| 221 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1910) November 18, 1910 | | | Published: | 1910 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | At a called meeting of the Board of Visitors, of
the University of Virginia, at 2:30 P. M., on above date,
in the office of the President, East Lawn. I received a copy of passages from the Records of
the University of Virginia, having to do with the establishment,
of the University Observatory by Mr. Leander McCormick and the
endowment of the professorship and working fund in connection
therewith. I beg to acknowledge receipt of your communication
of June 11th, containing a presentation of the conditions
under which the McCormick Observatory was established at the
University of Virginia, and making certain suggestions as to
the future use of the observatory and the future conduct
of the astronomical work at the University. I had hoped
to be able to present that matter to the Board at their
June meeting, but by reason of circumstances beyond my control,
that meeting was not held, and it is not possible
to bring the matter before them before the early fall.
Your letter and all the facts must be brought before them and
a clear decision reached. The great majority of the Board
are men who have taken up service on the Board since these
matters were handled, and it will be necessary for them to
go back over the records and make a study of the situation
themselves. I wish to acknowledge receipt of your letter of
June 20th which has been forwarded to me. Please accept thanks for yours of the
3d. According to the records of the Board of Visitors of the
University, the duties of the Professor of Astronomy were to
be two-fold: 1st. To teach theoretical and practical astronomy:
2nd. To spend any remaining time in the use of the telescope. Enclosed please find a copy of the above mentioned
trust, the original of which is recorded and filed in the
clerk's office of the Albemarle Co., court, also an order
on the Albemarle Nat. Bank for the two bonds mentioned in
said document, the interest from which is to be devoted to
the scholarship. I have the honor to report that at their meeting of Nov. 7
last, the Academic Faculty approved the attached outline of a
proposal course in Public Speaking. By resolution the Faculty
recommended that the proposed course be approved by the
President and Visitors and the the course be given
the value of one elective at large, when offered for the
Baccalaureate Degree. The Charlottesville and Albemarle Railway
Company of Charlottesville, Virginia, a corporation
duly chartered under the laws of the State of Virginia, respectfully
requests that your Honorable Board will grant
it the right to locate and operate an electric railway line
upon and through the property of the University of Virginia,
along the terrace West of what is known as "Rugby Road", and
between said Road and the walk immediately East of the Fayerweather
Gymnasium. Said line to begin at the Ivy Turnpike
Road, and run in a North-westerly direction to the C. & O.
Railway overhead bridge on the Rugby Road: said line to be
located and constructed under the general supervision and
direction of the President and the Superintendent of Grounds
and Buildings of the University of Virginia, and the Chairman
of the Executive Committee of your Board; and that an order
be entered on the minutes of your Board authorizing the said
line to be located on an through the property of the University
of Virginia, subject to the aforesaid provision. | | Similar Items: | Find |
222 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1911) May 9, 1911 | | | Published: | 1911 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | At the annual meeting of the Board of Visitors, called
for the consideration of the "Financial Budget" for 1911-1912, I hereby tender to you and through you to the
Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia, my resignation
as Professor of Secondary Education, and as Professor of
Psychology, and as Director of the Summer School at the
University of Virginia. I should like for this resignation
to take effect at the end of the scholastic year, June 14,
1911. I think it advisable to continue my connection with
the Summer School until its close, July 29th, and with respect
to that phase of my work this resignation should not become
operative until July 29th. It may be that I cannot be present
every day during the Summer School, but if agreeable
I shall be present as often as possible. By the Eleventh Article of his last will and Testament
the Hon. Lambert Tree, Deceased, of this city, bequeathed to
your institution the sum of $5,000.00 to be invested in
perpetuity for the benefit of your library. To be used in
the purchase of books, or such other ways as may be deemed
best for said library. I beg to acknowledge receipt of your communication
of the 29th, inst., containing a check for $4,854.61, being
the bequest of the Hon. Lambert Tree, deceased, to the University
of Virginia, less the inheritance tax of the State of Illinois
of $145.39. I also acknowledge receipt of the copy of article
XI of the will of Lambert Tree, deceased, setting forth
the purpose for which this bequest shall be used. The
University of Virginia will in due time express proper
gratitude through its Rector and Visitors for this bequest. | | Similar Items: | Find |
223 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1911) May 30, 1911 | | | Published: | 1911 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | At a called meeting of the Board of Visitors of the
University of Virginia on above date in the Presidents'
Office. The following statement was presented by the President,
and ordered to be placed on record as follows: I beg to submit to you the following reports from
the Faculty of the Department of Graduate Studies of the
University of Virginia and the Faculty of the College of the
University of Virginia, the two comprising the Academic
Department of the Institution. I submit these reports
with my entire approval and endorsement. They are the
result of patient study of specially appointed committees
of these faculties extending over a period of two years.
