon Herman Kossuth John Cornelius Herrington (Medical Student) Vicksburg Anna Herron : Carroll C ounty Herbert Holmes (Lawyer) Senatobia Thomas Jefferson Hopkins Hickory Wilford H. Howry Dallas, Texas Robert Knox Hubbard (D.D.S.) Hazlehurst Charles H. Hudson (Lawyer) Wilberton, Okla. Thomas Dudley Isom Burgess Joseph Elliott Johnson Batesville A. C. Johnston Friars Point Moses Hunt Jones Franklin County J. M. Kimbrough Durant Orman Lanier Kimbrough Greenwood Rufus Ballentine Lacey Memphis, Tenn. Ernest Latham (Merchant) Pontotoc County UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 287 Douglas Clifton Lauderdale (Lawyer) Hernando James Eades Luckett (Theological Student) Kosciusko Mary Wirt McCorkle (Mrs. A. J. Seals) California Prather Sondheim McDonald (Stenographer) Bay St. Louis Vance Rutledge McDonald (Insurance Agent) Hattiesburg David McDowell, Jr (Farmer) Marshall County Anselm Joseph McLaurin, Jr Brandon John Warren McNair (Lawyer) Brookhaven Overton Harris Miller Chickasaw County Luther B . Mobley Batesville Frank Morris Courtland J. T. Morrow Pontotoc County Benson L. Myers West Point Harry Ervin Nash (Lawyer) Starkville Willis Carl Paschall Oxford Robert Johnson Perry ....Warren County Lavelle Cuthbert Pigford Lumberton Rilla Ella Rea (Teacher) Wesson Viola Blanche Rogers New Albany Edwin Andrew Sawyer* Kosciusko Emma Schauber Laurel John Thomas Sherman (Drummer) Oktibbeha County Leo Shumaker ._ Holly Springs Alfred Browne Sparkman Cleveland George Royster Stephenson Marshall County George Howell Strange Booneville Randolph Tucker Strickland Germantown, Tenn. Joseph K. Sturdivant Holmes County Emily Laura Sutton - Oxford Thomas McQuiston Sykes (Teacher) Jackson Tillie Tann DeKalb, Kemper County N. Burton Thurmond Lafayette County R. J. Thurmond Lafayette County Julius Robinson Tipton (Lawyer; member Legislature) Hernando Asa Caldwell Tucker Courtland Hugh V. Wallace Lafayette County Ben R. Warriner Alcorn County Thomas Williams Waite DeSoto County Luther A. Whittington Roxie William Lewis Wood (Lawyer) Brookhaven B. F. Worsham Corinth Frank Osborn Wynn Ruby ville Jacob Shall Yerger Greenwood William Green Yerger Greenwood 12SS UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. SESSION OF 1903-04. Commencement Preacher. Rev. Theron D. Rice, D.D Atlanta, Ga. Commencement Orator. Hon. W. H. Hardy Hattiesburg Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Laws. Hon. John Sharp Williams Yazoo City Master of Arts. Edward Saunders Balthrop (Professor) Jackson, Tenn. William Irving McKay (Lawyer) Forest Bachelor of Arts. Samuel James Collier Oxford John Marvin Furr Pontotoc Benjamin J. Hatch Greenville James Berry Lea veil Oxford Robert Bradford Walker Carthage Edward Clyde Wright Grenada Bachelor of Science. Charles Fisher Ames Hattiesburg Laurie Marion Gaddis Bolton Laurens Thompson Kennedy Guntown Mary Wirt McCorkle (Mrs. A. J. Seale) Oxford Bachelor of Civil Engineering. Samuel Jackson Murphy Attala County Bachelor of Mining Engineering. William Lawrence Fulton Iowa City, Iowa Bachelor of Electrical Engineering. Bern Price, Jr Oxford Bachelor of Philosophy. Sallie Falkner Burns . University Virgil Rufus Howie Morton Robert Hamilton Powell Canton Bachelor of Laws. William Alexander Bethune Bond Walter Fletcher Brown Holly Springs Edward E. Dent Mendenhall Hubert Frederick Fisher Memphis, Tenn. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 289 William Andrew Henry, Jr Yazoo City Herbert Holmes Senatobia Rufus Ballentyne Lacey Memphis, Tenn. James Addison Leathers Clarksdale John Warren McNair Brookhaven Ely Bigham Mitchell Rienzi Charles Ellis Ott Mt. Herman Hillrie M arshall Quin ^ Jackson Marion Wesley Riely Natchez Virgil Otis Robertson Jackson Cecil Shands Laurel Benjamin Rowlett Warriner Corinth Thomas Binford Watkins Water Valley Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Thomas Binford Watkins LL.B. with Special Distinction Walter Fletcher Brown LL.B. with Distinction Senior Speakers Elected. Academic Department. Robert Bradford Walker Valedictorian Virgil Rufus Howie Oration William Lawrence Fulton Oration Mary Wort McCorkle Oration Alternates. Lawrence Thompson Kennedy Oration Laurie Marion Gaddis Oration Law Department. Walter Fletcher Brown Salutatorian Cecil Shands Oration Thompson Binford Watkins Oration Hillrie M. Quin Oration Alternates. William Andrew Henry Oration Charles Ellis Ott Oration Medals Awarded for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. George Holcomb Robertson First Medal Thomas Earl Edwards Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Albert F. Mecklenberger First Medal Fred Marshall Witty Second Medal 19 290 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. University Sophomore Medals. Luther Manship, Jr First Medal Mary Alice Haley j Second Medal Senior Medals for Excellence in Debate. Virgil Rufus Howie Phi Sigma Society Medal No Hermaean Medal Awarded. Bryan Medal. William Lawrence Fulton. Edward Thompson Law Prize. Walter Fletcher Brown. School of English Prize. Richard Capel Beckett, Jr. C. G. Robertson Prizes. Mary Helon Childress Sophomore Rhetoric Medal Royal Cameron Bailey Freshman Rhetoric Prize New Students. Gertrude Abramsohn Monroe County, Ark. James Milton Acker Aberdeen Clayton Anderson Tupelo Landon Clifford Andrews Oxford Royal Cameron Bailey (Teacher) Lexington Louella Barnes Copiah County Lucretia Beall Hillsdale William Thomas Bennett Corinth William Alexander Bethune Harrison County L. May Boatner (Teacher) Potts Camp Madge Wills Boatner (Teacher) Potts Camp Walter Sidney Bobo Clarksdale Katherine Hudson Bogard Oxford G. F. Boyd Kosciusko William Henry Braden Vicksburg David Clay Bramlette, Jr. (Lawyer) Woodville Maurice Bray Winona Houston Breland Hattiesburg Norman Craig Brewer Black Hawk Walter Fletcher Brown Marshall County Henry Anderson Busick Brandon Edgar Leon Byrd Lafayette County Robert Lee Campbell Pontotoc Charles Galloway Carter Hattiesburg m UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 291 Lucy Bell Carothers Sardis Archibald Steele Catching Georgetown Clinton Freeman Cate Pleasant Hill James Phipps Chase Memphis, Tenn. Edward Clarke Coleman Kosciusko Casa Collier Oxford David Ephraim Crawley Center Ben C. Crisler Madison County James Finner Dabbs Amcry John Ira Dabbs (Teacher) Saltillo Joseph Hughston Dampeer (Physician) Dentville Junius Davidson — Arkansas Olust John Dedeaux DeLisle Edward L. Dent Simpson County Henry Muldrow Downing Chickasaw County Josephine Dulaney Okolona Isaac Greenwood Duncan (Physician) Memphis, Tenn. William Richards Eades (Electrician) Memphis, Tenn. Thomas Earl Edwards Laurel Albert Lamon Ellis Florence John Edward Ellis Cedar Bluff Frank Love Fair (Merchant)... Louisville Vivian Felker (Teacher) . Batesville Hubert Frederick Fisher (Lawyer)... Memphis, Tenn. India Flynt Monroe County Ebb J, Ford (First Rhodes' Scholar for Mississippi) Columbia Annie Roberta Fulton Miller School, Va. Iona Doyle Furr Oxford Quinn Devereaux Furr r Oxford Lelia B. Gentry (Teacher) Eupora Susie Gibert (Mrs. Samuel Knowlton) Shaw Harry Inscoe Gill Senatobia Robert James Gordon Chickasaw County Samuel Claude Hall (Supt. Schools) Grenada Mary Marr Hardeman (Stenographer) Dallas, Texas William Iverson Hargis, Jr Jackson Francis Higdon Harper Grenada County A. E. Harris.. Hinds County Onie Harris Booneville Carsie Marcious Hartzog Covington County Charles Mann Haverkamp (U. S. A.) West Point, N. Y. Claude P. Henry.. Yazoo City Claude Edward Hill Hattiesburg James Hardy Holder . Tate County Arthur A. Howze Winona Eoline Howze Winona Anna Hudson (Teacher) Central Academy Martha Louise Hull ..Attalla County 292 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Edward Watson Humphries. Lowndes County Pearl Isabel Huston Harmontown Rosa Hutcheson Little Rock, Ark. Dudley Isoni Hutchinson (Vanderbilt Student) Nashville, Tenn. Robert Kenneth Hutchinson Little Rock, Ark. James Robert Jackson Pontotoc County Alonzo Brown Johnson (Teacher) Batesville George M . Johnson Sardis John Edward Johnson (Civil Engineer) Sardis Means Johnston Sunny Side Lucille Josephine Kimerer (Teacher) Cuba Marion H. Kimerer Coahoma County John T. Kirk Noxubee County B. Frank Lampton Marion County Robert Benjamin Lampton ..Magnolia Keith Palmer Lanneau, Jr Natchez John Campbell Latham (Officer U. S. N., "Miss.") DeSoto County J. L. Landrum Copiah County George Walne Leavell, Jr Oxford Robert Charles Lee, Jr Madison Paul Purcell Lindholm Lexington Leopold Locke Poplarville Edna Haley Lowe Hinds County William Locke Lowrance Wichita County, Texas Luther Manship, Jr. (Lawyer) Jackson Douglass Maxwell (Mrs. D. C. Bramlette, Jr.) Woodville Lucius Lamar Mayes (Lawyer) Jackson John E. McCorkle, Jr Oxford Thomas Paschall McCullar (Lawyer) Booneville John I. McDade (on battleship Miss.) Copiah County Lee Davidson McLean Winona Sherman M. McNair (Lawyer) Brookhaven Albert F. Mecklenberger (Student in Chicago) Okolona Ellyson Gwynne Merriwether (M.D.) Lake Cormorant Norma Middleton (Mrs. Hardy) Meadville Donald Cameron Miller Oxford Ely Bingham Mitchell (Lawyer) Rienzi Lyman Burge Mitchell Rienzi Louis N. Mitchell New Albany J. L. Mixon Hattiesburg Pat H. Moody Crystal Springs Edmond Warren Montgomery 1 Yazoo City William Harris Mounger Eupora Mary Louise Neilson Oxford Jewell Arthur Newman* Union Church Bell Taylor Orendorf Rolling Fork Charles Ellis Ott Washington Edmund Lewis Patty Alamo, New Mexico UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 293 William Grafton Pearce Panola County Albert Winfrey Pigford Meridian David Earle Porter Memphis, Tenn. Lloyd Greenleaf Prentice Poplarville Leverne Kelly Purcell Seattle, Wash. Julius Ingram Purser Copiah County Hugh Henry Rather (Druggist) Holly Springs Augustus C . Ray Texas John Edward Reed, Jr Meridian Marion Wesley Reily Adams County Bessie Richmond (Mrs. John See) Corinth John Ricks .Canton Jackson Blair Roach, Jr Oxford George Holcomb Robertson Hattiesburg Ambrose Barney Schauber (Teacher) Brookhaven Samuel Pervis Shaw St. Landry Parish, La. George Barnes Shelby Shelby Baxter Sloss Oxford Lula C. Smith Lafayette County Mabelle Augusta Smith Oxford Robert Somerville, Jr . Greenville Margaret Harris Spears Lafayette County George Royster Stephenson (Merchant) , Holly Springs John Allen Sykes (Lawyer) Aberdeen James Meriwether Taylor Como Horace Hulett Walton San Antonio, Texas Benjamin Rowlett Warriner Alcorn County John Boyd Webb* ._ Columbus Sallie Webster * Oxford John Perry White Perry County Nathan Wilmer Whitfield . _Columbus Auvergne Williams (Student University Chicago) Eupora John Clifton Williams Houston Fred Marshall Witty Winona William R. Witty (Insurance) Winona Eva Ida Woodruff Batesville Tandy O. Yewell (Lawyer) Carrollton SESSION OF 1904-1905. Commencement Preacher. Rev. B. P. Fullerton, D.D., St. Louis. Commencement Orator. Prof. C. Alphonso Smith, Chapel Hill, N. C. Degrees Confebbed. Doctor of Laws. Prof. C. Alphonso Smith. 294 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Master of Arts. W. H. Carter.. Columbus J. DeWitt Furr.. ..University J. P. Neff Lafayette A. H. Roop... University Bachelor of Arts. Henry Samuel Barron Crystal Springs Guy Tillman Gillespie Duck Hill Ira Thompson Gilmer , Toccopola Roy Lester Heidleberg Heidleberg Viola Blanch Rogers New Albany Elmer Ruel Walton Coosa Bachelor of Science. Annie Berry Braxton Thomas Bailey Hardy Columbus Robert Henry Harrison Charleston Mary Lula Rea Wesson Stokes Vernon Robertson. Hattiesburg Bachelor of Philosophy. Charles Thompson Butler Brookhaven Abye Albert Cohn .Brookhaven Mary Alice Haley (Mrs. W. L. Fulton) Iowa City, Iowa Hinkle Patton Heidleberg Heidleburg Emma Kate Kimmons Oxford Kate Lundy Oxford Anselm Joseph McLaurin, Jr Brandon Leopold Shumacker Holly Springs Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering. John Edward Fanning Buena Vista Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering. Samuel Wilson Bigger Winona Bachelor of Laws. David J. Allen Cleveland Landon Clifford Andrews Oxford William Percy Biggs Memphis, Tenn. William Chapman Bowman Natchez Duncan Holt Chamberlain Harriston Claude Clayton Amory William Fielder Cook Hattiesburg Frederick William Elmer Biloxi DeWitt Carroll Enochs Mendenhall M. B. Grace Belen John Moseley Hairston Crawford UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 295 Chas. Buck Hamilton Jackson Virgil Rufus Howie McComb Lucus Lamar Mayes Jackson Anselm Joseph McLaurin, Jr Brandon Charles Robert Ridgeway Jackson Frank Roberson_ Pontotoc George Barnes Shelby, Jr Shelby Adolph Herman Stephens Fayette William Evans Stone Oxford Garland Quinche Whitfield Jackson James Lafayette Williams Indianola Tandy 0. Yewell Carrollton Distinctions and Medals Awarded. Tandy 0. Yewell LL.B. with Special Distinction D. H. Chamberlain LL.B. with Distinction DeWitt C. Enochs LL.B. with Distinction Senior Speakers Elected. Academic Department. Leopold Shumacker Salutatorian Viola Blanch Rogers Oration Mary Lula Rea Oration Abye Albert Cohn Oration Alternates. Stokes V. Robertson Oration Elmer R. Walton Oration Law Department. T. O. Yewell Valedictorian H. V. Watkins Oration W. C. Enochs Oration D. H. Chamberlain, Jr Oration Alternates. V. R. Howie Oration G. Q. Whitfield Oration Medals Awarded for Excellence in Elocution. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Akin Brooke First Medal James Curtis Grant Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Medals. Frank H. Leavell . First Medal James E. Calhoun Second Medal 296 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. University Sophomore Medals. Albert F. Mecklenburger First Medal May Belle Standifer Second Medal Senior Medals fob Excellence in Debate. Guy T. Gillespie Phi Sigma Society Medal Stokes V. Robertson Hermaean Society Medal Bbyan Medal. Mary Alice Haley. Edwabd Thompson Law Pbize. D. H. Chamberlain, Jr. School of English Pbize. Lucille J. Kimerer. Pbize Offebed by the Colonial Dames of Amebica. Charles Thompson Butler. Mabcus Elvis Taylob Memorial Medals. Albert F. Mecklenburger Sophomore James E . Calhoun Freshman Earle Lindsey Freshman New Students. Roger Hiram Adams San Francisco, Cal. Andrew Jackson Aldridge Areola F. Marion Aldridge Greenwood Joseph Holliday Aldridge. Estill David J. Allen Rosedale Henry L. Allen Vicksburg Wesley Motes Bailey (Cadet) West Point, N. Y. Frederick Monroe Ball (Teacher) Braxton Richard Jacob Beaver Seminary Mrs. Richard Jacob Beaver Burns Ella Bew Greenwood William Percy Biggs Memphis, Tenn. Wiley Alexander Blair. . ^ Tupelo Clarence Richard Bolton Pontotoc John B. Bourdeaux Meridian William Chapman Bowman Natchez Addison Brooks Boyd Water Valley Effie Pearl Bramlett Oxford Jessie S. Bramlett Oxford John Robert Brock Leakesville Akin Brooke Meridian UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 297 Dewitt Buck (Physician) Acona Hugh Thompson Buckley Winona George S. Buder Columbus Anna May Buford.. St. Joseph, Mo. Ernest A. Buford Whitehaven, Tenn. James Edmund Calhoun Atlanta, Ga. Isaac Price Carr Pontotoc Claude Clayton (Lawyer) Tupelo Albert Jerry Coleman (Lawyer) Vaiden Myrtle Coleman (Mrs. Baker) Birmingham, Ala. Lucile Cook Oxford William Felder Cook (Lawyer) Hattiesburg John Beattie Coon Washington, D. C. James Curtis Crane Yazoo City Ella May Cresswell Oxford Hattie Crowell Orrwood James Evans Crump West Point Mattie Glenn Dalton Booneville Eric Allen Dawson Okolona Chauncey L. Denton Belen Rankin Scott Dorsey Natchez Henry Beasley Edwards Texas Hudgins S. Ellis (Physician) Yazoo City James C . Elmer Biloxi DeWitt Carroll Enochs Mendenhall Leonard Eugene Farley .... Hernando Chaille Ferrell . Ashland J. Wilbourn Field ___Oxford James Alemeth Finley .- Tupelo Anderson Marshall Foote Hattiesburg Harriet Jeannette Ford (Mrs. C. C. Thompson) Columbia Willie Ford (Mrs. Chas. Hardin, Jr.) Macon Ethel Charlotte Fowler Gretna, La. Charles L. Fox Memphis, Tenn. Hugh Lawson Gary, Jr Rosedale James Max Glenn, Jr Colliersville, Tenn. Mary Roselyne Glenn Oxford Charles Tucker Gordon Liberty Elias Kilgore Guinn .-. Houston Daniel Reed Gunn Okolona Toxey Hall Columbia Charles Buck Hamilton Jackson Wilbourn Edgar Hampton Oxford Josiah Rowan Haney, Jr. (Student) Hattiesburg Matthew Claudius Harper Fayette Harry S. Haynes Vicksburg Mary Florence Hedleston Oxford Rachel Caldwell Herron Trezevant, Tenn. 298 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Charles Counce Hightower Hattiesburg Minnie Hightower Hattiesburg Beulah Holder (Mrs.) Jackson S. H . Horton Grenada Arthur A. Howze_ Winona Loin M arvin Hudson Bassfield Cleveland Paul Huggins (Civil Engineer) Biloxi Sallie Walton Humphreys (Mrs. W. W. Harrison) St. Joseph, Mo. Lawrence Chastine Hutton Kodol Lemuel Doty Jackson (Accountant) Kosciusko Hal Glenn Johnson Bright Leslie Christine Johnson University Loulie M ay Johnson University Albert Sidney Johnston Pontotoc Albert Benjamin Kelly (Planter) Anding Nellie Sue Kimmons Oxford Grover C. Kirby Money Isaac Cecil Knox Pontotoc Mathilde Parkman Lacey (Mrs. T. W. Yates) Laurel William Abner Lauderdale (Accountant) Hernando Frank Hartwell Leavell Hollywood, Cal. Robert E. Leigh Columbus Julius A. Lemler Greenville Earle Lindsey - Laurel Salvador Antonio Matranga (Salesman) ..New Orleans, La. Will Reid McBride Greenwood Theodore Trimmier McCarley (Rhodes Scholar) Oxford, England Lawrence White McLean Tupelo Leary W. McPherson Jackson James M cWillie Jackson Ernest Lamar Meaders Grenada Pearl Marvin Middleton (Mrs. Crawford) Arkabutla Arthur Wellington Miller Indianola Mabel Miller Iuka Martin Van Buren Miller, Jr Meridian Sam Cochran Mims (Lawyer) Byhalia Loraine Moore Liberty Lutie Belle Moore Oxford Newton Augustus Moore Splinter Roscoe R. Moore Coldwater Mrs. Lillie McKissick Morris* Caledonia Samuel P. Morris Star Melissa Hope Moss Oxford William Andrew Nelson Watten, Okla. James H. Neville, Jr Gulfport Thomas C. Newsom, Jr Independence James Lutellus Nichols Eudora Charles Guin Oglesby Tupelo . UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 299 Lemuel E . Oldham Oxford Carl Monroe O'Neal Ludlow Robert Langdon Orr Orwood John August Osoinach (Editor) Biloxi Percy A. Perkins Colliersville, Tenn. Bessie D . Powe Hattiesburg Frank R. Quarles Fairfax, Okla. Melne Belle Richards Laurel Charles Robert Ridgway Jackson Archie Campbell Roane* Oxford James Lake Roberson Pontotoc Lewie Robertson (Mrs. Griggars) Atlanta, Ga. Daniel Lycurgus Ross (Secretary of U. of M.) University Marcelle Rowland Coffeeville Mary Victoria Rowland Oxford Lewis Jones Rutledge (Army) Summitt Joseph Sheffield Albin Walter Sillers, Jr Rosedale Caulder Evans Slough (Lawyer) ..Oxford Arthur H. Smith Sumner Frank P. Smith Coffeeville James Strain Smythe Greenville William Augustus Solomon (Insurance) Hernando Arthur Alphonso Sparkman Cleveland May Belle Standifer Gulfport Ruth Standifer Gulfport Rupert Lester Stark (Teacher) Arden, N. C. Daniel Eli Staton Swan Lake William Griffin Stewart (Druggist) ...Moss Point Abel John Street Gloster Emma Gerdine Sykes Oxford William Alexander Temple. Oxford Fred S. Toombs Memphis, Tenn. Moyle Treloar Orrwood T. Floy Turley Memphis, Tenn. Anna Ward Meridian H. Vaughan Watkins 1 Jackson John Pickett Watkins Iris Thomas Clay Watson (Planter) Strong Olive Webster Oxford Albert Hall Whitfield, Jr Jackson Garland Quinche Whitfield Magnolia C. Arthur Williamson Yazoo City Chalmers Meek Williamson, Jr Jackson Samuel Freeman Williamson Pleasant Grove Albert W. Willis (Merchant) Tylertown John Calhoun Windham (Supt. Schools) Canton Clarence Wilford Withers L Memphis, Tenn. 300 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Andrew