Click on the thumbnails to be taken to larger images.
Snapshot of Woody Sturdivant Moore and Major General Thomas H. Barfield, MMI president, on the occasion of Moore’s retirement as MMI Librarian in 1980 (she served from 1960 to 1980).
Ms. Woody Moore was a member of the First Place Team in the 1976 Parents’ Weekend Golf Tournament at MMI.
Three snapshots of the Bell Tower being put into place in 1991. With the Chapel clocks, the project cost $100,000, a donation by James M. Hamilton, MMI Class of 1930.
Anita Johnson’s home (my landlady) has a rich and diverse history. Note the references to Harvard Law School, General Sam Houston’s wedding, and of Woodrow Wilson having tea in the front parlor in 1905. (From Perry County Heritage (2 vols., 1991) by W. Stuart Harris.)
“Tara Marsh,“ the home of James G. (C.?) Reynolds on Clay Street in Marion. The Confederate artillery officer’s uniform housed in the MMI Archives belonged to Reynolds. It was donated to the Morgan’s Raiders by his daughter, Mary Felix Reynolds. No C.S.A. artillery unit has yet been identified for Second Lieutenant Reynolds. (From Perry County Heritage (2 vols., 1991) by W. Stuart Harris.)
A two page letter from Hopson Owen Murfee to Professor E. O. Lovett at Princeton University in 1903. In addition to trying to secure Henry Van Dyke to speak at MMI, Murfee is also looking for a new mathematics professor/coach for MMI. He is hoping that Lovett will help him find the right candidate. The letter is interesting as Murfee is beginning to formulate ideas for his “Eton of the South” concept for MMI. In addition to the $700 salary for the first year offered to the new professor, Murfee wants a young unmarried man who is not only competent in his field and who is a graduate of one of the leading universities, but who is also athletic and who wants to make the teaching of young men his profession. Scholarship (publications) is less desired to excellent teaching in the classroom and on the playing field.
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Interesting Documents (20 November 2007)
Click on the thumbnails to be taken to larger images.
Detail from an aerial photograph of the MMI campus taken on February 5, 1958. Note the light dusting of snow!
The Old Library, circa 1950s or 1960s.
A MMI parade, circa 1970s or 1980s.
The MMI Drum Corps, circa 1970s or 1980s.
A unique view of the Chapel highlighting the foliage in the vicinity.
Two images of the interior renovation of the Chapel.
Two views of the Chapel bell.
A World War II-era image of the Corps on the football field before the game. Note the cheerleaders and others at far right.
Cadet line at a home football game during the heyday of the Morgan’s Raiders (note Confederate flag in the foreground).
Detail from an aerial photograph of the MMI campus taken on February 5, 1958. Note the light dusting of snow!
The Old Library, circa 1950s or 1960s.
A MMI parade, circa 1970s or 1980s.
The MMI Drum Corps, circa 1970s or 1980s.
A unique view of the Chapel highlighting the foliage in the vicinity.
Two images of the interior renovation of the Chapel.
Two views of the Chapel bell.
A World War II-era image of the Corps on the football field before the game. Note the cheerleaders and others at far right.
Cadet line at a home football game during the heyday of the Morgan’s Raiders (note Confederate flag in the foreground).
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Interesting Documents (13 November 2007)
Click on the thumbnails to be taken to larger images.
Dance cards of Thomas Harvey Crigler, MI Junior College Class of 1924. Crigler later attended the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. Captain Crigler died in Columbus, Mississippi, in 1983.
Memorabilia of T. Harvey Crigler, 1921-1924.
The first “Fall In!” from The Assembly for 1902 (the MMI yearbook).
The MMI Band in 1935-1936 (from a framed photograph).
One of the beautiful raised flower beds of the 1960s and 1970s, planned and supervised by Louise McLeod Wilkerson, wife of an MMI trustee, and planted and tended by Carl Moore, MMI’s expert Gardener. From a framed photograph.
Article about “Bear” Bryant speaking at MMI from the May 13, 1972, issue of The Skirmisher.
From the 1973 MMI Sports Banquet program when Auburn University’s “Shug” Jordan was the guest speaker.