They have been carefully considered and discussed by the
Faculties themselves in utmost detail. In some cases they
have been held up for months with a view of obtaining the
best information on all subjects connected with the curriculum
and the methods of teaching in modern colleges. They
have passed the Facilties of the Department of Graduate
Studies and of the College with practical unanimity. The
report of the Faculty of the Graduate Department is unanimous,
and the report from the Faculty of the College
comes to you with only one dissenting vote. The fundamental
purpose in these proposed modifications is to increase the
power, to elevate the standards, and to place on a surer
pedagogic basis all instruction given at the University of
Virginia. | | Similar Items: | Find |
224 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1911) November 14, 1911 | | | Published: | 1911 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | At a meeting of the Board of Visitors on above dates
in the office of the President, East Lawn, I have the honor to inform you that
I have accepted a position as research Chemist with the
Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station, and I herewith
hand you my resignation as Professor of Chemistry, in
the University of Virginia, to take effect at the beginning
of the next collegiate year. I beg to acknowledge with very
profound and sincere regret your communication of the 19th,
inst., tendering your resignation as Professor of Chemistry,
in the University of Virginia. I wish for you in your new
position as research chemist with the Kentucky Agricultural
Experiment Station every opportunity for the advancement of
your chosen field of work. You have served this University,
permit me to say, with ability and distinction during your
brief period of work here. You have made friends of your
colleagues and friends of your pupils, and all of us feel,
no one more than myself, that in losing you we are sustaining
a genuine loss both in the direction of scientific power
and personality. I appreciate the motives that have moved
you to this decision, and while I deeply regret that the
result is your separation from the work here, I can only
wish for you in this new field the abundant measure of
success you have achieved here. The trustees of the Peabody Education
Fund at a meeting held in New York on November 1, (1911)
adopted the following: The University of Virginia will undertake to
maintain a Department of Education upon which not less
than $10,000.00 a year will be expended for maintenance
per annum, provided the Peabody Education Fund will donate
the sum of $40,000.00 to the Rector and Visitors of the
University for the purpose of erecting a suitable building
for the home of this department. The University already
has in hand funds amounting to $7,000.00 a year that could
be used legitimately for this purpose. It would be necessary
for it, in order to carry out this proposition, to increase
this amount by the sum of $3,000.00. This it hopes to
be able to do in the next six months. It is, therefore,
suggested that that amount of time, at least, be allowed
the University of Virginia in which to meet the conditions
of this proposition. I have the honor to inform
you that the Executive Committee of the Foundation
at its meeting on June 8 voted to admit the University
of Virginia to the list of accepted institutions of
the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. I beg to acknowledge with very
great pleasure and satisfaction the receipt of your communication
of June 9th, wherein you inform me that the Executive
Committee of the Foundation at its meeting on June 8th, voted
to admit the University of Virginia to the list of accepted
Institutions of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teaching. I am gratified at this action of the Foundation,
not solely because it secures against want the old age of
men who have given their lives to an unlucrative but noble
profession, but in a higher sense because such action signalizes
the accomplishment by this University of a great undertaking
which it set out to bring to pass nearly seven years ago.
