foreseen, 42; nation unready for, 43;
popular impatience at beginning of,
43; disappointment in commanding
generals in early part of, 43, 44;
political situation in, 44, 45; the issue
of personal rights versus national
safety, 45, 46; premature movement
for peace, 46-48; carried on with a
heavy heart in the North, 51; satis-
faction at successful completion of,
52; characteristics of the era which
followed, 52, 53.
Civilization, on the control of modern,
431, 432.
Clarke, Henry Steele, 65.
Clarke, James Freeman, 138.
Classical college, the accomplishment
of the, 37, 38.
Coit, Charlie, 22.
Collective bargaining, 15.
College Hall, Dartmouth, 332.
College presidency, 362-64, 392, 403;
emeritus, 420.
Colleges, before the Civil War, 30; uni-
formity among, 31; curriculum of,
32, 33; competition in scholarship
fostered by curriculum of, 33; pre-
dominance of personal element in
teaching in, 33; numerical equality
in, 34; educational aristocracy among
graduates of, 34; the freedom of, 3();
routine and the elective system, 36,
37; the classical training of, 37, 38;
the earlier and the modern, distinc-
tion between, 38; significance of the
present tendencies in, 39 n.\ "college
life," 39; comradeship in, 39, 40;
corporate consciousness of, 249-71;
the institutional character of, 249,
250; have spiritual value, 250; mean-
ing of the phrase "corporate con-
sciousness" as applied to, 250, 251;
from address of Woodrow Wilson on,
252; criticism of educational spirit
of, 253, 257-66; humanizing and in-
dividualizing in, 253-55; corporate
spirit a stimulus to scholarship in,
255-57; governing bodies, 260-62;
faculty responsibility, 261, 262; non-
sectarianism of, 262, 263; endow-
ments of, 263, 264; danger of cap-
italization of, 264; tendency to trans-
form governing boards of, into finan-
cial boards, 264, 265; educational
boards of trust in, 265, 266; tempta-
tion to insufficient or inferior use of,
266, 267; relation of, to the past, 267;
prominence of teaching force in, in
nineteenth century, 297; administra-
tion prominent in the modern, 297,
298; the modernizing process in, 297-
300; historic, the proper financial
policy of, 302, 303; change in occu-
pations of graduates of, 353, 354;
humanizing function of liberal edu-
cation of, 359, 360; relation between
professional and executive conception
of administration of, 404, 405.
Collins, Charles, 76.
Columbia University, endowment of,
264.
Comradeship, college, 39, 40.
Concord Reformatory, 169.
Congregational churches, examination
of candidates for pastorates of, 151.
Congregationalism and Presbyterian-
ism, 72.
"Congregationalist," the, 107-10, 210.
Conscription, 425.
Constantinople, 393.
Cook, Joseph, 55, 126.
Cooperation as a factor in evolution, 93.
Corporate consciousness, 249-71;
meaning of the phrase as applied to
colleges, 250, 251.
456
INDEX
Corporations, 15.
Corruption following the Civil War,
U.
Covel, W. J., 157.
Craig, 0. H. P. (Captain Craig), 26.
Creed subscription, 121-23.
Crosby, Dr. Howard, 73.
Crosby, Dr. and Mrs. Josiah, 66 n.
Cummings, Uncle and Aunt Noah, 26.
Curriculum, of colleges before the Civil
War, 31-33; the modern and the old-
time, 38; significance of the present
changes in, 39 ?;.
Cushwa, Charlotte Cheever, 415 n.
Cushwa, Professor Frank William,
415 n.
Cushwa, Mrs. F. W. (Elizabeth Wash-
burn Tucker), 230, 415 n.
Cushwa, William Tucker, 415 n.
Dale, Dr., 81.
Dartmouth, Lord, 274, 276.
Dartmouth, Lord, the present, 276-78,
289 n.
