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 P. D. Pollock


Pinckney Daniel Pollock 1896-1903

Pinckney Daniel Pollock
  • Educator (1860-1905); LL.B., A.M., LL.D. degrees; married to Ena Selman (1895)
  • Was the first layman to hold the office of university president
  • Raised $115,000 for the endowment fund, doubled the number of faculty and students, and constructed three brick buildings, now known as Groover, Ware, and Wiggs halls
  • Placed emphasis on oratory, providing Mercer with victories and no defeats for a number of years
  • Abolished the sub-freshman preparatory school, making Mercer fully a college
  • Employed several young faculty members who later made national reputations at major universities, including William Heard Kilpatrick in education and Edmund Cody Burnett in history
  • Oversaw publication of the Mercerian, the Kinetoscope, and a student handbook

"Mercer Rally Song," Mercer-Athens Champion Debate, May 28, 1898:

"When you see our speakers come, fearless, on the floor,
Just hold your breath a little—some'ns goin' to happen 'shore,'
And when they both begin to 'argify' and speak,
See proud Athens' knees a growin' 'kinder' weak."

Mercerian, June 1898:

"Resolved, 'That the breaking up of the Solid South would be conducive of the best interests of the South.' The question was well argued by both sides, but Messrs. [John Roach] Straton and [J. C.] Flannigan were too strong for Messrs. Walker and Weddington [of the University of Georgia], and the decision was rendered in favor of Mercer. The students of Mercer by their gentlemanly manners made a most favorable impression upon the people of Atlanta."

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