It now occupies a consistent and logical relation to the system
of secondary education with which it is allied, and it has also
concluded legislation by which it occupies consistent and logical
relation in its graduate school, to the college and higher institutions.
Such action of the Foundation is an added testimony
to the fact that standards of admission established have been
administered with integrity and good sense. I wish to express
to the Foundation assurances of our belief that the Foundation
has helped powerfully in enabling this University, and other
Universities in this country to establish and maintain such
standards as to unify the whole educational process. I too
hope that the relations between the Foundation and the University
may be one of material help and service in all educational development. We are forwarding to you today via Adams Express
thirty notes of $1,000.00 each, made by J. W. Hough and
Abner S. Pope, payable to the Rector and Visitors of the
University of Virginia. All of these notes bear interest
from Jan. 1, 1911 to Jan. 1, 1913, at the rate of three
per cent per annum, and after that date, at the rate of
six per cent per annum. The notes are as follows: I am very anxious to get your
advice and co-Operation in connection with the expenditure
of the income of the Phelps-Stokes Fund of which I am one
of the Trustees. This Fund, which amounts to about a million
dollars, was left by my Aunt, Miss Caroline Phelps Stokes,
with the understanding that the income should be used for
various educational purposes, but more particularly for advancing
the cause of negro education in the South. I have
had several conferences with out mutual friend, Dr. Dillard,
and I wish your specific opinion regarding the plan that we
have had under favorable discussion for creating fellowships,
endowed we will say at $10,000. each, at two or three
representative state universities in the South, such as the
University of Virginia, and the University of Georgia. The
Fellowship to be awarded by the proper university authorities
to graduate students whose time would be devoted to studies
on some phase of the negro problem. The administration of
the Fund, the selection of incumbents, etc., to be entirely
in the hands of the University authorities. I was greatly interested to have your
letter of the 29th, ult., and have been giving the matter
of your suggestion very grave thought. I have felt for
many years that a fundamental thing to do in this tangled
problem is to cause it to be scientifically approached by the
scholarship of the South. The thing to do is to take it out
of the nervous system of our people and their emotions and to
get it set up before them as a great human problem, economic
in nature, scientific in character, to be acted upon as the
result of broad, wise, sympathetic study. The time ought to
come when our best scholars will take pride in making contributions,
however minute, toward the handling of the great
question. I have no doubt that an endowed foundation of the
character suggested by you would be most acceptable to the
authorities of this University. I am a bit troubled about
just the right suggestion to make to you in regard to your
definite proposition for the creating of fellowships endowed at
approximately $10,000, and having for their primary purpose the
securing ultimately of a small group of trained men who shall giv
their life to the study and improvement of the negro conditions.
Let me explain a bit. I established here, at
Tulane University, and at the University of North Carolina
the first Professorship of Economics: Sociological subjects
were not being taught in Southern institutions. Even
Political Science, as a scientific subject, has no independent
status. We now have a very strong department of Economics,
and temporarily, a very able lecturer in Political Science.
Our full Professor of Economics, as you may know, is on the
Tariff Board, and his place is supplied by a veryable
fellow from Wisconsin. We have two full professors in the
Department of Education, and these departments make it a
point to emphasize the sociological aspects of education.
There is, however, no Professor of Sociology. It, of course,
is as yet an undefined and somewhat empiric science, but
there is a tremendous current of interest among our men in
the big questions affecting social betterment, the improvement
of rural life, the imporvement of industrial life, the better
governing of cities, questions of public health and sanitation,
and foremost among them, supreme in its importance, stands,
of course, the negro problem with all of its implications.
The ideal need here is a professorship in that great field,
giving to the negro problem its right place as the chief
subject of scientific study by our analytic minded scholars.
