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| Old beginnings: In
1913, a car drives away from Craven Hall, the primary post-graduation
gathering place on campus in the Trinity College era, below;
Above, the graduating class of 1915 passes the old Trinity
College Library en route to Craven Hall |
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Commencement at Duke's predecessor, Trinity
College, was a more intimate affair in the early twentieth century.
Usually held on the first Wednesday in June, graduation ceremonies
began at 10:15 in the morning with the board of trustees, members
of the faculty, alumni, and the graduating classes assembled in front
of the library. They then processed to Craven Memorial Hall, a building
that was removed when the campus we today call East was rebuilt (between
1925 and 1927).
Instead of a single student commencement speaker, senior orators
competed the night before, with the winner receiving the Wiley Gray
Medal. Like graduates of today, the class heard a commencement address
delivered by an individual who had made outstanding contributions.
In 1911, documentary photographer and social reformer Jacob A. Riis
of New York was Trinity's speaker.
The last official act was the lowering of the class flag, at sunset
on commencement day.
-Tim Pyatt '81, University Archivist
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