A Moment in Time And Space

Headlines sound eerily familiar:

  • Congressional subpoenas and testimonies
  • Political unrest around the world
  • Presidents and the word impeachment regularly used in the same sentence
  • Protests
  • Russians creating havok

A major difference is that in 1969 there were only three news channels, and they did not broadcast the news 24/7 – complete with “experts” to explain and spin each and every nugget of information. People read newspapers and books and sought out information. They discussed it in person, often on panel discussions containing actual experts. They  certainly did not always agree.

In 2019 there is 24/7 news on an unlimited number of social media channels. Television has mind-numbing discussions of news and issues which are often just shouting matches. Personal discussions are conducted by way of Tweets or comments on a Facebook post from people who really don’t know what they are talking about. They are just repeating something they heard or saw somewhere else without taking the time to research to find out the truth of the matter.  In a world of nearly unlimited access to information, we are starving for wisdom. We still do not always agree, but chances of encountering a thoughtful discussion with participation of a true panel of experts in person is less likely.


Products of our time (and participants in it)

The 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Mission is everythwere at the moment. We are taking some time to look back through time to discover (rediscover) what life was like the year that we took a Giant Leap for Mankind.

That year contained not one big event, but many.

The country was reeling from the Vietnam War.  The Stonewall Riots began the Gay Rights movement. American Indians seized Alcatraz. The Young Lords group (working for Puerto Rican and other Latino rights) took over the 1st Spanish United Methodist Church in Spanish Harlem to bring attention to their mission of empowering young Latinos, and the Black Panthers were actively engaged throughout the country.

And yet……that year also gave us a great many things that we now consider to be standards in our culture, including: Scooby Doo, Cracker Barrel, Wendy’s, The Brady Bunch, Monty Python’s Flying Circus, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Frosty the Snowman, PBS, and Sesame Street. The Beatles played their last concert together, released their last album together, and ZZ Top and Led Zeppilin came on the scene. A lot was going on.

Click here to see a timeline of some of the hightlights (including some from WVWC).



1969 at WVWC

All of these things were certainly part of the lives of students and faculty at Wesleyan. But, while the world was busy going crazy in the 1960s, Wesleyan was busy growing. Seven new buildings were added to campus in that decade, creating what I like to refer to as the Oval Side of Campus. The Benson House (now the Erickson Alumni Center) was purchased to house the new nursing program. Six new buildings rose from the mud: Doney Hall, Benedum Campus Community Center, Holloway Hall, Paul G. Benedum Hall,  Christopher Hall of Science, and Wesley Chapel and Martin Religious Center.

These last two in particular embody the importance of both the sciences and Liberal Arts at WVWC. The idea that both buildings are important enough to put forth time and resources at such a time in history to make them a reality.

The Summer 1969 issue of the Sundial was dedicated to covering the importance of science in our world and in the curriculum here at Wesleyan. Sadly, this issue has slipped through the cracks of our scanning!! (Which just points out exactly why we need to finish all of that work). Here is the cover, and I have transcribed a few excerpts.

Sundial, Summer 1969

On the cover:  Recent scientific progress has brought the age of space into our daily lives. We can no longer talk about the prospect of space travel as if it were a remote possibility. Our earth-born “Man-on-the-Moon” has made us dramatically aware that our shrinking world is part of a shrinking universe. The cover shows an astronomer’s view of the Milky Way. Sagittarius is in the center. The two bright spots in the lower right portion are the Magellanic Clouds. (photograph courtesy of J.M. Wiley & Sons, Inc. Publishers)

Haymond Hall of Science had served well since 1914, but it was no longer equipped for the types of things that needed to be done as the 1960s came to a close.  Many people dreamed of more, as we see in this excerpt:

The brick, block, steel, and machinery, even the inconveniences of noise and mud represented the fulfillment of a dream. This was the dream of students and teachers who had labored in the antiquated confines of Haymond Hall. This was the dream of the Board of Trustees and the administration as they worked to improve Wesleyan’s science education program. This was the dream of countless alumni who contributed to our building fund. This had been the dream of Nicholas Hyma to whom our science program owes so much. This was the dream of Mrs. and Mrs. Frank Christopher who gave generously toward the construction of the building. This was the dream that now had become a reality. Wesleyan gazed in wonder as the Christopher Hall of Science rose from the mud.