Dartmouth College, Indian School pre-
cursor of, 23, 272; its history to be
capitalized, 269; college sentiment
to be fostered, 269, 270; question of
facilities, 270, 271; the traditions of,
271-96; a religious venture into an
untried field of education, 272; re-
founding of, 272, 273; the romance
of, 275, 276; foundation of, 275, 276;
and the present Lord Dartmouth,
276-78; Tucker elected to Presidency
of, 222; considerations for and against
acceptance of Presidency, 222-25,
237; letter of declination, 225-28;
the "Alumni Movement," 234-36;
Tucker decides to accept Presidency
of, 238; the proper institutional de-
velopment of, 268, 269; the Wheelock
Succession, 280-83; occasion of re-
founding of, 283-85; charges and
counter-charges, 285, 286; President
deposed, 287; act of Legislature rela-
tive to, 287; suit and adverse de-
cision, 287, 288; character of its
graduates, 296, 297; the modernizing
process at, 300; management of, 300,
301; contraction of, 301, 302; finan-
cial policy of , 302, 303; funds of, 303-
08; independent heating and lighting
system of, 306; the plant of, 307-09
the physical expansion of, 309-12
architectural development of, 312
superintendence of construction at, '
312, 313; educational expansion of,
313-15; changes in professional
habits at, 315, 316; committee sys-
tem introduced into the Faculty,
316; cooperation of Faculty in re-
con.struction of, 316, 317; distribu-
tion of, 317, 318; benefactions of
Edward Tuck to, 319-21; cooper-
ation of alumni, 321, 322; normal
capacity of, 323; immediate effect of
modernizing process on internal life
of, 323, 324; cooperation of students
used in reconstruction, 324-29; the
elective svstem in, 324, 336-39;
"Dartmouth night," 325, 326;
"horning" and college sentiment,
326-29; introduction of the bath,
330; prejudice against the modern
dormitory at, 330, 331 ; the dormitory
system at, 331, 332; athletics at, 335,
336; and the University idea, 349-
53; the Thayer School, 351, 358,
359; Amos Tuck School of Adminis-
tration and Finance, 354-58; lecture-
ships established by Henry L. Moore,
361, 362; and the State of New
Hampshire, 373-77; Tucker's letter
of resignation from Presidency of,
397, 398; during the time of contin-
ued service of President Tucker, 402;
need of academic productivity in,
403; scholarships and fellowships at,
403; incident touching relation of
professional and executive concep-
tion of administration of, 404, 405;
question of pension system at, 405,
406; Sabbatical year at, 406; elec-
tion of Dr. Nichols to Presidency of,
408; speech of President Tucker at
Alumni Dinner of, 409-13.
Dartmouth Hall, 312, 353.
"Dartmouth Night," 325, 326.
Darwin, Charles, publication of his
"Origin of Species," 2; publication
of his "The Descent of Man," 3;
casual manner of introduction of the
"Origin of Species," 3; influence of
the "Origin of Species," 3.
Degrees, academic, 363.
Democracy, 15, 17, 426; conventions of ,
329.
Denison, John H., 55.
Department store, the, 15.
Dexter, Henry M., 65; letter of, to the
"Transcript," 195, 196; argument of,
at the Andover Trial, 199; death, 209,
210.
INDEX
457
Dexter, Miss, 401.
Dickens, Charles, 81.
Dickinson, Dr. Charles A., 155, 169.
Dike, Samuel W., 54.
Discipline, 1.
Disraeli, Benjamin, 5.
"Divinity of Christ, The," 143.
Dix, Dr. Morgan, 73.
Dixon, Caroline Moorhouse, 415.
Dixon, Professor Frank Haigh, 317,
415 rt.
Dixon, Mrs. F. H. (Alice Lester
Tucker), 230, 415 n.
Dixon, Roger Coit, 415 n.
Dixon, William Tucker, 415 n.
Dodge, William E., 74.
Dodge, William E., Jr., 72, 74.
Dogmas, 219.
Dormitories at Dartmouth, 308, 330-
32.
Dow, Professor L. H., 317.
Dunning, Dr., 210.
Duryea, Dr., 72, 116.
Dwight. Judge Theodore W., 197, 199.
Eastman, Professor John Robie, 301.
Economic crusades, originate in the
West, 13.
Economic progress, 423.
