Subject | Path | | | | • | UVA-LIB-Text | [X] | • | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | [X] |
| 1 | Author: | Lynch, Frederick | Add | | Title: | Personal Recollections of Andrew Carnegie / by Frederick Lynch | | | Published: | 2000 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | I FIRST met Mr. Carnegie on a special train to Tuskegee. Mr. Robert C. Ogden,
chairman of the Board of Trustees of Tuskegee Institute, had invited about
a hundred men and women to be his guests for a week on a special train from
New York to Tuskegee and back. The train was made up of stateroom cars with
two dining cars, and the guests occupied the train all the week, even while
at Tuskegee. (Principal Washington had built a spur from the main road right
into the Tuskegee campus. He used to say of it: "It is not as long as the
New York Central, but it is just as broad.") It was a very happy party. It
was made up largely of University presidents and professors, well-known editors,
many publicists, and a sprinkling of clergymen and authors. Practically every
man on the train was a man of international reputation, but three or four
stood
out among all the rest not only because of eminence, but because of
the good time they were having. They were in picnic mood and were enjoying
the trip immensely. They were often together. I recall especially Mr. Taft,
Mr. Carnegie, Lyman Abbott, President Eliot and Professor Dutton discussing
international affairs. The Philippine question was then to the front and
there was a wide diversity of opinion in this group on that question, and
when the talk veered around to the Philippines, as it always did, a crowd
of us younger men would gather about this group and listen—sometimes egg
the disputants on. Sometimes the disputants would get quite warm on the subject,
and then we heard some rare talk. All phases of internationalism were discussed,
but on this subject the members of the group were pretty well agreed. But
when it came to the question of armament there came a division of the house
again. There were a good many educators on the train, and most of them were
pretty thoroughly in accord with Mr. Carnegie's views, namely, that the
vocational side of education should be stressed, and that science should
replace the classics. | | Similar Items: | Find |
|