The doors opened, and the first classes were taught, in February 1969. Just as things were gearing up for that Apollo 11 Moon Landing.

There was so much joy in this accomplishment that there were three days of celebrations centered around science. The three main events were in keeping with the values of the college. Importance of curriculum and preparing students, creative (and very accurate) thinking about the future of the world, and worship.

  • A Panel Discussion: “The education of scientists, as viewed by representatives of industry, foundations, higher education and government was explored at the panel discussion. The general topic of the panel was “Perspectives In Science Education.” The discussion centered on current trends in science education and the preparation of future scientists.”
  • Convocation Speaker:  Arthur C. Clark spoke. Yes, the scientist and science writer who was nominated that year with Stanley Kubrick for an Academy Award for Screenwriting — 2001: A Space Odyssey spoke in Wesley Chapel. His topic was “The World of 2001,” and featured science and technology of the future. In his verbal tour of life in 2001, he discussed the questions of efficient land control, a dwindling food supply, instant communication, agricultural use of the sea, and artificial production of food products.
  • Worship Service: Conducted by Dr. Webster H. Sill, Jr., a 1939 graduate of Wesleyan and now a professor teaching botany and plant pathology at Kansas State University. His topic is “Facts–Undergird Science, Morals, and Faith.” Dr. Sill is a well-known scientific author and lecturer. He has done considerable research on diseases in food crops in the Philippines and India. Dr. Sill is also the minister of the Sedalia (KS) Community Church. He has been pastor at this church since 1963 and has been either minister or assistant minister in New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Kansas churches. He was Kansas Layman of the Year in 1957. Dr. Sill won his letter in football and baseball at Wesleyan. What a wonderful choice of a speaker! Dr. Sill embodied a very successful alumnus, who had been a student athlete, and who had gone on to be very successful in both the sciences and the church. A scientist with a heart for the Liberal Arts.

It was a Moment in Time and Space.


Looking Back and Forward (Repeat)

Time is a strange thing. On October 28, 1955 the Founders Day speaker was J. Roy Price, Chairman of the Long Range Planning Committee.

In that speech, he looked back at his experience as a student – he also scrutinized the college in 1955 from the perspective of one in the present who was planning for the future. The future he was planning is now sixty-three years in our past.


1923

J. Roy Price (known as Roy) entered  West Virginia Wesleyan as a student in the Academy in 1917 (which would be equivalent to a Jr. in High School today) and graduated in 1919. This was the year that the Academy program phased out and all work became college level.

In 1923 he graduated with his B.S. degree.

As you can see from the caption below his photo, he was definitely a person who appreciated the Liberal Arts approach of the school: Young Men’s Christian Association, Debate, Chemistry, Theater, Murmurmontis staff. Quite the variety of interests.

He would have been one of Nicholas Hyma’s earliest students, as he taught from 1919-57.

They can be seen catching up in this 1944 picture from an alumni dinner in New York.

Career in Chemistry

J. Roy Price went on to have a very successful career in the chemical industry working with Union Carbide. He was part of the team doing original research on vinyl plastics and did research on such things as rosin, shallac, asphalt, celluloid, can linings, and insulation for electric wires (which was used as a substitute for rubber when the U.S. entered WWII).

During WWII he served as Union Carbide’s liaison to Defense Agencies, and in 1958 was appointed by President Eisenhower as head of the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization.


College Connections

Receiving an  Honorary Doctor of Science from WVWC in 1949,  J. Roy Price served on the Board of Trustees from 1949-73, and was President of the Board from 1969-73. Working with President William Scarborough, he was also the chairman of the Long Range Planning Committee which set the groundwork for the major growth of campus facilities under President Stanley H. Martin.


Founders Day Speaker in 1956

The full text of this address can be found here.

