Bachelor of Ugliness
The Bachelor of Ugliness was a title conferred onto Vanderbilt University's most popular male undergraduate.[1][2] One of the highest honors that a student could achieve, it was given to the male undergraduate student believed to be most representative of ideal young manhood and the class's most popular member, devised by William H. Dodd, a professor, in 1885.[3]
List of recipients
Year | Recipient |
---|---|
1885 | T. P. Branch |
1886 | B. G. Waller |
1887 | A. E. Clement/R. E. Crockett (tie vote) |
1888 | Frank Taylor |
1889 | Jeff McCarn |
1890 | V. S. Roenborough |
1891 | Horace E. Bemis |
1892 | J. A. Robins |
1893 | R. W. Clawson |
1894 | W. W. Craig |
1895 | W. R. Hendrix |
1896 | H. N. Pharr |
1897 | Myles P. O'Connor |
1898 | Phil Connell |
1899 | S. V. Gardner |
1900 | W. A. White |
1901 | F. S. Palmer |
1902 | John Edgerton |
1903 | B. F. Carr |
1904 | Ben Clary |
1905 | E. B. Tucker |
1906 | Ed Hamilton |
1907 | A. M. Souby |
1908 | Bob Blake |
1909 | N. T. Dowling (Elected, but resigned)[4] |
1910 | Bruce McGehee |
1911 | John W. Bull |
1912 | Ray Morrison |
1913 | Bruce Wade |
1914 | Enoch Brown |
1915 | Tom Brown |
1916 | Irby Curry |
1917 | Pope Shannon |
1918 | Ammie Sikes |
1919 | Chas R. Richardson |
1920 | Manning Brown |
1921 | Grailey Berryhill |
1922 | Scotty Neill |
1923 | Jess Neely |
Many more men have been voted into this honor, such as the first African-American basketball player at Vanderbilt, Perry Wallace, who earned the title in 1970.[6]
gollark: Why would they *not* be? It isn't like there's much particularly everyone-killing stuff likely to happen in the next few decades.
gollark: Sorry, -100000, not that it matters at all.
gollark: Since, if you trap it right, all outcomes cause it to have an expected outcome of -10000, it will just treat them all as equally bad and pick the first one.
gollark: Of course not.
gollark: In testing, it *did* do that once when it realized the futility of its actions.
References
- "LIFE". 7 June 1937.
- "Caduceus of Kappa Sigma". 1905.
- http://news.vanderbilt.edu/archived-news/register/articles/index-id=4649.html
- Heard, Alexander (1995). Speaking of the University. ISBN 9780826512659.
- The Commodore (Vanderbilt Yearbook), 1923, page 265
- Andrew, Maraniss (2014). Strong inside : Perry Wallace and the collision of race and sports in the South. pp. 347–348. ISBN 978-0826520241. OCLC 894510850.
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