Taps . ? 4 mi In?. dicaxi eatcaxtou Babib J|tll J^enrp -^V AVID HILL HENRY, Associate Professor of Chemistry, enteredm Clemson College in the raw days of February, 1894, and joined a hand^^^?^ of over one hundred young men, from among whom he and twenty-four others were to graduate in February, 1898—the second class to receivediplomas from Clemson Agricultural College. He hailed from Abbeville, thehome of the judges, the Athens of South Carolina, as he so proudly and sofrequently proclaimed to us all in those good old days when the Clemson worldwas young. He had spent his childhood and boyhood


Taps . ? 4 mi In?. dicaxi eatcaxtou Babib J|tll J^enrp -^V AVID HILL HENRY, Associate Professor of Chemistry, enteredm Clemson College in the raw days of February, 1894, and joined a hand^^^?^ of over one hundred young men, from among whom he and twenty-four others were to graduate in February, 1898—the second class to receivediplomas from Clemson Agricultural College. He hailed from Abbeville, thehome of the judges, the Athens of South Carolina, as he so proudly and sofrequently proclaimed to us all in those good old days when the Clemson worldwas young. He had spent his childhood and boyhood in that town, and he hasnever known any other place to love as home but that and Clemson College, toboth of which his devotion is unmistakable and undoubted. From his first days in College, he took a first place in every kind of work andevery phase of college life; and, best of all, he took a first place in the hearts ofthose who knew him—students and teachers. Everybody always liked LittleDave, in spite of


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Keywords: ., bookauthorclemsonu, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1916