University of Virginia Library

THE BARBOUR-PAGE LECTURE FOUNDATION.

The University of Virginia is indebted for the establishment of
the Barbour-Page Foundation to the wisdom and generosity of Mrs.
Thomas Nelson Page, of Washington, D. C. In 1907, Mrs. Page
donated to the University the sum of $22,000, the annual income of
which is to be used in securing each session the delivery before the
university of a series of not less than three lectures by some distinguished
man of letters or of science. The conditions of the foundation
require that the Barbour-Page lectures for each session be
not less than three in number; that they be delivered by a specialist
in some branch of literature, science, or art; that the lecturer present
in the series of lectures some fresh aspect or aspects of the
department of thought in which he is a specialist; and that the entire
series delivered each session, taken together, shall possess such
unity that they may be published by the Foundation in book form.

Lecturer on the Barbour-Page Foundation.

1912-13.

Rt. Hon. James Bryce, D. C. L., LL. D., British Ambassador to
the United States.

Subject: Ancient Democracy.

1913-14.

President Arthur Twining Hadley, LL. D., of Yale University.

Subject: Some Problems of American Democracy.