Speaking as an alumnus and a Trustee  as well as the Chairman of the Long Range Planning Committee, he notes that these things were absolutely necessary:

  1. High Quality Education
  2. More and Better Faculty, with salary improvements
  3. Physical Facilities

I encourage you to read his words. They are as relevant today as they were then.


The tomorrows that they were planning for 63 years ago are now our past. And others are now in the process of planning for the future. Time has a way of shifting from past to present to future. It is with great appreciation that I write to tell of this Giant in Wesleyan history.

John Roy Price (click here for his Bio)

Born: June 15, 1900

Died: June 15, 1975 (unexpectedly on his 75th birthday)



The quotation under his yearbook photo in 1923 seems to be a very fitting one. From Wordsworth, it said, “A man of cheerful yesterdays and confident tomorrows.”

Decades of Dedication: Nicholas Hyma in His Element

Haymond Hall in 1920 catalog
Haymond Hall in the 1920 Catalog

In the fall of  1919, World War I was just ending. Prohibition had just become the law of the land and Warren G. Harding had just been elected President of the United States. Wallace B. Fleming was the President of West Virginia Wesleyan College. President Fleming, along with Dean Thomas W. Haught (who taught Chemistry in addition to his duties as the Dean) hired a 33 year old Chemistry Professor named Nicholas Hyma.

Haught writes:

When, at the opening of school in the autumn of 1919, the College needed a teacher of Chemistry, President Fleming, having the address of one possibility for the position said to the writer, “Well, we’ll take a chance on him, I guess, and send him a telegram.” A day or two later Dr. Hyma saw Buckhannon and Wesleyan for the first time. Dr. Hyma found the department lacking equipment and poorly organized. He didn’t characterize it that way; he was too considerate. He went quietly about his work taking time to get acquainted with all its details. By the time that was accomplished he was putting so much of his personality into his work, and with such good effect, that his classes were overflowing with students eager to pursue his courses.

Until then the work of the department was all housed in the basement rooms on the north side of the Science Hall. More room was now needed. The unused rooms on the first floor above were appropriated. New courses in Chemistry should be offered. These, in turn, required more laboratory room and storage. Basement rooms on the south side of the building and the south-side-front-corner room on the first floor were made available.

His predicessor (Haught himself) who had been trying to do two pieces of work that were incompatible, in that they pressed for his presence in two different places at the same time, has taken great satisfaction in watching the expansion of the work in Chemisty and he hopes that Dr. Hyma has the heritage of long life and good health.

It would have been just too bad for Wesleyan College if, in 1919, the President had not taken a chance and sent a telegram.

For nearly four decades Hyma continued to pour himself into his work. But, more than just the work he poured himself into the very fabric of the college.

1920s

As women were given the right to vote in 1920, Hyma was hard at work encouraging girls to study chemistry. His students became leaders in the chemical industry nationwide and at all levels.

During this decade sound motion pictures were just beginning, Yankee Stadium was being built, Time Magazine published its first issue, the Indian Citizenship Act was passed, NBC Radio Network was formed, Lindberg and Amelia Earhart were making famous flights, Mickey and Minnie Mouse made their debut, Al Capone was making headlines in Chicago, and the Stock Market crashed, throwing the country into the Great Depression.

Meanwhile, Nicholas Hyma was instrumental in establishing intramural sports at Wesleyan and on the committee to launch Greek life on campus. He organized the first student union, and in 1920 started the Benzine Ring for chemistry majors. Several national chemistry fraternities tried to establish Chapters at Wesleyan, but since they did not admit females, Dr. Hyma would not consider them because he believed in equal rights.

Hyma and the Benzine Ring

Chemical dicoveries were being made during this decade as well, with the discovery of penicillin in 1928. Virginia Fisher, one of his students put together a book of reminiscences from his former students in which she wrote:

When penicillin was developed in England by Fleming in 1928, none was available in the United States. When word went out that Allegheny Hospital in Pittsburgh had failed in an attempt to produce penicillin, Dr. Hyma and one of his students went to the Hospital and obtained their results. He took their results to Wesleyan and, with the aid of other faculty, worked to develp the penicillin. For several years, he made weekly trips to Allegeny Hospital to supply them with the drug.

