Its early difficulties far behind it, by the turn of the twentieth century the Michigan Agricultural College had reached a position of prominence and high regard among the nation’s agricultural and mechanical colleges. Many M.A.C. graduates had gone on to become deans, directors, and professors at other colleges, spreading the influence of the pioneer land-grant institution far and wide. Wanting to celebrate this success, and to “mark the fiftieth milestone in the progress of the type of education which this college so fittingly represents,” the College invited all its alumni to return to campus for a massive Semicentennial celebration in 1907.† 1
The week-long event began on Sunday afternoon, May 26, with Baccalaureate exercises held in the Armory featuring a sermon by Dr. Matthew Henry Buckham, President of the University of Vermont (that state’s land-grant institution). Two solid days of addresses and presentations followed on Wednesday and Thursday, May 29 and 30, most of them in a large assembly tent erected on the campus. These included speeches from Governor Fred Warner and various state education luminaries, an open session of the American Association of Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations, and a multi-lecture retrospective of the school’s early days including “The College in 1870” presented by Professor Beal.2
On Thursday some twelve hundred M.A.C. alumni and guests gathered for a luncheon in the large tent. “The crowd was grouped by classes, and each endeavored to prove that his class was still very much alive.” That evening, along with a ceremonial illumination of the campus buildings, a procession of students singing college songs, and a bonfire in front of the brand-new Wells Hall, a new “Alma Mater” written especially for the occasion was performed for the first time. With lyrics by Board Secretary Addison Makepeace Brown, “Close beside the Winding Cedar” used a familiar melody “that was the college song for over a dozen colleges all over the nation,” reputedly first as “Far above Cayuga’s Waters” by M.A.C.’s land-grant sibling Cornell University. (This song was officially replaced in 1949 by “The Shadows,” written in 1927 by Bernard Traynor, which remains M.S.U.’s alma mater song today.)3
The highlight of the week came on Friday, May 31, with Commencement, its address delivered by President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt. The President arrived in Lansing by train early Friday morning and was paraded down Michigan Avenue to the campus in a brand-new two-cylinder REO Touring Car—driven by Ransom Eli Olds himself, having won a coin toss against Oldsmobile president Samuel Smith.†† After a brief respite from his travels, Roosevelt attended a private luncheon at the home of M.A.C. President J. L. Snyder, № 1 Faculty Row.4
On Friday afternoon, following his participation in a ceremonial tree planting between Faculty Row №s 1 and 2, Roosevelt took the stage that had been erected on the drill field (now Walter Adams Field). He delivered a stirring address on the importance of scientific agriculture education, his un-amplified voice booming out over the crowd, whose estimated size ranged from 20,000 to 40,000 spectators. Roosevelt’s comments on the federal responsibilities of farmers and the land-grant colleges were very warmly received, and prompted the later formation of the Extension Service, the annual Farmers’ Week, and other programs.5
Along with numerous congressmen and senators, a great many distinguished delegates attended the ceremonies, including several from universities and colleges of Europe and Canada. Among American schools, Cornell University was perhaps best represented, with seven delegates including alumni Liberty Hyde Bailey (M.A.C. ’82, M.S. ’86, Dean of Horticulture) and Rolla Clinton Carpenter (M.A.C. ’73, M.S. ’76, Professor of Mechanical Engineering). Carpenter was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Laws for his “valuable service… as a member of [the M.A.C.] faculty,” “engineering skill,” and “ability as a designer of great construction render[ing him] worthy of special recognition.”6
Also in attendance was Myrtle Craig (1883–1974, M.A.C. ’07), who became on that day the first African-American woman to graduate from the College. She and her fellow 1907 graduates were handed their degrees by President Roosevelt himself.7
- MAC Record, 11(38), 12 Jun 1906, p. 1. ↩︎
- Blaisdell, pp. 3–12. ↩︎
- MAC Record, 12(37), 4 Jun 1907, pp. 1, 7. M.S.U. Archives, 29 Mar 2011. The Helmet student handbook (1948), p. 114; (1949), p. 100. ↩︎
- Kestenbaum, p. 127. ↩︎
- Kestenbaum, pp. 68, 128. ↩︎
- Blaisdell, pp. 260, 365–371. ↩︎
- MAC Record, 12(37), 4 Jun 1907, p. 4. ↩︎
- † For most of its first century, the school’s inception date was considered to have been the first day of classes: May 13, 1857. By the time of the Centennial, the date had shifted to that of the school’s founding: February 12, 1855. As a result the Centennial took place only forty-eight years after the Semicentennial.↩︎
- †† Winning this coin toss was a minor vindication for Olds. It was Smith who, having bought the Olds Motor Works from Olds in 1899, put his son in charge; the son, Frederic Smith, frequently clashed with Olds until Olds left the company in 1904. Smith threatened to sue Olds if he used his own name in any further ventures, which is why Olds’ next car company was named REO Motors (his initials, but not an abbreviation as regards the company name). But in 1907 it was Ransom Olds driving a REO, and not Smith driving an Oldsmobile, that brought Roosevelt to campus.↩︎
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