Class Notes

Class of 1897

APRIL, 1927 Morton C. Tuttle
Class Notes
Class of 1897
APRIL, 1927 Morton C. Tuttle

Albert Morrill has been offered the professorship of law at the Law College of the University of Virginia. At the time of writing he has not decided as to whether or not he will accept.

A. W. Brown retains his legal residence in Leominster, Mass., where his mother is living. In a letter to B. A. Rowe, Brown says: "It will be thirty years in September since I began teaching. I have taught continuously, but for parts of two years spent abroad. To use movie parlance, I have had location in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Cincinnati, Chicago, Racine, Florida, and Holyoke, Mass. I also tutored the son of William du Pont, in Virginia, for three years. I traveled once with the son of Townsend Wright and we didn't stay anywhere very long. But the above mentioned places are fixed in my mind as old stamping grounds.' A few years ago I sought school work, too, and went to Florida. My experience in Florida previously had been confined to Palm Beach, where I was a tutor one season. This school was not on Palm Beach, nor any other beach, but in the midst of a rattlesnake-infested malaria-infested swamp near the northern part of I had been there just eight weeks when the thing burned down. As I escaped down the fire escape I could not help congratulating myself. Florida may attract the whole world and his brother, but it will never have the power to attract me again."

Secretary, Park Square Building, Boston