Wood .Oklahoma Rebecca Elizabeth Woods Water Valley Chauncey Monroe Wooley Edgar J. M. Wyatt (Principal University Training School) Oxford Mrs. Mary G. Wyatt (Teacher University Training School) Oxford SESSION 1905-1906. Commencement Preacher. Rev. Beverly Warner, D.D New Orleans, La. Commencement Orator. Hon. Murray Smith Vicksburg Degrees Conterred. Doctor of Laws. President H. H. Harrington. Hon. Dunbar Rowland. Gen. Luke E. Wright. Master of Arts. Goode Montgomery Hazlehurst Howard W. Odum (Student Columbia University) New York City Bachelor of Arts. Nancy Louise Andrus (Teacher) Yazoo City Richard Capel Beckett, Jr (Rhodes Scholar) Oxford, England Charles B. Cochran (Lawyer) West Point William D. Conn (Lawyer) Corinth Esta A. Furr Pontotoc Maude V. Herman Kossuth Edmond Gaines Hightower (Theological Student) Louisville, Ky. James Hardy Holder (Minister) University William Harris Mounger (Minister) University Vergie Louise Neill (Teacher) Oxford Samuel William Newell (Supt. Schools) Tupelo Lavelle Cuthbert Pigford (Teacher) Lumberton Emma Schauber (Teacher) Laurel Thomas McQuiston Sykes (Teacher) Aberdeen Edgar Webster (Lawyer) Oxford Bachelor of Science. Mary Helon Childress Batesville Hosea Rimmer Covington Canton Allen Peeler Dodd (Lawyer) Kosciusko Pearl Lorraine Guy (Teacher) Vicksburg Douglas Clifton Lauderdale (Lawyer) Hernando UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 301 Prather Sondheim McDonald Bay St. Louis Charles W. Martin University Irby C. Nicholds (Teacher) College Station, Texas Asa Caldwell Tucker Courtland Albert Hall Whitfield, Jr Jackson Bachelor of Philosophy. John Cornelius Herrington (Medical Student) Vicksburg Lucile Josephine Kimerer (Teacher) Cuba Linda Katrina Sultan (Mrs. H. M. Faser) Oxford Bachelor of Laws. Charlton Augustus Alexander Jackson Norman Rudolph Allen Carrollton Charles Clark Cleveland William Dow Conn . Corinth Rankin Scott Dorsey Natchez Thomas Airey Evans Memphis, Tenn. Roscoe Douglas Ford Scranton Laura Marion Gaddis Bolton James Ollie Gilespie Senatobia Charley Tucker Gordon Gillsburg David Aloysius Jacobs Beulah Orman Lanier Kimbrough Greenwood William Irving McKay . Forest James McWillie Jackson Robert Hamilton Powell Canton John Henry Price . Noxapater Caulder Evans Slough -_ Oxford Alonzo Louis Yates Columbia Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering. John Edward Johnson Sardis Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering. Carl David Kirby Carrollton Bachelor of Science in Education. Samuel Claude Hall Grenada Bachelor of Arts in Education. John Calhoun Windham (Supt. Schools) Canton Bachelor of Science in Medicine. Benjamin Howard Durley Aberdeen Certificate for Completion of Two- Year Medical Course. Benjamin Howard Durley Aberdeen John Marvin Furr Pontotoc 302 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Grover Cleveland Kirby.. Carrollton Ellyson Gwynne Merriwether Hernando Percy Augustus Perkins Collierville, Tenn. Arthur Henry Smith Sumner Distinctions, Medals, Pbizes Awabdad. Excellence in Scholarship. William Dow Conn B.A. with Distinction I. C. Nichols B.S. with Distinction William Dow Conn LL.B. with Distinction Seniob Speakebs Elected. I.C. Nichols Valedictory W. D. Conn Salutatory C. A. Alexander Oration R. C. Beckett, Jr Oration T. A. Evans. ._ Oration V. L. Neill Oration Alternates. R. D.Ford Oration E . Webster Oration Marcus Elvis Taylor Memorial Medals. William Henry Braden Physics (c) Leonard Eugene Farley English (b) Vergie Louise Neill German (c) Jewell Arthur Newman Botany (b) Lavelle Cuthbert Pigford Astronomy (d) Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Paul Renshaw First Medal John Sivley Rhodes Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Clinton Simmons Bigham First Medal Richardson Ayres Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Frank H. Leavell First Medal Loulie May Johnson Second Medal Excellence in Oratory. Albert F. Mecklenburger Phi Sigma Junior Medal Excellence in Debate. Edmond Gaines Hightower Hermaean Senior Medal Albert Hall Whitfield, Jr Phi Sigma Senior Medal John W. Odum Confederate Memorial Prize. William Irving McKay. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 303 Bryan Medal. Edmond Gaines Hightower. School of English Magazine Prize. Edgar Webster. Edward Thompson Prize. Charlton Augustus Alexander. Hillrie M. Quinn Prize. Charley Tucker Gordon. E. C. Knickerbocker Prize. John Henry Price. Bobbe-Merrill Prize. William Irving McKay. New Students. John A. Aldridge Estill Charlton Augustus Alexander Jackson Norman Rudolph Allen Fayette Clayton Anderson . --_. Tupelo Emma Love Ashford Hattiesburg Richardson Ayres Natchez Ben Stigler Beall, Jr. (Pharmacist) Lexington Joe Steen Bell Columbus Jennie Huntington Benson (Mrs. W. S. Bobo) Clarksdale Clinton Simmons Bigham Pontotoc Hugh Priddy Boswell Kosciusko Walter Lawrence Brannon, Jr Coffeeville Houston Breeland (Civil Service) Hattiesburg Mary Broome Collins Julia Clementine Brown Oxford Hugh Zollicoff er Browne Kosciusko Charles Clifton Buchanan Collins Edna Gertrude Bufkin Laurel Ezekiel Lee Busby Bogue Chitto Frank Stanislaus Cannon Greenville John Paul Cannon , Greenville Laura Chambliss Canon Dubbs Mrs. Margaret Beers Charling New Orleans, La. Arice Clarence Cherry Montgomery Mary Ona Collier .Oxford James Walker Cunningham (Planter) Lexington James Hector Currie Meridian Lawrence Edgar Dickerson Blue Springs Ida Helon Duncan Oxford 304 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Earle Ellis Florence Isaac Newton Ellis, Jr. (Bank Clerk) Hazlehurst Frank Kendall Ethridge Meridian M aurice Friedman Cleveland Walter Currie Furr University James Gordon Gillespie Greenwood James Ollie Gillespie Senatobia Daniel Ransome Grantham (Teacher) Collins Ora Frazier Grantham (Teacher) Purvis William Russell Graves Jackson Marcellus Green, Jr Jackson B. B. Greene Holly Springs Clifford Cleveland Gruber Jackson May Elene Haddon Harpersville Charles Philip Hall (U. S. Army) Charleston Danie Elizabeth Hall (Teacher) Kosciusko Benjamin Franklin Hardy (Teacher) Laurel Fleet Cooper Hathorn (Lawyer) Hattiesburg Hiram Cornelius Henry Yazoo City Henry Augustus Hicks (Lawyer) Guthrie, Okla. George Henry Hill, Jr Tupelo Oeslie Woodward Holberg* Macon Herman Holland Maben Jud McCarty Holman Hemingway James Garrott Holmes (Lawyer) Yazoo City Edward Charley Hudson Bassfield Daniel Hunt University David Aloysius Jacobs Beulah Elbert Johnson Senatobia Lucas Polk Jones Sallisaw, Okla. Lynette Kimmons Fort Smith, Ark. Hugh William Kisner Water Valley Robert Pinkney Lake Memphis, Tenn. Chase Medrich Laurendine (Reporter) New Orleans, La. Harrison Carter Leak (Lawyer) Woodville William Cooke Lester Guntown Samuel Huston Liddell Blue Springs Sam P. Long Shannon Annie Wauchope McBride Greenwood Henry Clay McCabe, Jr. (Lawyer) Vicksburg Anna McCain Water Valley Howard Crawford McCorkle Oxford William Percy McDonald (Chemist) Starkville Augustus Henry McDonnell Okolona Algernon Sydney McGehee Memphis, Tenn. Theodore McKnight, Jr. (Lawyer) Vicksburg Lucius Lamar McLean Naples, Texas Wallace Neal McLeod Brooksville UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 305 Hattie Magee Clinton Maud M agee Columbia Fidelia Massey Oxford Alma George Mauldin McCool Houston Clark Maxwell (Electrical Engineer) Brookhaven R. Cleveland Maxwell Lamar Thompson White Meriwether Lake Cormorant John Mixon (Banker) Hattiesburg Fred Hope Montgomery Sardis Mabel Clare Morrow West Point, Ga. Margaret Merriam Morrow West Point, Ga. Samuel Fulton Neal .Winona Jason Adams Niles (Attorney at Law) McComb Luther Rawls O'Brien Terry Bradford Oldham (Real Estate) Bradford, Col. Boothe Frederick Oliver . Memphis, Tenn. Charles Edward Pegues Pontotoc John Bolivar Perkins, Jr. (Lawyer) Shawnee, Okla. Sam T. Pilkinton Mayhew John Henry Price Noxapater Ernest Franklin Puckett . Gattman Thomas G. Ramsey. . Whiteapple Hollis Clifton Rawls _ Columbia Leonidas Dudley Reed (Lawyer) Yazoo City Joseph Gilman Reid Canton Paul Renshaw Indianola John Sivley Rhodes Oxford George H. Robertson Hattiesburg George Hanson Robertson Laurel Albert Edgar Russell University Hall Williamson Sanders (Lawyer) Gulfport Noah Burney Scales Columbus Margaret Ruffin Sherman Memphis, Tenn. John R. Shields Jackson Norfleet Ruffin Sledge, Jr Como John Timothy Smith Barlow Rundle Smith Vicksburg Abram Douglas Somerville Greenville Ruby Stall Oxford Burton Horace Storm (R. R. Office) Brookhaven Simon Peter Stubblefield Vaughns Mignon Kathleen Therrell Aberdeen William Frank Thompson (Lawyer) Winona Benton Tindall Water Valley Francis Marion Tindall Misterton Walter Trotter, Jr T Winona Duffie D. Tucker Engine Walter Augustus Tynes, Jr Summit 20 306 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. James Owen Tyson (Bookkeeper) Holly Springs George Torrey Warren Union Church Virginia Irene Welch Toomsuba David Gotleib Wettlin (Lawyer) Woodville Erne Expert Wilkins (Merchant) Duck Hill Dawson Williamson Winn Laurel Mrs. Beulah A. Withers Love Charles Galloway Wood Brookhaven William Arthur Wooten Como Pauline Wright Oxford Joseph Kennard Young Lexington SESSION OF 1906-07. Commencement Preacher. Rev. Henry Stiles Bradley, D.D St. Louis, Mo. Commencement Orator. Hon. George T. Mitchell Tupelo Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Laws. President John Newton Tillman. Master of Arts. Maude Vernon Herman Kossuth Bachelor of Arts. Edward Clark Coleman, Jr Kosciusko Clyde R. Conner Hattiesburg Mary Marr Hardeman Dallas, Texas Claude Edward Hill Hattiesburg Sallie Walton Humphreys Greenwood Pearl Isabel Huston Harmontown Theodore Trimmier McCarley (Rhodes Scholar) Oxford, England Ambrose Barney Schauber Brookhaven Robert Sommerville Greenville John Boyd Webb* Columbus Auvergne Williams Eupora Fred Marshall Witty Winona Bachelor of Science. Royal Cameron Bailey Lexington Gayle C. Beanland 1 Oxford William Henry Braden Guntown James Phipps Chase (Lawyer) Memphis, Tenn. Olust John Dedeaux DeLisle Thomas Earle Edwards Laurel UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 307 Harriet Gennette Ford (Mrs. C. C. Thompson) Columbia Anna Elizabeth Hudson Tupelo James Garrett Holmes Yazoo City Leslie Christine Johnson University Mathilde P. Lacey (Mrs. T. W. Yates) Laurel Paul Purcell Lindholm Lexington Douglass Maxwell (Mrs. D. C. Bramlette, Jr.) Woodville Albert F. Mecklenburger Okolona Lyman Burge Mitchell Rienzi Jewel Arthur Newman Union Church Leonidas Dudley Reed Yazoo City Bess Richmond (Mrs. John See) . Corinth Charles Arthur Williamson Waynesboro Bachelor of Arts in Education. Tyna Amelia Tate Coff eeville Bachelor of Science in Education. Rupert Clark Morris Caledonia Bachelor of Engineering. Walter Sidney Bobo Clarksdale Maurice Bray Winona William Iverson Hargis, Jr University John E. McCorkle, Jr 1 Oxford William Hayes Miles Ashland Jackson Blair Roach, Jr Oxford Bachelor of Laws. James Addison McMillan Alexander Jackson Charles Banister Cochran West Point Clyde R. Conner Hattiesburg Charles Herman Dean Senatobia Hugh Lawson Gary Brookhaven Tony A. Hardy Gulf port Fleet Cooper Hathorn .Hattiebsurg Fenelon Dobyns Hewitt Summit Henry Augusta Hicks Bellefontaine James Garrott Holmes Yazoo City Elbert Johnson. . Senatobia Harrison Carter Leak Woodville Henry Clay McCabe, Jr Vicksburg Theodore McKnight, Jr Vicksburg Fred Hope Montgomery Oxford James Edgar Parker Increase John Bolivar Perkins, Jr Starkville Thomas G. Ramsey Whiteapple Holis Clifton Rawles Columbia Daniel Lycurgus Ross University 308 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Warren Lee Scott Sumrall Benjamin Acker Tucker, Jr Senatobia David Gotlieb Wettlin Woodville William Lewis Wood Brookhaven Certificates fob Two- Year Medical Course. Isaac Greenwood Duncan . Oxford Elias Kilgore Guinn Houston John Cornelius Harrington Sandersville Distinctions, Medals, Prizes. Excellence in Scholarship. Charles Herman Dean LL.B. with Distinction Elbert Johnson LL.B. with Distinction Albert F. Mecklenburger B.S. with Distinction J. E. Parker LL.B. with Distinction Tyna Amelia Pate B.A. in Education with Distinction Thomas G. Ramsey LL.B. with Distinction Senior Speakers Elected. Elbert Johnson Valedictory Tyna A. Pate Salutatory James G. Holmes Oration Albert F. Mecklenburger Oration Fred M. Witty Oration Alternates from Law Department. Charles B. Cochran Oration C. Herman Dean Oration From Other Departments. Auvergne Williams Oration J. Arthur Newman Oration John E. McCorkle Oration Marcus Elvis Taylor Memorial Medals. James Lutellus Nichols Zoology (b) James Meriwether Taylor Ethics (c) Paul Renshaw Greek (b ) Ernest Franklin Puckett Rhetoric (b) Erric Allen Dawson French (c) Annie Wauchope McBride Mathematics (b) Isaac Greenwood Duncan Chemistry (c) Hattie Magee History (c) Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. David E. Crawley First Medal Joseph Smith Rice Second Medal . UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 309 Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. Barry Gillespie First Medal C. McC. Phipps Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Clinton Simmons Bigham First Medal Paul Renshaw Second Medal Excellence in Debate. O. J. Dedeaux Phi Sigma Senior Medal A. B. Schauber Phi Sigma Senior Medal Excellence in Oratory. M. V. B. Miller Hermaean Junior Medal John W. Odom Confederate Memorial Prize. Tony Arnold Hardy. School of English Magazine Prize. John Boyd Webb.* Edward Thompson Prize. Charles Herman Dean. Hillrie M. Quinn Prize. Elbert Johnson. E. C. Knickerbocker Prize. Charles Herman Dean. Bobbs-Merrill Prize. James Garrott Holmes. Hemingway and McDonald Prize. Elbert Johnson. New Students. Fulton Swanzy Abney Toccopola Max Gilliard Abney Toccopola James A. McMillan Alexander Jackson Ethan Ellison Allen Brookhaven Winifred Alston Mt. Olive George Lucius Baskin Meridian Lou Ina Bates Oxford Roscoe Conkling Batson Hillsdale Bethune Caldwell Bernard Senatobia William Coleman Branton Burdette Henry Herschel Brickell Yazoo City Clifford Hall Buckley Winona Eugene Love Burnet Utica 310 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Richard Field Camp Hattiesburg Olive Cassell Canton Robert E. Cheatham, Jr Columbus Thomas Dudley Chilton Oxford Charles David Christian, Jr Meridian Frank Ervin Collins Coffeeville Martin Sennette Conner Seminary Kyle McCombs Cooper Grenada John Allen Crittenden Greenville Maude Crowell Orrwood Eugenia Eloise Davis (Stenographer) ...Memphis, Tenn. Charles Hermon Dean Senatobia Silas Leroy Dear Florence Benjamin E. DeRoy New York, N. Y. David Lamar Dixon Olio John William Dulaney, Jr Greenwood Catherine Shields Dunbar Natchez Nelle Wheat Dunn Greenville Frank C. Englesing, Jr Port Gibson Richard Creed Fox, Jr Duck Hill Thomas M cCulloch Fuller Laurel Richard Hoyt Furr Toccopola Rice Hunter Gaither Louisville Barry Gillespie Duck Hill Nonus Quay Gilmer Toccopola Wiley P. Goolsby Texas William Hunt Griffin Greenville William Butler Gunn Hand Emmie Hammond Winona Andrew Broadus Hargis Jackson Robert Blackburn Harper Fayette Leon Rivers Harrison, Jr Fayette Joseph Eugene Herrington Ellisville Fenelon Dobyns Hewitt (Lawyer) Summit William Henry Hill* Water Valley Otho Douglass Hooker (Physician) Lexington Lexey Walter Hubbard Shuqualak Robert Lee Ingram Dunleith Edgar Everet Jameson Sunny Side Francis Colbert Jenkins Shubuta William Augustus Jones, Jr. (Bookkeeper) Memphis, Tenn. Alpha Kendel Oxford Julia Lestine Kendel Oxford Lizette Kimbrough Oxford Annie Louise Kimmons Oxford Marie Kimmons Fort Smith, Ark. John Dowd King Okolona Nell Kirk Yazoo City UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 3H Thomas Kyle Kirk Clarksdale Elizabeth Reavis Kittle Evansville Norman Drayton Kittrell Black Hawk Baxter Nicholson Knox Pontotoc John McClain Kuykendall Enid Nannie A. Lacey Thomastown Leonard Leavell Oxford John Monterey Lee Greenville Walthall Bass Lee Madison Burwell Rembert Leman* Como John P. Lester Guntown John Lindsey, Jr ■__ Laurel Sidney J. Loeb (Merchant) Columbus James Selby McClinton Newton Charles Hemming Mclnnis Meridian Chester Andrew McLarty Tula Augusta McLeran (Teacher) Nettleton Eric Alexander McVey Pontotoc Margaret M axwell Canton Launcelot Pinkney May (Teacher) Brookhaven Cecil Eugene Miller Meridian Edward Baskin Miller Meridian Frances Bond Mitchell New Albany Robert Paine Mitchell Grenada Philip Stringer Montgomery Hattiesburg Roger Montgomery Tunica Clarence Edward Morgan (Lawyer) Kosciusko Elvis Lucas Myers Jackson Jennie Black Newell „. Tupelo Richard Lanier Nisbet Pontotoc James Madison Pannell Wesson James Edgar Parker Increase James Heddleston Paschall Toccopola Lillie R. Phillips Monticello, Ark. Claiborne McCullough Phipps Terra Ceia, Fla. Powell Plant Oxford Oren Quals Poindexter Ravine Alexander McKee Powe Hattiesburg David Neely Powers Jackson Sarah Elizabeth Price Macon Charles E. Quekemeyer Yazoo City Edward Holloway Ratcliffe, Jr Gulfport Robert Clifton Ray Canton Sarah Milner Rea (Teacher) Wesson Joseph Smith Rice Oktow Earle Harden Roach Oxford Marx Hanna Rosenbaum Meridian Warren Lee Scott Prentiss 312 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Thomas Banks Shepherd (Assistant Cashier) Lexington Eagleton Deaderick Smith Holly Springs William Hobson Spencer, Jr Red Lick Janie Stennis Kipling Archie Young Sturdivant Swan Lake Anna Belle Terry (Mrs. R. T. Bollew) Luxora, Ark. Julia Boyd Tolbert (Teacher) Winona Robert Allan Tri ble Cedar Bluff Julian Prentiss Trotter West Point Frank Warren Wadlow Biloxi William Allen Walton Edinburg Ruth Watkins Newton Wade Low Webster Oxford Zenus Paine White Toccopola Ephraim Isaac Wiy^ul (Bank Clerk) Nettleton Myrtis Browning Woodley Hattiesburg SESSION OF 1907-08. Commencement Preacher for 1908. Rev. George W. McDaniel, D.D Richmond, Va. Commencement Orator. Bishop Charles B. Galloway Jackson Degbees Conterbed. Doctor of Laws. Prof. Lauch McLaurin. Prof. William Howard Magruder. Hon. Samuel Andrew Witherspoon. Master of Arts. Pearl Lorraine Guy Vicksburg Edmond Gaines Hightower Hattiesburg Vergie Louise Neill Oxford Irby Coghill Nichols College Station, Texas Bachelor of Arts. Clarence Richard Bolton Pontotoc David Clay Bramlette Woodville James Hector Currie, Jr Meridian Isaac Cecil Knox Pontotoc Maude Clifford Magee Columbia James Lake Roberson Pontotoc James Meriwether Taylor Como Benton Tindall Water Valley Charles Galloway Wood Brookhaven UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 313 Bachelor of Science. Ben Stigler Beall, Jr Lexington James Edmund Calhoun Atlanta, Ga. John Beattie Coon Woodville Eric Allen Dawson Okolona Henry Beasley Edwards Shuqualak Leonard Eugene Farley Hernando Anderson Marshall Foote Hattiesburg Josiah Rowan Haney, Jr Hattiesburg Charles Counce Hightower Hattiesburg Hal Glenn Johnson . Hernando Loulie May Johnson University Lynette Kimmons Fort Smithnando William Abner Lauderdale Her, Ark. Earle Lindsey Laurel James Lutellus Nichols Eudora Simon Peter Stubblefield Vaughns Frank P. Smith Coffeeville John Pickett Watkins Irks Bachelor of Science in Education. Frederick Monroe Ball Braxton Pearl Marvin Middleton _ '_ Yazoo City Daisy Boswell Plant Oxford Bachelor of Engineering. Donald Cameron Miller Oxford Bachelor of Laws. William Thomas Bennett Corinth Charles David Christian, Jr Meridian Ellis Bowman Cooper Newton Frank Archelaus Critz, Jr West Point Douglas Clifton Lauderdale Hernando Thomas Paschal McCullar Boonville Jason Adams Niles Kosciusko Edward Holloway Ratcliffe, Jr Natchez Marx Hanna Rosenbaum Meridian Robert Allan Tribble Cedar Bluff Holland Otis White Brookhaven Certificate for