| Stephen Beauregard Weeks - 1896 - 108 pages
...Murphey says that when he was a student there I )r. Caldwell had no library attached to his school. "His students were supplied with a few of the Greek...Elements of Mathematics, and Martin's Natural Philosophy. * * * The students had no books on i Foote's Sketches, pp. 284, 287. history or miscellaneous literature.... | |
| Charles Lee Coon - 1908 - 592 pages
...]!sorth Carolina will never be sufficiently appreciated: but the opportunities of instruction in his school were very limited. There was no library attached...Elements of Mathematics, and Martin's Natural Philosophy. Mora! Philosophy was taught from a syllabus of lectures delivered by Dr. Witherspoou in Princeton College.... | |
| Charles Lee Coon - 1908 - 594 pages
...North Carolina will never be sufficiently appreciated : but the opportunities of instruction in his school were very limited. There was no library attached...supplied with a few of the Greek and Latin Classics, Euclid,s Elements of Mathematics, and Martin,s Natural Philosophy. Moral Philosophy was taught from... | |
| Edwin Anderson Alderman, Joel Chandler Harris, Charles W. Kent - 1909 - 506 pages
...North Carolina will never be sufficiently appreciated; but the opportunities of instruction in his school were very limited. There was no library attached...philosophy was taught from a syllabus of lectures delivered by Dr. Witherspoon at Princeton College. The students had no books on history or miscellaneous... | |
| Edwin Anderson Alderman, Joel Chandler Harris, Charles W. Kent - 1909 - 508 pages
...North Carolina will never be sufficiently appreciated ; but the opportunities of instruction in his school were very limited. There was no library attached...the Greek and Latin classics, Euclid's Elements of Mathematies, and Martin's Natural Philosophy. Moral philosophy was taught from a syllabus of lectures... | |
| Martha Helen Haywood, Mrs. Hubert Haywood, Mary Hilliard Hinton - 1911 - 322 pages
...North Carolina will never be sufficiently appreciated, but the opportunities for instruction in his school were very limited. There was no library attached...philosophy was taught from a syllabus of lectures delivered by Dr. Witherspoon, in Princeton College. The students had no books on history or miscellaneous... | |
| Archibald De Bow Murphey - 1914 - 542 pages
...North-Carolina will never be sufficiently appreciated: but the opportunities of instruction in his school were very limited. There was no library attached...Philosophy was taught from a syllabus of lectures delivered by Dr. Witherspoon in Princeton College. The students had no books on history or miscellaneous... | |
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