1930s

Hyma in Lab

In the 1930s, the Great Depression had an impact on everything. Franklin Delano Roosevelt had Fireside Chats with the country on the radio, Social Security was begun as part of the New Deal, Gone With the Wind was published, Orson Welles terrified people with his War of the Worlds, and Jesse Owens won four gold medals at the Berlin Summer Olympics under the watchful eye of Hitler.

Hyma Photo and Description 1936 Chemistry

Wesleyan honored Nicholas Hyma with a Doctor of Science Degree in 1936.

Dr. Nicholas Hyma led the way, through research, and created the Hyma Chemical Laboratories, hiring students to help package his products in order to earn a few dollars. One of these products was a remedy for poison ivy.

Hyma Ivadote Bottle

Because of the economic hardships during the Great Depression, several faculty members, including Dr. Hyma, had second jobs to help them financially. The Hyma Chemical Laboratory was one of these, and he paid some of his students to help bottle and label the products to give them some extra pocket money.

In addition, he did coal analysis for local coal companies, water analysis, and from time to time was called upon by local law enforcement for what we could now consider forensic help. All of these things were in the realm of Applied Chemistry, and he taught classes in these topics as well. Thus, many students learned chemistry skills that later translated into very successful research careers.

In the May-June, 1936 issue of the West Virginia Wesleyan Alumni Magazine, Linda Arnett, Class of 1936, wrote a wonderful description of life in the Chemistry Department. You can read it here, on page 7.

1940s

This decade saw the world reeling from World War II. The first peacetime conscription draft was implemented, there were Japanese Interment Camps, the first Atomic Bomb was developed and deployed, more than 425,000 troops died on the beaches of Normandy, Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in baseball, NATO was founded.  The transister was invented, the Big Bang Theory introduced, and Willard Libby introduced the concept of Radiocarbon dating.

As the Director of the Wright Field Trainee program from 1945-46, Professor Hyma assisted the war effort by working with the soldiers who were stationed at Wesleyan, training them as engineering aides and as fuel and lubricant inspectors. The March 1944 issue of the West Virginia Wesleyan College Bulletin reported that:

Professor Nicholas Hyma and his staff have been highly complimented for the excellent manner in which they have conducted the training and for the fine equipment placed at the student’s disposal. There are fifty trainees enrolled in the program and Dr. Hyma said assurance had been given that the program will continue. Following the war a number of these trinees plan to continue their college education at Wesleyan College.

1950s

Although the Korean conflict was a factor and the Cold War was begun, the world was much calmer overall in this decade. Soldiers had come home and were taking advantage of the GI Bill to pursue their education. The McDonald’s Franchise was incorporated and Disney Land opened in Anaheim. Brown vs the Board of Education ruled that racial discrimination was unconstitutional and Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat. The first polio vaccine was developed by Jonas Salk, and the Double Helix DNA Model made its debut.

And still Nicholas Hyma taught on.

The May 11, 1951 issue of Science incuded a story entitled, “The Origins of American Scientists” in which they listed the top 50 schools in America whose students had gone on to earn a Ph.D. in the field of science. Wesleyan was listed as number 37 on that list – the only school in West Virginia and one of a few schools in the south. Credit for this accomplishment was generally placed at the feet of Dr. Hyma.

From Harding to Eisenhower and Fleming to Scarborough, and from World War I through the atomic age, Dr. Nicholas Hyma was in his element at West Virginia Wesleyan College. When offered a high-paying and prestegious position elsewhere, he stated, “I declined the offer because I would rather teach West Virginia boys and girls chemistry.”

He died on November 13, 1956 after a three week illness. He died exactly one week after Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected president. At his request, his body was cremated and his ashes scattered around Haymond Hall of Science.

His colleagues, students, and friends published a memorial booklet in celebration of the man. Some called him Nick. Some called him Doc. You can read it here.

Today

The Wesleyan community of today often attends events in Hyma Auditorium, which is located in Christopher Hall of Science, but many do not know the story of the man for whom it is named.

Hyma Plaque

I believe that he would be pleased with the excellent Chemistry faculty of today. They are, indeed, carrying on – as are their students.