Completion of Two-Year Medical Course. Casa Collier Oxford William Edgar Hampton Oxford Josiah Rowan Haney, Jr Hattiesburg Charles Counce Hightower Hattiesburg 314 I MVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Distinctions, Medals, Prizes. Excellence in Scholarship — Diplomas with Distinction. James Edmund Calhoun B.S. with Special Distinction Leonard Eugene Farley B.S. with Distinction Charles Counce Hightower B.S. with Distinction Charles Counce Hightower Medical Certificate with Distinction Earle Lindsey B.S. with Distinction Holland Otis White 1 LL.B. with Distinction Senior Speakers. James Edmund Calhoun Valedictory Holland Otis White Salutatory Ellis Bowman Cooper Oration Leonard Eugene Farley Oration Lynnette Kimmons Oration Marcus Elvis Taylor Memorial Medals. Lucas Polk Jones Mathematics (b) Henry Herschel Brickell English (2b) Idaline Cayce Latin (b) Howard Crawford McCorkle Physics (c) Andrew Broadus Hargis Mechanical Drawing (b) William Abner Lauderdale Astronomy (c) Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. Emmons N. Ligon First Medal John Carlisle Allen Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. James Dorman Rucker First Medal Baynard Coulter Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Barry Gillespie First Medal P. W. McDonald . Second Medal Excellence in Debate. Leonard Eugene Farley Hermaean Senior Medal M. V. B. Miller Hermaean Senior Medal John W. Odom Confederate Memorial Prize. Edward H. Ratcliffe, Jr. Edward Thompson Prize. Holland Otis White. Hillrie M. Quinn Prize. Charles D. Christian. Bobbs-Merrill Prize. Douglas Clifton Lauderdale. . UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 315 New Students. Robert Irwin Abbay Tunica Marshall Turner Adams . Belden John Carlisle Allen Meridian Miller Orr Allen Brooksville William Leslie Ammons Sumner Anne Heard Augustus Macon Oliver V. Austin Ellisville Eunice Aleine Barber Vicksburg Wilson P. Bean, Jr Yazoo City John Arthur Bell Greenwood James B . Boyles Patesville William P. Bramlett Oxford Thomas Steward Bratton Potts Camp Paul Zollicoff er Browne Kosciusko Katharine Metcalfe Byrnes . Natchez Robert Gunn Carlisle Little Rock, Ark. Bess Ming Carothers Sardis Roy W. Carruth Chesterville Joseph Blair Catching r Georgetown Robert Ellis Catching Hazlehurst Idaline Edith Cayce Martin, Tenn. Robert Knox Chandler . Okolona Gaston D. Chesteen Kilmichael Thomas Augustus Clark Dennis Ellis Bowman Cooper Newton Bayard L. Coulter Collins Carrie Clyde Cozine Meridian Rufus Lee Daniel .' Ackerman Jean Elizabeth Davidson Oxford Ralph Peter Delmas Scranton Jonas F. Dison (Lawyer) Ersman Iva Lamar Dorroh Macon John Bunyan Duke Scranton Lucile Eades Oxford Harold G. Edwards Abbeville, La. Mark H. Edwards Abbeville, La. William Edwards Enterprise Walter L. Elledge Burnsville James Clarence Fair (Merchant) Louisville David LaBau ve Farley Hernando Clifford Trotter Fisackerly Winona J. Milton Floyd Meridian Sam Jackson Foose _■ Tchula James Edward Furr Oxford Artimus Frank Gardner Greenwood Nora Victoria Gibson Collins T . Eugene Gerald Liberty 316 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Hugh Boudinot Gillespie Raymond John Kindred Gillis .DeKalb Dixie Annie Gowdy Batesville Ollis R. Gresham Ashland Anderson Eugene Grissom Verona Harris F. Hamner Memphis, Tenn. George G. Hampton Oxford Orin O . Hampton Oxford Lois Haralson Vicksburg Altha Louise Haxton Greenville John Patton Hayter Texas Winn David Hedleston, Jr Oxford George Neoma Hodges Weir George Maynard Holmes Aberdeen Hazel Delia Hope Greenwood Marie Emma Hughston Ackerman Alice Johnson ■. Sardis Susie May Johnson Sardis Victor O. Johnson Verona Edgar Malcolm Jones University Helen Conkey Keyes Oxford C arey Gray King .Oxford Philip D. Lacey* Gomez Clarence Stanley Leavell Oxford Elgenia Leftwich Aberdeen James Madison Leggett Seminary Willie Frederick Leigh, Jr Columbus Emmons N. Ligon Gloster DeW T itt Marshall Love Yazoo City Annie Belle Lundie Oxford James Samuel Lyell Wesson Joe R. McArthur Duncan, Okla. George W. McCabe Vicksburg Avis McCharen Oxford John Harvey McCracken Hernando Daniel Rayford McGehee Little Springs John Hillman McLain Gloster Eugene McLaurin Mt. Olive Henri Ella Martin Germantown, Tenn. Ada Miller Canton Robert Herbert Miller Louisville Hubert Henry Mims Cockrum Norman Monaghan Tupelo Mary Montgomery Memphis, Tenn. Hugh Wilson Moore Hattiesburg Robert Mayo Moore Coldwater Lottie Elizabeth Morgan Oxford Robert Franklin Morgan Oxford UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 317 Barnette Emile Moses Natchez Charles Lea Neely Bolivar, Tenn. John Cham Norfleet Memphis, Tenn. Richard T. O'Neill Vicksburg George Lucas Paddison Greenwood Mabel Evelyn Paschall Toccopola Dorothy Patterson Swan Lake Clifford Grimes Payne Hernando Granville H. Peets Woodville John R. C. Peyton Columbus Walter Louis Pfeffer Jackson Millard Franklin Pierce Hickory Sam Orr Price Hernando Jessie Lee Pryor (Mrs. Croom) Arkansas Mary Lynda Ramey Oxford Roscoe Paul Ray Kosciusko Stephen Banks Rayburn Oxford Josephine Sherwood Raymond Washington Bertha Elizabeth Roark Water Valley Charles Watson Robinson Hernando Francis Herron Rowland Oxford James Dorman Rucker Itta Bena William Lucius Russell _ University Elise Rutledge Summit Abner Potts Hubert Sage Cockrum Edna May Samuell Oxford Harry Preston Sayle. Coffeeville Jacob Hunter Sharp Columbus Isaac Lewis Sheffield (Lawyer) .. Fulton Edmund Burrage Smith Oxford E. Dederick Smith (Electrician) Atlanta, Ga. Mary Augusta Smith Indianola Sidney Brown Spencer Verona Maude Lester Stanback (Teacher) Byhalia Ben McClellan Stevens Hattiesburg Jesse E. Stockstill (Lawyer) Picayune William W. Stockstill (Lawyer) Bay St. Louis Oscar E. Street (Lawyer) ...Ripley Alma Sullivant (Teacher) Kosciusko John Robert Suttle Meridian Olin Clair Taylor Senatobia Katie Thames (Mrs. T. D. Prestridge) Collins Samuel Powell Tipton Nesbit William Chamberlain Trotter Winona Everette G. Truly Fayette Harry Randolph Tucker Senatobia Charles Vance Valverde Scranton John Henry Van Hook Whitehaven, Tenn. 318 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. J i m Money Vardaman Jackson Hunter Sharp Walker Columbus Robert German Walker Wesson John M . Wall Greenwood Addie Lee Wallace Oxford Aha Ray Wallace Oxford William Alton Walton Columbus Grace Watkins Aberdeen Henry Duke Watson, Jr West Point Olive Webster Oxford Marguerite St. Clair Wettlin Woodville Holland Otis White Brookhaven Will Gibson White Brandon Lottie Louise Whiteway University Robert Joseph Whitfield Jackson B. Frank Williams (Merchant) Aberdeen John William Woodward Oxford Roger Barton Wooten Senatobia Sarah Isom Worley Oxford William Thomas Wynn Greenville Lillian Price Yates Oxford James Edgar Young Corinth SESSION 1908-1909. Commencement Preacher. Rev. William Hayne Leavell, D.D., of Texas. Commencement Orator. Hon. George Earl Chamberlain, U. S. Senator from Oregon. Degbees Confessed. Doctor of Laws. Prof. John L. Johnson, LL.D. Senator George Earl Chamberlain. Dr. Robert Burwell Fulton. Rev. William Hayne Leavell, D.D. Master of Arts. Samuel P. Walker, B. A University Bachelor of Arts. Thomas Steward Bratton Potts Camp Akin Brooke Meridian Edna Gertrude Bufkin Laurel Ella May Cresswell Oxford Robert Lester Stark Pontotoc Walter Trotter, Jr. Winona William Arthur Wooten Como UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 319 Eva Ida Woodruff - Batesville John Sivley Rhodes. Oxford Bachelor of Science. Clinton Simmons Bigham Pontotoc Ezekiel Lee Busby Bogue Chitto Hubert Compton Dorsey New Albany Isaac Greenwood Duncan Oxford James Gordon Gillespie Greenwood Mary Roselyn Glenn Oxford William Russell Graves Jackson Herman Holland Maben Alonzo Brown Johnson Batesville Frank Hartwell Leavell Holly Wood, Cal. Samuel Huston Liddell Blue Springs Howard Crawford McCorkle Oxford Hattie Magee Clinton Thomas C. Newsom Independence Ernest Franklin Puckett Gattman Albert Edgar Russell University Dawson Williamson Winn Laurel Pauline Wright Oxford Bachelor of Science in Education. Mary Elizabeth Broom Collins Ora F. Grantham Purvis Bachelor of Engineering. Walter Lawrence Brannon Coffeeville Bachelor of Laws. James B. Boyles Batesville William Henry Braden Vicksburg Akin Brooke Meridian Jefferson Busby Iuka Landon K. Carlton Sardis Thomas James Collier Oxford Olust John Dedeaux DeLisle Iva Lamar Dorroh Macon Julius M. Forman Liberty Robert Lawrence Genin Bay St. Louis Eugene Gerald Smithdale Hugh Boudnot Gilespie Raymond Claude Edward Hill Hattiesburg George W. McCabe Vicksburg Daniel R. McGehee Little Springs Barnette Emile Moses ...Natchez Charles Lee Neely Bolivar, Tenn. George L. Paddison Greenwood 320 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Thomas Fite Paine Aberdeen Leonidas Dudley Reed .Meridian J. W. Renshaw Indianola Isaac Lewis Sheffield Dorsey Faison H . Smith Oxford Edgar Webster Oxford Certificate for Completion of Two-Year Medical Course. Hugh Zollicoffer Brown Kosciusko James Edmund Calhoun Atlanta, Ga. William Russell Graves Jackson Lex W. Hubbard Shuqualak Hal Glenn Johnson Hernando Isaac Cecil Knox Pontotoc Samuel Huston Liddell Blue Springs James Lutellus Nichols Eudora John Pickett Watkins Iris Distinctions, Medals, Pbizes. Diplomas with Distinction. Rupert Lester Stark, B.A Asheville, N. C. Hubert Compton Dorsey, B.S New Albany Hattie Magee, B.S Clinton Ernest Franklin Puckett, B.S Gattman Pauline Wright, B.S Oxford William Henry Braden, LL.B Vicksburg Leonidas Dudley Reed, LL.B Yazoo City Senior Speakers. Leonidas Dudley Reed Valedictory Hattie Magee Salutatory Akin Brooke Oration Frank H. Leavell Oration Edgar Webster Oration Marcus Elvis Taylor Memorial Medals. James D. Rucker Mathematics (b) Ruth Watkins History (c) D. E. Crawley Chemistry (c) W. Arthur Wooten Greek (b) Eva Ida Woodruff Botany (b) Ada Miller French (c) M arguerite Wettlin Rhetoric ( b ) Excellence in Declamation. Hermaean Society Freshman Medals. G. M. Turner First Medal A. P. Hudson Second Medal . UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 321 Phi Sigma Society Freshman Medals. S. P. Tennison First Medal John H. McLean Second Medal University Sophomore Medals. Emmons 7 N. Ligon First Medal W. P.Bramlett . Second Medal Phi Sigma Society Junior Medal. Barry Gillespie Duck Hill Pbizes. John W. Odom Confederate Memorial Prize. Leonard E. Farley Hernando ! Early English Text Society Prize. Anne Heard Augustus . Macon Edward Thompson Prize. Faison H. Smith Indianola Hillrie M. Quinn Prize. Leonidas Dudley Reed Yazoo City Bobbs-Merrill Prize. . Claude Edward Hill Hattiesburg New Students. James Stuart Abney Toccopola Winf red Cooper Adams Corinth Marvin Treadwell Aldrich : Michigan City Robert N. Aldridge Estill Hugh Standifer Alexander Greenville Julian Power Alexander Jackson Lucy May Alexander Greenville Morris James Alexander, Jr Tunica Joseph Bailey Allen Hazlehurst John Russell Anderson Tupelo H. M. Baddley Water Valey Laurie Bailey Lexington Julia Franklin Baker Aberdeen Thomas Horace Ball Rexf ord William Marshall Barron- Ackerman William E. Baskin Okolona Ben Moseley Bell University Charles Richard Berry Baldwyn Thomas Carleton Billups Columbus Hattie Black Weir Jeff Mitchener Boggan Tupelo Mary Burrows Borum Oxford 21 322 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. V i rginia Creight on Borum Oxford Walter G. Boyette Water Valley Albert Neville Brady Vicksburg Joseph Gipson Bridges Kossuth Benjamin Humphreys Briscoe -Port Gibson Henry Jackson Brothers Cedar Bluff George Arnold Brown Oxford Harry M. Bryan Seneca, S. C. George Thad Buck Lexington Thomas C. Burnett Vicksburg Jeff Busby Iuka James Lee Byrd Newton Brian Lumbley Campbell Silver City John Edward Campbell Pontotoc Katie Irene Campbell j Winona William Henry Canty Scranton Landon K. Carlton Sardis William Proby Cassedy, Jr Brookhaven Walter Scott Catching, Jr Georgetown Arthur Barnett Clark Newton Sallie Allene Clifton Aberdeen John B. Gordon Cochran Cockrum James William Conger Oxford Claude E . Conner Columbia Osborn Byron Cooke Maben Forrest Graham Cooper Forest Charles Calvit Cordill Crowville, La. Mary Moore Dawson Okolona Carey Emerson Day Liberty Hubert C. Dorsey New Albany Gussie Arnold Draper Batesville Duncan W. Draughn Petal Cecil Ray Elliott Jackson, Tenn. J. W. T. Falkner, Jr Oxford Henry Minor Faser , University Richard Flournoy Crawford Joeph Swift Ford Columbia Julius M . Forman Gloster Will Lindsey Fuller Laurel Stanley Francis Gaines Boyle Robert Gardner Greenwood Robert Lawrence Genin Bay St. Louis Luther Hooper Graves Jackson Henry C. Greer, Jr Hattiesburg Richard Malcolm Guess Brookhaven Harry DeWitt Gulley Meridian Edward Griffin Hardy Columbus John Allison Hardy Columbus Ruth Loeta Hargis University UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 323 George Pink Harris Oxford Luther Adams Harrison Tutwiler Yancey Davis Harrison, Jr Marshall, Texas John Robert Hodnett Water Valley Thomas Hinkle Holloman Ovette John Benton Howie, Jr Gulfport Arthur Palmer Hudson Hesterville Martha Ann Hunter Sardis Chester Arthur Irby Energy Leslie Philip Johnson Durant Samuel McCoy Johnston Shubuta James Ivy Jones Toccopola Johnson Shands Jones Independence Patty Kellis Shuqualak Charles N. Kennedy Quitman Maud Allene Kent. Kilmichael Annie Hope Kimmons Oxford John Hall Kimmons, Jr Oxford Frank Haman King Vaiden Fannie Knight Oxford John William Kyle Batesville Roland Quinche Leavell Oxford Alonzo Church Lee, Jr Jackson Frank Collins Lee McComb City Mirabeau DeWitt Leverett Hickory Harry D . Love Leland John W. McCall Summerland E. . Harvey McGehee Little Springs William Hollis McGehee -_ Little Springs Floyd Whitaker McHenry McHenry Oliver Rankin Mcllhenny Forest William Edward Mclntyre Johns Roy Henry McKay Memphis, Tenn. William T. McKinney Angulila John Hawkins McLean Winona Walter B. McMahon Oxford Jeff David Martin Raleigh Rowland Harrison Martin Juneau, Alaska Arthur Maxson Clarksdale Stevie Frank Mitchell Sardis Weber Ira Mitchell Crenshaw Benjamin F. Moak Bogue Chitto James Preston Murray McHenry James Swanson Niles Kosciusko Thomas Fite Paine Aberdeen Lessie Maude Phillips Taylor Albert Brown Pitts, Jr Hazlehurst Wilton Grady Pitts Hazlehurst Winston Carl Pool Leakesville 324 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Kenneth GilJ Price Magnolia Alfred Ramsey . Mt. Olive John Elliott Rankin Nettleton Annie Evelyn Reedy .Hattiesburg John Dennis Reedy Hattiesburg J. W. Renshaw Indianola Marguerite Rh des_. Oxford James Richardson Newton Walter Stevens Ridgway Jackson William Green Roberds Prairie Joseph Augustus Rowland Flora Peter Whitman Rowland, Jr Oxford Frank Raymond Rubel Corinth Milton F. Rubel Corinth Robert Bedford Rucker Itta Bena Jennie Scarborough Mobile, Ala- G. Thomas Seale Monroe, La. Howard V. Seidenspinner Gloster David Sutton Shackelford Lexington Claude P. Shannon Pontotoc Levi Samuel Sheffield Dorsey Claudia Lee Sims Hattiesburg Harry Spurgeon Sisk Oxford Ronald James Slay Purvis Lillie Belle Smallwood New Albany E. Winston Smith Hernando Nellie Louise Smith Ellisville Robbie H. Smith Oxford Thomas T. Smith Brookhaven Ernest Beall Stall Oxford Brevard Doty Stephenson Oxford William Clyde Stokes Durant Augustus Street Corinth Luther Franklin Sumrall Soso Verne A. Taylor Senatobia Selwyn Presley Tennison Columbus Claude Ernest Thompson Amory Frank Lewis Tool Oxford George Madden Turner Sallis Thomas Littleton Upshur Greenwood Benjamin Newton Walker.. Carthage Efhe Lee Walker Horn Lake Laura Wallace Ripley Vivian Humphreys Wallace Oxford Hattie Vivian Watkins Hattiesburg John Quincy West, Jr Sardis Joseph Henry Wheeler Love Bertram Oliver Wood Moss Point James Wright Wooten, Jr Como Thomas Harris Yates Oxford UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 325 GRADUATE STUDENTS. 1873 Degree Previously Course Taken. Begun. Residence. John H. Davidson B.A M.A Homer, La. Robert B. Fulton B.A M.A... .Miller School, Va. Robert H. Loughridge B.S Ph.D. ..South Carolina. George W. Smith B.A M.A Pontotoc, Miss. Albert H. Whitfield B.A M.A... .Jackson, Miss. 1875 Leon Sidney Hays* B.A M.A Pensacola, Fla. Andrew E. Kilpatrick B.A M.A Corinth, Miss. 1876 William Addison Alex- ander.. B.A M.A Clarksville, Tenn. Louis Lowry Mclnnis B.A M.A Bryan, Texas. Chalmers Meek Wil- liamson B.A M.A Jackson, Miss. .1877 Thomas D. Greenwood*.. _B. A Ph.D. ..University, Miss. John Wesley Johnson B.A M.A University, Miss. 1878 Charlton H.Alexander B.A M.A Jackson, Miss. Henry Miller B.A M.A Kentucky. William I. Sinnott B.A M.A Oxford, Miss. Thomas W. Stockard B.A M.A Washington, D. C. Samuel A. Witherspoon...B.A M.A Meridian, Miss. 1879 Joshua W. Kilpatrick B.A M.A Fayette, Mo. 1880 Edward DeS. Juny B.A. M.A Lincoln, Neb. William E. Martin B.A M.A Birmingham, Ala. 1881 Dabney Lipscomb B.A M.A Columbus, Miss. Malachi C. Pegues B.A M.A Oxford, Miss. 326 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 1882 Degrees Previously Course Taken. Begun. Residence. Anselm H. Jayne B.A M.A Jackson, Miss. Wilbur Fisk Mister B.A M.A Grapevine, Texas. 1883 Gerard Brandon B.A M.A Natchez, Miss. William Locke Chew B.A M.A Greenwood, Miss. Benjamin D. Cockrill B.A M.A Owensboro, Ky. Frank E. Larkin B.A M.A Greenville, Miss. Milliard Field Leake M.A Collierville, Tenn. David S. Switzer B.A M.A Granbury, Texas. 1884 Augustus H. Foster B.A M.A Louisville, Miss. W. D. Hedleston B.A M.A Oxford, Miss. Thomas Needham Rob- ertson B.A M.A Searcy, Ark. William I. Sinnott B.A Ph.D. ..Oxford, Miss. Joseph B. Wilson B.A M.A Yazoo City, Miss. 1885 Thomas Dabney Marshall. B.A M.A Jackson, Miss. 1886 Byron P. Patterson B.A M.A Wise County, Texas. Henry Skipwith Taylor_._B.A M.A Henderson, Tenn. 1887 Algeron Jasper Aven B.A M.A Clinton, Miss. Cortez Pedro Gilmer* B.A M.A Toccopola, Miss. James Freeman Sellers B.A M.A Starkville, Miss. T. C. Woodman M.A Brighton, England. 1888 William Robert Mabry*...B.S M.A Senatobia, Miss. Evan Leonidas Ragland...B.A M.A Brookhaven, Miss. William Walter Rivers B.A M.A Helena, Ark. John Magruder Sullivan.. .B.A M.A Jackson, La. 1889 Noble M. Eberhart M.A.... Chicago, 111. Cortez Pedro Gilmer* B.A., M.A Ph.D. ..Toccopola, Miss. John William Provine B.S M.A Clinton, Miss. Jackson Reeves B.A., B.S M.A Lynnville, Tenn. Walter Erskine Williams. _B.P M.A Fort Worth, Texas. 1890 Fannie Camp (Mrs. Duggar) late stu. I. I. & CM. A Oxford, Miss. Minnie Pasley late stu. I. I. & CM. A Columbus, Miss. Eugene H. Roberts B.P Ph.D. ..New Orleans, La. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 327 1891 Degree Previously Taken. Course Begun. Mary B. Bynum* late stu. I. I. & C.M.A--. Eula Deaton late stu. I. I. & C.M.A.. . Lucien B. Howry B.P M.A... Samuel Hall Kimmons_.._B.P Ph.D.. Ephriam N. Lowe B.P Ph.D. Thomas O. Mabry B.P ,_.Ph.D.. Paul Hill Saunders B.A Ph.D.. Hubert Anthony Shands.. B.A Ph.D.. William D. Shue* B.A M.A... Milton S. Smith B.P M.A... 1892 George H. Lee M.D., B.P M.A... Edwin Lee Mounger B.A M.A... Wirt Adams Scott B.S M.A... E. L. Sherwood M.A... J. J. L. Spence B.P M.A... Cora Walker late stu. I. I. & C.M.A... 1893 Percy Bell. B.P .....M.A... William Harrison Carter.. B.S M.A... Minnie Cowan Graduate Whit- worth College. _.M. A. .. J. W. Crisler M.A— B. M. Drake B.A , M.A... Weston M. Fulton B.A M.A... W. I. Gibson M.A... Andrew A. Kincannon B.A M.A... Eugene H. Roberts B.P Ph.D.. Thomas Percy Scott B.A M.A... Charles Strong B.S M.A... Residence. .Columbus, Miss. .San Antonio, Texas. .Washington, D. C. .Fort Smith, Ark. .Oxford, Miss. .Rock Hill, S. C. .Laurel, Miss. .Georgetown, Texas. .Coffeeville, Miss. .Heidelberg, Miss. .Galveston, Texas. .Greenwood, Miss. -Washington, D. C. .Houston, Miss. -Monticello, Ark. -Columbus, Miss. -Greenville, Miss. .Columbus, Miss. .Sherman, Texas. .Lee, Miss. .Daleville, Miss. .Knoxville, Tenn. .Booneville, Miss. -University, Miss. .New Orleans, La. .Brookhaven, Miss. .Macon, Miss. 1895 W. H. Drane B.A M.A University, Miss. J. B. Hillyer B.A Ph.D.. .Holly Springs, Miss. J. C. Johnson B.A M.A University, Miss. Peter G. Sears B.A Ph.D. ..Houston, Texas. C. B. Sisler B.A M.A Senatobia, Miss. 1896 G. C. Ballard B.A M.A.