This, of course, means a good deal of money. The next in
order would be, it seems to me, a lectureship demanding much
less money, but devoted almost exclusively to the study of
the negro problem and the social betterment question, to
giving information to the young men, to giving the proper
bent to their minds, to stimulating their interest, to
developing in them right methods of approach to such a subject.
It seems to me such a lectureship logically precedes
the establishment of a fellowship. Out of such lectureship and
its activities would come such interest as to arouse young
men inside or outside of the University to strive for a prize to
be offered by us in the form of a fellowship or scholarship. W
the sum you mentioned, $500.00 a year would be yielded as
income. If $400.00 of this could be given to a man who would
come here and make, say, a dozen lectures and meet men in semina
ways; and then, if $100.00 could be made as a prize for the
best bit of research work in small fields at first-I mean small
as to area-the matter could get itself tried out, though on somewhat
too meager a basis. I hesitate for a moment, though I hate
to seem to hesitate a second in such a matter to establish an
independent Fellowship in such a subject when there is back of
it no clear instruction or stimulation in the great field which
the Fellowship would cover. My fear about it is simply that
the work itself would not get justice. The work would not yield
its best results. You may be sure I want this opportunity here.
Would it be possible to consider the proposition to increase the
sume just a bit so as to make the Lectureship and the Fellowship
co-existent? If such could be done it seems to me a new era
would be brought about in our best institutions in their
attitude toward this matter. Last year one of our professors
gave a course of talks on the negro, based on Weatherford's
book. It was astonishing the interest taken in the matter,
the book being used as a text-book. I heartily wish I could
talk with you about this matter, or with my friend,
Dillard. Instruction in such a matter is not only not
unwise, but most needed and would be welcome. I would
never want to see such a fellowship established here, unless
I saw fruitful results issuing out of it. I do not want it
to become a mere academic thing that in time would lose
its edge and become a mere formal prize. I hope you will
not reach any definite conclusion in the matter until in
some way we can talk it out, for it is a big question and
incapable of just solution by interchange of letters. I have the honor to inform you that at a meeting
of the Trustees of the Phelps-Stokes Fund held at the office
of Anson Phelps Stokes, 100 William St., New York City,
Wednesday, November 15, 1911, the following vote was passed: | | Similar Items: | Find |
226 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1912) May 9, 1912 | | | Published: | 1912 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | In response to the call of the 2nd instant, for a meeting
of the Board of Visitors for this date, the following members
appeared, the Rector, and Visitors Harmon, Craddock, and Norton. University of Virginia,
May 9th, 1912. In accordance with the authorization of the Trustees
of the Phelps-Stokes Fund, referred to in my letter of January
31st, 1912, I beg to enclose herewith our check for $6,250.00,
being payment of the balance of the Endowment Fund to create
a Fellowship for the study of the negro, under the terms
and conditions outlined in my letter of January 31st,
1912. The Board of Visitors of your Institution should,
in session, by resolution, designate such officers of the
Institution as they may elect, to make demands, monthly,
in the corporate name of the Institution upon the Auditor
of Public Accounts for the payments of the several funds
appropriated to your Institution. Copy of the resolution
adopted by the Board in session, should be duly certified
to this office, so that I may, on and after June 1st, 1912,
draw warrants on the Treasury payable to the Institution
in its corporate name, which warrants will be mailed direct
from this office to such officer of the Institutions as the
resolution may direct. The resolution can be so drawn
as to have force and effect until changed by similar resolution
adopted by that Board. Believing that there is room and demand for a second
drug store at the University of Virginia, we have decided
to make the following offer, | | Similar Items: | Find |
227 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1912) June 11, 1912 | | | Published: | 1912 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | At the regular annual meeting of the Board of Visitors
on above date, at 8:30 P.M., The University of Virginia now holds a balance of
$42,500.00 upon the L. P. Stearnes loan which matures
