Glomerata


5
May 22

A light day

Ever get fundraising letters and emails from your alma mater(s)? This 1922 copy circulated in newspapers around Alabama, a sad story that came from one of my alma maters, and it is more impactful than all of those donation letters.

This was part of an important campaign for my alma mater. Auburn was in a deep economic hole compared to the other schools in the state, which had been uniquely successful in creating a deep economic hole for all of its schools anyway. So all that spring of 1922 they prepared for this campaign that they hoped would raise $1 million dollars which would equal … quite a few more million these days.

It was a substantial ask, am ambitious plan and, if you’d be willing to listen to the whole of the tale I can draw a pretty clear line between that campaign and the institutional politics that still appear there, 100 years on.

Ralph Boyd appears in the papers one time before this syndicated piece, in a small brief about his death in Montgomery that February. His last surviving sibling passed away in 2017.

And here he is the year before, somewhere in this group photograph from the 1921 Glomerata, the university’s yearbook.

In the 1922 yearbook there’s a mention of the Greater Auburn campaign. They called it the greatest thing Auburn had ever undertaken. But there doesn’t seem to be a mention of young Ralph Boyd in that edition.

So there’s not much here today, but I did run across that, which is really an excuse to share the greatest century-old graphic you’ve ever seen.

That’s recyclable, is all I’m saying. It’s also amusing that they were using the Auburn name in the university’s campaign efforts, a formal usage if you will, decades before they changed the institution’s name.

Something a little fun … Penn & Teller!

And something amazing … The Punch Brothers!

More tomorrow, I assure you.


24
May 16

We leap ahead three decades in the Glomeratas

We’re putting one collection, the historic markers, to bed here. May as well get up-to-date with another. So let’s sneak back over to the Glomerata bookshelf. (I have a big bookshelf.) The Glomerata is the yearbook for my alma mater. For reasons that escape me I’ve been collecting them. I have several. (Told ya, big bookshelf.) A little at a time, I’ve been uploading the covers as a section on the site. I’ve got two or three more to go just now.

Pictured below is the 1944 cover. If you click that cover you can check out today’s addition to the group, the 1945 Glomerata. The campus was about to grow rapidly. If the book came out that spring, the G.I. Bill would be signed that summer. And within the year the place would be crawling with veterans ready to put the war behind them and improve their career options with an education. As the campus would grow in the next few years to meet the new crowds of students, they had young men living in tents. Imagine that today.

Anyway, the 1920s and 1930s yearbooks had some great customized covers. And the first photographs on the cover appeared in the 1940s. If you click on 1944 below you’ll see just the second photo cover of the series.

(These days they are all photograph covers and the books are just terribly formulaic. Yearbooks have lost a lot of personality in the last few years.)

See all my Gloms here.


17
May 16

Back to the Glomeratas

While we are wrapping up the Lee County Historic Marker project on Thursdays, it is only fitting to get the Glomerata collection up to date, too. The Glomerata is the yearbook for my alma mater. I’ve collected them for some reason. Over time, I’ve been uploading the covers as a section on the site. Pictured below, for instance, is the 1914 cover. If you click that cover you can check out today’s addition to the group, the 1917 Glomerata.

You can see my complete collection here.


10
May 16

Returning to the Glomeratas

Since we’re wrapping up the Lee County Historic Marker project, it seems only right to return to the Glomerata collection, too. The Glomerata is the yearbook for my alma mater. And I collect them for some reason. I have quite a few of them. And, over time, I’ve been uploading the covers as a section on the site. Pictured below, for instance, is the 1904 cover. That one has been on the site for a long time. But if you click that cover below you can check out today’s addition to the group, the 1903 Glomerata.

Glomerata 1904

The 1903, by the way, is the only yearbook in the now 119 volumes that uses a horizontal orientation. You can see the whole collection, here. Want to check out a few choice volumes, dive in here.


28
Apr 15

Glomeratas

Back to the Glomerata section, where I share the covers of all of the yearbooks from Auburn, my alma mater. I’m still adding new-to-me editions to my collection and so here we are today. The one I’m showing you here is the 1993 edition. If you click the cover you can see the 1994 Glom.

1993 Glomerata

See all of the covers in my Glom collection here.

Bill Clinton was the president. No one had thought yet of shutting down the government and we were a long way from our national debate on the meaning of the word “is.” NAFTA and Nancy Kerrigan were in the news and people were still saying “information superhighway.” Others were still struggling to pronounce Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Scream was stolen, the Olympics were in Lillehammer and American troops withdrew from Somalia. Kurt Cobain killed himself. Tonya Harding pled guilty and Lorena Bobbitt was found not guilty by reason of insanity. Richard Nixon died.

Students in the fall before, if they followed the news, learned more about Sydney and Mogadishu and worried about an uprising in Moscow and nuclear tests in China. Early that fall I decided, for sure, that I wanted to go to Auburn. I’d had ideas previously, but that fall I made some visits and fell for the place.

There were 263 million people in the U.S. in 1994. Some 4.26 million of them were in Alabama, more than double the pre-World War II census. Guy Hunt, the first Republican governor Alabama had known since Reconstruction, had just left office as Alabama’s first governor removed from office for a criminal conviction. He paid his fines and served his probation and got a pardon. Considered by some to be an accidental governor, he was considered a bumpkin by opponents but took advantage of a splintered Democratic party. Trivia: A minister, farmer and salesman, Hunt was the last governor of Alabama that didn’t attend college. He fought in Korea instead. He’s also a man who made Alabama a two-party state. And now, of course, state politics have tipped entirely the other direction. Guy Hunt died in 2009. When he stepped down, he was succeeded in 1993 by his lieutenant governor, Jim Folsom, Jr. He ran in 1994, but was beaten by the former-Democrat-turned-Republican (and Auburn grad) Fob James. James was returning to an office he’d held 20 years earlier. Folsom would show up, a decade later, again as lieutenant governor. (Alabama is a cyclical place.)

Alabama, and much of the southeast, was hit hard by an ice storm in 1994. Heather Whitestone, who would later become Miss America, was enjoying her time as Miss Alabama. Birmingham, the state’s largest city, was in the middle of a nine-year stretch of triple-digit homicides. Local boy and NASCAR hero Davey Allison died in a helicopter accident. I was busy navigating high school. As if that was all.