As difficult as it may be to believe, Averett faculty, staff, and yes, even Presidents, were once - long, long ago - college students themselves. Take, for example, the four picture on the left side of this post, each of which depicts a future President of Averett when they were youthful and energetic 20-somethings.
As the Averett archives was recently gifted a small collection of materials related to the college education of former president James P. Craft, for the next month the archives will put on display an array of items from the college lives of some of our former presidents.
James P. Craft (President from 1921-1927):
When I teach classes, it is generally true that the most common advice I have to give to my students is "you should be taking more notes." Note-taking is an important activity, as the brain has to process information in order for that information to travel from the eyeballs to the hands.
I obviously would not have had to give that advice to a young Jim Craft. While studying at Harvard from 1907-1909, he took so many notes in his philosophy courses that the result was a stack of paper more than four inches thick! Again, these are lecture notes; this is just what good ol' Jim decided to write down from what his professors were saying. He ultimately chose to have them professionally bound into a ponderous and immense hardcover tome so that he could keep them forever, show them to his friends, and I imagine, in the event of an unforeseen crisis, use them as a rudimentary sledge-hammer.
Well done, Jim. Well done.
J.W. Cammack (President from 1927-1936):
If there's anything that I typically don't imagine a college President doing, it's playing varsity athletics. Such a thing simply never occurs to me.
And even for those who did have a budding athletic career tragically cut short by a highly paid college presidency, one would expect any mementoes of such an athletic experience to wind up in the archives of the school at which they occurred...not at a random school for which that former athlete later worked.
Nonetheless, by a strange coincidence, the Averett archives holds a flier for an 1899 college football game between the Richmond College (now the University of Richmond) Spiders and the Hampden-Sydney Tigers. In this game, future Averett President J.W. Cammack started for Richmond at Center. Cammack's Spiders got beaten handily by Hampden-Sydney (17 to 5). So it goes. Every football contest has to have a loser.
J.W. Cammack. What a loser!
Mary Fugate (Acting President for Spring/Summer 1966):
In the era of the computer and word-processing software, the ability to adjust the wording, margins, and any other little thing in a document, at any moment, has become so simple that most of us can't even imagine writing happening any other way. It is thus very jarring to look at Mary Fugate's master's thesis - "The Attitude of the American People Toward the Theatre, 1783-1800" (Columbia University, 1927) - and realize that she not only had to live without a word processor, she didn't even use a typewriter! The full 55-page manuscript was written entirely by hand.
And yes, she even used properly formatted footnotes.
As if the prospect of that revision process wasn't terrifying enough, imagine being required to write the whole thing out two or three times! The copy that we have in the archive of her family papers is not the copy that she submitted to the school itself. She wrote it out at least twice!
I humbly suggest that you honor Ms. Fugate's memory by spending a weekend hand-copying the longest paper you ever wrote multiple times. Come to Blount Library and tell me how it goes. I want to be the first one to sign the wrist braces you'll wind up wearing for the rest of the week.

Some additional group photos and long-shots for your enjoyment:


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