Welcome

I'm pleased to welcome you to my blog on Mercer University, started in 1833 in a log cabin at Penfield and now a full-fledged university on campuses in Macon, Atlanta, and Savannah.. During its first 37 years Mercer was essentially owned and operated by Georgia Baptist Association.

William T. Johnson

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Mercer University and its President G. A. Nunnally


Gustavus Alonzo Nunnally 1889-1893

Gustavus Alonzo Nunnally
  • Clergyman, educator (1841-1917); A.B., D.D. degrees; married to Mary Catherine Briscoe (1859) and Alla Holmes Cheney (early 1900s)
  • Reminded Georgians that there was a college in the town of Macon by traveling and speaking extensively in churches, court houses, and the state legislature
  • Raised funds to erect new buildings, doubling the capacity of the university
  • Supervised the construction and drew the plans for a chapel building, which contained six large recitation-rooms, six offices, a chapel with 800 sittings, and a library for 20,000 books
  • Increased the endowment, partnering with John D. Rockefeller and Georgia Baptists to raise $50,000
  • Oversaw the establishment of student organizations, including the athletic and glee clubs, and the Mephistophelean, a student newspaper

Macon Telegraph article, December 6, 1891:

"Mercer's young athletic club is rapidly progressing. A football team has been chosen to represent the college and with the permission of the faculty they hope to meet the team of the university in Athens sometime during the month of January [1892]."

Robert E. Wilder's Gridiron Glory Days: Football at Mercer 1892-1942:

"Regular practice sessions were held and plans were made to outfit the team. The uniforms consisted of white canvas jackets, white cannon knee pants, black stockings, and caps of orange and black, Mercer's school colors."
"Since the game was to be played in Athens, most of the students, faculty, and many local citizens took the train for Athens. The fans who attended this game would actually witness the first college football game in Georgia, and one of the first in the deep South."
"The Mercer men drew praises for their hard fought battle, but they were no match for the 'varsities' as the game ended 50-0."

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