  |
Transitions: The
Sower in the Sixties, top, and today, below, newly restored
Photos: Duke University Archives |
The bronze statue of The Sower recently returned
to its East Campus home, newly restored after receiving some much-needed
cleaning and repair. Over the years, this campus symbol has been
mistaken for Johnny Appleseed or, in one instance, Mr. Duke planting
his money. The late-nineteenth-century German-made statue depicts
a seventeenth-century peasant sowing in the fields. James B. Duke
donated the statue in November 1914, after former Trinity College
President John Kilgo admired it during a visit to Duke's estate in
New Jersey. Duke, who had discovered The Sower while on a grand tour
of Europe, purchased it in Leipsic.
Kilgo, then a bishop in the United Methodist Church, was drawn to
the statue in part because of an inspiring baccalaureate sermon given
at Trinity College two years earlier based on the parable of the
sower from the Gospel of Matthew. Kilgo also admired the statue's "strength
and nobleness of face and the strong arm with which the laborer faced
his daily toil." He believed the statue would be a powerful
model for students as they completed four years of study and prepared
to face new challenges.
On campus, the statue assumed a role quite different from what Kilgo
had had in mind. Trinity women were allowed to have only three dates
a week, but they could walk through designated sections of campus
with gentlemen and not have it count as a date. The Sower became
a popular destination for these couples and, eventually, began serving
the role of "Cupid." Couples started placing pennies in
the statue's hand; if the coins were gone the next time the couple
returned, the gentleman could claim a kiss.
www.lib.duke.edu/archives
--Tim Pyatt '81, University Archivist
|