„.Moss Point, Miss. A. C. Bigger B.A M.A Oxford, Miss. Samuel N. Craig B.P M.A Meridian, Miss. T. L. Haman, Jr B.A M.A Durant, Miss. 328 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Course Begun. Residence. --M.A West Point, Miss. -M.A Holly Springs, Miss. Degree Previously Taken. Thomas C. Kimbrough..._B.P. _. Thomas C. Lockard B.P Wilbur F. Mister B.A ..M.A.... Fort Worth, Texas Byron Darius Rivers B.S .M.A Louisville, Ky. Oliver Abbott Shaw B.P M.A Winona, Miss. Charles F. Webb B.P M. A.... Gallatin, Tenn. Richard Eggleston Wil- bourn B.A M.A Meridian, Miss 1897 Jean Courtney B.A M .A. . . A. M. Croxton B.A., M.A., Th.D.Ph.D. Redman Renn Eason B.A M.A... Robert V. Fletcher B.A M.A... David Alexander Hill B.P M.A... Harper Johnson B.A M.A... Thomas C. Lockard B.A Ph.D.. Ruth Smith B.A M.A... Chas. Strong B.S., M.A Ph.D. -U. F. C, Oxford, Miss. .Oxford, Miss. .Carrollton, Miss. .Pontotoc, Miss. .Booneville, Miss. .Senatobia, Miss. .Meridian, Miss. .West Point, Miss. .Macon, Miss. J. S. Meaders* B.A. Maud Morrow (Mrs. C. S. Brown) B.A. 1898 M.A. .Roswell, N. M. .M.A University, Miss. J.W.Bell B.P. Eugene Campbell* B.P. Maurice G. Fulton B.P. J. C. Hardy B.A. W. P. Kretschmar B.A. W. W. Venable B.A. 1899 M.A... M.A... M.A... M.A... M.A... M.A... .University, Miss. .University, Miss. .Davidson, N. C. .A. & M. College, Miss. .Greenville, Miss. .Meridian, Miss. 1900 Bessie Fox M.A West Point, Miss. H. L. McCleskey B.S M.A Hazlehurst, Miss. Ira Pressley B.A M.A Como, Miss. W. 0. Pruitt B.S.. M.A... .Houston, Miss. E. L. Wall M.A... .Edwards, Miss. 1901 Eugene Campbell* B.P M.A University, Miss. Joe Cook M.A Columbus, Miss. H. R. Fulton B.A M.A._._Penna. State College. G. H. Hayes M.A West Point, Miss. Kate Kimmons B.S M.A Oxford, Miss. A. M. Leigh B.S M.A University, Miss. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 329 Degree Previously Course Taken. Begun. Residence. E. S. Lewis M.A Brooksville, Miss. C. Longest B.A M.A University, Miss. A. W. Phillips B.A M.A... .Oxford, Miss. Sarah Ola Price (Mrs. W. S. Leathers).. B.P M.A Oxford, Miss. H. R. Shands B.A M.A Jackson, Miss. J. W. Wade ..B.P M.A... .Little Rock, Ark. J. D. Wallace B.A M.A Brooksville, Miss. Norma Wilkins B.P M .A University, Miss. C. L. Wood M.A West Point, Miss. 1902 J. V. Bowen B.P. T. S. Johnston B.P. W. S. Lester B.A. R. P. Linfield B.A. M.A A. & M. College, Miss. .M.A St. Louis, Mo. .M.A Plum Point, Miss. .M.A Scranton, Miss. Greenville, Miss. Walter, Okla. R. A. Meek M.A R. H. Sultan B. S M.A J. T. Wallace M.A Clinton, Miss. W. D. Shue* B.A., M.A Ph.D-.-Coffeeville, Miss. 1903 E. S. Balthrop B.Ped M.A Jackson, Tenn. N. R. Drummond B.A M.A Columbia, Miss. A. J. Seale B.A M.A. ...California. W. A. Stevens B.A M. A ...Greenville, Miss. 1904 J. D. Furr B.S ' M.A.. E. N. Lowe B.P., M.D M.A.. W. I. McKay B.A M.A.. G. Montgomery B.A M.A.. J. P. NefT M.A- L. R. Powell B.Ped M.A.. A. J. Seale i.B.A., M.A Ph.D. O. A. Shaw B.A., M.A Ph.D. M. E. Wadlington B.A M.A.. T. W. White B.A. M.A.. S. W. Bigger B.P. D. G. Chase B.A. J. R. Countiss B.A. W. L. Fulton B.E. J. M. Furr B.A. H. W. Odum B.A. A. H. Roop B.A. Eva Shepard B.P. 1905 .M.A.. .M.A.. .M.A.. .M.A.. .M.A.. .M.A.. M.A.. .M.A.. .Oxford, Miss. .Oxford, Miss. .Forest, Miss. .Ellisville, Miss. .Fayette, Ala. .Wesson, Miss. _San Francisco, Cal. .Winona, Miss. .Fort Worth, Texas. .St. Louis, Mo. .Oxford, Miss. .Coffeeville, Miss. .Greenville, Miss. -Iowa City, Iowa. -Toccopola, Miss. .New York City. -University, Miss. -Lexington, Miss. 330 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Degree Previously Course Taken. Begun. Residence. B. T. Schumpert B.A M.A Coffeeville, Miss. S. L. Stringer M.A Hattiesburg, Miss. R. H. Young M.A Iuka, Miss. 1906 R. B. Walker B.A M.A... .Carthage, Miss. E. R. Walton B.A M.A New Haven, Conn. 1907 R. C. Beckett B.A M.A... .Oxford, England. M. V. Herman B.A M.A Kossuth, Miss. C. W. Hinton B.P M.A Vicksburg, Miss. E. G. Hightower B.A M.A Hattiesburg, Miss. V. L. Neill B.A M.A Oxford, Miss. I. C. Nichols B.S M.A.-.-College Station, Texas. 1903 T. E. Edwards B.A M.A Hattiesburg, Miss. Pearl Guy B.A M.A Vicksburg, Miss. M. W. Latham M.A Columbus, Miss. A. B. Schauber B.A M.A Brookhaven, Miss. S. P. Walker B.A M.A University, Miss. 1909 J. C. Herrington B.P M.A Vicksburg, Miss. J. L. Nichols ,..B.S M.A Eudora, Miss. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 33I GRADUATE DEGREES. Conferred after examination on a prescribed course of study covering one or more years. M.A. 1873— Albert Hall Whitfield Jackson, Miss. 1873— George William Smith, B.A Durant, Miss. 1874— Robert B. Fulton, B.A Miller School, Va. 1875— Leon Sidney Hays, B.A* Pensacola, Fla. 1875— Andrew E. Kilpatrick, B.A Houston, Texas 1876— William Addison Alexander, B.A Clarksville, Tenn. 1876 — Louis L. Mclnnis, B.A Bryan, Texas 1876— Chalmers M. Williamson, B.A Jackson, Miss. 1878— Charlton H. Alexander, B.A Jackson, Miss. 1878— Henry Miller, B.A Middlesborough, Ky. 1878 — Samuel A. Witherspoon, B.A . Meridian, Miss. 1879 — John W. Johnson, B.A University, Miss. 1879— Thomas W. Stockard, B.A .. Washington, D. C. 1880— Edward DeS. Juny, B.A Lincoln, Neb. 1881— Dabney Lipscomb, B.A Columbus, Miss. 1881— Joshua W. Kilpatrick, B.A Fayette, Mo. 1885— Frank E. Larkin, B.A Greenville, Miss. 1887— David Seille Switzer, B.A Granbury, Texas 1888— Cortez Pedro Gilmer,* B.A_-_ Toccopola, Miss. 1889 — Algernon Jasper Aven, B.A Mississippi College, Miss. 1889— William Walter Rivers, B.A Helena, Ark. 1890 — John William Provine, B.S Mississippi College, Miss. 1891— John Magruder Sullivan, B.A Centenary College, Miss. 1891— James T. Sellers, B.A Macon, Ga. 1891 — Hubert Anthony Shands, B.A Georgetown, Texas 1892— Samuel Hall Kimmons, B.A Fort Worth, Texas 1892— Thomas Ovid Mabry, B.P Rock Hill, S. C. 1894— Eula Deaton (I. I. & C.) San Antonio, Texas 1896— William R. Mabry,* B.S Senatobia, Miss. 1896— E. L. Sherwood Okolona, Miss. 1896— Chas. Strong, B.S Macon, Miss. 1897— Walter H. Drane, B.A University, Miss. 1897— T. C. Lockard, B.P Meridian, Miss. 1897 — Richard Eggleston Wilbourn, B.A . Meridian, Miss. 1899— Oliver Abbott Shaw, B.P Winona, Miss. 1899— William D. Shue,* B.A Coffeeville, Miss. 1900— Mary B. Bynum* Columbus, Miss. 1900— Eugene Campbell,* B.P University, Miss. 332 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 1900 — Cora Walker Columbus, Miss. 1001— Maurice Garland Fulton, B.P.. Davidson, N. C. 1901— David Alexander Hill, B.P Booneville, Miss. 1901 — Byron Darius Rivers, B.S Louisville, Ky. L902 -Thomas Stewart Johnson, B.P St. Louis, Mo. 1902— Maud Morrow, B.A (Mrs. C. S. Brown) University, Miss. 1902— Robert Herman Sultan, B.S Walter, Okla. 1902— John William Wade, B.P Little Rock, Ark. 1902— Jesse Thomas Wallace Clinton, Miss. 1903 — Andrew Jackson Seale, B.A San Francisco, Cal. 1904 — Edward Saunders Balthrop, B.Ped Jackson, Tenn. 1904— William Irving McKay, B.A Forest, Miss. 1905— W. H. Carter, B.S Columbus, Miss. 1905— J. DeWitt Furr, B.S University, Miss. 1905— J. P. Neff Fayette, Ala. 1905— A. H. Roop, B.A University, Miss. 1906 — Goode Montgomery, B.A Hazlehurst, Miss. 1906— H. W. Odum, B.A Columbia University 1907— M. V. Herman, B.A Kossuth, Miss. 1908 — Pearl Lorraine Guy, B.A Vicksburg, Miss. 1908 — Edmund Gaines Hightower, B.A Hattiesburg, Miss. 1908— Vergie L. Neill, B.A Oxford, Miss. 1908— Irby Coghill Nichols, B.S College Station, Texas 1909— Samuel P. Walker, B.A •_ University, Miss. Ph.D. 1893— Prof. Hubert Anthony Shands, B.A., 1890; M.A., 1891; Fellow in English, 1890-93; Prof. English Georgetown, Texas 1894— Paul Hill Saunders, A.B., M.A. (see page 223) Laurel, Miss. 1895 — Eugene Harper Roberts, B.P. (see page 242) New Orleans, La. MEDALS AND OTHER DISTINCTIONS, 1866-1886. Note — No certain record of awards previous to 1866. For years fol- lowing 1886, see lists of distinctions in preceding pages. University Sophomore Medals for Excellence in Elocution. 1866 — Christopher Taylor Hill, first; Joseph Albert Brown, second. 1867 — John Whitfield Shields, first; William Schenck Johnson, second. 1868— Hampton Mundall Sullivan, first; James C. N. McNeill, second. 1869 — Walter Long Sink, first; Hampton Jarnigan, second, and Henry Sale Yerger, second. 1870 — Walker Lucas Clapp, first; Sidney Turner Moreland, second. 1871 — Cranner Ridlay Boyce, first; Frank Harwood Bates, second. 1872— David Hughes Morrow, first; Harvey Wilson Flinn, second. 1873 — James George Snedecor, first; John Edward Madison, second. 1874 — John Fletcher Rives, first; Alexander Jackson Mcintosh, second. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 333 1875 — William Franklin Bell, first ;|Charl ton Henry Alexander, second. 1876 — John Newton Bush, first; Geo. Rhew Page, second. 1877— Joseph Nathaniel Gray, first; Marvin Eddie Sullivan, second. 1878 — Alex. P. Stewart, first; John Cochran Scott, second. 1879 — Geo. Harriston Armistead, first; John Burnet, Jr., second. 1880 — Evan Leonidas Ragland, first; William Gray Sears, second. 1881 — Charles Nicholas Riggan, first; Samuel Taylor Rucks, second. 1882 — Crawford Jackson, first; John Myers Steen, second. 1883 — Richard Walter Jones, Jr., first; Robert Edwards Jackson, second. 1884 — Guston Thomas Fitzhugh, first; John Meredith Matthews, second. 1885 — William Randolph Hill, first; Thomas Wallace Yates, second. 1886 — Ewing Earle Brougher, first; Robert Paine Wendel, second. Literary Societies Freshman Medals For Excellence in Elocution. (First offered in 1872. For years following 1886, see lists of distinctions in preceeding pages.) 1872 Hermaean Society — James George Snedecor and Frederick Edward West considered equal. Phi Sigma Society — Alfred Downs Pace. 1873 Hermaean Society — Samuel Andrew Witherspoon. Phi Sigma Society — William Oscar Norrell. 1874 Hermaean Society — Avent Walker. Phi Sigma Society— Charlton Henry Alexander. 1875 Hermaean Society — Jordan Mitchell Boone. Phi Sigma Society — John Newton Bush. 1876 Hermaean Society — Martin Luther Sexton. Phi Sigma Society — William Preston Anderson. 1877 Hermaean Society — William Millsaps Wheat. Phi Sigma Society — Aleaxnder P. Stewart, Jr. 1878 Hermaean Society— Gilbreath Neill Hart. Phi Sigma Society — John Burnet, Jr. 334 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 1879 Bermaean Society— Frank Alexander Neilson, first; William Dowd With- erspoon, second. Phi Sigma Society— Pressley Kettridge Ewing, first; Benjamin Watkins Bedford, Jr., second. 1880 Hermaean Society — Gerard Creagh Falconer, first; John Henry Pahlen, second. Phi Sigma Society — Chas. Nicholas Riggan, first; Richard Henry Stokes, second. 1881 Hermaean Society — Louis Morgan Southworth, first; Crawford Jackson, second. Phi Sigma Society — David Monroe Watkins, first; Spencer Shepherd Hudson, second. 1882 Hermaean Society— Walter Perdew Tackett, first; William Jeremiah Bowen, second. Phi Sigma Society — Benjamin George Humphreys, first; Thomas C. Hindman, second. 1883 Hermaean Society — Hillrie Marshall Quinn, first; William Forest Stevens, second. Phi Sigma Society — John Meredith Matthews, first; John L. Hebron, Jr., second. 1884 Hermaean Society — William Randolph Hill, first; John David Burge, second. Phi Sigma Society — Thomas Wallace Yates, first; Walter Malone, second. 1885 Hermaean Society — John Bennett Ross, first; Dudley McEwen Feather- ston, second. Phi Sigma Society — George Yerger Hicks, first; William Henry Maybin, second. 1886 Hermaean Society — Robert Edward Hallsell, first; Walter Eugene Ander- son, second. Phi Sigma Society — Sam Hall Kimmons, first; Lewis Thomas Fitzhugh, second. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 335 Anniversary Officers Elect of the Hermaean and Phi Sigma Literary Societies. Note. — No certain record previous to 1866. For years following 1887, see annual lists of distinctions. 1866 Hermaean Society — Chas. B. Howry. Phi Sigma Society — John Silliman Moore. 1867 Hermaean Society — Joseph Albert Brown. Phi Sigma Society — Thomas Green Bush. 1868 Hermaean Society — Edward Mayes. Phi Sigma Society — D. George Humphreys. 1869 Hermaean Society — John Whitfield Shields.* Phi Sigma Society— Robert N. Miller. 1870 Hermaean Society — James C. N. McNeill. Phi Sigma Society — Hampton Mundall Sullivan.* 1871 Hermaean Society — Charles Sheppard McKenzie.* Phi Sigma Society— John William Flinn. 1872 Hermaean Society — Jerry Witherspoon.* Phi Sigma Society — Robert G. Hudson. 1873 Hermaean Society — Joseph M. Sloan. Phi Sigma Society — Alexander Fox Moore.* 1874 Hermaean Society — Frederick Edgar West. Phi Sigma Society — Marion Lafayette Dye. 1875 Hermaean Society — Henry Arthur Finch. Phi Sigma Society — Eber Elam Bigger. 336 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. L876 Hermaean Society — Samuel Andrew Witherspoon. Phi Sigma Society— Edwin Hamilton Dial. 1877 Phi Sigma Society — Andrew Shelton Meharg. Hermaean Society — No Celebration. 1878 Hermaean Society — Lawson Harvey Snell. Phi Sigma Society— John Newton Bush. 1879 Hermaean Society — Afton Kane Wooten. Phi Sigma Society — Joseph N. Gray*; Edward DeSeebach Juny. 1880 Hermaean Society — Robert Shotwell.* Phi Sigma Society — Alexander P. Stewart, Jr. 1881 Hermaean Society — Willis Clark Gaulding. Phi Sigma Society — Pressley Kittredge Ewing. 1882 Hermaean Society — William Dowd Witherspoon. Phi Sigma Society — Andrew A. Kincannon. Phi Sigma Society — Stephen Franklin Hamilton. 1883 Hermaean Society — William Robert Bridges.* Phi Sigma Society — Winn David Hedleston. 1884 Hermaean Society — Crawford Jackson. Phi Sigma Society — Robert Mansfield Buck. 1885 Hermaean Society — John Lewis Buckley. Phi Sigma Society — John Lawrence Hebron, Jr. 1886 Hermaean Society — Hillrie Marshall Quinn. Phi Sigma Society — John Meredith Matthews. 1887 Hermaean Society — Dudley McEwen Featherston. Phi Sigma Society — Walter Malone. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 337 e»)BagnJ90 I«!P«»W HEuio|(ii(i luani^iedaQ a W tf fa w fa z o o w H W os o w Q o o CM 1-HW--iCMCMTfcO SESSION a 1 oc oc C 'C 1 C- -1- 1 o >C 1 IK OC re >c 1 o IC oc -+ >C 1 ct >C OC IC 4 IC oc ec 'C oc I- ■ c 1 •c oc >c 1 1- IC oc c >c i oc in oc c cc 1 c 'C oc 5 c cc oc CC ■ c CC oc 1- CC 1 CC CC oc oc CC 1 1 - CC CON'0'0'---OMC<50)00(NN s H Q •< O Q fa i— H-H CO WNrtN \~ ~H ^h CO CO CO CO i-H co co ' fa 03 rH CO •— it^Csr^OSC0"*'»<0>O«O i-H CO Tf CO CO •"*! CO co' pq N-Hf* co «' co'<»'oot^'OeocNkOt^coa5'OINN(NiNNrH(NrtN(M(NrtrHM(N(N(N fCUOisBajoij CO <-H CO i-H r-H r-H ^H ,-H ^H CO i-l r-t CO CO CO (M ^ CO ■* «0 aiiuspeov OOOCOOllNOlOOlOOeONiOi-naTHCCfflNtOMN^iN oot^.i^-ociCi^HCOTt<'*iTti-*t^-*a>0't | -^ | ioc5coiO(M /Qineiud.u,) ON0)CClNNIN«3OC0'*OiON01'*00Ci CO CO i-t ^h -h z o M CO CO w CO 50 00 1 CO t> X X 1 1- X 1 X X a X — . X X — X X C) X I X X cc X 1 CI X X 1883-84 1884-85 1885-86 NMCDOi-i OO 00 00 OS OS (ONMfflO 00 00 00 00 CD oo oo oo oo oo coco OS OS 1 1 -hCO CS OS 00 00 os 1 CO OS X >o OS 1 -Y S3 X sc OS 1 lO OS X I- ci OS -X X CS 1 OS X UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 339 j i i i , .-H CO CO CO "# O CO Tt< *— i >— i i i i i i i i i CO CO CO .— I i i i .—I »-l CO i— 1 CO ■* -r - CO _ !,-<_,,_, 1 i F MISSISSIPPI. Hamer, J. P. (II) 1878 Earner, R. S.. L878 Hamer. T. E.* . L865 6 Hamilton. C. E 1>S7 Hamilton. C. B „L. '05 Hamilton, G. P 1394 Hamilton. H. C— - 1892 Hamilton, J. D . . . 1875, 1878 Hamilton. J. V.*. . 1883 Hamilton. M. W... __._1884 Hamilton. T. J.... 1880 Hamilton, T. W— . 1872 Hamilton, W. F '60 Hammack, J. H 1890 Hammond, E 1907 Hammond, J. L 1880 Hamner, C. H.* 1886 Hamner, H. F 1908 Hamner. W. F 1878, L. '80 Hamner, W. M '96, L. '98 Hampton, E 1890 Hampton, G. G 1908 Hampton, J. R 1884 Hampton, O. O 1908 Hampton, S. F.* '82, L. '84 Hampton, T 1882 Hampton, W. E 1905 Handley, L. S '69 Handley, S 1899 Handley, W. C 1890 Handy, G 1860 Handy, H.* 1862 Handy, W.* '61 Haney, J. R., Jr '08 Haney, J. T 1903 Hanna, J. S 1878 Hannah, J. A 1881 Hannah, T. C L. '02 Hansbrough, P. H _ 1870 Hanson, Genevieve 1898 Haralson, L 1908 Haralson, M. I 1898 Hardage, W. H ...1881 Hardaway, M. B 1864 Hardeman, J. O '53 Hardeman, M. M '07 Hardeman, W. O 1878 Harding, J. M '69 Harding, W. A 1883 Hardwick, J. G .1857 Hardy, B. F .1906 Hardy, E. G. 1909 Hardy, J. A ..1909 Hardy, J. C. (G.)-- ...1899 Hardy, J. D.. ..1890 Hardy, L '98 Hardy, R... 1895 Hardy, T. A.. L. '07 Hardy, T. B '05 Hardy, W.H.. 1902 Hare, S. N 1873 Hare, T. E L. '73 Hargis, A. B 1907 Hargis, J. E 1898 Hargis, R. L 1909 Hargis, W. I 1884 Hargis, W. I., Jr '07 Hargraves, P. M 1867 Hargrove, D. E 1878 Hargrove, E. B.* 1879 Hargrove, H. H.* L. '70 Hargrove, M. L 1901 Hargrove, T. B.* '71 Hargrove, W. H '98 Harlan, H. E 1880 Harlan, H. G 1880 Harlan, J 1867 Harley, J. M.* 1862 Harley, J. W. 1875 Harley, L. M 1884 Harman, E. P.* '58, L. 1860 Harmon, K 1901 Harper, A. Y.* '57, L. 1860 Harper, F. H 1904 Harper, G. S.* L. 1861 Harper, H. H 1879 and '81 Harper, H. J.* '54, L. '56 Harper, J. N.* '53 Harper, J. T.__: 1878 Harper, M. C '73 Harper, M. C 1905 Harper, R. B 1907 Harper, S. G 1861 Harper, S. J 1884 Harper, W. R '79 Harrell, J. E 1882 Harrington, H. H 1880 Harrington, J. E L. '03 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 365 Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr Harr ngton, J. K . '83 ngton, K --1880 s, A 1880 s, A. E .1904 , A. H.* ...- '52 , A. J.* '61 , A. M 1879 , C. E _.L. '98 , C. M , D. W.*.... . '81 , F . __1893 , G. D., Jr.* 1896 , G. P ___1909 , H. B.* ... L. '59 , J. B ....1872 , J. C. (Ill) '82 , J. C. (II) 1870 , J. C. (I) 1861 . J. L.* (I) 1877 , J. L. (II) L. '03 , J. N 1382 , J. W -1856 , J. V '59 , L. B ....1900 , M. M 1901 ,0 ...1904 , R. E.* 1872 , R. L.*.l_. '58 , R. M '54 , S. H.* 1852 , T 1878 , T. B 1881 s, T. P 1902 s, W. H '58 s, W. P.* (I).__. ..1869 s, W. P.* (II).. ...1878 s, W. R ..1879 s.Walter ..1886 s, Webb 1884 son, B. B L. '80 son, B. N.* __1856,L. 1862 son, I.* 1883 son, J. P 1872 son, J. R_. 1869 son, J. T_. 1868 son, J. W ...1879 son, L. A ...1909 son.L. R., Jr. ... 1907 son, N. V 1883 Harrison, R. H. Harrison, Y. D. Harriston, S. J. Harry, J. J Hartley, G. A. '05 1909 1860 .1872 1881 Hart, C. H.* . ..1871 Hart, E. C ..1871 Hart, G. N ..1878 Hart, W 1881 Hartzog, C. M -.1904 Harvey, A.* .... -.1899 Harvey, E. B.* ..1872 Harvey, G., Jr 1903 Harvey, H. P.* .1871 Harvey, J .... -.1878 Harvey, T. B.* -.1873 Harvey, W. A ..1881 Harvey, W. R -1373 Harvey, W. W. -.1886 Hatch, B. L., Jr - '04 Hathorn, F. C - L. '07 Hatter, W. R. B.* „L. '69 Haughton, R. B... --L. '86 Haverkamp, C. M 1904 Havern, T 1851 Hawkins, B. J '70 Hawkins, C. B --1866 Hawkins, J. D 1891 Hawkins, L. E 1895 Hawkins, W. H -.1878 Haxton, A. L__ .. --1908 Hayes, H. A. (G.) -1901 Hayes, L. S.* ..'74, '75 Hays, B. H..._ 1860 Hayes, E. T. -1890 Hays, J 1857 Hayes, J. L . -1890 Hays, L. S Hays, Rowe .. L- '97 Hays, W.J ..1897 Hayes, L. P.. -1873 Haynes, H. S 1905 Haynes, J. R 1857 Haynie, C. T. . L900 Hayter, J. P.. -1908 Hazard, J. H 1869 Heard, A. B .. -1873 Heard, C. A.*..- -1881 Heard, J. F.._. 1872 366 / MVKHSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Beard, J. W 1879 Hoard. N. W 74 Heard. S L869, L. 1871 Hearon, D. S 1871 Hearon. J. H.