From the Archives: 73 Students Make up First Graduates on the Hill

Known as the “Pioneer Class,” 73 students – 36 women and 37 men – made up the first class to graduate from Hartwick College at a ceremony held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, June 13, 1932, at the First Episcopal Methodist Church (now the First United Methodist Church) as shown on this program from the Paul F. Cooper Jr. Archives.

According to a local newspaper report, “The class was a symbol of achievement, representing a site of 100 acres, a $250,000 building, a faculty of 26 members and a student body, including part-time students, of upwards of 400.”

FirstHartwick College Commencement Invitation, 1932
First Hartwick College Commencement Program, 1932

This senior class day program, also from the archives, allowed the Pioneers to let loose a bit. While the traditional remarks were by Class President Howard D. Sherman ’32 and a formal dedication was made of the Oyaron yearbook, there was also a class poem read by Ruth E. Kittle ’32 and a “class prophecy” – a set of jokes on what the class expected to see of each other at their 10-year reunion – read by Helen E. Tunnecliff ’32.

Photos are part of the collection in Hartwick College Paul F. Cooper, Jr. Archives.

April 28, 2025

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