Contents : 1."Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth" 2 "An Institution of Learning of High Grade" 3 Annville 4 Organization 5 Transition from Academy to College 6 The College Charter 7 The Debate over Higher Education 8. President Thomas Rhys Vickroy 9 The First Curriculum 10 "To Collegiate Proportions" 11 President Lucian H. Hammond 12 President DeLong Brings Harmony 13 President Edmund S. Lorenz 14 President Lorenz Charts a Course 15 President Cyrus Jeffries Kephart 16 President E. Benjamin Bierman 17 Student Life in the Nineties 18 The Story of John Lehman 19 President Hervin Ulysses Roop 20 The Fire 21 Aftermath 22 President Abram Paul Funkowser 23 President Keister Balances the Budget 24 0 Berwick and the Death League 25 The Disturbance of the Eighth 26 President Gossard and the New Era 27 "Ask Gladys 28 Accreditation 29 The Benders 30 Momentum 31 Tribute to Paul Wagner 33 President Clyde A. Lynch 34 The Annual Murder 35 President Miller Fulfills a Prophesy
This is a social and political history of Pennsylvania written in 1962 by Dr. Paul A. W. Wallace historian and folklorist.From the book's cover: "In this authoritative and delightful book, a distinguished historian of the Keystone State tells the story of Pennsylvania from it's geological birth to the present. Here are the Susquehannock, Delaware and other indian Nations who found it such a pleasant place in which to live, and the Welsh, Irish, Scotch, German, Swedish and Finnish immigrants who, under the remarkable William Penn's Holy Experiment, flourished alongside their new neighbors.Here also are accounts of Pennsylvania's growth, its troubles and achievements: the French and Indian war; its role in the American Revolution and the formulation of a new government; mining and lumbering; canals and railroads; utopias and outlaws; iron and steel; art and architecture. And here are portraits of its most interesting citizens, from the great Penn himself to Benjamin Franklin, Andrew Carnegie, Milton Hershey, and many others."
"This book describes 131 paths with maps, history, significant points along the way, and information on approximating the course of the trails by automobile. Five appendices trace other historically significant routes such as the Forbes Road and George Washington's1753 path to Fort LeBoeuf." [from the publisher]