* 1872 Heath. C 1880 Heath. D. L.* 1879 Heath. L. E 1877 Heathman. W. F '70 Hebron. G. B 1887 Hebron. J. L., Jr '85, L. '87 Hedleston, M. F 1905 Hedleston, W. D '83, (G) 1884 Hedleston, W. D., Jr 1908 Hedrick, W. W.* i 1873 Heffner, W. L 1881 Heggie, I. R 1863 Heidelberg, G. C. (I) 1858 Heidelberg. G. C* (II) '61 Heidelberg, H. P '05 Heidelberg, R. L '05 Heine, E. D 1892 Heiss, J. L L. '00 Helm, E.* 1866 Hemby, J. L 1890 Hemingway, J. B. H.*___L. 70, 1871 Hemingway, W. E 1872 Hemingway, W. S '89 Henderson, A. S.* '54 Henderson, E. N 1872 Henderson, J. J 1878 Henderson, J. W.* '55 Henderson, M. A 1881 Henderson, T. A.* 1862 Hendon, J. A., Jr.* L. 1868 Hendrick, J. L L. '80 Hendrick, S. E 1878 Hendricks, C. L 1861 Henington, Frank W 1886 Henington, F. L '81 Henington, L. L L. '99 Henry, C. P 1904 Henry, H. C 1906 Henry, P 1878 Henry, P., Jr '99, L. '00 Henry, R. H., Jr 1890 Henry, W. A L. '78 Henry, W. A., Jr '03 & L. '04 Henton, S. B 1885 Herman, M. V . '06 & '07 Herod, J. D.* 1S7S Herring, B. S.*.._ 1857 Herring, J. B.* '51 Herring, D. A.* L. '61 Herring, L 1892 Herring, L. W 1872 Herrington, J. C '06, (G.) 1909 Herrington, J. E .1907 Herron, A 1903 Herron, M. H ...1397 Herron, F. B . 1878 Herron, R. C .1905 Herndon, P. H ..1881 Heslep, T 1863 Hester, R. H L. '95 Hewitt, F. D L. '07 bbler, J. S '98 bbler, R. T 1854 bbler, T. G., Jr 1894, L. '00 ckey, W. H 1895 M I- (H)_ I.* (D- s.*_... ..1854 -.1885 L. '70 ..1371 ...1869 ...1883 cks, A cks, B cks, B cks, B cks, E-. cks, G. Y cks, H. A_. _.L. '07 cks, J. C 1851 cks, J. R.* 1856 gdon, J. C 1886 ggason, R. A.* 1860 gginbotham, W. S 1866 gh, D. B '78 ghtower, C. C '08 ghtower, E. G '06, '08 ghtower, J.* 1856 ghtower, M 1905 lderbrand, D. G 1856 lgard, G. F 1856 11, A. L 1901 11, A. P.* 1872 11, C. E '07&L. '09 11, C. T.* '68 11, D. A '95, '01 11, G. B 1880 11, G. H., Jr 1906 11, G. R.* L. '68 11, H. L 1883 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 367 Hill, J. A 1872 Hill, J. P 1884 Hill, J. M 1881 Hill. J. W 1880 Hill, Mrs. D. A ____1894 Hill, P. B 1876 Hill, R. A., Jr.* ____1895 Hill, S. V '85 Hill, T. J 1869 Hill, W. H* 1907 Hill, W. R. B.* 1854 Hill, Wm. R 1883 Hill, W. S , 1881 Hill, W. W.* L. '78 Hiller, A. F.* L. '57 Hillyer, J. B. (G.) 1895 Hilyer, G. M 1867 Hindman, T. C 1882 Hinds, T.* '54 Hines, L. D 1881 Hinton, C. W '98, (G) 1907 Hinton, N. B 1882 Hinton, W 1882 Hirsh, E 1888 Hobbs, J. H.* 1888 Hobson, G. F.* 1853 Hobson, S. A.* 1861 Hodge, J. F 1878 Hodge, J. S. W 1897 Hodge, W. M 1854 Hodges, B. W 1870 Hodges, G. N 1908 Hodges, J. C* 1880 Hodges, J. H., Jr 1880 Hodges, J. N.* L. '57 Hodges, W. B__: 1872 Hodnet, J. R 1909 Hodo, J. M.* 1878 and '84 Hoff, J. W __. '74 Hogan, J. B.* 1860 Hogan, L. R 1900 Hogg, G 1857 Hogg, T. J. D 1880 Hogg, W. B ___1897 Hogin, D. H 1878 Hoke, T. W 1870 Holberg, L. W.* __.1906 Holbert, J. W _.1878 Holden, J. P.* 1870 and 1871 Holder, A. B.* 1879 Holder, B 1905 Holder, B. H 1881 Holder, J. K 1879 Holder, J. H '06 Holland, H '09 Holliday, J. W.* ...L. '79 Holliday, L. W.* 1880 Holliday, T.* 1859 Holliday, W. R.* 1878 Holliman, T. H 1909 Holloman, F. P.* _■ '74 Holloway, E. K 1893 Holloway, F. R 1392 Holloway, I. G.* '54 Holloway, S '89, L. '91 Holloway, Z. M.* 1860 Hollowell, J. F 1881 Holman, E. B 1883 Holman, J. J.* 1872 Holman, J. M 1906 Holman, W. O 1901 Holmes, A.* 1862 Holmes, A. T 1861 Holmes, D.* 1855 Holmes, E. R 1896 Holmes, F.* 1852 Holmes, Francis '58 Holmes, F. C '90, L. '92 Holmes, F. V 1887 Holmes, G. M 1908 Holmes, G. W 1885 Holmes, H L. '04 Holmes, H. G 1853 Holmes, J. E L. '99 Holmes, J. G '07 & L. '07 Holmes, L.* '54 Holmes, J. R 1878 Holmes, J. T.* .'58 Holt, J. W. W.* 1888 Hood, D. H 1892 Hooker, A. T 1378 Hooker, A. W ...1881 Hooker, H. S.* . .1870 Hooker, H. S., Jr__. .1896, L. '00 Hooker, J. J -1870 Hooker, O. D... 1907 Hooper, F. P.... - '85 Hooper, J. A.* 1881 368 / wi i:usity of Mississii'i'i. Hooper. M. M.' Hoove-. H. C Hoover. J. R Hoover, W. J Hope. E. J.* Hope, H. D.. Hope. J. E Hope, L Hope, R. A.*... Hopkins, A. L__ Hopkins, J. L. _ Hopkins. 0. S__ Hopkins, T. J ... 'si L884 1885 1879 1856 1908 1879 1SSS 1S53 1902 '96 '03 1903 Hopkins, W. E 1897 Hopson, J. B 1889 Home, L. L 1854 Horton, C. E 1899 Horton, J. W.* 1861 Horton, R. A. 1888 Horton, R.* '70 Horton, S. H 1905 Horton. W. S. (I).. .1891 Horton. W. S. (II).._. 1897 Hoskins, W. W.* 1872 Houston, A. F. F 1879 Houston, G 1901 Houston, G. G 1872 Houston, J. J 1872 Houston, J. E L. '97 Houston, M 1901 Houston, R. P 1878 Houston, S. M '97, L. '97 Houston, W. A 1851 Howard, S. F 1882 and 1887 Howard, T. A 1872 Howell, E _._L. '97 Howell, F. M.* '69 Howie, J. B., Jr 1909 Howie, J. H L: '01 Howie, V. R __'04&L. '05 Howry, C. B L. '67 Howry, F. W.* '74 Howry, J. H 1863 Howry, L. B '90, (G) 1891 Howry, P. A.* '74 Howry, S. M 1866 Howry, W. C ...1891 Howry, W. H 1903 Howze, A. A 1904 Howze, E. _ 1904 Howze, I. R ..1872 Howze, M. N 1901 Hoye, C. R. M. .1885 Hoyle, J. W _ 1880 Hubbard, E. J 1897 Hubbard, L. W 1907 Hubbard, R. K . 1903 Hubbell, G. L 1862 Huddleston, G. B L. '69 Huddleston, J. J '92 Hudson, A. E '07 Hudson. A. P .1909 Hudson, C. H__ L. '03 Hudson, C. S.*. ...1S72 Hudson, E. C 1906 Hudson, F. G 1881 Hudson, G. W.*_. ..1854 Hudson, J. L.* '51 Hudson, J. S . '81 Hudson, L. M 1905 Hudson, R. F.* '68 Hudson, R. G '72 Hudson, S. S 1881 Hudson, T. J . L. 1878 Hudson, W. A . 1872 Hudson, W. M 1876 Huey, T. W 1886 and 1890 Huff, H. P 1896 Huggins, C. P 1905 Hughes, G. W 1862 Hughes, R. P_._ 1862 Hughes, W. Y L. '78 Hughston, E. V '82 Hughston, M. E 190S Hughston, S. R L. '78 Hull, A.* 1884 Hull, C. C . 74 Hull, E. B 1860 Hull, M. L 1904 Hull, M. M_. L. '80 Humphreys, B. G 1881, '96 Humphreys, D. G.* 1867, L. '68 Humphreys, D. S 1880 Humphreys, James 1881 Humphreys, J. B 1866 Humphreys, Joseph 1867 Humphreys, M. S.* 1870 Humphreys, S. B.* 1859 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 369 Humphreys, S. C* 1870 Humphreys, S. W '07 Humphreys, W. W.* 1866 Humphreys, J. A.* '55, L. '57 Humphries, E. W ..1904 Humphries, J. S 1888 Humphries, R. E 1896 Humphries, S. J 1857 Humphries, W. W 1857 Hunsicker, G. J.* 1864 Hunt, D 1906 Hunt, E. B 1879 ■ Hunt, G. (I) 1888 Hunt, G. (II) 1900 Hunt, G. E 1857 Hunt, H. S.* 1871 Hunt, J.* 1872, L. 1873 Hunt, J. A 1894 Hunt, J. E.* 1854 Hunter, E. W '94 Hunter, H. M., Jr L. 1878 Hunter, J. A 1879 Hunter, M. A 1909 Hunter, T. J 1857 Hunter, T. W.* '53 Huntington, Robert H '01 Hurlbutt, T. L '81 Hurst, G. G 1897 Hurt, A. W. G 1896 Hurt, B. D.* 1859 Hustace, Amy 1898 Hurt, H. H.* 1852 Huston, P. I '07 Hutcheson, R 1904 Hutchins, A. Q 1868 Hutchinson, D. I 1904 Hutchinson, J. W 1899 Hutchinson, R. K 1904 Hutchinson, R. M 1896 Hutchinson, T. A.* 1871 Hutchinson, T. H 1888 Hutchinson, W. M 1870 Hutchinson, W. N __ 1898 Hutson, E .1889 Hutton, E. F 1900 Hutton, L. C 1905 Hutton, M. C* - '69 Hyatt, B. F. J.* L. 1862 Hyde, J. J.* 1862 24 Hyland, J. L 1878 Hyman, H 1879 Inge, G. S.*._ Ingram, J. F. Ingram, R. L. Irby, C.A___. Irby, J. H.*_. Irby, J. T____ 1873 1863 1907 1909 1881 1868 Irby, R. F.*__ '54 Ireys, J. T '96 Irving, A. W _ 1880 Irwin, A.* 1869 Isaacs, Chas 1877 Isenberg, N. N 1897 Isom, G. G.* 1857 Isom, J. A.* 76 Isom, T. D 1903 Isom, T. D., Jr.* 1874 and '81 Ivy, F. H '81 Ivy, F. P____'_: 1898 Ivy, J. W 1889 Ivy, T. G '96, L. 1898 Ivy, W. E 1878 Izard, G. L 1882 Jackson, C '84 Jackson, J. L 1888 Jackson, J. R 1904 Jackson, G. L 1894 Jackson, L. D 1905 Jackson, N. T : 1857 Jackson, R. E 1879 Jackson, S. A.* L. '93 Jackson, S. M 1885 Jacobs, D. A L. '06 Jacobs, M 1885 Jacobson, G L. '03 Jacoway, B. J 1863 Jacoway, H. M.* '59, L. '61 Jagers, J. E., Jr 1878 James, A. A 1881 James, T. G 1881 James, T. W ..1882 Jameson, E. E 1907 Jamison, A -- '03 Jamison, R. S 1872 Janez, LB... .1853 Jarman, J. E 1864 370 UNI} BRSITY or MISSISSIPPI. Jarman, R. A- L862 Jarnagin, H.* 1S71 Jarnagin. W. C 1871 Jarratt, B. E L888 Jarvis, R. F L875 Jay. P L. "97 Jayne, A. H_. .1872, (G) 1882 Jeffries, J. H.*_— 1855 Jelks, H 1872 Jelks, W. C.*.. 1872 Jenkins, C* 1864 Jenkins, F. C 1907 Jenkins, J. A 1876 Jenkins, H.* 1879 Jenkins, L.* 1890 Jenkins, R. B.* 1878 Jenkins, W. J 1872 Jenkins, W. T 77 Jennings, E. A . 1884 Jennings, H. J 1 1896 Jennings, J. W 1880 Jiggitts, D. E.* 1860 Jiggitts, F. J '84 Jinkins, F. P.* 1874 Johns, F. W 1861 Johns, G.* 1871 Johns, U. W 1890 Johnson, A. (II) 1908 Johnson, A. (I) 1899 Johnson, A. B '09 Johnson, B. F., Jr 1902 Johnson, B. G 1872 Johnson, B. S 1862 Johnson, B. T 1887 Johnson, C. L 1860 Johnson, Clyde '98 Johnson, C. T "90 Johnson, E L. '07 Johnson, E. L '94 Johnson, Eugene* '70 Johnson, G. M 1904 Johnson, G. W.* 1866 Johnson, H..._'96, (G) 1897, L. 1898 Johnson, H. G '08 Johnson, H. P.* ..1868 Johnson, John E '06 Johnson, Joseph E 1904 Johnson, J. L.* 1902 Johnson, J. S.* 1882 Johnson, J. C '91, (G) 1895 Johnson, J. H._ .. 1S83 Johnson, J. J. A.*.. '69 Johnson, J. L '87 Johnson, J.N 1859 Johnson, J. W ..'76,79 Johnson, J. A... 1893 Johnson, J. T... '86 Johnson, L. C '07 Johnson, L. M. . '08 Johnson, L. P .1909 Johnson, N. D_. ..1885 Johnson, P. D 1897 Johnson, R. A 1902 Johnson, R. W_. 1860 Johnson, S. A 1882 Johnson, S. L.* 1855 Johnson, S. M 1908 Johnson, S. W.. 1881 Johnson, T. C* '69 Johnson, T. H 1891 Johnson, V. O 1908 Johnson, W. G '60 Johnson, W 1852 Johnson, W. B 1869 Johnson, W. F 1876 Johnson, W. H 1853 Johnson, W. S.* (I) '69 Johnson, W. S. (II) 1868 Johnson, W. W. (I) 1878 Johnson, W. W. (II) 1898 Johnson, G. W 1867 Johnston, A. C 1903 Johnston, A. S 1905 Johnston, H. R 1862 Johnston, J. S 1884 Johnston, M 1904 Johnston, O. G 1900 Johnston, S. M ..1909 Johnston, T. H., Jr L. '00 Johnston, T. S '01, '02 Johnston, W.*.. 1880 Joiner, D. A ..1901 Joiner, J. E 73 Jolliff, W. C 1884 Jones, Ackland H L. '01, '02 Jones, A., Jr 1894 Jones, A. H '02 Jones, A. K '60 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 371 Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones A. V '98 B. F '90 B. F., Jr 1878 C '98 C. C L. '00 C, Jr 1857 C. R 1893 D. W., Jr '94 E. A.* L. 1862 E. L 1884 E. M ...1908 E. P L. 70 E. G.* 1862 E. T 1898 F '87 F. B 1874 F. E.* 1871 F. L 1873 F. W 1872 G. M '93, L. '94 G. P '98 H. K 1863 H. M 1883 H. N 1901 H. S.* 1890 J.* 1885 J. B.* '80 J. C 1884 J. H _- '58 J. I 1909 J. M. (I) 1866 J. M. (II)* 1886 J. O 1874 J. P., Jr 1879 J. S. (Ill) 1909 J. S.* (I.) '61 J. S. (II.) 1878 J.T 1887 J. W 1853 K. A , Jr 1895 L 1895 L. B.* 1852 L. N 1899 L. P. (II.) 1906 L. P.* (I.) 1854 M. D 1867 M. D 1902 M. H 1903 M.L.* 1863 Jones, M. M 1901 Jones, M.W.* L. 1862 Jones, N 1891 Jones, O. P 1878 Jones, P. M 1880 Jones, P. Z L. '92 Jones, R. H.* '72 Jones, R. L 1901 Jones, R. W., Jr. (II.) ..... '84 Jones, R. W. (I.) --1877 Jones, S 1879 Jones, S. B . 1893 Jones, S. H 1884 Jones, S. M. (II.) '98 Jones, S. M.* (I.) 1870 & 1871 Jones, S. Marshall 1901 Jones, S. W L. '01 Jones, T. M 1869 Jones, W. A 1 1884 Jones, W. A., Jr 1907 Jones, W. B '87 Jones, W. R 1884 Josey, J. E.* 1859 Joyner, N 1890 Joyner, S. B.* 1880 Joyner, T 1883 Juny, E. DeS '79, '80 Juny, F. A 1873 Juny, G. O 1873 Juny, M. W_- 1873 Kahn.L. M '98 Kahn, M. F 1902 Kawasaki, Kinjiro 1887 Kaufman, M 1890 Kea, J. W 1878 Kearney, G. H.* 1864 Kearney, G. T.* 1883 Kearney, J. G.* 1864 Keene, W. C 1873 Keirn, W. L L. 1883 Keith, T L. '70 Keithley, L. W ...1870 Kellogg, W .. L. 1871 Kelley, A. B -.1905 Kellis, P . 1909 Kelly, E. Y -1896 Kelly, H. C* 1891 Kelly, W 1878 372 l VIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Kelly. \Y. A Kelly. R. B Kemp, R. B Kendall. J. L kemlel, L... Kendel, J. L . Kendrick, J.I Kennedy. C. N Kennedy. E Kennedy, E. B. Kennedy, J. R... Kennedy, J. W Kennedy, K Kennedy, L. T Kennedy, L. W 1878, L Kennedy, M. H Kennedy, T. B.* Kennedy, W. F.* Kent, J L Kent, J. D Kent, M. A Kerr, J. T.* Kerr, W. B Kerr, W.J* Kershaw, E. H Key, J. T Keyes, A. G.* Keys, F. W.* Keys, H. C Kibbe, O. A.* Kidd, E. M Kier, W. H L Killough, 0. N Kilpatrick, A. E 73 Kilpatrick, E. P.* Kilpatrick, J. W 76 Kilpatrick, W. L L. Kimbell, W. R Kimbriel, N. A r Kimbrough, A. L.* Kimbrough, B. T., Jr Kimbrough, D. M '96, L Kimbrough, E Kimbrough, J. M Kimbrough, L _ Kimbrough, O. L L Kimbrough, R. M.* '55, L. Kimbrough, T. C '95, (G.) Kimbrough, T. H 1882 Ki 1892 Ki IS! 11' Ki is;>7 Ki 1907 Ki 1907 Ki 1890 Ki 1909 Ki 1878 Ki 1881 Ki 1895 Ki 1864 Ki 1S72 Ki '04 Ki . 79 Ki 1880 Ki 1857 Ki 1874 Ki . '95 Ki 1879 Ki 1909 Ki 1863 Ki 1880 Ki 1862 Ki 1898 Ki '58 Ki 1853 Ki '55 Ki 1908 Ki : 61 Ki 1887 Ki . '00 Ki 1882 Ki , 75 Ki 1851 Ki , '81 Ki 1S83 Ki 1897 Ki 1881 Ki '57 Ki '99 Ki . '99 Ki 1897 Ki 1903 Ki 1907 Ki . '06 Ki 1859 Ki 1896 Ki 1895 KI mbrough, T. P 1891 merer, L. J '06 merer, M. H_ I'.HM mmons, A. H 1909 mmons, A. L 1907 mmons, E. K '05 mmons, J. H 1872, L. 78 mmons, J. H., Jr.._ ..1909 mmons, J. K 1X73 mmons, K '00, (G.) 1901 mmons, L '08 mmons, L. H.* '83 mmons, M 1907 mmons, N. S .1905 mmons, R. F 1885 mmons, S. H '90, '92 ncannon, A. A '81, (G.) 1893 ncaid, R. B 1856 ndel, A. H 1869 ndel, J. C* 1868 ndel, J. R 1863 ng, B 1869 ng, C. G 1908 ng, C. R 1878 ng, F. H_. 1909 ng, J. D 1907 ng, J. R 1896 ng, P. M L. 1898 ng, R. A 1860 ns, A. P 1864 rby, C. D '06 rby, G. C 1905 rk, J. T 1884 rk, J. T 1904 rk, N 1907 rk, T. K 1907 rk, W 1851 rk, W. W 1884 rkland, S. H 1864 rkpatrick, J. G.* (I.) 1852 rkpatrick, J. G. (II.) 1878 rkpatrick, R. F 1878 rkpatrick, W. G 1878 sner, H. W 1906 tchell, E. P 1900 ttle, E. R 1907 ttrell, N. D 1907 ttrell, R. N.* '82 Klein, M. C 1870 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 373 Kline, L. T.* 1872 Knight, F 1909 Knight, J. C.J 1891 Knight, J. P 1868 Knight, T. P 1870 Knotts, W. S 1895 Knox, B. N 1907 Knox, DeW 1902 Knox, I. C '08 Knox, J. G.* '54 Knox, R. H 1902 Knox, S. R L. '98 Koen, J. H 1878 Krebbs, J. H.*.._ 1884 Kretschmar, W. P__._'98, (G.) 1899 Kuykendall, A. C* 1883 Kuykendall, J 1878 Kuykendall, J. McC 1907 Kyle, A. G 1884 Kyle, A. S 1876 Kyle, J. C, Jr.* 1898 Kyle, J. M '90 Kyle, J. W 1909 Lacey, C 1901 Lacey, M. P '07 Lacey, N. A _1907 Lacey, Philip D.* 1908 Lacey, R. B L. '04 Lacy, T 1861 Lake, A. W 1859 Lake, G. P.* 1871 Lake, R. H 1898 Lake, R. P 1906 Lake, W. W 1879 Lamar, J. M.* '53 Lamb, L. B '97 Lamb, R. T 1873 Lamb, S. H 1858 Lambeth, R. L 1864 Lambuth, B. W.* 1862 Lambuth. J. W.* _ '51 Lamkin, J. A L. '81 Lamkin, J. O L. '95 Lampkin, W. J I860 Lampton, B. F 1904 Lampton, L. B 1893 Lampton, L. L 1873 Lampton, R. B 1904 Lampton, T. B '89 Lampton, W. E 1881 Land, H. L L. '79 Land, I. R.* 1897 Land, T 1880 Land, W. H L. '78 Landau, M. D L. '95 Landrum, J. H 1892 Landrum, J. L 1904 Lane, G. W.* 1854 Lane, H. C 1878 Lane, S. C* L. '72 Lane, T. M.* '60 Landgon, S. L., Jr '00 Langford, J. C 1884 Langston, A. D 1878 Lanier, R. D L. '98 Lann, K 1880 Lanneau, K. P., Jr 1904 Larkin, F. E.* '82, '85 Larkin, P. J-. 1857 Lashbrooke, E. L 1884 Latham, E . 1903 Latham, J. C 1888 Latham, J. C 1904 Latham, J. F 1882 Latham, M. W. (G.) 1908 Latham, O 1886 Latham, R. E 1888 Latting, R. G 1872 Lauderdale, D. C '06, L. '08 Lauderdale, J. F.* 1883 Lauderdale, M :...1901 Lauderdale, W. A '08 Laughter, W. P.* L. '60 Laurence, T. J 1866 Laurendine, C. M 1906 Lawhon, R. S 1878 Lawler, S. W 1880 Lawrence, D. N 1872 Lawrence, O. M L. '00 Lawson, H. W.* 1872 Law, J.* 1884 Lawton, R.... 1878 Lea, W.* '61 Lea, W. M.* (I.) 1864 Lea, W. M. (II.) L. '95 Leachman, R. E.* 1864 Leak, H. C~ - L. '07 374 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Leak. \Y. .1.* 1852 Lt»ake. M. E . L. '96 Leake, M. F. (G.) 1883 Leake, W. W.. L866 Learned, A. B L885 Leathers, J. A L. '04 Leavell, A. B -isi»s Leavell, C. B '96 Leavell, C. S 1908 Leavell, F. H '09 Leavell, G. W., Jr 1904 Leavell, J. B '04 Leavell. J. G 1893 Leavell, L 1907 Leavell, L. P '99 Leavell, M. B 1897 Leavell, R. M '59 Leavell, R. Q 1909 Leavell, W. N 1900 Leavell, Z. T 1872 Ledbetter, J. M 1872 Ledbetter, R. G 1897 Ledbetter, S. L '76 Lee, A. C, Jr 1909 Lee, C. H '55, L. 1857 Lee, C. P. (I) 1878 Lee, C. P. (II) 1878 Lee, F. C 1909 Lee, G. H '82, (G) 1892 Lee, H. M 1881 Lee, J. J 1890 Lee, J. M 1907 Lee, J. T 1860 Lee, J. L 1889 Lee, J. M 186s Lee, R. C L. '82 Lee, R. C, Jr 1904 Lee, T. P.* 1862 Lee, W. B 1907 Lee, W. H 1888 Leftwich, E 1908 Legg, R. E 1879 Leggett, E. M 1865-6 Leggett, J. M 1908 Leggitt, W. M 1865-6 Lehman, E 1888 Lehman, J 1886 Leigh, A. M '00, (G) 1901 Leigh, R. E 1905 Leigh, R. E 1892 Leigh. W. C .1857 Leigh, W. F 1908 Leitch, J. V 1896 Leman, B. R.* 1907 Lemler, J. A.... .1905 Lengsfield, H 1872 Lenoir, R. L., Jr 1882 Lenoir, S. C -.1881 Leonard, C. H.* 75 Leonard, E. G , 1872 Leonard, H. O., Jr 1899 Leonard, J. A.* L. 1858 Leonard, J. T 1874 Leonard, W. E. B '03 LeReaux, O. D L. 1881 Lester, G. A.* '55 Lester, G. H.* (I) '56, L. '60 Lester, G. H. (II) 1896 Lester, H. S . ....1885 Lester, J. P 1907 Lester, J. T 1862 Lester, L 1901 Lester, L. B., Jr 1887 Lester, O 1894 Lester, S. L 1863 Lester, S. P.* 1852 Lester, W. C. (I) 1872 Lester, W. C. (II) 1906 Lester, W. S '00, (G) 1902 Leverett, M. DeW 1909 Levy, E 1888 Lewenthal, A 1878 Lewis, A. S.* L. 1871 Lewis, E. S. (G.) 1901 Lewis, I. L.* 1853 Lewis, Leander* 1857 Lewis, Leon 1891 Lewis, Mrs. L 1895 Lewis, R. L 1895 Lewis, T. T 1889 Lewis, W.* 1876 Lewis, W. N L. '95 Liddell, A. J.* '70 Liddell, C. G.* 1859 Liddell, J. M 1872 Liddell, S. H '09 Ligon, E. N 1908 Ligon, G '73 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 375 Ligon, W. P 1853 Lile, W. H.* 1859 Lilly, J. Y.* 1864 Linch, W. C 1881 Lindholm, P. P '07 Lindsey, E '08 Lindsey, J., Jr 1907 Lindsey, T. F... __1859 and 1868 Lindsey, S. A 1857 Linfield, R. P 1892, (G) 1902 Linfield, W. L 1883 Lipford, H. F 1901 Lipscomb, B. W 1901 Lipscomb, D ■____ ---'79, '81 Lipscomb, E. W '98 Lipscomb, F. M 1865 Lipscomb, J 1880 Lipscomb, J. F 1858 Lipscomb, R. H '59 Lipscomb, J. W.* 1854 Lipsey. L. H 1887 Lipsey, P. I '86 Lipsey, R. C -1864 Little, A. W 1891 Little, D. D__ 1888 Little, H. C__ - '97 Little, M. M.* - '89 Little, W. G., Jr.* ...1851 Lloyd, W. L 1855 Lockard, G 1901 Lockard, T. C '95, '97, L. '02 Lockard, W. W _..'95, L. '00 Locke, M. F.* ,1882 Locke, L 1904 Locke, O 1902 Lockett, W. B.* '54 Lockhart, J. T. (I) '58 Lockhart, J. T. (II) 1896 Lockhart, S. T.* 1856 Lockhart, W. T '58 Lockley, P 1880 Lockwood, B. M.* 1887 Lockwood, W. B 1889 Loeb, S. J 1907 Lowenberg, J 1878 Lofton, W. M L. '97 Logan, J. L 1883 Logan, J. S 1890 Logan, R. F. B L. '03 Loggins, W 1878 Lomax, C. L L. '97 Lomax, O. A 1891 Long, C. P L. '88 Long, S. P 1906 Longest, C '00, (G) 1901 Longino, R. E 1898 Longstreet, D. W 1879 Longstreet, J. C L. '78 Looney , B. F - _ 1879 Looney, F. M 1856 Lott, E. W 1870 and 1871 Loughridge, R. H 71, (G) 1873 Love, A. G '99 Love, A. G '99 Love, DeW. M 1908 Love, F. E.* 76 Love, H. D 1909 Love, T. B.* 1869 Lovejoy, F. J.* L. '56 Lovett, J. L '96 Lowe, C. E.*. 1885 Lowe, E. H 1904 Lowe,E. N '84, (G) 1891 Lowe, E. P '81 Lowe, J. T '86 Lowrence, W. L 1904 Lowrey, J. T L. '03 Lowry, D. L L. '94 Lowry, J. W 1887 Lowry, R., Jr.* 1880 Lowry, W. B.*-_- 1862 Lucas, A. J 1870 Lucas, H. C 1868 Lucas, J. T 1884 Lucas, W. A '98 Lucius, Vastine L. 1898 Luckett, J. E - 1903 Luckett, J. W., Jr _ . 1895 Lum, J. J __1878 Lum, R. J.* -1870 Lumpkin, O ...1854 Lundie, A. B 1908 Lundie, K '05 Luse, W. H.* 1858, L. '60 Lusk, S. H ..1878 Luter, P. F 1901 Lyell, G. G '96, L. '98 Lyell, J. S 1908 UNI} ERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Lyell, M L895 Lyles, R. C 1870 and 1871 Lynch, C. B 1902 Lyon, B. T L899 Lyon. C. M 1872 Lyon. J. A _L. '73 Lyon. J. N.* '55 Lyons. W. H L869 Maas, C 1S94 Maas. D .1878 Mabry, E. L '00 Mabry, M. H 1870 Mabry. T. O '90, '92 Mabry, W. A 1883 Mabry, W. R.* '86, '96 Madden, J. A L. '74 Madison, J. E.* L. '74 Madison, T 1890 Magee, A. B 1870 Magee, H '09 Magee, M '08 Magruder, B. H 1878 Magruder, J. M, 1881 Magruder, J. M 1900 Magruder, L. W 1902 Magruder, R. H _.._1878 Magruder, T. S.