in the following manner: I have the honor to inform you
that in accordance with your recommendation and in conformity
with the rules of the Carnegie Foundation, retiring allowances
have been voted to the following officers in the University
of Virginia, to be paid in the ordinary way through the
University. I have great pleasure in acknowledging
receipt of your communication of May 10, 1912, informing
me that in conformity with the rules of the Carnegie
Foundation, retiring allowances had been voted to the
following officers in the University of Virginia to be
paid in the ordinary way through the University: Milton
Wylie Humphreys, $2050.00, Isaac Kimber Moran, $1460.00,
Ormond Stone, $2050.00. I have notified these gentlemen
of the action of the Foundation and beg to express to
you for them their very great obligations. When their
resignations are received by the Rector and Visitors, I
shall give you due notice. I am in receipt of a communication
from the Secretary of the Carnegie Foundation for
the Advancement of Teaching, which contains this statement,
"I have the honor to inform you that, in accordance
with your recommendation and in conformity with the rules
of the Carnegie Foundation, a retiring allowance has been
voted to Milton Wylie Humphreys, to be paid in the ordinary
way through the University. This retiring allowance amounts
to $2050.00. The allowance of Prof. Humphreys will become
effective on September 15, 1912." To you as President, and through you
to the Rector and Visitors I hereby tender my resignation
as Professor of Greek in the University of Virginia, to take
effect September fifteenth, 1912. I am in receipt of a communication
from the Secretary of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teaching which contains this statement, "I have the
honor to inform you that, in accordance with your recommendation
and in conformity with the rules of the Carnegie Foundation,
a retiring allowance has been voted to Ormond Stone,
to be paid in the ordinary way through the University. This
retiring allowance amounts to $2050.00. The allowance of
Professor Stone will become effective on September 15,
1912." Having been granted, in accordance
with your recent letter, at my request, a retiring allowance
by the Carnegie Foundation, I beg that you will kindly
transmit to the Rector and Visitors my resignation as Professor
of Astronomy, to take effect September 15th, next. In doing
so I desire to express to you and the Faculty, as well as to
the Rector and Visitors my sincere thanks for the many
courtesies I have received during the thirty happy years
I have spent at this University. May I also express the pleasure
I have enjoyed in watching the growing spirit of progress
which during these years has gradually infused
the life of the University, especially during the eight
eventful years in which you have been its leader. I wish
also to express my pleasure in noting the growing realization
of the duty of the University constantly to readjust itself
in order that it may with ever increasing efficiency contribute
to the higher life of the people. In the firm
belief that this spirit and this realization will continue
to grow with the passing years, I lay down my work here with
pride that I have been privileged for so long a time to be
connected with an institution possessed of such splendid
traditions, and (what is more important) inspired by such
noble ambition to serve. With sincere personal esteem, I have the honor to inform you that the
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching has this
day notified me that a retiring allowance has been voted to
Isaac Kimber Moran to be paid in the ordinary way through
the University. This retiring allowance will become effective
on October 1, 1912. The amount accorded to you is $1460.00. It has been known to you for some months
past that I have had in contemplation the relinquishment
of the offices with which the University has so long honored
me. I hereby tender to you my resignation as Bursar
of the University of Virginia, and also as Secretary to
the Board of Visitors, to take effect on October 1st, 1912. I respectfully request that I be permitted to occupy
my present residence on University grounds, for the year from
October 1st, 1912 to October 1st, 1913, at the same rental
I am now paying; viz. $200.00 per annum. | | Similar Items: | Find |
230 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1912) December 16, 1912 | | | Published: | 1912 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | At a called meeting of the Board of Visitors on above
date, Were hereby make application through you to the Rector
and Visitors of the University, that the house formerly
occupied by Professor J. W. Mallet be assigned to us,
jointly, when it shall be given up by Mrs. Mallet. I beg to recommend that we carry out the suggestion
