Guide to the Brown University Sesquicentennial Celebration records , 1914
John Hay Library , Special Collections
Box A
Brown University
Providence, RI 02912
Tel: 401-863-2146
email: hay@brown.edu
Published in 2013
Collection Overview
Title: | Brown University Sesquicentenniel Celebration records |
Date range: | 1914 |
Creator: | Brown University. |
Extent: | 0.5 linear foot |
Abstract: | The Sesquicentennial Celebration papers contain a selection of introductions, addresses and speeches made at Brown University's 150th anniversary celebration on October 11-15, 1914. Several are in the form of revised typescript and include an abstract. |
Language of materials: | English |
Repository: | John Hay Library
, Special Collections |
Collection number: | MS.1MS.S2. |
Scope & content
The Sesquicentennial Celebration records are organized in one series of documents, arranged alphabetically by speaker. The collection comprises a selection of introductions, addresses and speeches made by participants and guests at Brown University's 150th anniversary, celebrated from October 11-15, 1914.Several of the documents are in the form of a revised manuscript and include an abstract. Several are abstract only. Notable speakers were Brown President William H. Faunce and honorary degree recipient and former United States President William H. Taft.
Access Points
Subject Names Subject Organizations Document Types Subject TopicsArrangement
The collection is organized in one series:
- I. Speeches, 1914
Administrative History
The Sesquicentennial celebration marking the 150th anniversary of the founding of the University lasted for five sunny days, October 11 to 15, 1914. No expense was spared and Friends of Brown contributed the entire cost of the festivities. College Hill was festooned with ropes of laurel draped from the trolley poles. Japanese lanterns lit up the campus, and fence posts sported wooden tubs of evergreens and autumn berries. University Hall was illuminated as it had been for earlier celebrations.On Sunday afternoon, October 11 President Faunce preached the anniversary sermon. Monday’s exercises reflected the religious history of the university with speakers representing the four religious denominations associated with the founding. Also the "Pageant of Warren" was performed at "Maxwelton" in that town where the college was first located.
Tuesday was a day for class reunions, capped by what must have been the most spectacular event of the week, the torchlight parade. Led by mounted police, the National Guard, the First Light Artillery, the Varnum Continentals, and the American Band, alumni and students in costume marched downtown through throngs of spectators. First came the classes of 1870 through 1899 in caps and gowns of white and brown, then the classes of 1900 through 1905 in the Puritan garb of the first settlers of Providence, followed by the classes of 1906 through 1908 as Quakers in gray. The classes of 1909 through 1914 dressed as the French soldiers who had occupied University Hall during the Revolution, while the senior class of 1915 were soldiers of the Continental army. Juniors wore uniforms of the War of 1812 and sophomores were French sailors of the Revolution. The freshmen as Narragansett Indians were dressed, according to a contemporary account, "in gaudy red blankets, their faces copper-color and a single feather stuck jauntily in their simple head-dresses." Costumed representatives of special events came next, the crew of 1873, the 1870 baseball team, Colonial and early nineteenth-century gentlemen, and finally, those marchers of other days, a recreation of the Junior burial with coffin and books on their way to a "cremation." The glorious procession returned from parading through the Van Wickle gates, decorated with laurel and electric lights, for a concert and book-burning which concluded the festive day.
On Wednesday an academic procession of twelve hundred, including many notable representatives of American and foreign educational institutions, marched to the Meeting House to hear the Historical Address by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans Hughes 1881. On Thursday there was an address by William Peterson, principal of McGill University, followed by the conferring of honorary degrees upon thirty-eight distinguished gentlemen. Celebrators could also enjoy three performances of "The Provoked Husband," a play within a play "In Colony Times," by Henry A. Barker and A. E. Thomas, which recalled the first production of "The Provoked Husband" in Providence in 1762, complete with John Brown and his trusty cannon in front of the improvised theatre, ready to ward off colonists who were protesting against the ungodly performance.
All of Providence joined in the celebration on Thursday. There was a pageant by grammar school children followed by relay races for high school students and dinner for four hundred at Churchill House.
The above entry appears in Encyclopedia Brunoniana by Martha Mitchell, copyright 1993 by the Brown University Library. It is used here by permission of the author and the University and may not be copied or further distributed without permission.
Access & Use
Access to the collection: | There are no restrictions on access, except that the collection can only be seen by prior appointment. Some materials may be stored off-site and cannot be produced on the same day on which they are requested. |
Use of the materials: | Although Brown University has physical ownership of the collection and the materials contained therein, it does not claim literary rights. Researchers should note that compliance with copyright law is their responsibility. Researchers must determine the owners of the literary rights and obtain any necessary permissions from them. |
Preferred citation: | Brown University Sesquicentennial Celebration, MS-1MS-S2, Brown University Archives. |
Contact information: | John Hay Library
, Special Collections Box A Brown University Providence, RI 02912 Tel: 401-863-2146 email: hay@brown.edu |
Administrative Information
ABOUT THE COLLECTION | |
ABOUT THE FINDING AID | |
Author: | Finding aid prepared by Brown University Library staff |
Encoding: | This finding aid was produced using the Archivists' Toolkit 2013 January 23 |
Descriptive rules: | Finding aid based on Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS) |
Sponsor: | Processing funded by a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission. |
Additional Information
Inventory
Series I. Addresses
Container | Description | Date |
Box 1 | Burgess, Frederick, 1853-1925, Class of 1873. The relation of the university to the Christian ministry. |
1914 October 12 |
Box 1 | Cunningham, William. Address. |
1914 October 15 |
Box 1 | Faunce, William Herbert Perry. University sermon. |
1914 October 11 |
Box 1 | Horr, George Edwin, 1856-1927, Class of 1876. Brown University and missions. |
1914 October 12 |
Box 1 | Hughes, Charles Evans, 1862-1948, Class of 1881. Address. |
1914 October 14 |
Box 1 | Keen, William Williams, 1837-1932, Class of 1859. Remarks as toastmaster at University dinner. |
1914 October 15 |
Box 1 | Lowell, Abbott Lawrence, 1856-1943, Honorary Degree 1914. Address. |
1914 October 15 |
Box 1 | Mullins, Edgar Y. Baptists and education. |
1914 October 12 |
Box 1 | Perry, James DeWolf, 1871-1947. Religious education in the modern college. Manuscript corrections and typed revision. With abstract of address. |
1914 October 12 |
Box 1 | Peterson, Sir William, 1856-1921, Honorary Degree 1914. University address. |
1914 October 15 |
Box 1 | Pothier, Aram J. Address. |
1914 October 15 |
Box 1 | Sharpless, Isaac, 1848-1920. Quaker ideals in education. |
1914 October 12 |
Box 1 | Taft, William Howard, 1857-1930, Honorary Degree 1914. Address. |
1914 October 15 |
Box 1 | Thomas, John M. The main end of studies. |
1914 October 12 |