* 1864 Magruder, W. D. (I) 1900 Magruder, W. D 1902 Magruder, W. H.* '79 Magruder, W. W 1884, L. '95 Mahon, H. K L. '98 Majet, L. C 1856 Malloy, F 1901 Malone, C. C* 1863 Malone, D. D.* L. 1868 Malone, J. W.* 1878 Malone, W '87 Mangrum, W. W 1869 Manlove, G. G.* 1868 Mann, J. A 1902 Mann, Q. A '53 Manning, E. S.* 1870 Manning, I. P 1897 Manning, V. H 1880 Manship, L., Jr 1904 Maples, J. L 1859 Markette, B. T L. '98 Markette, M 1893 Marks, M. L ... .. 1S99 Marshall, C. C* L. '58 Marshall, C. L . '53 Marshall, C. Y ....1862 Marshall, H. E . L. 1898 Marshall, J. E.*__ .1871 Marshall, J. M ...1878 Marshall, M. F ...1902 Marshall, T. D '82, (G) 1885 Marshall, W 1869 Marshall, W. B.* L. '58 Marshall, W. H 1888 Marshall, W. W.* ...1862 Marsh, C 1857 Marsh, J. R.* 1863 Marsh, S.* 1863 Martinez, J.* 1888 Martin, A 1890 Martin, B. J 1858 Martin, C. W '06 Martin, E. G '91 Martin, E. L 1878 Martin, F. C 1900 Martin, G. P 1878 Martin, H. E 1908 Martin, H. L.* 1902 Martin, J.* 1859 Martin, J. D 1909 Martin, J. G 1900 Martin, M. J 1895 Martin, R. H 1909 Martin, T. O '88 Martin, W. A '88 Martin, W. C '81 Martin, W. E '78, (G) 1880 Martin, W. F. (I) 1880 Martin, W. F. (II) 1883 Martin, W. O.* 1862 Martin, W. S 1900 Martineau, T. E 1901 Mason, J. M 1902 Massey, C. S 1878 Massey, F 1906 Massey, J. W 1869 Massingale, S. C 1890 Matranga, S. A 1905 Matthews, B. N 1878 Matthews, B., Jr L. '81 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 377 Matthews, G. E . . 1873 Matthews, J 1885 Matthews, J. M. (II) 1892 Matthews, J. M. (I)* L. '86 Matthews, J. P.* 1884 Matthews, J. W.* L. 70 Matthews, L. H 1872 Matthews, S. S 1881 Matthews, W. L 1897 Matthews, W. W.* 1873 Mathison, L. J.* 1884 Mathis, B. W - 1880 Mattox, C. C* -1857 Mauldin, A. G 1906 Maupin, J. A.* 1872 Maury, E. F 1872 Maury, J. F.* 1862 Maury, M. H.* 1872 Maxey, T. S 1869 Maxson, A 1909 Maxwell, D '07 Maxwell, H. C 1906 Maxwell, M 1907 Maxwell, R. C 1906 Maxwell, T. H.* 1869 Maxwell, T. R 1874 May, A. S 1878 May, H. A 1889 May, J. V 1897 May, J. R.* T878 May, L. P 1907 Maybin, W 1896 Maybin, W. H 1884 Mayer, A.*.... 1862 Mayer, J. A.* '57 Mayers, D. M 1877 Mayes, E '68, L. 70 Mayes, H. B.* 1876 Mayes, J. E 1879 Mayes, L. L L. '05 Mayes, M. L 1897 Mayes, R. B L. '88 Mayes, W. W 1884 Mayfield, H. V.* ..I860 Maynard, C. E 1866 Maynard, G. F L. 78 Mayo, S. J 1896 Mayo, W. J.* . '84 Mayor, A. E 1897 Mayrant, W. N 1858 Mays, J. D 1898 Mayson, C. G 1887 Mayson, J. H.* '52 Mayson, T. E.* 1878 McAdory, R. A.* L. '68 McAfee, E. M.* 1860, L. 1862 McAfee, R. W 1882 McAllister, J. N.* 1859 McAllister, R. S.* 1852 McAlpine, N. F 1877 McAlpine, R. D.* 1860 McArn, J. D 1872 McArthur, J. R 1908 McBee, J. T 1851 McBee, R. C -L. '00 McBee, S 1851 McBride, A. W 1906 McBride, F. C 1884 McBride, W. R 1905 McCaa, J. C 1868 McCabe, E. J L. '01 McCabe, G. W L. '09 McCabe, H. C, Jr L. '07 McCafferty, C. C 1885 McCafferty, E. F.* 1884 McCafferty, J. T 1885 McCain, A 1906 McCain, J. S 1902 McCain, W.* 1872 McCain, W. A 1896 McCaleb, D.* 1862 McCaleb, E. H.* 1862 McCaleb, C. B.* '61 McCall, J. W 1909 McCall, W. P 1884 McCallum, D. A 1873 McCallum, G 1900 McCann, W. T 1860 McCardle, W. H.* 1863 McCarley, R. O.* 1878 McCarley, T. T '07 McCaskill, H. L ..1896 McCaskill, J. E.* __..1864 McCaskill, J. L.*.... '61 McCaskill, T. A 1900 McCaw, A. B.* 1871 McCay, J., Jr.*__ 1878 McCharen, A 1908 S7S / V/l Hlx'SITY OF MISSISSIPPI. McClellan, B. P.*. 1858 McCldlan, E. L. B ....1886 McClellan, F. H 1884 McClellan, J. T ..1S69 McClellan, J. L ..1878 McClellan, N. C 1888 McClellan, S. B 70 McClelland. E. W._ McClellan. J 1857 McClelland, R. D '58 McClendon, J. L.*..' L. 1858 McClendon, W. S.* 1859 McCleskey, H. L '99, (G) 1900 McClinton, J. C 1880 McClinton, J. S 1907 McClure, A. J 1880 McClure, J. T 1878 McClurg, M L. '78 McColloch, C. H 1879 McCullum, D.* '61 McConnico, T. A.* 1869 McConnico, S. B 1868 McConnico, W. B 1878 McCool, D. C 1902 McCool, J. F. (I)* 1870, L. '69 McCool, J. F. (II) L. '79 McCord, C. E 1892 McCorkle, H. C '09 McCorkle, J. A 1880 McCorkle, J. E., Jr '07 McCorkle, J. W 1901 McCorkle, M.W '04 McCorkle, S. W.* '02 McCorkle, W. B 1891 McCormick, J. I 1890 McCormick, M. W 1888 McCracken, J. H 1908 McCracken, J. T 1879 McCrory, W. W '93 McCravey, J. R 1888 McCullar, T. P L. '08 McCullough, J. M.* '57 McCutchen, J 1868 McCutchen, J. R.* 1859 McDade, J. I 1904 McDaniel, E. S '74 McDaniel, Q 1878 McDonald, P. S '06 McDonald, V. R .._1903 McDonald, W. A... L. 'SO McDonald, W. P 1906 McDonald, W. T L. '82 McDonnell, A. H 1906 McDowell, A. B. (II) 1890 McDowell, A. B.* (I) 1869 McDowell, D., Jr 1903 McDowell, D. M ..1882 McDowell, James* 1855 and 1856 McDowell, John* 1855 and 1856 McDowell, J. D ...1880 McDowell, J. R '98, L. '00 McDowell, S.* 1858 McDowell, W. W...„ 1882 McEachern, D '91, L. '95 McEachern, W. H 1892 McElrath, A. T 1882 McElroy, J. B '88 McElroy, K.* 1861 McElroy, W ...1879 McEwen, J. B.* '58 McEwen, W. B.* 1887 McEwen, W. W.* __..1860 McFarland, B (I)* L. 1861 McFarland, B. (II) '99, L. '01 McFarland, D. K.* '68 McFarland, E '83 McFarland, F. P 1869 McFarland, J. L 1890 McFarland, J. M.*. 1869 McFarland, T. J.* 1868, L. '69 McFarland, W. B 1879 McFee, F. P.* 1878 McFee, J. S.* 1878 McGee, C. G 1885 McGee, W. J 1878 McGeehee, A. S 1906 McGehee, D. R L. '09 McGehee, E. H 1909 McGehee, H 1856 McGehee, J. B L. '79 McGehee, J. G 1855 and 1856 McGehee, J. T.* 1860 McGehee, L. H 1898 McGehee, W. E 1878 McGehee, W. H 1909 McGehee, W. T 1855, 1856, 1857 McGegee, W. T 1902 McGill, T. F 1878 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 379 McGovern, J., Jr 1900 McGowan, A. W.* 1862 McGowan, H. S.* '68 McGowan, J. G 1888 McGowan, J. L. * . . _ _ 1855 and 1856 McGowan, R.* 1852 McGowan, W.* ...1878 McGuire, H. E 1887 McGuirk, R. W.* 1872 McHenry, F. W 1909 Mcllhenny, O. R 1909 Mclnnis, C. H -1907 Mclnnis, H.* - 1851 Mclnnis, J. D* 1899 Mclnnis, J. T 1870 and 1871 Mclnnis, L. L 75, 76 Mclnnis, N 1878 Mclnnis, R. A 1870 and 1871 Mcintosh, A. J 1872 Mcintosh, H. M _ -L. '98 Mcintosh, J 1885 Mcintosh, J. T 1900 Mcintosh, J. R.* -I860 Mclntyre, A. J L. '96 Mclntyre, W. E 1909 McKay, H. M _L. '88 McKay, R. H -1851 McKay, R. H -1909 McKay, W. I '02, '04, L. '06 McKelvain, R. P.* __-18"61 McKennon, J. A..-. -1880 McKenzie, C. S.* 71 McKenzie, J. W . . 1864 McKenzie, L. T L. '97 McKee, F 1872 McKie, J. H.* L. '68 McKie, J. M.* 1852 McKie, J 1891 McKie, W. M.* 1871 McKie, W. P 1870 and 1871 McKinney, J. M 1894 McKinney, S. M.* 1858 McKinney, W. T 1909 McKinnon, J. B.* 1857 McKinnon, R. J.* 1880 McKnight, T., Jr L. '07 McLain, F. A 74 McLain, J. H 1908 McLarty, C. A 1907 McLaurin, A. J., Jr '05 & L. '05 McLaurin, C.* '57 McLaurin, E 1908 McLaurin, G. C ...1878 McLaurin, G. W.* _ '81 McLaurin, H.* 1863 McLaurin, H. D.* '57, L. 1861 McLaurin, H. L _ '81 McLaurin, L 74 McLaurin, R. L. (II.) 1883 McLaurin, R. L.* (I.) 1863 McLaurin, S. L . 1883 McLaurin, W.* 1883 McLaurin, Z. B.* 18G1 McLean, F. H 1896 McLean, G 1902 McLean, G. D '97 McLean, J. H 1909 McLean, L. C 1902 McLean, L. D 1904 McLean, L. L 1906 McLean, L. W 1905 McLean, N. B.* 1854 McLean, R. D 1901 McLean, W. A 1872 McLean, W. T* 1858 McLemore, J. D 1902 McLemore, J. H.* L. 1862 McLemore, L. W.* 1863 McLemore, R. S.* 1857 McLeod, C. H 1897 McLeod, C. P*___ '55 McLeod, D. C.* 1870 McLeod, E. W.* 1883 McLeod, J. W 1868 McLeod, R. A.* 1860 McLeod, W. A 1872 McLeod, W.B_- 1884 McLeod, W.N 1906 McLeran, A 1907 McMahon, R. B 1878 McMahon, T. P 1878 and '83 McMahon. W.B.(I)_- 1884 McMahon, W.B. (II) 1909 McMahon, W. E 1884 McMahon, W. J 1859 McMath, E. N 1878 McMillan, L 1870 McMillin, A. L ...1902 380 / \/i Eiisn v of Mississippi. IfcMinn, S. P 1887 MLcMorrough, G. H L. 'no McMorrough, T. J.. 1896 McMullen, F. N isso McMullen, R. R '54 McMullen, W. F... L863 McMurphy, F. H... moo McMurry, W.J _.L. '02 McNair. J. W ... L. '04 McNair, L. D., Jr 1878 McNair. S. M 1904 McNeal, A.* 1S50, 1861 McNeal. A. T '61 McNeal, T . . . . 1872 McNeel, A. A 18S0 McNeily, J. S 1860 McNeill, A. J.* 1856 McNeill, G. D 1901 McNeill, H. H 1867 McNeill, J. H '02 McNeill, J. C. N.* 1870, L. '70 McNeill, M 1869 McPherren, C. E 1894 McPherson, L. W 1905 McQuiston, W. C '53 McRea, A. B.* 1854 McRea, F. M.* 1869 McRaney, O. C 1897 McRaven, J. S..* '51 McRee, D. D 1886 McSwine, J.* '55 McSwine, R.* 1866 McSwine, W. M. R.* '55 McVey, E. A 1907 McWhorter, B. F., Jr 1878 McWhorter, H. M 1900 McWhorter, J. H 1885 McWhorter, S. M '89 McWillie, J L. '06 McWillie, T. A 1870 Meade, T. T 1869 Meade, W. E 1883 Meaders, E. A 1901 Meaders, E. L 1905 Meaders, G 1901 Meaders, J. P 1853 Meaders, J. S. (G.) 1898 Means, B '56 Means, C. B 1867 Means, J 1851 Mebane, G. D.._ .1880 M>'cklenberger, A. F. . '07 Mecklin, J. A '69 Mtcklin, R. M._. 1896 Medford, A .1901 Meek, E. C ..1S95 Meek, I 1894 Meek, J. S.* __L. '61 Meek, N.* 1899 Meek, R. A '88 (G.) 1902 Meek, R. B 1887 Meek, W. T___. 1897 Meek, W. E 1886 Meggs, L. L 1879 Meharg, A. S '78, L. '78 Meisner, J. N.* 1881 Melchoir, A. C 1893 Melchoir, I. C 1895 Mellard, T. H I860 Mellen, D. C 1877 Mellen, W. F.* . '55 Melton, C. W.* 1891 Melton, J. M.* 1862 Melton, W. M 1889 Melville, D 1863 Mercer, C. V 1900 Merriwether, E. G 1904 Merriwether, J. O 1879 Meriwether, T. W 1906 Meyers, D. P L. '74 Mhoon, J. A 1870 and 1868 Mhoon, J. W.* '71 Middleton, E. S., Jr L. '88 Middleton, F. W 1853 Middleton, N 1904 Middleton, P. M '08 Milam, R. P.* L. 1860 Miles, L 1902 Miles, W. H 1896, '07 Miller, A. (I) • 1890 Miller, A. (II) 1908 Miller, A. W 1905 Miller, C* (II.) 1891 Miller, C. (I.) '71 Miller, C. C* 1869 Miller, C. E . 1907 Miller, D 1897 Miller, D. C '08 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 381 Miller, E.* 1864 Miller, E. B 1907 Miller, E. H L. 70 Miller, F 1890 Miller, F. D __._1892 Miller, G.* 1863 Miller, G. A : 1866 Miller, G. E 1879 Miller, G. J 1861 Miller, H .—'77, 78 Miller, H. A.* 1873 Miller, H. B 1897 Miller, J. C. (I.) '58 Miller, J. C. (II.) 1879 Miller, J. D 1897 Miller, J. F 1895 Miller, M 1905 Miller, M. B 1891 Miller, M. E 1878 Miller, M. V. B 1905 Miller, O. H 1900 Miller, R. H 1908 Miller, R. N '69 Miller, T. B 1891 Miller, W. B _.__1902 Miller, W. D.* L. 1862 Milloy, J.* '58 Mills, F. Z '91 Mills, H J _ 1861 Mills, J. B 1881 Mills, W. P . '89 Millsaps, H. T L. '90 Millsaps, J. D. (II.) '86 Millsaps, J. D. (I.) 1872 Millsaps, J. G.* L. '98 Millsaps, R. W 1870 Millsaps, T. P.*__. 1878 Millsaps, U 1867 Millsaps, W.F.. __. _L. '80 Milton, W. E 1878 Mims, H. H 1908 Mims, S. C 1905 Mims, W. D.* 1862 Minter, J. G.* L. '57 Minter, J. T... 1855 Mister, J. F '60 Mister, W. F . . '60 (G.) 1382 Misterfeldt, E .1898 Mitchell, A. C 1891 1885 1902 '03, L. '04 1907 1902 L. '95 Mitchell, C. D Mitchell, C. T Mitchell, E. B Mitchell, F. B_ Mitchell, G. B Mitchell, G. T Mitchell, G. W __L. '02 Mitchell, H 1885 Mitchell, J.* ..I 1872 Mitchell, J. Y 1875 Mitchell, L.B _ '07 Mitchell, L. N 1904 Mitchell, M. M 1901 Mitchell, R 1854 Mitchell, R. B 1880 Mitchell, R. M 1884 Mitchell, R. P 1907 Mitchell, S. F 1909 Mitchell, U. W 1884 Mitchell, W. A 1872 Mitchell, W. M L. '89 Mitchell, W. I 1909 Mitthoff, M. F L. 1880 Mitts, F. H 1880 Mixon, H 1880 Mixon, J 1906 Mixon, J. L 1904 Mize, J. H L. '02 Moak, B. F 1909 Mobley, L. B 1903 Molloy, F.* 1853 Monaghan, Norman 1908 Monette, A. C 1861 Monette, W. H. (I.) 1864 Monette, W. H.* (II.) 1895 Money, H. D 1860, L. '60 Montague, R. V.* 1859 Montgomery, A L. '01 Montgomery, C. P.* 78 Montgomery, C. R.* 1S52 Montgomery, D. P '68 Montgomery, E. W 1904 Montgomery, F. H L. '07 Montgomery, G '03 and '06 Montgomery, H. R L. 78 Montgomery, I 1901 Montgomery, J.* (I.) 1869 Montgomery, J. (II.)... .-1892 Montgomery, J. F 1872 382 i \n i.l'si i y of MISSISSIPPI. Montgomery, J. M lsTs Montgomery, J. R.* 'S8L. 'tH Montgomery, J. S '68 Montgomery, J. T L. '83 Montgomery, M 1908 Montgomery. M. A . L. '90 Montgomery. M. C .. '87 Montgomery, P. S 1SI07 Montgomery, R 1907 Montgomery, S. E_. 1X7(1 Montgomery, S. W. . 1S70 Montgomery, W. H_. L873 Montgomery, V 1866 Moody, I. M 1897 Moody, J. B 1871 Moody, L. B L. '91 Moody, P. H 1904 Moody, S. O 1867 Moore, A. A 1881 Moore, A. F.* 73 Moore, B. M.* 1878 Moore, C. L '58 Moore, E. E.* 1900 Moore, G. D., Jr 1882 Moore, G. H 1881 Moore, G. P.* '92 Moore, H. C* 1856, L. 1857 Moore, H. W 1908 Moore, J 1853 Moore, J. A 1859 Moore, J. J •_ 1859 Moore, J. P., Jr '87 Moore, J. S.* '67 Moore, J. T.* 1861 Moore, J. V.* 1864 Moore, L 1905 Moore, L. B 1905 Moore, L. W '55, L. 1857 Moore, N. A 1905 Moore, P. L 1879 Moore, R. M 1908 Moore, R. P L '86 Moore, R. R 1905 Moore, S. C 1866 Moore, T. A.* '61 Moore, W. A 1872 Moore, W. D 1876 Moore, W. H 1879 Moore, W. W 1862 Morehead, B. H ... 1879 Morehead, S. J ..1867 Morehead, W. T.* .1864 Moreland, S. T .1872 Morgan, C. E.... .1907 Morgan, G. W.. ..1886 Morgan, J. B„ Jr.* 1886 Morgan, L. E 1908 Morgan, M__ 1896 Morgan, M. E 1901 Morgan, M. G . .1898 Morgan, R. F____ 1908 Morgan, W. H .1856 Morphis, B. W 1883 Morphis, L. B 1883 Morris, F 1903 Morris, J. A 1878 Morris, J. L L. '96 Morris, L. McK.* 1905 Morris, R. C '07 Morris, S 1901 Morris, S. A 1878 Morris, S. P 1905 Morris, W. P.* ....1862 Morris, W. T . 1880 Morrison, S. A L. '98 Morrison, H. M.* '55 Morrison, J. K. (I) '98, '01 Morrison, J. K. (II) 1901 Morrison, J. M 1870 Morrow, D. H '74 Morrow, J. T 1903 Morrow, M '97, '02 Morrow, M. C 1906 Morrow, M. M 1906 Morrow, R. O. B '73 Morrow, R. P 1901 Morrow, T. J.* 1860 Morrow, Z. T 1873 Mortimer, T. E 1901 Morton, C. S.* '52 Morton, H. C 1878 Morton, J. K.* L. '60 Morton, W.* 1854 Mosby, F. L 1900 Mosby, M. A 1901 Mosby, V. B 1901 Mosby, W. J., Jr 1891 Moseley, B. F.* 1872 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 383 Moseley, G. M.* 1862 Moseley, H. C 1827 Moseley, J. B 1882 Moseley, J. T.* '51, L. 1856 Moseley, J. W., Jr 1886 Moseley, T. B 1865 and 1866 Moseley, W. X '57 Moses, B. E L. '09 Moss, C.L 1884 Moss, M. H 1905 Moss, R. E 1902 Moss, R. L 1875 Moss, R. A.* '03 Mounger, E. H L. '96 Mounger, E. L__'91, (G.) 1892, L. '95 Mounger, H L. '94 Mounger, M. H 1885 Mounger, W. D 1884 Mounger, W. H '06 Mount, B. S 1901 Moyse, J 1887 Mozinsky , A 1901 Mulcahy, I. L '98 Muldrow, H. L.*.— ' '56, L. '58 Muldrow, R.* '53 Mullen, H. H 1879 Mullen, W. L 1879 Mullens, B. S 1857 Mullikin, H. F 1883 Mullins, J. B 1869 Mullins, L. R.* L. '61 Mullins, S. W 1873 Munnerlyn, F. L 1886 Murch, W. A L. '89 Murphey, S.* 1860 Murphree, R 1900 Murphy, D. J '04 Murphy, H. L ....1901 Murphy, W. S 1882 Murry, C. G Murray, C. M 1886 Murray, J. A 1890 Murray, J. P.. 1909 Murray, M. W 1890 Murray, P. B.* L. '78 Murray, S. A.* ..1874 Murrill, T. E 1872 Murry, J. Y., Jr '83, L. '84 Murry, J. M . '98 Musselwhite, A 1890 Myer, L. S 1878 Myers, B. L 1903 Myers, C. H 1884 Myers, C. R '60 Myers, E. L 1907 Myers, G. B L. '03 Myers, H. C 1869 Myers, P. S.* 1862 Myers, S.* 1900 Myers, W. D 1898 Nabers, F. M.* I 1861 Nabers, J. A 1873, L. 78 Nabors, B. D 1880 Nailer, F.* 1856 Nail, R. P 1888 Nance, L. M 1890 Napier, J. O L. '88 Nash, H. E 1900 Nash, M. G.* 1852 Nash, W. N.* L. '68 Nash, W. W.* 1873 Neal, S. F 1906 Neblett, R. P 1902 Needham, J. B 1879 Neel, T. V '68 Neeley, J. J 1867 Neely, C. A 1871 Neely, C. L L. '09 Neely, H. F.* '60 Neff, J. P '05 Neill, G. F.* 1869 Neill, H. H '70 Neill, S. D L. '91 Neill, S. S. (Mrs. T. K. Boggan). '03 Neill, V. L '06, '08 Neilson, C. B. (I.) 1866 Neilson, C. B., Jr. (II.) 1897 Neilson, C. P.* L. '56 Neilson, F. A 1875 Neilson, J. E 1873 Neilson, J. H.*-..- -.1854 Neilson, H. H.*.. ....1882 Neilson, M. L 1904 Nelson, W. A 1905 Nelson, J. H.*.. .-1858 Nelson, J. W ..I860 Nelson, N. T 1855 3S4 i DIVERSITY or MISSISSIPPI. Nelson. S., Jr I860 Nelson. T. Y Nelson, W. C '61 Nelson. '\V. P L. '92 Nettles, W. K L. '88 Neville. G. B 1890 Neville, J. H.. Jr 1005 Neville, W 1897 Newell. A. A 1896 Newell, Mrs. A. A 1896 Newell. D. J.... 1873 Newell, J. B 1907 Newell, S. W.* (I) 74 Newell, S. W(II) '06 Neuman, J. H 1857 Newman, C. D.* 72 Newman, J. A '07 Newman, R. S 1867 Newman, W. S 1870 and 1871 Newnan, A. M 1873 Newsom, T. C (I) 1873 Newsom, T. C, Jr. (II) '09 Newton, J.* (I.) '58 Newton, J. (II.) 1860 Newton, J. K. P.* 71 Newton, J. M 1902 Newton, M. T., Jr 1880 Newton, O. C* 1859 Newton, W. W 1858 Nicholas, J. R 1872 Nichols, I. C '06, '08 Nichols, J. L '08 Nichols, R 1899 Nichols, W. W 1900 Nicholson, J. D.* 1864 Nicholson, J. S 1855 Nicholson, P.* 1854 Nickle, A. E 1901 Nicks, J. A 1879 Niles, J. A L. '08 Niles, J. S 1909 Nisbit, L. G 1875 Nisbet, R. L 1907 Nixon, G. F 1886 Noble, J. E 1870 Noble, W. H.* 1878 Nolan, J. T 1872 Norfleet, C. C 1901 Norfleet, J. C (I) 1872 Norfleet. J. C. (II) 1908 Norman, T 1889 Norman, W. B.* .1881 Norment, J. W L900 Norrell, A. G 1865-6 Norrell. W. O L. 74 Norris, G. D 1S57 Norwood, J. D 1S79 Nowell, J. P '56 Nugent, P. H '81 Nugent, J. R., Jr .1879 Nugent, W. L., Jr '94 Oatis, E. P Oatis, J. J.* Oatis, M. A.*__. O'Bannon, S. L_ 1882 .1857 '56 1902 O'Briant, J. M L. '02 O'Brien, L. R 1906 O'Callahan, B.* 1863 O'Connor, A.* 1877 Odom, A. A 1880 Odum, H. W '06 Oglesby, C. G 1905 Oglesby, I. D., Jr 1893 Ohleyer, E. H 1879 Oldham, B 1906 Oldham, E. B 1889 Oldham, L. E. (I) 1887 Oldham, L. E. (II) 1905 O'Leary, R. S 1892 Oliver, A. W 1899 Oliver, B. F 1906 Oliver, D. M.* 1852 Oliver, D. T.* '57 Oliver, E 1863 Oliver, I. A L. '88 Oliver, J. M 1886 Oliver, J. P.* 1884 Oliver, J. S.* 1880 Oliver, J. T 1857 Oliver, L. H 1855 Oliver, R. B 1872 O'Neal, E O'Neal, C. M 1905 Oneal, F. A 1851 O'Neill, J. A 1878 O'Neill, R. T 1908 Ordonez, E 1888 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 385 Orendorf, B. T 1904 Ormond, M. T _..L. '00 Orr, H 1889 Orr, J 1868 Orr, R. L 1905 Orr, L. L.* '86 Orr, W. G.* L. '82 Ortego, E. E 1884 Osoinach, J. A 1905 Oswalt, C. V 1878 Oswalt, E 1.1896 Oswold, J 1854 Ott, C. E L. '04 Ousley, W. N 1881 Owen, J. E. P.* _._!—L. '57 Owen, T. C 1878 Owen, W. P 1878 Owens, C. D 1872 Owens, W.* 1851 Overstreet, W. J 1878 Pace, A. D 1872 Packwood, N. R 1891 Packwood, S. F.*._. 1881 Paddison, G. L L. '09 Padelford, S. C '73 Page, G. R 1875, L. '78 Page, T.* 1859 Pahlen, J. H 1879 Paine, J. B.* '58 Paine, J. E.* 1872 Paine, R.* 1870 Paine, T. F L. '09 Paine, W. M 1873 Palmer, E 1893 Pannell, J. M 1907 Parham, J '58 Parham, L.* '56 Parham, R. H '54 Parham, W. R 1856 Parham, W. S.* '53 Park, G. A ...1872 Park, J. F 1 '83 Park, J. S '57 Park, T. J 1881 Parker, E '00, L. 1909 Parker, G. B '82 Parker, H. A L. 1878 Parker, H. M 1859 25 Parker, J. E ._L. '07 Parker, J. R 1889 Parker, J. W.*_.__ --I860 Parker, L. A.* -I860 Parker, P. A., Jr _1S78 Parker, R. A '70 Parker, W. B 1891 Parker, W. P 1861 Parmer, J. M. P.* L. 1883 Parsons, F 1898 Parsons, W. A- .1883 Partee, A. Y L. 1857 Partee, S. B.* 1866, L. '68 Paschall, J. H 1907 Paschall, M. E 1908 Paschall, W. C 1903 Pasley, M (G) 1890 Passmore, L. C* 1852 Pass, A. S.* '56, L. 1859 Pate, A. S.* 1855 Pate, B. J.*___ 1877 Pate, C. A.* -_-1855 Pate, T. A '07 Pate, W. T '97 Paterachi, D .1871 Patrick, J. G.* -1855 Patterson, B. P '85, (G) 1886 Patterson, D 1908 Patterson, E. W.* 1896 Pattison, A 1876 Pattison, I. C 1888 Pattison, J. T.* _ '71 Patton, E. C L. '95 Patton, E. H 1858 Patton, S. C* '68, L. '68 Patty, E. C L. '01 Patty, E. L 1904 Paxton, A. G_ - _-1874 Paxton, A. J ._1874 Paxton, W. F.* -1874 Payne, A. B .1901 Payne, C. G - .-1908 Payne, H .1884 Payne, J 1884 Peacock, E. P .1888 Peace, J. H 1879 Pearce, G. W.*_- -1885 Pearce, L. S. -.1871 Pearce, M. E_. 1901 3S6 l VIVBRSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Pearce, W. G. 1904 Pearce, W. R_... -.1872 Pearman, W. M.*.. ..1896 Pearson, E. N.* 1863 Pearson. H. G 1856 Pearson. R. V .1856 Pease. J. B 1858 Peery, W. D 1870 Peets, G. H 1908 Pegues. A. H 1872 Pegues, C. A.