Education, effect of scientific revolu-
tion of nineteenth century on, 6, 7;
liberal, humanizing function of, 359,
360.
Elective system, the, 36, 37, 324, 336-
39.
Eliot, Charles, 309.
Emeritus, the term, 420.
Emerson, Professor, 315.
Emery, Professor F. B., 317.
Endowments of colleges and univer-
sities, 263, 264.
England, study of German language in,
438.
English language, study of, 437, 438.
Equality and liberty, 423.
Eustis, Rev. Dr. William T., his part
in the Andover Trial, 105, 186, 193,
203-10.
Evil and good, 93.
Evolution, cooperation as a factor in,
93.
Faculty responsibility, 261, 262.
Fairfield, Arthur P., 313.
Farrar, Canon, 81.
Fayerweather, Daniel B., 305.
Fayerweather Fund, the, 305.
Fenn, William H., 66.
Field, Chief Justice, 208.
Field, Cyrus W., 78, 79.
Fiske, Daniel T., 104.
Fitchburg, Mass., sermon delivered by
Tucker at, 126-28.
Foster, Professor 11. D., 208, 317.
France, study of German language in,
438.
Franklin Street Church, Manchester,
N.IL, Tucker's pastorate of, 64-71;
Semi-Centennial, 60 7i., 68; social
expansion of, 69, 70; the building,
70.
Fraternities, college, 332.
French, Judge Asa, 197, 199.
Gaston, Ex-Governor, 197.
Generation, Tucker's, character of, 1;
fortune of, 1-18; purpose of, 2, 449;
moral heritage of, 7; the incoming,
449-51.
German language, the study of, 434-38.
Germany, the mind of, 434.
Gilman, Gov. John Taylor, 376.
Gladden, Washington, 99, 370.
Gladstone, W. E., 178, 179.
Glezen, Mr., 167.
God, change in conception of, 92.
Good and evil, 93.
Gordon, Dr., 370; on the modern or-
thodox view of Christ, 131, 133.
Gospel of Wealth, 178-80.
Graduate school, a contribution of the
scientific method, 7.
Grant, U. S., a man of peace, 51.
Gray, Professor, 207.
Greeley, Horace, his letter in the "New
York Tribune," 8; urgent for im-
mediate peace, 46.
Greene, Dr., 156.
Gregory, James C, 183.
Greynook, Nantucket, 401, 402.
Grimm, Professor H., 233.
Griswold, Conn., birthplace of Tucker,
20.
Grouard, Dr., 401.
Gulliver, John P., 124.
Hall, Dr. John, 73.
Hanover, N.H., 416.
Hanover Street Church, Manchester,
N.H., 65.
Hardy, Alpheus, 104, 153.
Hardy, Alpheus H., 104.
Hardv, Professor Arthur Sherburne,
330, 415.
458
INDEX
Harris, Dr., United States Commis-
sioner of Education, 30, 296.
Harris, Professor George, appointed to
chair at Andover, 120, 121; personal
sketch of, 147; cooperates in prepa-
ration of hymn book, 1G6, 167; form
in which he accepted the Andover
Creed, 202; testimony of, at the
Andover Trial, 202.
Harvard University, endowment of,
263; Tucker as preacher at, 367, 368.
Haynes, Tilly, 198.
High schools, public, in 1860, 30, 31.
Hilton, H. H., 322, 372.
Hincks, Dr. Edward Y., 124; personal
sketch of, 148, 149.
Historical criticism of the Bible, 94-96.
History as a study, 337.
Hitchcock, Mrs. Hiram, 311.
Hitchcock, Roswell D., 74. 76, 80, 81.
Hoar, Judge Rockwood, 196, 197, 199,
216.
Hoar, Senator, quoted on the Harvard
curriculum, 31.
Holmes, Justice, 208.
Home, education of, in a New England
village, 28-30; the Puritan, 30.
Homiletics, scheme of lectures in, 170.
Hopkins, President of Dartmouth, 321,
363, 402; quoted on founding of lec-
tureships at Dartmouth, 360-62; his
presidency, 421.
Hopkins, Ernest M., 319.