made by Messrs. Coolidge and Bacon at their recent visit
to the University. I have only by a slow process
reached this conclusion. It was made to us some four
years ago by Mr. Brown, the landscape man for the Government
grounds and buildings at Washington. | | Similar Items: | Find |
232 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1913) May 20, 1913 | | | Published: | 1913 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | At the annual meeting of the Board of Visitors, called
for the consideration of the Financial Budget for 1913-1914. The Committee on Entrance Building having made the foregoing
report, it was After the annual report of the Department of Engineering
had been made and forwarded to the President, it was
learned that Mr. J. S. Lapham, a graduate of this University
in Mechanical Engineering, desired an appointment on our
teaching staff. Mr. Lapham is a young man of unusual ability;
and, if his application had been received earlier, he would
undoubtedly have been engaged. It is not often that any
school has the opportunity of securing the services of a
man so eminently fitted by capacity, training, and character
to make a useful and accomplished University teacher. The
department is already committed to the young men nominated in
our report as instructors for 1913-1914, and cannot in good
faith, cancel any one of the nominations. On the other
hand, the opportunity is one which cannot be postponed; unless
Mr. Lapham comes to us, he will go into business with his
father, and such permanent changes will have to be made in
the details of that business as will prevent him from
accepting a position with us in the future. As you are already aware, I have recently sent to the
Trustees of the Carnegie Foundation a formal application
for retirement, feeling that after forty years of full
professional work and twenty-five years of active service
at this University, the time has come when it is wise for me
to take advantage of the provisions of the Foundation, I. We recommend that the sites on Carr's Hill for
fraternity houses, be at present restricted to four, and
that the northernmost site be located on a line passing
through the centre of the president's residence and the
centre of the president's stable, and at least as far
distant from the president's house as is the location of
the "Delta Tau Delta" house. Prof. Newcomb who is planning the plants for the
sewage purification, as directed by the State Board of Health,
indicates that we will have to acquire land to furnish a
sufficient fall to carry off the effluent from the filter
beds. | | Similar Items: | Find |
233 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1913) June 16, 1913 | | | Published: | 1913 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | At the annual meeting of the Board of Visitors on above
date, in the office of the President, East Lawn. I have already advised you by letter of the
matter of this supplementary report, but at the suggestion
of Dean Page, I am now putting the matter in such form that
it may be laid before the Visitors at their meeting to be
held within the next few days. As you have not acted officially
in the matter, and as there is not now time to transmit
this report to you for action, the purpose of bringing it
before the Visitors at this meeting is not for action thereon,
but in the hope that they may refer it to you, or to yourself
and the Executive Committee, for suchaction as youmay
deem wise—and thus secure earlier action than would otherwise
be possible. | | Similar Items: | Find |
234 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1913) October 27, 1913 | | | Published: | 1913 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | At a called meeting of the Board of Visitors in the
office of the President, East Lawn, on above date, In accordance with the agreement at the
conference between Dr. P. H. Whitehead, Dean of the Medical
Department of the University of Virginia, Dr. Stuart McGuire,
Dean of the Medical College of Virginia, and myself,
in this city on Thursday evening last, the Executive Committee
of the Medical College of Virginia yesterday appointed a
committee of five to confer with a similar committee to be
appointed by the Board of Visitors of the University of
Virginia to discuss plans looking to the union of the
medical schools in this state. The committee consists of— On September 1, 1913, I, as Chairman of
the Commons Committee, entered into a contract with Charles
Jaimes Leasing the University Commons for the period of
one year. The terms of this agreement are exactly the
same as authorized by the Rector and Board of Visitors in
the spring of 1912, except that in lieu of a surety bond
guaranteeing the safe return of the University's property,
I accepted a $50.00 a month deposit with the Bursar of the
University. It was impossible for Mr. Jaimes to secure