* 1879 Pegues, C. E.*_ 1869, L. '69 Pegues, C. E 1906 Pegues, L. T 1872 Pegues, M.* '51 Pegues, M. C.._-'79, L '80, (G) 1881 Pegues, P. E . 1872 Pegues, S. W '56 Pegues, S. W. E '69 Pegues, T. H 1854 Pegues, W. C* '51 Pepper, A. M L. '95 Pepper, F. H.* L. '98 Pepper, L. D 1881 Perkins, C. P 1896 Perkins, F. P 1901 Perkins, H. J L. '96 Perkins, H. S 1878 Perkins, H. T 1896 Perkins, J. B., Jr. (I) 1859 Perkins, J. B., Jr. (II) 1885 Perkins, J. B., Jr. (Ill) L. '07 Perkins, J. H 1868 Perkins, J. S., Jr 1879 Perkins, M. L L. '00 Perkins, P. A 1905 Perkins, T. H.* 1873 Perkins, W. M 1880 Permenter, W. B 1880 Perry, J. W 1874 Perry, R. E 1888 Perry, R. J 1903 Peteet, A 1883 Peters, B. N 1897 Peters, T. M.* '61 Petrie, C. G 1891 Petrie, E 1894 Petrie, H. L.* 1871 Petrie, M. McG 1901 Petrie, T. D Pettis, B. M._. Pettis, C. R Pettis, W. S., Jr. 1901 .1879 . '99 '01 Pettus, J. A.* _L. 1862 Pettus, T. F 1889 Petty, A. G... 1893 Petty. J. P '81 Pevey, W. H '93 Peyton, E. G 1893 Peyton, F. M L. '95 Peyton, J. R. C 1908 Peyton, L 1878 Pfeffer, W. L 1908 Phelan, J.* 1872 Phifer, C. W.* 1852 Phifer, W 1870 and 1871 Phillips, A. M 1881 Phillips, A. W '99, (G) 1901 Phillips, B. F 1854 Phillips, C. W '03 Phillips, D. A.* 1882 Phillips, D. M 1881 Phillips, E. L 1882 Phillips, F. M.* 1887 Phillips, G. C '57 Phillips, H.* 1895 Phillips, H. I 1880 Phillips, J. S.* 1864 Phillips, L. M 1909 Phillips, L. R 1907 Phillips, M. L '99 Phillips, R. J.* 1863 Phillips, S. R.* 1857 Phillips, S 1880 Phillips, T. E.* 1878 Phillips, T. J 1872 Phillips, W. C. (I) 1870 Phillips, W. C. (II) 1887 Phillips, W. J 1864 Phipps, A. M 1883 Phipps, B. L.* 1852 Phipps, C. McC 1907 Phipps, J. M '51 Phipps, J. F.* 1859 Phipps, R. W '52 Phipps, W 1869 Pickens, E. W 1885 Pickens, J. C 1869 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 387 Pickens, T. H.* 1870 and 1S71 Pickett, J. K 1867 Pickett, W. A 1864 Pierce, A. G 1865-6 Pierce, E. B *89, L. '90 Pierce, E. D L. '87 Pierce, M. F 1908 Pierce, R. F 1874 Pierce, T. M.* L. '60 Pierce, W. J 1885 Pigford, A. W 1904 Pigford, L. C '06 Pilkinton, S. T 1906 Pillow, R. L 1897 Piner, F. E.* L. '60 Pinnell, P. W.* 1872 Pinson, J. C L. '02 Pinson, W. W 1872 Pinto, D. J. de M. P 1873 Pipes, E. J 1885 Pipes, I 1884 Pitchford, R. L 1883 Pitman, A. L 1884 Pittman, F. K 1897 Pitts, A. B., Jr 1909 Pitts, W. G 1909 Plant, D. B '08 Plant, J. M.* 1872 Plant, M. G. H 1901 Plant, P .__■ 1907 Plant, W.* 1884 Plunkett, J. H 1878 Poindexter, J. B 1899 Poindexter, O. Q 1907 Poindexter, W. G 1899 Pointer, E. M 1887 Pointer, M.* 1853 Pointer, P.* 1853 Polk, E. L 1857 Polk, O. B 1872 Pollan, J. R 1881 Pollard, E. J 1901 Pollard, O 1857 Pollard, R. T.* '61 Pomery, H 1855 Pool, W. C 1909 Poole, S. A 1879 Poole, W. H 1891 Pope, F. A.*_..'61, L. 1862 and 1869 Pope, J. E '91 Pope, J. F '98 Pope, T. W 1895 Pope, W. H.* 1892 Porter, A. T 1883 Porter, B. F 1881 Porter, D. E 1904 Porter, J. W 1880 Porter, L. M '98 Porter, S. F 1870 and 1871 Porterfield, D 1873 Porterfield, D. M , L. '78 Porterfield, W.* 1873 Posey, H. H 1896 Posey, J. A 1890 Posey, J. B.* L. 1862 Posey, J. F._ '87 Posey, W. F.* 1887 Postell, L 1887 Postell, L. T 1878 Potts, H . 1901 Potts, J. A 1878 Potts, J. P 1878 Potts, S. F 1878 Potts, T. J 1857 Potts, T. W 1872 Potts, W. N 1862 Potts, W. V.* 1857 Powe, A. McK 1907 Powe, B. D 1905 Powell, A 1863 Powell, A. M 1861 Powell, C. K. M 1873 Powell, C. M 1902 Powell, D. S.* 1878 Powell, L. R '01, (G.) 1904 Powell, R '70 Powell, R. H '04, L. '06 Powell, R. S 1894 Powell, S. V 1901 Powel, W 1852 Powel, W. A _ '83 Powell, W. H. __ '75 Power, W. S.* 1876 Powers, D. N 1907 Powers, J. N 1902 Prentice, L. G 1904 Pressley, I. S '98, (G.) 1900 Price, A.* ,.L. 1862 3SS VNH ER8ITY <>l Price, H.. Jr '04 Price. D. T 1S7s Price, G. H L896 Price, J. H L. '06 Price, J. H. . L. '90 Price. K. G 190!) Price, R 1895 Price, R. O 1872 Price, Sam Orr 1908 Price. S. B 1S5S Price, S. E 1007 Price, S. O '00, (G.) 1901 Price, W.* 1861 Prichard, C. B 1865-6 Prichard, W. T 1868 Prichard, V. L.* 1884 Priddy, A. E.* 1872 Priestley, C. S 1866 Priestly, H. D.* (I.) 1870 Priestley, H. D., Jr. (II.) '98 Priestley, J. D 1902 Priestley, W. M.* 1878 Priestley, W. T '92 Pritchard, R. L 1882 Pritchett. T. T.* 1870 Provine, C. C '90 Provine, E. B '96 Provine, G. H 1888 Provine, J. F 1878 Provine, J. N 1888 Provine, J. W '88, '90 Provine, R. F 1888 Pruitt, W. O '99, (G.) 1900 Pryor, G. W.* . 1878 Pryor, J. L. (Mrs. Croom) 1908 Puckett, E. F '09 Puckett, M 1892 Pulley, M 1881 Pulliam, A. B 1857 Purcell, L. K 1904 Purnell, F. M 1888 Purnell, H. W.* '59 Purnell, M. T 1851 Purser, J. L 1904 Puryear, T. J.* 1852 Puryear, W. S.* 1856 Purvis, C. H 1878 Purvis, P. G.* 1867 Pyle, J. A. E 1884 MISSISSIPPI. Quarles, F.*... ... Quarles, F. O... Quarles. G. R Quarles, J. H.* Quarles, J. J.* Quekemeyer, C. E. Quekemeyer, J. G- Qu Qu Qu Qu Qu Qu Qu Qu Qu nche, A. E nche, H. M n, H. M '86, L n, H. S L n, J. D.„. n, J. H... n, J. M.* n, L. R 1872, L nn, W. E 1874 1905 is;.:: 1856 '51 1907 1902 1883 '86 . '04 . '80 1861 1866 '72 . '80 1S72 Ragan, W. B 1852 Ragland, E. D 1855 Ragland, E. L '84 (G.) 1888 Ragland, I. F 1851 Ragland, J. H.* ■_ 1873 Ragland, S. E 1893 Ragland, W. L.* 1865-6 Ragsdale, D. H.* 1852 Ragsdale, G. M.* 1874 Ragsdale, J.* 1876 Ragsdale, S. G.* 1859 Raiford, P. L.* 1862 Raiford, W. S 1878 Raines, A. E.* 1866 Raines, S. L.* 1866 Raines, W. A.* 1863 Rainwater, E. W 1896 Ramey, M. L 1908 Ramsay, A 1909 Ramsey, C. H 1883 Ramsey, J. A L. '93 Ramsay, T. G L. '07 Randle, E. C* 1878 Randle, F. L 1S59 Randle, I. W.* 1859 Randle, N. S 1859 Randle, S. T 1882 Randle, W. H.* '54 Randolph, F.* L. 1868 Randolph, H 1878 Rankin, J. E 1909 Rankin, J. T 1897 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 389 Ratcliffe, C. V 1891 Ratcliffe, E. H '84 Ratcliffe, E. H., Jr L. '08 Rather, H. H 1904 Ratliff, P. C L. 1885 Ratliff, R. W 1883 Ratliffe, F. L 1873 Ratliffe, J. C 1890 Ratliffe, W. W 1870 Rauch, E. S.* 1898 Rawlings, A. B.* L. '78 Rawls, H. C L. '07 Ray, A 1892 Ray, A. C 1904 Ray, C. A 1878 Ray, G. L '98, L. '00 Ray, H. J.* 1871 Ray, P 1891 Ray, R. C 1907 Ray, R. P 1908 Ray, W. H 1859 Rayburn, K.* 1890 Rayburn, L. M.* '52 Rayburn, M. D L. '87 Rayburn, S. B 1908 Raymond, A. H 1878 Raymond, J. S 1908 Rayner, B. S.* 1872 Rea, G. W.* 1862 Rea, M. L '05 Rea, R. E 1903 Rea, S. M 1907 Reading, A. B., Jr.* 1878 Reagan, J. H.* L. 1878 Reasons, A. M.* '54 Reasons, L. W.* L. '56 Red, W. C* 1878 Redhead, J. A 1899 Redus, R. C '82 Reed, C* _" 1870 Reed, H. E.* 1880 Reed, J. E., Jr 1904 Reed, L. D '07 and L. '09 Reed, R. F 1879 Reedy, A. E 1909 Reedy, J. D 1909 Rees, W. H L. '69 Reeves, J '88, (G.) 1889 Reeves, R. H.* 1866 Reeves, S. A '88 Reid, H. P 1890 Reid, J. B 1896 Reid, J. G 1906 Reid, J. S 1883 Reid, W. H. S 1878 Reily, M. W L. '04 Rencher, G. J L. '01 Renshaw, J. W L. '09 Renshaw, P 1906 Revis, J.* 1895 Reynolds, G , 1867 Reynolds, H. A 1892 Reynolds, J. S.* 1863 Reynolds, M. A.* 1861 Reynolds, R. C 1867 Reynolds, R. O., Jr.* 1886 Rhew, J. P.* 1866 Rhodes, B.* 1867 Rhodes, J. H.* 1875 Rhodes, J. S '09 Rhodes, M 1909 Rhodes, R. E.* '74 Rice, A. H 1900 Rice, G. W.* L. '60 Rice, H. M.* 1862 Rice, J 1902 Rich, J. C L. '80 Rice, J. S 1907 Rice, S 1900 Richards, C. B 1878 Richards, D. D 1892 Richards, E. W 1875 Richards, J. R 1883 Richards, M. B 1905 Richards, W. D 1893 Richardson, B.* 1880 Richardson, C. D.* 1872 Richardson, F. B.* L. '80 Richardson, G. P.* '55 Richardson, J 1856 Richardson, J 1909 Richardson, J. M 1869 Richardson, S.* 78 Richardson, T. P 1892 Richardson, W. S L. 1883 Richmond, B. (Mrs. J. See) '07 Richmond, L '57 Richmond, W. M 1896 390 virn ersjty <>/ Ricketts, W. A ....1884 Ricks. B. S.. Jr '93 Ricks. H. P 1899 Ricks. J 1904 Ricks. V. Q ...- 1899 Ricks. W. B.. Jr.*. L. *99 Riddick, T. M 1889 Riddick, S.B. 1876 Ries. C. J.* 1875 Ridgway, C. R L. '05 Ridgway. W. S 1909 Riggan, C. N '83 Riggs. C. V 1887 Riggs. E. A 1882 Riggs, W 1883 Rightor, H. A 1901 Riley, J. B 1898 Riley, O. D ..1880 Riley, W. F 1879 Rinehart, L. D_. 1890 Rives, J. F.* '76 Rivers, B. D '92, '01 Rivers, C. M.* 1884 Rivers, S. L 1892 Rivers, W. W '86, '89 Rison, J. W 1854 Rison, W. A 1854 Ritz, W. E 1875 and 1878 Roach, E. H 1907 Roach, F.* '53 Roach, J.* (I.) '52 Roach, J., Jr.* (II.) '56 Roach, J. B., Jr '07 Roane, A. C* 1905 Roane, A. G '98, L. '01 Roane, F 1899 Roane, R. H.* 1900 Roane, S. M.* 1871 Roane, W. A 1872 Roane, W. T.* 1897 Roark, B. E 1908 Roberds, W. G 1909 Roberson, F '01, L. '05 Roberson, J. L '08 Roberson, M. R 1883 Roberson, W. N 1874 Roberts, A.* 1858 Roberts, C. A.* 1876 Roberts, E. H '89, '95 MISSISSIPPI. Roberts, G. * 1860 Roberts, H. C_. .1878 Roberts, H. T 1878 Roberts, J. A 1857 Roberts, T. L ...1880 Robertson, A. M '81 Robertson, F. O 1870 and 1871 Robertson, G. H (I).. 1904 Robertson, G. H (II) .1906 Robertson, G. J ...1889 Robertson, G. W.* L. '83 Robertson, H. C 1863 Robertson, J. C* '61 Robertson, J. F 1872 Robertson, J. W.* (I.) 1855 Robertson, J. W. (II)* 1899 Robertson, L 1905 Robertson, S. V '05 Robertson, T. N '82, (G.) 1884 Robertson, V. O '02 and L. '04 Robertson, W. H.* 1864 Robinson, A. S.* 1878 Robinson, C. W ...1908 Robinson, E. S., Jr 1878 Robinson, F. D L. '78 Robinson, G. O 1899 Robinson, J. A L. 1881 Robinson, J. M 1878 Robinson, T. L 1882 Robinson, W. W* 1883 Robinson, J. N 1874 Robson, G. T 1870 Robson, R.* 1854 Robson, W. J.* '53 Roby, P. M 1885 Roby, V. M L. '00 Rockett, H. W 1870 and 1871 Rodgers, C. L 1880 Roger, T. H 1882 Rogers, F. M L. '78 Rogers, G. C 1901 Rogers, H. C 1859 Rogers, J. A 1902 Rogers, J. H '68 Rogers, J. J., Jr 1892 Rogers, J. R 1893 Rogers, L. S 1882 Rogers, M.* 1886 Rogers, M. L 1865 VNl\ ERH1TY OF MIKSIKK/ I'I'l. 391 Rogers, Rogers, R.* Rogers, T. L.* Rogers, T. T Rogers, V. B Rogers, W. A Rogers, W. J Rogers, W. W Rolf, F. H Rollins, S. D Roop, A. H Rootes, C. J Rootes, E. L. W Rootes, E. W Rose, A. P Rose, H. B Roseborough, J. G Roseborough, L Roseborough, S. F .- Roseborough, W. B Rosenbaum , J Rosenbaum, L Rosenbaum, M. H L Rosenthal, L. B Ross, D. G Ross, D. L L Ross, J. B. (II.) L Ross, J. B. (I.) Ross, R. L Ross, T. J Ross, T. L '90, L Ross, W. T Roudebush, A. H Routh, S. M Rowan, E. A., Jr Rowan, S. L (I.) Rowan, S. L. (II.) Rowe, V. D L Rowland, C. W L. Rowland, D L Rowland, F. H Rowland, J. A Rowland, M Rowland, M. V Rowland, P. W., Jr Royall, W. S Rubel, F. R Rubel, M. F Rucker, J. D_ 1878 Rucker, R. B 1909 1896 Rucks, J 1873 1853 Rucks, L. T.* .1864 1852 Rucks, S. T 1880 '05 Ruffin, J. D 1856 1893 Ruffin, W.* 1854 1891 Rundle, W. B 1891 1891 Rush, G. C 1881 1866 Rush, P. A '83 L. 1884 1873 Rush, T 1880 '05 Rush, W. T.* '82 1882 Russell, A. E '09 1887 Russell, D. M L...L. 1898 1892 Russell, G 1870 and 1871 1866 Russell, J. C* '57, L. '59 1898 Russell, J. H., Jr.* 1886 1900 Russell, L. M '01, L. '03 1901 Russell, L. T 1894 1878 Russell, L. V L. '98 1874 Russell, W. L 1908 1878 Russell, W. S. B 1891 1878 Russ, J. W . 1878 , '08 Russwurm, S. C 1891 1879 Rutland, W. H '96 1895 Rutledge, E 1908 . '07 Rutledge, F 1897 . '89 Rutledge, J. W 1883 1882 Rutledge, L. J 1905 1863 Rutledge, T. M 1881 ■70 Rutledge, W. D 1897 . '96 Rutledge, W.O 1898 '71 Ryan, G. M 1894 '94 1863 Sadler, T. B 1887 1901 Sadler, T. R.* 1854 1886 Sadler, W. L 1889 1898 Saddler, T. R '54 .'01 Sage, A. P. H 1908 1898 Sale, B. B.* 1884 , '88 Salley, D. J.* 1856 1908 Salmon, J. A 1881 1909 Salmon, I. B 1897 1905 Salmon, J. B 1879 1905 Salmon, J. H '85 1909 Salter, E. T 1885 1852 Sample, J. F 1852 1909 Sample, J. H.* 1864 1909 Sams, W. C --L. 1909 1903 Samuell, E. M -1908 192 I NIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Sannall. W. B.*. 1879 Sanders. E -L. '93 Sanders. E. M... 1879 Sanders. H.* - 1854 Sanders, H. W- 1906 Sanders. J. O. S.... - L. '97 Sanders. W. E 1880 Sanders. W. M. ... '98 Sanderson, S. J 1890 Sandidge, A 1872 Sandidge, J. W ...1888 Sanford, H. B 1892 Sarrett, E. J 1873 Satterfield, M. M L. '94 Satterfield, V. J 1890 Saunders, H.* 1867 Saunders, J. D. R 1878 Saunders, J. E.* 1872 Saunders, J. M 1874 Saunders, P. H '90, '91, '94 Saunders, R. C 1870 Savage, W. E 1887 Sawyer, E. A.* L. '03 Sawyer, J. 1870 and 1871 Sawyer, L. E L. '91 Sayle, D. T 1902 Sayle, H. P 1908 Scaife, F. A.* L. 1862 Scales, D. M.* L. '68 Scales, E. D '97 Scales, H. M.* '55, L. '59 Scales, J. W.* (I.) '52 Scales, J. W. (II.) 1868 Scales, N 1872 Scales, N. B 1906 Scales, N. F 1898 Scales, S. S 72 Scales, S. W 1899 Scales, Walter W ..1889 Scales, W. F 1880 Scarborough, D 1881 Scarborough, J 1909 Schauber, A. B ..'07, (G) 1908 Schauber, E '06 Scherck, I. L 1902 Schlater, G. M 1883 Schlater, T. W 1879 Schwartz, C. W L. 73 Scott, A. Y ■—. L. '93 Scott. C----__. 1893 Scott. C. S L. 74 Scott, F. M._. __L. '82 Scott, G. R 1872 Scott, I. F 1886 Scott, J. C 1875 Scott, J. W. (I.) . '81 Scott, J. W. (II.)... --1897 Scott, J. Z 1885 Scott, R. T 1857 Scott, T. P_.'92, (G.) 1893, L. '96, '99 Scott, T. W L. '01 Scott, W. A '91, (G.) 1892 Scott, W. A 1901 Scott, W. L L. '07 Scott. W. W.* 1870 Scudday, J 1863 Scudder, E. N L. 78 Seabrook, C. P 1898 Searcy, G. A 1872 Seale, A. J '02. '03 Seale, G. T 1909 Sears, E. A 1886 Sears, G. F.* 1876 Sears, P. G '85, (G.) 1895 Sears, T. C 1883 Sears, W. G L. '84 Seely, P. R 1882 Seely, W. T 1882 Segrest, R. A '00 Segrest, W. E '97 Seidenspinner, H. V 1909 Sellers, J. F '85, '91 Selser, J. M 1857 Semmes, J. M 1856 Sergeant, G. B 1870 and 1871 Sessions, J. F.* (I.) '56 Sessions, J. F.* (II.) L. '60 Sessions, R. D 1888 Sessums, I.* 1872 Sevier, A. H 1863 Seward, D 1898 Seward, F. D.* 1881 Sexton, J. P 1899 Sexton, J. S 1873 Sexton, L. S L. '00 Sexton, M. L -1876 Sexton, T. C 1895 Shackleford, D. S 1909 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Shackelford, J. A.* '70 Shackelford, T. F_ -.-L. 79 Shackelford, S. E 1875 Shamburger, G. H.* L. 79 Shands, A. W -'96, L. '98 Shands, C '02 and L. '04 Shands, H. A '90, '91, '93 Shands, H. R '00, (G) 1901 Shankle, S. M 1S80 Shannon, C. P.--- 1909 Shannon, H 1900 Shannon, M. Y.* 1882 Sharbrough, B. W 1883 Sharkey, A. N 1857 Sharkey, W. L.* 1854 Sharman, J.* 1890 Sharp, E. C '01 Sharp, J. H 1908 Sharpe, J. M 75 Sharpe, J. S 1891 Sharpe, L. K 1884 Sharpe, T. S 1884 Shaw, D. C* 1858 Shaw, J 1874 Shaw, J. M 1881 Shaw, O. A '95, '99 Shaw, S. P 1904 Shaw, W. W.* 1856 Sheegog, E.* 1859 Sheegog, J.* 1853 Sheegog, R. B 1868 Sheffield, I. L L. '09 Sheffield, J 1905 Sheffield, L. S 1909 Shelby, D 1872 Shelby, E. J.* 1862 Shelby, F. P 1895 Shelby G. B L. '05 Shelby, I.* '60 Shelby, J 1896 Shelby, W. A 1879 Shelton, T. M L. '98 Shelton, W. J 1861 Shepherd, E. R 1888 Shepherd, K. E '02, (G) 1905 Shepherd, T. B 1907 Sherman, J. T 1903 Sherman, M. R 1906 Sherwood, E. L '96 393 Shields, H. H.* i 8 54 Shields, J. R jgQg Shields, J. W.* '69, L. 72 Shields, T. P 1 8 53 Shields, T. R.* '54 Shields, W. (I) _"i852 Shields, W. (II) '89, L. '90 Shields, W. B 1851 Shilton, W. J.* L. 1862 Shinault, J. R '96 Shinault, S. T 1895 Shinault. W. P '00, L. '03 Shipp, C. D .' 1883 Shipp, C. J. J.* ; '59 Shipp, D. H 1890 Shipp, H. D 1878 Shipp, R. W '98 Shipp, T. T 1882 Shirley, J. J '71 Shive, C. C 1873 Shive, M. N.* 1857 Shive, R. W.* . '55 Shoemaker, L. L 1895 Short, J. L., Jr L. '81 Short, U. F 1870 Shotwell, R.* '80, L. '80 Shoup, G. O 1868 Shreve, C* 1873 Shue, W. D.* '99 Shumaker, J. H '84 Shumaker, L '05 Shumpert, B. T (G.) 1905 Shuttle, J. R 1908 Siebe, H. T.* 1863 Sikes, H. H 1879 Sillers, J.* 1864 Sillers, J. C 1867 Sillers, W 1870 Sillers, W., Jr 1905 Simms, A. G.* 1860 Sims, C. L 1909 Sims, M. A 1901 Simmons, E. J 1890 Simmons, F. R 1870 and 1871 Simmons, J. N 1859 Simmons, J. S '56 Simmons, R. O 1890 Simmons, T 1872 Simmons, T. B.* '56 394 / V/l ER8ITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Simms. W. B 1878 Simonton, J. M ...1882 Simpson, C. L L. '96 Simpson, J. C* -1S70 and 1871 Simpson. J. A.* 1850 Simrall, J, (I) L. '81 Simrall, J., Jr. (II) 1897 Simrall. H. P... 71 Sims, F 1872 Sims, J 1867 Sims, R. L 1894 Sims, T. J 1870 Sims, W. H .1878 Sinclair, W. H.* 1859 Singleton, G. S 1872 Sink, W. L 1871 Sinnott, J. M 1878 Sinnott, W. I '77, (G) 1878 Sisk, H. S 1909 Sisler, C. B (G.) 1895 Sivley, A. B 1868 Sivley, C. L L. '93 Sizemore, A. V 1883 Skinner, C. R 1884 Skipwith, F. P '93 Skipwith, J. A 1870 and 1871 Skipwith, K. A 1894 Slack, J. J 1864 Slaughter, J. P 1853 Slay, R. J 1909 Sledge, L. S.* 1871 Sledge, N. R., Jr. (I) 1858 Sledge, N. R., Jr. (II) 1906 Sloan, J. M '73 Sloan, J. Q 1878 Sloan, P. E '00 Sloss, B 1904 Slough, C. E L. '06 Small, W. E 1878 Smallwood, L. B 1909 Smiley, J. J.* 1851 Smith, A 1883 Smith, A. A 1865-6 Smith, A. D 1863 Smith, A. H 1905 Smith, A. J 1888 Smith, A. N. W '76 Smith, A. T '81, L. '81 Smith, B. L 1862 Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith. Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm th, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm ith, Sm th, Sm th, Sm th, Sm th, Sm th, Sm th, Sm th, Smi th, Sim th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, Smi th, B. P C. D C. F. (I).. C. F. (II). D. E.*_... E. A. (I).. E. A. (II). E. B E. D E. M. (I). .'97, L. '00 1898 1857 .'87, L. '89 ...... '59 1863 1880 1908 1907 1873 E. M. (II) 74 E. W.*(I) 1872 E. W. (II) 1909 F. C 1890 H 1895, L. '09 D.* 1871 P '08 1856 K 1897 W. (I) 1858 G. W. (II)* '60, 73 H 1868 H. M 1884 H. T 1900 I. T 1870 and 1871 J.* 1S62 J. A.* (I) 1860 J. A.* (II) 1862 J. F 1859 J. H 1859 J. J. S 1879 J. M.* (I) '55 J. M. (II) 1900 J. M. (Ill) 1902 J. T 1906 J. W 1890 K 1894 K. B 1895 L. A.* 1878 L. A. W '99 L. C 1904 L. L.* 1893 L. O 1892 M.* (I) 1863 M. (II) '98 M. A 1904 M. A 1908 M. S '89, (G) 1891 N 1888 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 395 Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm Sm th, N. L th, P. H.*_... th, R th, R. B., Jr__ th, R. C* (I). th, R. C. (II). __1909 __1878 __1906 ..1878 L. '61 _.1892 th, R. E . 74 th, R. H 1909 th, R. R 1879 th, Ruth (G.) 1897 th, S. C 1883 th, S. M L. '93 th, S. P.* 1861 th, S. W 1900 th, T. G. (Smith-Vaniz) '57 th, T. R 1878 th, T. S.* L. 78 th, T. T 1909 th, W. A 1879 th, W. C ...-L. '97 th, W. F 1880 th, W. J.* 1873 th, W. T 1885 ther, C. A.* 1876 ther, C. G.* '55 ther, J. H. (I) 1889 ther, J. H. (II) 1891 ther, J. W 1883 ther, R. E 1891 ther, R. G.* 1§52 th-Vaniz, W. R 1894 th-Vaniz, G. W '60 Smylie, J. A '97 Smylie, J. B '98 Smythe, J. G L. '97 Smythe, J. S 1905 Smythe, M. J '88 Snedecor, J. G 1871 Sneed, A. H 1878 Sneed, C. D 1893 Snell, L. H 78 Snider, J. B J 1868 Snider, N. C L. 78 Soloman, W. A 1905 Somerville, A. D 1906 Somerville, A. H.* 1872 Somerville, H.* 1898 Somerville, J. W.* . 70 Somerville, M. H 1902 Somerville, R., Jr '07 Southworth, F. M L. '94 Southworth, L. M L. '87 Spann, J. A., Jr 1898 Spann, J. T 1902 Spann, L. Y 1888 Sparkman, A. A 1905 Sparkman, A. B 1903 Sparks, B 1901 Sparks, J. M 1891 Spearman, C. H 1901 Spearman, D. E 1880 Spears, M. H '. 1904 Spence, J. J. L '89, (G) 1892 Spence, J. M 1889 Spence, T. C 1894 Spencer, C 1896 Spencer, D. E 1869 Spencer, G.* L. 1868 Spencer, S. B 1908 Spencer, S. S 1881 Spencer, W. A 1883 Spencer, W. H 1907 Spight, H. R L. '99 Spight, L. D 1892 Spight, T 1863 Spight, W. B 1861 Spinks, E 1893 Spiva, E.* 1887 Spiva, W 1885 Spooner, G. W.* 1852 Spradling, D. F L. '02 Stackhouse, M. H 1897 Stafford, J. H 1889 Stagg, J. H 1872 Stall, E. B 1909 Stall, R 1906 Stainback, G. T.* '54 Stanback, M. L... 1908 Stanback, P L. '81 Stancill, B. E.* 1861 Stancill, G. C 1858 Standifer, J. N.* 1898 Standifer, M. B 1905 Standifer, R 1905 Standifer, R. M., Jr _ _ 1901 Standley, B. F.* '57, L. 1859 Standley, H. L ...1882 Stansberry, O.. ....1871 (96 l \l\ ERSITY <>F MISSISSIPPI. Stark. R. L .... '09 Stark. S. H L806 Statham, J. F 1881 Staton. D. E 1905 Steele, J. B.