From the same program, a list of the MMI Sports Banquet guest speakers from 1959 to 1972.
Again from the 1973 Sports Banquet program, a list of the Junior College All-Americans and Honorable Mention All-Americans from 1959 to 1972.
Dance cards of Thomas Harvey Crigler, MI Junior College Class of 1924. Crigler later attended the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. Captain Crigler died in Columbus, Mississippi, in 1983.
Memorabilia of T. Harvey Crigler, 1921-1924.
The first “Fall In!” from The Assembly for 1902 (the MMI yearbook).
The MMI Band in 1935-1936 (from a framed photograph).
One of the beautiful raised flower beds of the 1960s and 1970s, planned and supervised by Louise McLeod Wilkerson, wife of an MMI trustee, and planted and tended by Carl Moore, MMI’s expert Gardener. From a framed photograph.
Article about “Bear” Bryant speaking at MMI from the May 13, 1972, issue of The Skirmisher.
From the 1973 MMI Sports Banquet program when Auburn University’s “Shug” Jordan was the guest speaker.
From the same program, a list of the MMI Sports Banquet guest speakers from 1959 to 1972.
Again from the 1973 Sports Banquet program, a list of the Junior College All-Americans and Honorable Mention All-Americans from 1959 to 1972.
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Of Governors and Coaches
Click on the thumbnails to be taken to larger images.
A number of Alabama governors and NCAA and professional football coaches have visited MMI over the years. Here are a few whose images I have recently located.
James E. “Big Jim” Folsom, Sr. (Governor 1947-1951, 1955-1959). This image is supposedly Folsom.
George Wallace (Governor 1963-1967, 1971-1979, 1983-1987); his wife, Lurleen Wallace (Governor 1967-1968). This image was made in 1974 at MMI.
Forrest H. “Fob” James, Jr. (Governor 1979-1983, 1995-1999). Governor James with MMI president Brigadier General W. Thomas Adams at MMI.
H. Guy Hunt (Governor 1987-1993). Governor Hunt with Major General Clyde W. Spence, Jr., MMI president.
Legendary Alabama Head Football Coach Paul William “Bear” Bryant was the MMI Sports Banquet speaker in 1972.
Legendary Auburn Head Football Coach James Ralph “Shug” Jordan was the MMI Sports Banquet speaker in 1973.
Bill Curry (Head Coach: Georgia Tech, University of Alabama, and the University of Kentucky). MMI Sports Banquet speaker Bill Curry with some MMI College Cheerleaders.
Charley Pell (Head Coach: Jacksonville State University, Clemson University, and the University of Florida). Image taken in 1977 at the MMI Sports Banquet with (L-R) Frank North, MMI’s Athletic Director and Head Football Coach, Charley Pell, and Major General Thomas H. Barfield, MMI president.
A number of Alabama governors and NCAA and professional football coaches have visited MMI over the years. Here are a few whose images I have recently located.
James E. “Big Jim” Folsom, Sr. (Governor 1947-1951, 1955-1959). This image is supposedly Folsom.
George Wallace (Governor 1963-1967, 1971-1979, 1983-1987); his wife, Lurleen Wallace (Governor 1967-1968). This image was made in 1974 at MMI.
Forrest H. “Fob” James, Jr. (Governor 1979-1983, 1995-1999). Governor James with MMI president Brigadier General W. Thomas Adams at MMI.
H. Guy Hunt (Governor 1987-1993). Governor Hunt with Major General Clyde W. Spence, Jr., MMI president.
Legendary Alabama Head Football Coach Paul William “Bear” Bryant was the MMI Sports Banquet speaker in 1972.
Legendary Auburn Head Football Coach James Ralph “Shug” Jordan was the MMI Sports Banquet speaker in 1973.
Bill Curry (Head Coach: Georgia Tech, University of Alabama, and the University of Kentucky). MMI Sports Banquet speaker Bill Curry with some MMI College Cheerleaders.
Charley Pell (Head Coach: Jacksonville State University, Clemson University, and the University of Florida). Image taken in 1977 at the MMI Sports Banquet with (L-R) Frank North, MMI’s Athletic Director and Head Football Coach, Charley Pell, and Major General Thomas H. Barfield, MMI president.
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