鶹Ӱ

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LEADERSHIP

President Ferguson Resigns

As president, Franklin Ferguson at first proved ingenious at securing funds for current expenses and endowment but, over time, his fondness for methods considered unduly risky and his business-based approach to academic administration led to strained relationships with the faculty and, ultimately, a loss of confidence on the part of the Board. At the end of his third year as president in 1901, the Board worked out a terminating agreement with him and he resigned.

CAMPUS

Sumner House Moved

Sumner House was moved to its present site at the corner of First and College, drawn by horses over timbers and rollers. Built in 1887, it was originally the home of pastor and 鶹Ӱ founder Charles Burt Sumner and his wife, Mary Louisa Steadman Sumner (for whom Sumner Hall was named). Originally named Twin Oaks, the house was built on 10 acres of land near the anticipated site of the College on Piedmont Mesa, about four miles north of Pomona. When the decision was made to move the house to Claremont in 1901, the Sumner family lived in the house throughout the six-week move. The house was later home to the Sumner’s son George C. K. Sumner 1894--who taught economics at Pomona and, in 1923, became College controller--and his grandson George Charles Sumner Benson. Over the years, Sumner House has been rented to faculty and, in the 1970s and ’80s, served as a dormitory for vegetarian students who prepared their own meals and dubbed it “veggie house.” It was closed as a dormitory in 1989 and carefully restored in 1992. Since then, it has served as the College’s guest house.

ACADEMICS

New Departments

A new Aesthetics Department was introduced, including history of art and history of music. A new collegiate Music Department, separate from the Music School, was also introduced.

STUDENT LIFE

Regulations

The prohibition against card-playing, which had been added to the list of forbidden activities in 1891 (along with intoxicating drinks, tobacco and profane language), was dropped in 1901.

ATHLETICS

Southern California Amateur Athletic Union

In 1901-02, Pomona became a charter member of the Southern California Amateur Athletic Union, which included all of the principal colleges and high schools in the region.

ELSEWHERE

  • Queen Victoria of England died at age 81. Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, becomes King Edward VII.
  • American anarchist Leon Czolgosz shot President William McKinley at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. McKinley died eight days later, and Theodore Roosevelt became president.
  • The new state constitution of Alabama required voters to have passed literacy tests.