Hopkins, President Mark, 153.
Hopkinson, Judge, 289.
"Horning," 326-29.
Hough, Charles M., letter to Tucker,
430.
Houghton, Mr. (Houghton, MiflBin &
Co.), 138.
Howells, Mr., 396.
Hunter, E. H., 313.
Huxley, T. H., 368, 369.
Hyde, William De Witt, 318; letter to
Tucker on Newman Smyth, 112 n.;
and the Maine Band, 183.
"Hymns of the Faith," 167, 168.
Individualism, 14, 16, 17, 97, 98.
Industrialism, 14, 15, 437; the theory
of, 394.
Initiative, intellectual, 1.
Institutionalism in colleges, 260-66.
Intellectualism in colleges, 259.
James, D. Willis, 74.
Jewett, Rev. William R., 22; Tucker
taken into the household of, 24; his
character, 29; death, 229.
Jewett, Mrs., death, 229.
Jewett City, 21.
Johns Hopkins, inaugurated epoch of
graduate instruction, 7; endowment
of, 263.
Johnston, Governor, 380.
Johnston, John Taylor, 74.
Jowett, Dr., 340. 345.
Kearsarge, U.S.S., and U.S.S. Alabama,
presentation to, of Memorial Tab-
^ lets by the State, 378-84.
Kellogg, Professor Vernon, quoted, 93.
Keyes, Professor, 313.
Kimball, Benjamin A., 301.
King's Chapel, Boston, 134.
Kingsford, Dr., 309.
Knowlton, Justice, 208.
Labor and capital, changes in, after the
Civil War, 14, 15.
Lacondaire, quoted, 135.
Lake, Dr. Kirsopp, 250, 251, 257.
Land and Water Power Company,
Manchester, N.H., 64.
Lane, George W., 74, 75, 86.
Lanphear, Dr., 211.
Lathrop, Justice, 208.
Law School at Dartmouth, 351, 352.
"Laying of the Corner Stone of the
New Dartmouth Hall," 289 n.
League of Nations, Tucker's attitude
toward, 438-42.
Learned, Bela, 22.
Leathes, Stanley, quoted, 16.
Leavens, Kirk, 22.
Lecky, W. E. H., quoted, 273, 274.
Lecture platform, the, 9, 10.
Lectureship on Pastoral Theology at
Andover, 161, 169-72.
Legge, Edward, 277.
Legge, W'illlam Heneage, 277.
Legge, William Walter, 277.
Leisure class, 443, 444.
Leland Stanford University, 263.
Liberty and equality, 423.
Libraries, college, 32.
Lincoln, President, his reply to Horace
Greeley's letter, 8; as an orator, 10;
the return to, in the present war, 10,
11; his second inaugural quoted, 11;
his analysis of democratic govern-
ment, 15, 16; his decisive statement
of the terms of peace, 46; feeling to-
ward, 47; sees little prospect of his
INDEX
459
reelection, 47; his view of the Civil
War, 51.
Lord, Professor John K., 318, 350, 402.
Lowell, President, 341.
Lowell Institute lectures, 232, 364-C6.
Lyceums, 10.
Lyman, Arthur T., 133, 134.
Macaulay, T. B., 364.
Madison Square, N.Y., 75.
Madison Square Church, the. Tucker
called to, 71; organization and
growth of, 74, 75; consolidated with
other churches, 85, 86.
Maine Band, the, 183, 184.
Manchester, N.H., character of, 64, 65;
the churches of. 65, 66; the pastorate
of Tucker at, 66-71.
Manchester Locomotive Works, the,
65.
Manning, Cardinal, 179.
Mansfield College, England, 245.
Marsh, George P., 294.
Marsh, .Joseph, 375.
Marsh, President of the University of
Vermont, 138.
Marshall, Jonathan, 105, 203, 209.
Mason, Jeremiah, 25, 286, 288.
McKenzie, Rev. Dr. Alexander, 104.
McKenzie, A. A., 313.
Mead, Professor, 121, 122.
Medical school at Dartmouth, 352.
Merrill, James G., 54.
Merriman, Dr. William E., 155.
