. Universities and their sons; history, influence and characteristics of American universities, with biographical sketches and portraits of alumni and recipients of honorary degrees. ation in 1896. He is anactive inember of the Montgomery County His-torical Society, and of the Pennsylvania ForestryAssociation, being especially interested in promot-ing the usefulness of the latter. Politically, he isa Republican with independent proclivities. OnOctober 13. TS6i,he married Emma, daughter ofJacob S. , of Plumstead, Pennsylvania, andhas one daughter: Minerva Weinberger. UNIVERSITIES AND THE


. Universities and their sons; history, influence and characteristics of American universities, with biographical sketches and portraits of alumni and recipients of honorary degrees. ation in 1896. He is anactive inember of the Montgomery County His-torical Society, and of the Pennsylvania ForestryAssociation, being especially interested in promot-ing the usefulness of the latter. Politically, he isa Republican with independent proclivities. OnOctober 13. TS6i,he married Emma, daughter ofJacob S. , of Plumstead, Pennsylvania, andhas one daughter: Minerva Weinberger. UNIVERSITIES AND THEIR SONS 469 DUE, Malvern Nicholas Princeton 1885 — Columbia in Wetumpka, Ala., 1862 ; received his prelimi-nary education at a Preparatory School in Wetumpkaand at Howard Coll., Marion, Ala.; graduated Prince-ton 1885; Coll. Phys. and Surg., Columbia, 1888;served in Jersey City Hosp., 1888-89; practised medi-cine in Birmingham, Ala., since 1889. DUE, , Physi-cian, was born in Wetumpka, Alabama,October 20, 1862, the son of Andrew Jackson andIsoline (Tulane) Due. His fathers ancestors, theDues, migrated from Scotland to France in the. fifteenth century, and in i 750 came to America andsettled in South Carolina, whence the grandfatherof the subject of this sketch moved to Alabama in1826. His maternal ancestors, the Tulanes, werenatives of Tours, France, who settled in San Do-mingo, West Indies, about 1750, removing to NewJersey in 1785. His grandfather, Louis Tulane,went to Alabama in 1818. Malvern N. Due re-ceived his College preparation at a preparatoryschool in his native town, and spent two years atHoward College in Marion, Alabama. He wasgraduated from Princeton as a Bachelor of Arts inthe Class of 1885, then entered the College of Phy-sicians and Surgeons, of Columbia, where he studiedmedicine, receiving his Doctor of .Medicine degree in 1888, and also the degree of Master of Arts fromPrinceton in the same year. After one year of


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectharvarduniversity