Nelson earned a divinity degree from Yale and was pastor of the First Congregational Church in Windsor, Conn., for 40 years, retiring in 1931. Roscoe Nelson, Class of 1887, wears a natural handlebar mustache. (Muskie Archives and Special Collections Library) Frank Hartford Smith, Class of 1875, and his walrus moustache. Sporting a walrus mustache is Frank Hartford Smith, Class of 1873. Thomas Singer, Class of 1890, and his long handlebar mustache. Singer died while at divinity school at Yale in 1894. Irish-born Thomas Singer, Class of 1890, had one of the longest handlebar mustaches at Bates in the hair-raising 1800s. John Carroll Perkins, Class of 1882, and his thin mustache. Fun fact: He was also the guardian of Emily Hale, often described as the confidante and muse of T.S. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate, he served as pastor of the historic King’s Chapel in Boston. John Carroll Perkins, Class of 1882, might be wearing a pencil mustache, or perhaps it’s just a modest attempt at facial hair. In Brooklyn, he was “at once recognized as an able physician, and his practice grew rapidly.” Walter Alfred Morton, Class of 1886, and a subtle handlebar mustache. “Having to rely solely upon himself for support, he found the pathway to a thorough college education beset with many difficulties, but was determined to surmount them.” The Standard Union newspaper of Brooklyn reported on his funeral. Sadly, he died at age 38 of heart trouble. Virginia-born, he earned a medical degree from Dartmouth and was a physician in Brooklyn, N.Y. Walter Alfred Morton, Class of 1886, sports a subtle handlebar mustache. He’s credited with establishing the Bates debate tradition by encouraging students to form literary societies, from which intercollegiate debating sprang. In the 1882 yearbook, legendary professor Jonathan “Uncle Johnny” Stanton, wears a flowing Shenandoah-style beard.Ī professor from 1863 to 1906, he taught Greek and Latin, served as librarian, and taught a popular class in ornithology. Here are 11 portraits of the best of the mustachioed and bearded Batesies. Public health rhetoric that emphasized hygiene, including shaving, was often tied to anti-immigrant rhetoric and policy that effectively demonized immigrants as unclean or unhealthy.īut before all that went down, beards, mustaches, and sideburns were all the rage. In the early 1900s, the emphasis on being clean shaven had social implications, explains Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies Rebecca Herzig in Plucked: A History of Hair Removal. (Irony note: A germ, COVID-19, caused a beard boom among men during the pandemic.) And shaving got easier, thanks to the introduction of the Gillette Safety Razor. With the emergence of the germ theory and subsequent public health campaigns, beards were thought to be unhygienic. In the 1901 yearbook, only two men out of 30 had any facial hair, and those two sported only the tidiest of mustaches. Returning home, the beard was the mark of a hero.īy the early 1900s, facial hair, especially beards, was on the wane at Bates and in the U.S. British soldiers fighting in the Crimean War of 1854–56 were allowed to grow beards for the first time. It’s said that the 19th-century beard boom started in Europe. What was in, in a big way, were beards and mustaches In the late 1800s at Bates, when Edmund Randall Angell sported a full goatee, and Thomas James Bollin wore friendly mutton chops, the percentage of clean-shaven American men was at an all-time low. Share on Email Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
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