Merwin, Sam, 22.
Militarism, 427.
Miller, Judge, 45.
Ministry, the, colleges as training school
for, 31; the personal element in, 54;
wider interpretation of the call to,
54, 55; the question of the pastoral
and the educational branches of
service in, 87.
Missions, "cut the nerve of missions,"
109, 144, 153; city, 130; motive for,
144, 220; the American Board of
Missions, 144, 153-58.
" Modernism," attitude of the churches
toward, 90.
Moore, Professor George Foot, 124,
137, 148.
Moore, Henrv L., lectureships estab-
lished by, 361, 362.
Morley, John, quoted on the tenden-
cies of modern education, 37.
Morley, John H., 55.
Morton, Justice, 208.
Munger, Theodore T., 99.
Music in church services, 166-09.
Nantucket, 400, 401.
"Nation," the, on Dr. Tucker's book,
"The New Reservation of Time,"
443, 444.
Nationality, spirit of, and the slavery
issue, 8-12.
"New departure," 125.
New England Breeders' Club, 384-88.
New Hampshire and Dartmouth, con-
nection of, 373-77.
New Hampshire College of Agriculture
and the Mechanic Arts, 351.
"New Puritanism, The," 370.
"New Republic," on Dr. Tucker's
book, "The New Reservation of
Time," 445, 446.
"New Reservation of Time, The," the
title, 443-48.
New York and Boston, the religious
atmosphere of , in 1875, compared, 72.
New York pastorate, limitations in,
82-86.
Nichols, President Ernest Fox, in-
auguration of, 280, 282; Professor in
Physics, 317; and "Dartmouth
Night," 326; accepts presidency of
Dartmouth, 408; reception to, 409;
support given to, 420; resignation,
421.
Niles, Edward C, 386.
Noble, Dr., 158 n.
Northern Academy, the, 350.
Norwich, Conn., early home of Tucker,
20, 21; description of, 22, 23.
Noyes, William H., the ease of, 154-58.
Occom, Samson, 23, 274, 275.
Olcott, Colonel, 375.
Ordronaux, Dr. John, 331.
Ormiston, Dr. William, 73.
Pacific Theological Seminary, Tucker
lectm-es at, 369.
Palaeopitus, Dartmouth society, 329.
Palmer, Professor George H., 55, 135,
368.
Park, Professor Edwards A., Professor
of Christian Theology, 55; theology
as treated by, 55, 56; resignation of,
105; witticism of, 166; death, 209,
210.
Parker, Dr., 81.
Parker, Chief Justice Joel, 310, 351.
Parkhurst, Dr., 84.
460
INDEX
Pastoral Theology, lectures on, 161,
169-72.
Patience, 450, 451.
Patten, Professor William, 93, 317, 338.
Payne, Judge, 375.
Peabody, Professor Francis G., quoted,
347-49; at Dartmouth, 368; his reply
to an article of Mr. Bourne, 447.
Peace, premature movement for, in the
Civil War, 46; moral and selfish, 430,
431; the aim of the incoming gener-
ation, 449; the problems of, 450, 451.
Peaslee, Dr. Edmund R., 86.
Pension funds, 266.
Pension system in colleges, 405, 406.
Personal rights versus national safety,
45, 46.
Phelps, Professor Austin, 56, 57.
Phi Beta Kappa Oration, 232, 233.
Phillips, John, 103.
Phillips, Phcebe, 103.
Phillips, Wendell, 10.
Phillips Academy, 102.
Pilgrim Church, St. Louis, 71.
Pillsbury, Att.-Gen. A. E., 378.
Play and work, 394, 395.
Plymouth, N.H., Tucker removed to,
24, 25; character of, 25; life at, 26-
30.
Plymouth Chiu-ch celebration, 370.
Political effects of the change in the
social order, 15, 16.
Politics, tone of, after the Civil War,
12, 13; Tucker's views on, 389-91.
Pollens, Professor, 317.
Pope, the, his proposal for intervention,
432, 433.
Porter, Judge John K., 76, 77.
Potter, Dr., 73.
Pratt, Mrs., 396.