the bond required, and I substituted this cash deposit
because I believed that the University's interests were
amply safeguarded thereby, and on account of the limited
time, it was impossible for me to wait for authority from
the Board. | | Similar Items: | Find |
236 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1913) December 10, 1913 | | | Published: | 1913 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | The Board of Visitors met at 8:15 o'clock P. M., on
above date, with the following members present:- As a Codicil to my last will and testament, I provide
that so far as my personal chattels are concerned, both
such as I hold jointly with my sister, and such as I
have in my sole right, she (my sister Fanny) shall have
the free use, control and disposition of them without
being held in any manner accountable therefor; but this
provision does not apply, and must not be held applicable
to the bonds, stocks, and scrip, which I hold and own
either jointly with her or separately, but all such bonds
stocks and scrip must be held as subject exclusively to
the provisions of my will of December 8th, 1877, to which
this is a codicil. Witness my hand this 19th February
1881. Mr. Eppa Hunton, Jr., has placed before the
Executive Committee of the Medical College of Virginia,
with the Medical Department of the University of Virginia,
as adopted by your Board. In accordance with our conversation,
I beg that you will request the Board to vote me one
hundred dollars, with which to construct a dark room,
which is to be placed in the basement of the Observatory. At a meeting of the Committee on Entrance Building,
there were present Messrs. Lambeth, Michie, Newcomb,
Forrest. The following resolutions were presented by
Mr. Forrest. Moved and seconded by Messrs. Michie and
Newcomb that they be adopted. Carried. The Board of Visitors met on this date at 10:15
o'clock in Madison Hall to hear the advocates and opponents
of the Woman's Co-ordinate College matter, with the following
members present; Messrs. Gordon, Flood, White, Norton
Drewry, Oliver, Irvine, Craddock, Michie and Stearnes.
Also Dr. J. M. Page, Acting President. | | Similar Items: | Find |
238 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1914) January 29, 1914 | | | Published: | 1914 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | A called meeting of the Board of Visitors was
held on this date, with the following members present:
Rector Gordon, Judge Norton, John W. Craddock, Ceo. R. B.
Michie and R. C. Stearnes. Having learned through Dr. Booker of Balitmore
that Dr. W. P. Morgan was on the point of bestowing his
library upon some institution, Dr. Harry T. Marshall
conveyed to me, as Chairman of the Library Committee, this
information. After an exchange of letters with Dr. Morgan
Dr. Marshall and myself visited him at his home, 315
Monument Street, Baltimore—with the result that he
presented to us his entire collection of books, claiming
the right to reserve some of the books for his own use
as long as he should live. At the solicitation of Dr. William D. Booker of
Baltimore and Dr. Harry T. Marshall of the University of
Virginia, I offer my library to the University of Virginia,
according to the terms agreed upon by yourself and At the meeting of our Library Committee
yesterday afternoon I read them your letter of December
12, in which you state that at the solicitation of Dr.
William D. Booker, of Baltimore, and Dr. Harry T.
Marshall, of the University of Virginia, you offer your
library to the University of Virginia, according to the
terms agreed upon by yourself and me as Chairman of
the Library Committee. (re-Estate Frances L. Wilson, deceased.) | | Similar Items: | Find |
240 | Author: | University of Virginia
Board of Visitors | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Board of Visitors minutes (1914) March 28, 1914 | | | Published: | 1914 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia::Board of Visitors | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | | | Description: | The Board of Visitors met on this date at 11:30
o'clock, with the following present: Rector Gordon, and
Visitors Michie, Drewry, Oliver, Stearnes and Hatton. I had some correspondence with you about
a year ago relative to the Estate of Robert P. Doremus.
The Executors are now filing their account. I recently took the liberty of
suggesting to Mrs. Chas. H. Senff of 16 East 79th Street,
New York City, that a great opportunity existed at the
University to do a good service by building a gateway to
our new entrance, which would commemorate both her
husband and in a large sense, the Honor System at that
institution. We the undersigned residents east of the
University, beg permission to enter the University grounds
near the Coal Bin. | | Similar Items: | Find |
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