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The first 25 years of the KENNETH SPENCER RESEARCH LIBRARY |
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Kenneth Spencer Research Library | University of Kansas Libraries
A Pioneer of the University: history from University Archives
THERE HAS LONG BEEN an interest in preserving the memories and
records of the University of Kansas, but it took 103 years to bring them all together
under one roof. In 1891 the Memorabilia Club began "gathering together and arranging
. . . material of all kinds illustrating the history of the University." Over a
period of time responsibility for this activity passed to the Libraries, which had neither
the space nor the staff to systematically collect and preserve all the materials of
importance. It was not until Helen Spencer's gift of the Kenneth Spencer Research Library
that it was possible to contemplate a collection of the size and scope that now exists in
University Archives. The formative years of great nations, successful organizations and esteemed associations are filled with men and women of vision and inventiveness. These pioneers set forth principles and ideals, laying the foundation that will shape growth for years to come. The first 25 years of the University of Kansas saw a number of great teachers and administrators who are memorialized in the names of buildings on the campus today: Francis H. Snow, entomologist and chancellor, Lewis Lindsay Dyche, naturalist and explorer, Frank Marvin, civil engineer and gifted amateur musician, William Herbert Carruth, teacher and poet, and Olin Templin, philosopher. In the midst of this group was a man whose life gathered threads from a multitude of directions and wove them into a fabric that stands for all that KU offers: education for its students, the historical presence of the campus within the community, service to the people of Kansas, and expansion of the world of knowledge for all. His name was E.H.S. Bailey. Bailey's career at the University of Kansas spanned more
than 50 years. With a bachelor's degree from Yale and a Ph.D. from Illinois Wesleyan, he
was appointed to the chair of chemistry, mineralogy and metallurgy by the Kansas Board of
Regents in 1883 at a salary of $1,600. When Bailey arrived at KU there were 582 students
and 19 teachers, with 35 students enrolled in the chemistry department, where he became
the sole faculty member. For several years he ran a one-man show, teaching general
chemistry, qualitative chemistry, organic chemistry, assaying, mineralogy, metallurgy,
blowpipe analysis, toxicology, physiological chemistry and materia medica. In 1886 eight
students enrolled in Bailey's domestic and sanitary chemistry class, making KU one of the
first schools in the nation to offer studies in practical chemistry. From these humble
beginnings the resourceful professor sowed many of the seeds that sparked KU's explosive
leap from a quaint liberal arts school with a religious flair to a hotbed of scientific
and intellectual curiosity. His imprint can be seen in the origins of the departments of
home economics, geology, and chemical engineering, the school of pharmacy and the Kansas
Geological Survey. Bailey's Bailey was a versatile man, as comfortable in the kitchens of domestic scientists as he was roaming about the Kansas countryside, and with a clear vision of how the land had been shaped from prehistoric ocean, swamp and savanna. When in 1889 the Kansas Legislature authorized KU to undertake "any geological survey or scientific work which may . . . benefit the science of the state", Bailey was an obvious leader for the resulting Kansas Geological Survey, in partnership with Erasmus Haworth (physical geology and mineralogy) and Samuel Williston (paleontology). Between 1898 and 1908 this trio of scientists wrote The University Geological Survey of Kansas. This nine-volume work included their explorations on Kansas' paleontology sites, coal, gypsum, mineral waters, oil, gas, lead and zinc. Bailey's primary contribution to this survey analyzed the bath-houses and hotels built around the springs, and incorporated a number of his own photographs.. As early as 1910 he experimented with color photography. Eventually his avocation insinuated itself into his work place; a photography laboratory was added to the chemistry department for the making of lantern slides, duplication of printed materials and other applications. Bailey's laboratory ultimately developed into the Office of University Relations photography bureau. In addition to Bailey's service as the state of Kansas'
chief chemist to the Geological Survey, he was the head chemist for the state's board of
health. Bailey was also responsible for a less serious but nonetheless abiding contribution to his University, and one of its oldest traditions. He composed the Rock Chalk Yell at the behest of the Science Club in May of 1889. Bailey had a knack for spawning talented scientists and teachers. His proteges were known as "Bailey's boys". Edward C. Franklin was one of the first to study under Bailey, receiving degrees in 1888 and 1890. Franklin taught at KU with Bailey for 17 years, moving to Stanford University in 1903. Edwin E. Slosson, who earned degrees in 1890 and 1892, taught in the chemistry department, and later founded the Science Service Center in Washington, D.C., which distributed popular scientific information. Others included E.C. McClung, who discovered the significance of sex chromosomes, Robert Duncan, who became the first head of the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research, George E. Coghill, a pioneer in neurology, Hamilton Cady, who isolated helium, W.C. Hoad, who worked on methods of water purification, M.A. Barber, a noted expert in preventive medicine, and Elmer V. McCollum, the discoverer of vitamins A and C. There were countless more of "Bailey's boys." In
fact, it is unlikely that there has ever been a professor at KU more loved and admired.
One former student remembered him as "a prince of a fellow with an indefatigable work
ethic". Bailey served as head of the Department of Chemistry from 1883 to 1918, then as a part-time professor from 1921 to 1933. At the time of his death in 1933, there were 3,672 students and hundreds of faculty at KU. The Department of Chemistry numbered 547 students and 21 faculty. Around the time of the 25th anniversary of KU in 1891, Bailey and some of his colleagues decided that some of their intellectual and scientific proceedings, as well as a few of their more light-hearted moments, might be of interest to readers and researchers of a historical bent in years to come. Thus Bailey, Vernon Kellogg (entomology), Wilson Sterling (Greek), William Carruth and Raphael O'Leary (English) teamed up and began gathering "college papers, pamphlets, speeches, newspapers, catalogues, programs of university affairs, photographs and any and all things of similar character . . ." They called this project the Memorabilia Club, and it was the genesis of the University Archives. The Memorabilia Club was short-lived, but other efforts to gather material continued in fits and starts for the next 77 years. Momentum picked up when Robert Taft, another chemistry professor and photography buff, wrote Across the Years on Mount Oread for the University's 75th anniversary in 1941. More interest was aroused in the 1960s when Clifford Griffin, professor of history, began gathering material for his remarkable book, The University of Kansas: A History. Yet it was not until Helen Spencer established the Kenneth Spencer Research Library in 1968 that the seeds which Bailey and his associates sowed in 1891 came to full bloom under the careful guidance of John Nugent. For 25 years Nugent worked as KU's archivist, building one of the nation's finest university archives, very much in the spirit of E.H.S. Bailey. Field trips to areas rich in fossils were a source of pleasure mixed with
research for many of the scientists connected with the University of Kansas. As Dr. Bailey
put it: Paleontology, 1899 In Wyoming in the "Freeze-outs," lay a Saurian, very fine; From Chicago, from Milwaukee, where the beer is very fine, When the Saurians heard the Kansans, with their spades, and picks so fine Then the pelvis caught the femur, said "That coracoid is mine," Oh those bone men, how they labored, but they had a glorious time
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