Preaching, the chair of, at Andover,
162; Tucker's lectures on, delivered
at Yale, 162, 163; by students, 163,
164; lectures on the technique of, 163-
65; has to do with the personality of
the teacher, 164; methods of, 165;
scheme of lectm-es on, 170-72.
Prentiss, George L., 74.
Presbyterianism and Congregational-
ism, 72.
Presidency, college, 362-64, 392, 403;
emeritus, 420.
Pritchett, Dr., 266.
Professional schools, 349-53.
Professions, work and play in, 394, 395.
Professors in colleges before the Civil
War, 33.
Progress, passion for, in Tucker's gen-
eration, 2, 449.
Progressive movement in theology, at-
titude of churches toward, 90; cov-
ered three fields, 91; in the field of
theological inquiry, 92-94; in the
field of historical criticism, 94-96;
its humanistic impulse, 96-99.
"Progressive Orthodoxy," 91, 142.
Progressives, the, 422.
Prohibition crusade, the, 13; attitude
of society toward, 425.
Provincialism in colleges, 257-59.
Public-mindedness, 391.
Public speaking, 414.
Prudential Committee of American
Board of Missions, 152-58.
Puritanism, revival of, in anti-slavery
conflict, 7-12; after the Civil War,
12, 13.
Putnam, Professor, 35.
Quint, Rev. Dr. Alonzo H., 105, 209,
301.
Rainsford, William S., letter to Tucker,
429, 430.
Ranney, W. W., 183.
Raymond, Rossiter W., 370.
Religion, of Boston and New York,
compared, 72; and science, so-called
conflict of, 94; the projection of,
into the conditions of modern life,
97; academic, 262, 263.
Religious controversy in nineteenth
century, 5, 6.
Religious cooperation, conditions not
favorable to, after the Civil War, 63.
Religious effect of the social revolution
of the nineteenth century, 16.
Religious movement of eighteenth
century, 273, 274.
Reparation, the question of, 434.
Republican party, the formation of,
11.
Rich, Charles A., 312.
Richardson, Professor Charles F., 347.
Richardson, Dr. Cyrus, 301.
Richardson, Judge James B., 301.
Ripley, George and Dick, 22.
Robertson, Frederick W., 58-62.
Robinson, ex-Governor, 207.
Robinson, Professor William C, 351.
Rockwood, Mrs. George I., 396.
Rogers, Charlotte, wife of Professor
Tucker, 229.
Rogers, John, 229.
INDEX
461
Rollins, Governor, 380.
Rollins Chapel, 313, -102.
Roosevelt, Theodore, 422.
Ropes, Joseph T., 104.
Rowe, Sam, 26.
Russell, Charles Theodore, 105.
Russell, Thomas H., 104.
Russell, Judge, 197, 199.
Ryder, Professor, 124.
Sabbatical year at Dartmouth, 406.
Salem race-track, 387, 388.
Sanborn, Professor, 35.
San Francisco, 370.
Sayward, Judge, 396.
Schaff, Philip, 74.
Scholarship, the corporate spirit a
stimulus to, 255-57; need of an avo-
cation in, 393.
Schools, addresses of Tucker at, 372.
Science and religion, so-called conflict
of, 94.
Scientific renaissance of nineteenth
centurv, 4-7.
"Second"^ probation," 108, 109, 125,
126, 128, 131.
Sectarianism in colleges, 262, 263.
Sedgwick, EUery, 443, 446.
Seelye, President Julius H., 105, 108,
117, 203, 209.
Self -education, 1.
Sewall, Professor, 168.
Sewall, Oliver D., 183.
Shattuck, George O., 207.
Shedd, William G. T., 74, 138.
Sills, President, 363.
Slavery issue, the, 7-12.
Smith, President, 351.
Smith, Edwin R., 183.
Smith, Prof. Henry B., 74.
Smith, Jeremiah, 288.
Smith, Dr. William T., 395.
