Word: faye
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...executive officers of the association are, president, Mrs. Louis Agassiz; secretary, Mr. Arthur Gilman; treasurer, Miss Alice M. Longfellow. Many of Harvard's most noted professors are members of the corporation. The important event of the past year is the purchase for the use of the society of the Fay estate, 10 Garden street, at a cost of $20,000. This sum is to be paid by subscriptions, of which $11,375 has been already paid in. One hundred volumes have been added to the Reference Library during the year. This library now numbers 1146 books, but needs many more...
...Howes, Carpenter, Kennison, C. W. Smith, Fraser, LaMonte, Babbit. Dissertations - Bolster, Lloyd, Gage, Gunnison, Harding. Henshaw, W. T. Clark, Shea, Hutchins, H. C. Miller, Mallory, Lunt, Merriam, Hurley, Fletcher, Fullerton, Waterman, Santayana, E. V. Abbot, G. B. Stevens, Lyman VonKlenze, Underwood, Stone, C. O. Hurd, Moors, Day, Torrey, Nichols, Fay. Disquisitions - Ayars, Scott, Burnett, Somers, Washburn, Holliday, Henry, Houghton, Pratt, S. R. Snow, Loeser, T. T. Baldwin, Boyden, Codman, Beal, J. M. Thompson, C. A. Brown, J. W. Richardson Ferry...
...Fay to E. E. Hamlin...
...well known "Fay House" on Garden street, in old Cambridge, that Dr. Samuel Gilman, of Charleston, S. C., wrote his ode, "Fair Harvard," in 1836. Dr. Gilman graduated at Harvard in 1811. This house is truly dedicated to Fair Harvard, as it is now the abode of the Annex students...
Just at this critical moment, when a change of domicile seems a question of life or death, the residence of the late Judge Fay, well-known in Cambridge, is offered to us at a reasonable price. The house is substantially built of brick, and, while it is large enough to allow for the present growth of the institution, it is so situated that additions could readily be made if desirable. Although a private dwelling, it has that touch of dignity which belongs to an old-fashioned house; and it can easily be adapted to the more general purposes...