| Abigail Ann Allen - Baptists - 1894 - 446 pages
...reference to founding a college in Connecticut, and closed by laying each a few volumes on the table, saying, "I give these books for the founding of a college in this colony." These were the fitting germs of Yale College, which has grown in proportions and in power one hundred... | |
| JOHN CLARK - 1894 - 328 pages
...thought it better to be a living governor of New York than a dead colonel of the Connecticut militia. " I give these books for the founding of a college in this colony." Such were the words of ten ministers who, in the year 1700, assembled at the village of Branford, a... | |
| John Marshall Barker - Universities and colleges - 1894 - 276 pages
...forty volumes of books, and, placing them on a table, presented them to the body, saying in substance: "I give these books for the founding of a college in this colony." This was the humble beginning of Yale College. The colony had a population at this time of fifteen... | |
| Universities and colleges - 1918 - 476 pages
...resolved to found it brought a number of volumes to the meeting and laying them on the table said: "I give these books for the founding of a college in this colony." President Clap boasted, sixty-five years after the founding: "XV^have a good library consisting of... | |
| A. U. Faulkner, Spenser O. M. Ovington - Education - 1895 - 480 pages
...В ran ford, each of the trustees bringing an offering of books and laying them on a table said, '' I give these books for the founding of a college in this colony," Yale College may be said to have originated. Fearing THE LATE HON. CARTER H. HARUI3ON, '45. that if... | |
| George Bancroft - Great Britain - 1895 - 652 pages
...fathers, who, in 1700, assembled at Branford, and each one, laying a few volumes on a table, said : ' I give these books for the founding of a college in this colony.' " But the political education of the people is due to the happjr organization of towns, which here,... | |
| David Henry Montgomery - United States - 1897 - 696 pages
...of sound knowledge and sound orthodoxy, met at Branford, near New Haven. Each brought a few books, saying, " I give these books for the founding of a college in this colony." Such was the humble beginning of what is to-day " Yale University." It was the second in order of birth... | |
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