*. L879 Steen. J. M _. '83 Steen, W 1901 Stegall, W. T 1878 Steger. D. W.* .1858 Stennis. D._ ..1894 Stennis. J. D 1881 Stennis. J. E 1907 Stein. L 1890 Steinberger, C. C 1902 Stephen, A. H '03 and L. '05 Stephens, A. M.* L. 1868 Stephens, C. M ...1865-6 Stephens, E. D 1877 Stephens, E. J 1897 Stephens, H. D L. '96 Stephens, J. L L. '91 Stephens, R. L. D 1876 Stephens, W. D.* L. 1886 Stephenson, G. R 1903 Sternberger, I. H 1887 Stevens, B. F 1863 Stevens, B. McC 1908 Stevens, C. H 1888 Stevens, C. Z 1888 Stevens, H. S L. '97 Stevens, J. A.* 1864 Stevens, J. J 1886 Stevens, J. H., Jr 1880 Stevens, J. M '98 Stevens, S. H 1899 Stevens, W. A '02, (G) 1903 Stevens, W. F.* '85, L. '88 Stevens, W. H '86 Stevenson, B. D 1909 Stevenson, J. T.* '69 Stevenson, L. A.* 1867 Stewart, A. (I) 1875 Stewart, A. (II) 1887 Stewart, A. B.* '61 Stewart, A. M.* 1867 Stewart, A. P., Jr '80 Stewart, C. B 1890 Stewart, C. M 1861 Stewart, C. S., Jr '82 Stewart, D. E... 1897 Stewart, D. W '81 Stewart, E. M .1898 Stewart, G. C 1878 Stewart, J. B... L. '81 Stewart, O. E 1863 Stewart, S. M 1873 and '83 Stewart, T. B.* 1890 Stewart, W 1878 Stewart, W. G 1905 Stewart, W. M 1879 Stewart, W. P.* L. '97 Stiles, E. H.* 1863 Stiles, J. P L. '81 Still, C* 1893 Still, C. P 1896 Stingily, C. C 1399 Stinson, D. N 1891 Stirling, D. T 1890 Stith, W 1878 Stitt, J. E 1854 Stitt, S. W 1854 Stockard, A.* 1855 Stockard, B. A '81 Stockard, C. C 1873 Stockard, J. A 1873 Stockard, T. W '75, '79 Stockdale, T. R.* L. '59 Stockdale, T. R 1900 Stockett, S. O 1888 Stockett, W. J L. '89 Stocks, P. G.* 1888 Stockstill, J. E 1908 Stockstill, W. W 1908 Stokes, J. J L. '80 Stokes, M. B 1869 Stokes, R. H 1880 Stokes, T. J 1858 Stokes, W. C 1909 Stokes, W. E.* 1855 Stone, A. H L. '91 Stone, E. D '90, L. '93 Stone, J 1872, L. 1878 Stone, J., Jr 1899 Stone, W. E 1897, L. '05 Stone, W. G 1882 Stone, W. I L. '02 Stone, W. R 1856 and 1857 Storey, G. T - '75 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 397 Storm, B. H 1906 Stout, H. H 1866 Stovall, A. T L. '90 Stovall, G. W 1880 Stovall, J. W L. '94 Stowers, F. M 1870 Stowers, J. B 1894 Stowers, J. R '83, L. '84 Stowers, T. M 1876 Strange, G. H 1903 Stratton, E. P 1880 Stratton, G. H 1852 Strawn, A. F L. '93 Strawn, T. C 1901 Street, A 1909 Street, A. J 1905 Street, O. E 1908 Stribbling, W. P 1895 Strieker, V 1901 Strickland, E '03 Strickland, G. K 1867 Strickland, R. T '06 Stricklin, P. L L. '69 Stricklin, W. L.* L. 1860 Stricklin, W. T.* L. '58 Stringer, S. L. (G.) 1905 Strode, A. E 1890 Strong, C '92, '96, (G) 1897 Strong, J 1870 Strong, M. L 1851 Stuart, C. L.* 1857 Stuart, H. A '58 Stuart, J. H.* '59 Stuart, W. C* '56 Stuart, W. E 1885 Stubblefield, C. F 1900 Stubblefield, G. C 1901 Stubblefield, S. P t__ '08 Sturdivant, A. Y 1907 Sturdivant, J. K 1903 Sugar, L L. '81 Sullivan, A. W.* 1892 Sullivan, B. B 1873 Sullivan, D. J 1883 Sullivan, H. M.* '70 Sullivan, H. M., JrJ 1890 Sullivan, J. M 1883, '90 Sullivan, M 1899 Sullivan, M. E L. 78 Sullivan, M. M.* 1895 Sullivan, W. T. J '57 Sullivan, W. V 1872 Sullivan, W. V., Jr.* 1897 Sullivant, A 1908 Sullivant, J. H 1880 Sultan, D. I. Jr 1902 Sultan, L. K. (Mrs. H. M. Faser).'06 Sultan, R. H '01, '02 Sumrall, J. H 1897 Sumrall, L. F 1909 Surghnor, G 1878 Sutherland, A. J.* '. 1854 Sutherland, A. L 1895 Sutherland, E. P .1859 Sutherland, H.* '68 Sutherland, H. L '70 Sutherland, J. A.* 1874 Sutherland, J. B.* 1898 Sutherland, J. M '60 Sutherland, P. P 1897 Suthon, W. J 1878 Sutton, E. L 1903 Swaim, J 1878 Swain, J. T 1881 Swayze, A. B.* 1880 Swayze, P.* 1860 Swayze, S. W.* 1864 Swift, W. E 1880 Swilley, W. J.* 1861 Swindoll, A. W 1877 Swindoll, C. M 1878 Swindoll, W. M 1868 Swinney, A. E 1899 Swinney, C. C '89 Switzer, D. S '70, '87 Sykes, A. J.* 1884 Sykes, C. E.* 1882 Sykes, C. R 1882 Sykes, E.* 1854 Sykes, E. G % .._.1905 Sykes, E. L . 1889 Sykes, E. O.* 1862, L. '68 Sykes, E. O., Jr L. '97 Sykes, E. T L. '60 Sykes, G. A 1873 Sykes, J. A ... '07 Sykes, J. L 1887 Sykes, L. M.* '57 398 I nVBRSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Sykea, S. M.*... Sykes, S. T . Sykes, T..B.* .. Sykes. T. McQ Sykes, W. A.* '52 1 857 '54 'on 1890 Sykes, W. L.* L857 Sykes, W.M.. L887 Sykes, W. S.* 1864 Symons, C. R 1S7-1 Tabor, E. A l.sso Tackett, J. R ..1885 Tackett, W. P '84. L. '85 Taggart, J. Q 1899 Talbert, J. D.* '59 Talbert, J. T. (II.) ..1882 Talbert, J. T.* (I.) '61 Talbert, J. W.* '56 Tankersley, A. R 1880 Tankersley, H. M 1880 Tankersley, J. M.* 1SS0 Tann, T 1903 Tanner, J. E 1901 Tapscott, C 1889 Tapscott, W 1895 Tarpley, A 1857 Tarpley, C. S 79 Tarpley, J. E.* I860 Tartt, E 1894 Tate, C. A 1886 Tate, S 74 Tate, W.* 1860 Tatum, J. S 1871 Taylor, A. B. C* 1881 Taylor, A. D 1886 Taylor, B. S.* 1852 Taylor, C. C 1890 Taylor, C. M 1884 Taylor, C.W.... ... L. 1885 Taylor, D J 1896 Taylor, E. D 1890 Taylor, E. G 1887 Taylor, E. L 1370 Taylor, E. W L. '02 Taylor, F. M.* '68 Taylor, G. W.* 1866 Taylor, H 1854 Taylor, H. P.* '56 Taylor, H. S 75, (G.) 1886 Taylor, J. L.* . . 1863 Taylor, J. L. H.*.. lSf.fi Taylor, J. M.* (I.)__ 1SS4 Taylor, J. M. (II.) '08 L. 1909 Taylor, J. R '93 Taylor, K. K 1S7S Taylor, L. A '00 Taylor, M ..._1878 Taylor, M. E.* 71 Taylor, N. A 1870 and 1871 Taylor, O. C— . 1908 Taylor, R. H ...1896 Taylor, T. H., Jr 1900 Taylor, V. A 1909 Taylor, W. B 1877 Taylor, W.J ..1874 Tegarden, W. H.* ..1873 Temple, A. C__ ..1878 Temple, J. W.__ 1378 Temple, W. A 1905 Tennison, S. P 1909 Terral, J. A 1879 Terral, J. S.* L. 1856 Terral, S. H.* '57 and 1855 Terrell, C. D 1894 Terrell, D. F.* 1880 Terrell, J. D.* 1862 Terrell, L. D 1886 Terrell, R. F 1881 Terrell, R. S 1863 Terrell, S... ..1884 Terrell, S. D 1891 Terrell, W. S '92 Terrell, V. L.* '57 Terry, A. B . 1907 Terry, C. C ...1874 Terry, G. W.*_. ..L. '58 Terry, J. H_. 1873 Terry, W. F._. 1878 Thacher, W. H .1870 Thacher, W. N 1873 Thacker, R. J 1871 Thames, H. D.* 1898 Thames, K 1908 Therrell, M. K 1906 Thomas, A. H.* L. 1856 Thomas, A.N. * '56 Thomas, D. H. (I.) 1880 Thomas, D. H. (II.) 1889 UNIVEItSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 399 Thomas, G. W 1861 Thomas, J. F 1377 Thomas, J. M L. '99 Thomas, J. W 1S78 Thomas, O 1866 Thomas, O. D 1870 Thomas, R. L 1890 Thomas, S. M 1882 Thompson, C L. '02 Thompson, C. E 1909 Thompson, C. M.* '58 Thompson, C. R 1882 Thompson, D. L 1897 Thompson, D. M.* 1858 Thompson, E. M.* '56 Thompson, F. P 1868 Thompson, G. F. F.* L. '69 Thompson, G. M 1858 Thompson, H. G 1884 Thompson, J. (I) 1874 Thompson, J. (II) '85 Thompson, J. B.* L. '89 Thompson, J. F '60 Thompson, J. H. (I.) 1878 Thompson, J. H., Jr. (II.) '97, L. '98 Thompson, J. N. (II.) 1878 Thompson, J. N.* (I.) 1856, '57 Thompson, J. S 1868 Thompson, J. W.* I.) '57, L. '59 Thompson, J. W. (II.) ." '71 Thompson, L.E L. '90 Thompson, L. W 1878 Thompson, O. G 1895 Thompson, P. G 1874 Thompson, R.* 1862 Thompson, R. H '69, L. 1871 Thompson, R. P 1896 Thompson, S. M 1859 Thompson, S. R 1893 Thompson, W. E.* '54, L. '58 Thompson, W. F 1906 Thompson, W. G 1891 Thompson, W. H.* (I.) 1864 Thompson, W. H.* (II.) 1874 Thompson, W. R 1870, 1871 Thomson, M. H '58 Thomson, J. G 1878 Thorington, J. W 1890 Thornton, A. L 1878 Thornton, L 1900 Threlkeld, S 1879 Thurmond, J. A. Q 1870, 1871 Thurmond, N. B 1903 Thurmond, R. J 1903 Tidwell, A. T 1865-6 Tindall, B '08 Tindall, F. M 1906 Tindall, G. W 1880 Tinnin, A. R 1881 Tinnin, J. A 1856 Tinsley, W 1901 Tipton, J. R _-.'97, L. '03 Tipton, S. F.* 1873 Tipton, S. P 1908 Tison, J. H 1884 Todd, J. W 1852 Todd, H. P 1898 Tolbert, J. B 1907 Toler, B. F 1886 Tomkies, J. G 1879 Toney, H. K 1893 Toney, W. M 1883 Tool; F. L 1909 Toombs, F. S 1905 Townes, E 1899 Torgerson, B.* '_ '96 Torrence, D. A 1877 Torrey, J. E L. '97 Torrey, J. C 1872 Torrey, R '91 Torrey, W. D.* 1871 Totten, J. C 1878 Townes, C. L 1873 Townes, C. H 1895 Townes, J. K 1889 Townes, L. C 1896 Townes, R. C 1889 Townes, W. C* '84 Towns, E. M -.--1872 Towns, S. R ---1896 Townsend, A. T .-.1880 Townsend, J. W _-.1884 Townsend, W. N .-.1881 Travis, S. E L. '92 Trawick, P. H.* 1880 Traywick, H. F 1897 Treloar, M 1905 Tribble, R. A L. '08 400 ' DIVERSITY <>l Trice, W. W L878 Trigg. A. S 1S77 Trotter, A I860 Trotter, A. P.. 1895 Trotter. C. H lss7 Trotter. C. T.* L888 Trotter. J 1S72 Trotter. J. D* „ L856 Trotter. J. P 1907 Trotter, R_. _ 1878 Trotter, W., Jr '09 Trotter, W. C. 190S Truly, E. G 1908 Tubb. C. L. (I) L. '97 Tubb, C. L. (II) _ _.L. '01 Tucker, A. C '06 Tucker, B. A., Jr '03 and L. '07 Tucker, B. L 1896 Tucker, D. D 1906 Tucker, E. E.* 1874 Tucker, H. R 1908 Tucker, J. H.* 1861 Tucker, T. E.* '61 Tucker, W. F 1889 Tunstall, J. B.* '73 Tunstall, R. H.* '76 Tupper, T. F 1864 Turley, J. D 1892 Turley, T. F 1905 Turner, E 1898 Turner, G. M 1909 Turner, J. R 1889 Turner, O. M 1884 Turner, S. E L. '94 Turner, T. S 1891 Turner, W. B 1879 Turner, W. F.* L. 1898 Turnipseed, C. P.* 1863 Tuttle, A. C 1887 Tye, H. C 1888 Tynes, F. T. L 1880 Tynes, N. C.* 1880 Tynes, W. A., Jr 1906 Tyson, J. A L. '78 Tyson, J. O 1906 Ulman, J. B 1884 Underwood, J. C 1881 Unger, M 1873 MISSISSIPPI. Upshur, T. L . .. . 1909 Usher, J. D __1859 Utter back, W. E .. L. '97 Vaiden, C. M.*_ 1877 Vairin, J. J 1S7S Vairin, N. B_. .1878 Valentine, M 1S55 Valliant, L. B '56 Valverde, C. V 1908 Vance, G.C- 1875 Vancleave, G. A 1884 Vancleave, R. A., Jr 1884 Vancleave, W. S 1890 Vaughan, F. P 1S64 Vaughan, H. R.* '59 Vaughan, J. B.* 1863 Vaughan, J. P.* L. 1859 Vaughan, J. R.* 1854 Vaughan, J. W.* 1867 Vaughan, W.* 1870 and 1871 VanHook, J. H 1908 Vardaman, J. M 1908 Veazey, F. F 1902 Venable, W. W '99, (G.) 1899 Venn, J 1887 Ventress, L. T 1870 Ventress, W. P. S L. '83 Vineyard, A '98 Vineyard, E. D 1980 Vineyard, G. H 1888 Vineyard, J. A.* 1879 Vineyard, J. B '91 Vineyard, J. M 1891 Vineyard, J. R.* 1879 Vineyard, J. S 1879 Vineyard, W. J. * '54 Viser, E. D.* 1872 Viser, J. H 1871 Viser, W. M... '75 Waddell, G. R.* '68 Wade, B. J 1872 Wade, E. M.* 1864 Wade, J. B 1859 Wade, J. F 1854 Wade, J. W '01, '02, L. '02 Wade, L. T__. 1881 Wade, M. T.* '60 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 401 Wade, R 1893 Wade, T. M 1881 Wadlington, A. W '01 Wadlington, M. E '02, (G.) 1904 Wadlow, F. W 1907 Wagner, G. A ..1898 Wagner, G. A 1902 Wailes, C. C* ....1878 Wainwright, R.* ....1900 Waite, T. W 1903 Waldrop, W. C* '58, L. 1860 Walker, B. N 1909 Walker, C '00 Walker, C. C* 1883 Walker, E. L 1909 Walker, H. A 1894 Walker, H. S 1908 Walker, J. M. (II) 1880 Walker, J. M.* (I) 1862 Walker, J. T 1882 Walker, L. F 1899 Walker, M. E 1899 Walker, N. S 1884 Walker, R. B '04 (G.) 1906 Walker, R. G 1908 Walker, S. P '93, '09 Walker, W. A.. 1895 Walker, W. B (I)* '82 Walker, W. B. (II) 1897 Walker, W. R 1896 Wall, E. L. (G.) 1900 Wall, F. S 1890 Wall, H. V L. '02 Wall, J 1890 Wall, J. H.* 1865-6 Wall, J. M '. 1908 Wallace, A. L 1908 Wallace, A. R 1908 Wallace, E 1891 Wallace, H. V 1903 Wallace, J. D 1898, (G) 1901 Wallace, J. M 1901 Wallace, J. T ...1898, '02 Wallace, L 1909 Wallace, V. H 1909 Walsh, H. R 1871 Walter, A. A.* '78 Walter, F. C.* . '74 Walter, H 1878 26 Walter, J. B.* '78 Walter, P 1891 Walton, E. C 1879 Walton, E. R '05, (G.) 1906 Walton, E. S '53 Walton, H. H 1904 Walton, J. F.* '61 Walton, J. J.* ....1854 Walton, T. J.* '54, L. '57 Walton, W. A 1907 Ward, A 1905 Ward, B. N ..1888 Ward, E. K '56 Ward, L. T 1883 Ward, M. E 1881 Wardlaw, E 1899 Wardlaw, J. L 1890 Wardlaw, M '99 Ware, J. T. F 1872 Ware, J. N 1888 Ware, W. Z 1852 Warfield, E ; . 1855 Warfield, G. H 1888 Warren, G. B 1878 Warren, G. T 1906 Warren, H '81 Warren, J. B 1890 Warriner, B. R L. '04 Waterer, J. W 1865-6 -Watkins, A. F 1901 Watkins, D. M 1881 Watkins, E '71 Watkins, F.* 1863 Watkins, G. 1908 Watkins, G. H 1900 Watkins, H. V. (I) 1905 Watkins, H. V. (II) 1909 Watkins, J.* 1852 Watkins, J. P '08 Watkins, J. W.* __.1872 Watkins, R 1907 Watkins, S. K 1860 Watkins, T. B '02 and L. '04 Watkins, W. B '97, L. '98 Watkins, W. H L. '95 Watkins, W. L 1897 Watlington, H. C 1866 Watson, B. M.* 1886 Watson, E 1870, 1781 402 I VIVBRBITY OF MISSISSIPPI. Watson. E. M L. '97 Watson, H. D.. Jr. 1908 Watson, J.* 1S70, 1871 Watson. J. A. .1878 Watson, J. H. 1868 Watson, J. W. 1872 Watson, H. C... --L. '88 Watson, T. C 1905 Watson, W. W.*_... 1874 Watson, W. T 1856 Watson, W. Y L. '86 Watt, W. G.* 1870 Watt, W. P...- 1866 Watts, J. B 1878 Watts, S. T ...1894 Waugh, M. G 1884 Waugh, R. L .1892 Waugh, W. D.* 1880 Weatherby, T. T 1856 Weatherly, A. H 1890 Weathersby, A. E L. 1885 Weatherby, Walter* L. '99 Weathersby, H. E.* L. '56 Weathersby, S. B 1859 Webb, C. F '93, (G) 1896 Webb, S. M 1874 Webb, F. B 1867 Webb, J. B. (I) L. '91 Webb, J. B.*(II) '07 Webb, J. L.* --.. '51 Webb, T. W.* '57, L. 1861 Webb, W. J '51 Webber, W. B 1902 Webster, E '06, L. '09 Webster, O 1905 Webster, S 1904 Webster, W. L 1907 Webster, W. M.* 1861 Webster, W. P 1893 Weir, H. B 1886 Weir, H. W 1887 Weir, R. S.* '57 Weissinger, J. R.* 1880 Welch, V. I .1906 Weller, L 1888 Weller, M. L.* '55 Wells, J. M 1881 Wells, S. M.*. L. '60 Wells, W. C. (I) '69 Wells, W. C, Jr. (II) '99 Welsh, J. M.* 1852 Welsh, S .1878 Wendel. J, B 1895 Wendel, W. D -.1886 Wendell, E. J. --1870 Wendel, R. P... '88 West, A -..- 1864 West, A. O... 1863 West, A. J 1870 West. A. M '69 West, C. W 18*4 West, E.. 1901 West, E. F 1868 West. F. E -1872 West, F. M L. '98 West, G. H -.1859 West. J. O '60 West, J. Q., Jr 1909 West, L. (I)* I860 West, L. (II) 1895 West, O 1876 West, S. Y.* L. '84 West, W. A.* 1864 Westbrook, P. H 1859 Weston, A. H 1876 Weston, D. C 1884 Wetherbee, H. L 1893 Wettlin, D. G L. '07 Wettlin, M. St. C 1908 Wharton, T. J.* 1871 Wharton, W. R 1870, '71 Wheat, J. E.* L. '80 Wheat, J. J 1877 Wheat, S. D 1883 Wheat, T. H . 1872 Wheat, W. M 1876 Wheeler, J. H 1909 Wheless, J. S L. '84 Whetstone, T. M L. '02 White, A 1881 White, A. S.* 1886 White, C. R L. '99 White, F. B.* 1885 White, F. R 1883 White, H 1868 White, H. H. H 1869 White, H. L 1899 White, H. M 1872 UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. 403 Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh Wh te, H. 0_-- te, J. J., Jr. te, J. P te, L. N_._. te, P. H-... te, T. C te, T. H___. ,. '08 . '99 .1904 .1901 .1893 .1891 .1857 te, T. W., Jr '03, (G.) 1904 te, S. M 1871 te, S. W.. ...-1869 te, W. G 1908 te, W. M -.1892 te, Z. E 1879 te, Z. P 1907 tehead, A. R 1870, 1871 tehead, H. P.* 1883 tehead, I. W 1852 tehead, J. B.* L. '88 tehead, R. H.* '55, L. '57 tehead, W. D 1855 teway, L. L 1908 teway, R 1898 tfield, A. D 1862 tfield, A. H '71, '73, L. '74 tfield, A. H., Jr '06 tfield, E.* 1858 tfield, G. Q L. '05 tfield, N. W -.1904 tfield, R. J 1908 tfield, R. N 1898 tfield, R. M.* 1374 tley, J. R. (I) 1869 tley, J. R. (II) 1885 tley, F. J .1870 tney, W. H.* 1879 tson, J. M 1869 tten, L. A '89 ttington, L. A L. '03 ttington, W. M L. '99 tworth, C. M 1880 Wickliffe, A. W 1859 Wier, F. L 1880 Weir, H. B 79 Weir, W. B 1880 Wiggins, H. R 1881 Wiggins, J. L ..1881 Wiggins, M. L 1880 Wightman, J. * 1859 Wilbourn, E. C* 1870 and 1871 Wilbourn, E. J.* 1870 and 1871 Wilbourn, M. C 1901 Wilbourn, R. E.* (I.) 1359 Wilbourn, R. E. (II.), '95, '97, L. 1898 Wilburn, C. C* 1856 Wilburn, M. W 1878 Wilburn, W. R. S 1897 Wilde, J. D.* L. 1868 Wildy, H. H.* '70 Wildy, J. H.* '74 Wiley, J. A '61 Wiley, S. O 1872 Wiley, Z. K 1364 Wilkerson, E. J.* 1872 Wilkes, B. B., Jr 1881 Wilkins, E. E 1906 Wilkins, J. P.*.. '96 Wilkins, N. M '99, (G.) 1901 Wilkins, W. Q.* 1865-6 Wilkinson, A 1895 Wilkinson, H. L L. '01 Wilkinson, O '03 Wilkinson, R 1830 Wilkinson, S. A L. '89 Wilkinson, W L. '95 Williams, A '07 Williams, A. M 1895 Williams, B 1889 Williams, B. F 1908 Williams, B. G 1389 Williams, C. B 1890 Williams, C. E 1882 Williams, D. E 1896 Williams, E. B '96, L. '97 Williams, E. G 1897 Williams, E. N., Jr 1900 Williams, E. P. (I.) 1359 Williams, E. P. (II.) 1884 Williams, F. M 1884 Williams, G. G 1896 Williams, G. M 1380 Williams, H. S 1868 Williams, J 1865-6 Williams, J. C 1904 Williams, J. D 1880 Williams, J. E 1894 Williams, J. F.* L. '89 Williams, J. L '03 and L. '05 Williams, J. R 1854 and 1355 404 I DIVERSITY Williams. L. E . . _1888 Williams. N. A. 1879 Williams. R. B.*.. .1863 Williams. R. D '90 Williams, R. W ...1898 Williams. T. E.* 70 Williams, T. H. W 1878 Williams, U. S., Jr 1878 Williams, V. W 1886 Williams, W '96 Williams, W. D.. . '88 Williams, W. E '85 (G.) 1889 Williams. W.F 1889 Williams, W. J 1900 Williams, W. L 1860 Williams, W. W.* 1879 Williamson, C. A '07 Williamson, C. M. (I.) '75, '76 Williamson, C. M. (II.) 1878 Williamson, C. M., Jr.... '08, L. 1909 Williamson, G. E 1878 Williamson, H. C, Jr .L. '00 Williamson, J. C 1853 Williamson, J. F '76 Williamson, J. G 1876 Williamson, N. H 1889 Williamson, R. F 1879 Williamson, R. R.* '55, L. 1857 Williamson, S. F 1905 Williamson, W. A 1895 Willing, R. P. (I.) '56 Willing, R. P., Jr. (II.), '83 Willing, W 1895 Willingham, I. V., Jr 1883 Willis, A. W 1905 Willis, R. B 1856 Willis, J. A L. 1S97 Wilroy, C. A 1899 Wilroy, N. E '98 Wilson, A. J. C 1886 Wilson, A. B 1896 Wilson, B '68 Wilson, C 1896 W 7 ilson, G. A 1872 Wilson, G. M.* 1877 Wilson, H 1894 Wilson, H. J '96 Wilson, H. N 1900 Wilson, J. B '82, (G.) 1884 OF MISSISSIPPI. Wilson, J. C L. '92 Wilson, J. E '61 Wilson, J. P.* (I.) L. 1860 Wilson, J. P. (II.) 1869 Wilson, M. de L 1880 Wilson, M. W 1878 Wilson, N. N.* 1871 Wilson, R. M 1879 Wilson, R. N. J.* .... '53 Wilson, R. L. G 1877 Wilson, R.* ..1880 Wilson, R. T 1859 Wilson, S. M 1862 Wilson, S. G 1897 Wilson, W 1891 Wilson, W. R 1894 Winchester, R. L 1882 Windham, J. C '06 Wingfield, F. G 1882 Wingfield, N 1878 Winn, D. W '09 Winn, H. B 1878 Winningham, T. B 1880 Winstead, A. M 1885 Winston, G '68 Winston, J. M 1854 Winter, F. D 1880 Wise, J. A 1891 Wiss, V 1901 Withers, B. A 1906 Withers, C. W 1905 Withers, W. H 1887 Witherspoon, E. B '81 Witherspoon, E. M.* 1860 Witherspoon, F.* 1874 Witherspoon, J.* '72 Witherspoon, S. A. (I.) '76, '78 Witherspoon, S. A., Jr. (II.) 1898 Witherspoon, T. D.* '56 Witherspoon, T. M '56 Witherspoon, W. D '82, L. '82 Witherspoon, W. W.* L. '59 Witty, F. M '07, L. 1909 Witty, W. H 1895 Witty, W. R 1904 Witty, W. W 1885 Wiygul, E. I 1907 Wolf, L 1884 Wolfe, A. T '55 UNIVERSITY OF MIBfUBBIPPI. 405 Wolfe, F. A.*. Wood, A Wood, A. W Wood, B. O Wood, C. G r . Wood, C. L. (G.) Wood, E. G Wood, F Wood, J.E Wood, W. L L Woodley, M. B Woodman, T. C. (G.) Woodruff, E. I Woods, C Woods, E. D Woods, E. H L Woods, H. J L Woods, M. S.* Woods, R. E Woods, W. A Woods, W. R L. Woodward, A. Y Woodward, J. E Woodward, J. W Woodward, W. M. (I.) Woodward, W. M. (II.) Wooldridge, D. E.* Wooldridge, E. T Wooley, C. M Woollard, P. B Woollard, G. D Woolerstein, D. M Woolfolk, C. T L Wooten, A. K L Wooten, J. R Wooten, J. W. (I.) Wooten, J. W. (II.) Wooten, J. W., Jr Wooten, R. B Wooten, W. A Wooten, W. C Word, T. N Work, C. S Worley, J. B Worley, J. G Worley, S.I Worsham, B. F Wray, J. A ._ Wright, B. L. H., Jr '56 Wright, C. E ...1895 1905 Wright, E. C '04 1866 Wright, F. J 1879 1909 Wright. J. H.* (I.) 1864 '08 Wright, J. H. (II.) 1888 1901 Wright, J. M.* (I.) '53 1879 Wright, J. M.* (II.) 1865-6 1881 Wright, K. B 1870, 1871 1867 Wright, L. E 1868 . '07 Wright, M.J L. '88 1907 Wright, P '09 1887 Wright, P. H 1881 '09 Wright, R.J L. 1886 1898 Wright, W.B. (II.). ... ...1888 1870 Wright, W. B. (I.) 1880 . '86 Wright, W. L , 1880 . '90 Wyatt, G. S 1872 '00 Wyatt, J. M 1905 1905 Wyatt, M. G 1905 1900 Wyatt, T. S 1852 ,'88 Wyatt, W. W. '60 1900 Wynn, F. O 1903 1892 Wynn, J. H '73 1908 Wynn, W. T 1889 1879 Wynn, W. T 1908 1884 Wynne, T. C 1891 1861 Wynne, W. T L. '01 1883 1905 Yaretzky, M 1880 1891 Yates, A. H 1885 1890 Yates, A. L L. '06 1874 Yates, C. W 1899 . '92 Yates, D. T 1859 . 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