Smyth, Professor Egbert C, 124; arti-
cle in the "Review" by, 140, 141;
specifications on which he was con-
demned, 143; personal sketch of, 146;
reply of, to letter of Dr. Eustis, 193;
his argument, at trial, 199, 200; con-
demned by Board of Visitors, 203;
appeals to Supreme Court of Massa-
chusetts, 205; reinstated, 208; com-
plaint against, renewed, 211; case
against, dismissed, 212, 213; the re-
sult of the trial a personal triumph
for, 214, 215.
Smj-ih, Dr. Ne^vTnan, 55; his reputa-
tion, 106; controversy over, 104-lG;
at the First Church of New Haven,
116, 117; refuses new chair offered
by Trustees of Andover, 118, 119.
Snow, Francis H., 54.
Social Christianity, 16, 97.
Social conscience, 424, 425.
Social Economics at Andover, 172-77.
Social justice, 17.
Social order, the new, 14-17.
Social progress, Tucker's views on,
422-27.
Social settlements, 17, 426.
Socialism, the danger in, 16; commu-
nistic, 17.
Sociological studies, connection of
Andover with, 172-77, 181-84.
South End House. See Andover House.
Spalding, C. W., 303.
Spalding, Dr., 66 n.
Stanley, Dean, 81.
Starbuck. Professor C. C, 137.
State, conception of, as power, 427-
29.
Stearns, Edward R., 183.
Storrs, Richard S., 73.
Stowe, Professor Calvin E., 57.
Stowe, Harriet B., 57.
Strain, physical and mental, 394.
Streeter, Frank S., 301, 436.
"Struggle for existence," 92, 93.
Sullivan, Attorney-General, 288.
Syndicate, the, 15.
Tappan Wentworth Fund, the, 303.
Taylor, Edward, 104.
Taylor, Dr. John P., 124, 137.
Taylor, Dr. William M., 73.
Teague, Henry N., 313.
Tennvson, Alfred, 254.
Thackeray, W. M., 81.
Thayer, General Sylvanus, 358.
Thayer, Professor, 121-23.
Thayer School, the, 351, 358, 359.
Theological freedom, 217, 218.
Theologj% progressive movement in,
90-99. See Progressive movement.
Tibbetts, Mr., 316.
Tilden, Samuel J., 79, 80.
Torrey, Daniel T., 154.
Toynbee Hall, 181.
Travel, value of, 392, 393.
Trust, the, 15.
Trustees, Board of. See Andover The-
ological Seminary, Andover Trial.
Tuck, Amos, 320.
Tuck, Edward, benefactions of, 319-
21, 355-58.
462
INDEX
Tucker, Robert, early ancestor of
William J. Tucker, 20.
Tucker, William ("Squire Tucker"),
grandfaUior of William J. Tucker,
20; his house at Norwich, 21; char-
acter of, 21, 22.
Tucker, William J., the character of
his generation, 1; the fortune of his
generation, 1-18; the purpose of his
generation, 2; the heritage of his gen-
eration, 7; his approach to his gener-
ation, 19; his ancestry and early
home at Norwich, 20-24; influence
of grandfather and mother on, 24;
taken into the household of Rev.
W. R. Jewett, 24; journey of, to Ply-
mouth, N.H., 24, 25; boyhood life
of, at Plymouth, 27-30; his early
schooling, 27; his early reading, 28,
29; his preparation and examina-
tions for college, 35; moral effect of
the college freedom on, 36 ; and col-
lege routine, 36, 37; precluded from
taking great active part in Civil War,
42; effect of illness upon, 42 n.;
teaching in Columbus, Ohio, 45; his
service in the United States Chris-
tian Commission, 48-50; on the
march from Atlanta to the sea, 50;
changes from the law to the ministry,
53, 54; at Andover Seminary, 55-58;
his debt to Frederick W. Robertson,
58-62; in service of American Home
Missionary Society, 63; in the Frank-
lin Street pastorate, Manchester,
N.H., 64-71; influence of the pastor-
ate on, 66, 67; on the need of clear,
terse, and truthful speech in the
ministry, 67; experiment of, in the
constructive study of the Bible, 67-
69; in the Madison Square pastorate,
71-89; his 6rst sermon in the new
pastorate, 75, 76; finds responsive