
Regent Gregory's Grave
A forgotten landmark,
the grave of John Milton Gregory resides in peaceful serenity in a
small memorial grove between Altgeld Hall and the David
Dodds Henry Administration Building.
Gregory served as the first Regent of the Illinois
Industrial University and was
instrumental in shaping it into the University that we know
today. Upon his death
in Washington D.C., on October 19, 1898, his body was brought back to the University to lay
in state in the rotunda of Altgeld Hall, before being laid to rest
in a vault in Mount Hope cemetery. However, before his death,
Gregory had expressed the wish to be buried on the grounds of the
University that had truly been his life for so many years. Hence, the following
November his body was exhumed to be laid to rest once
again. Even in death, Regent
Gregory was a well-traveled man.
The Board of Trustees ordered that his "burial be made in
mason work in the neighborhood of a point south of the line of John
Street, if projected into the University grounds, and about one
hundred feet therefrom [sic], and about midway between University
Hall and the west line of the University grounds", along the path he
had walked each afternoon on his way to his house on John
Street. For the gravestone, they
selected a "a simple marker in the form of a bronze tablet attached
to a glacial boulder, which had lain for unnumbered centuries in the
soil of what is now the University campus, and which was found in
the excavation of the Woman's building".
On May 14, 1914, President Edmund Janes
James sent a letter to all faculty inviting them to the dedication
of the grave and expounding that "this is not merely an alumni
tribute, but a tribute of the University to the work of this man,
and it is well worth the while of everyone of us who is benefiting
by his labors to participate in the exercises of this
occasion". On Monday,
June 15, the classes of 1874, 1879, 1884, 1889, 1894, 1899, 1904,
1909, 1911, and 1913 celebrated their reunions, and the
42nd annual Alumni Renion was held in the Woman's
Building.
The following day, the memorial proceedings
began in the Auditorium at 10:30 in the morning. The Rev Charles B. Taylor, a
gradate of 1879, performed the Scripture readings and prayer,
followed by President Charles A. Richmond, D.D., LL.D., Chancellor
of Union University, who read an address titled Dr. John Milton
Gregory, His Student Days and Life in New York. Martin L. D'Ooge, PH.D., D.
Litt., Professor Emeritus in the University of Michigan next read
his address, John Milton Gregory, Superintendent of Public
Instruction of Michigan, followed by William E. Praeger, B.S., a
graduate of 1900, M.S., Professor in Kalamazoo College, who read
John Milton Gregory as President of Kalamazoo College. The song America was
read, followed by two more addresses, John Milton Gregory as
President of the University of Illinois - His Personal
Relations to the Students and Faculty, by the Honorable Henry M.
Beardsley, 1879, Kansas
City, and John Milton Gregory as an
Education Leader in Illinois, by President Edmund J. James,
PH.D., LL.D. Finally,
Regent Gregory's University Anthem, first read at the dedication of
New Main University Hall, was recited, and the alumni dinner was
held at the Woman's Building at 1 o'clock.
The memorial procession assembled at the
Auditorium, where it left for the the Regent's grave at 3
o'clock. The Rev.
Charles Ryan Adams gave the final prayers, before Gregory's youngest
daughter, Allene Gregory, unveiled the tablet. The President of the Board
of Trustees, the Honorable William L. Abbott, an 1884 graduate, gave
the final address, concluding
with "By the authority of the Board of Trustees, I declare this
tablet dedicated to the memory of John Milton Gregory. May his ashes forever rest
in peace amid the stirring scenes in which his spirit is a living
and potent factor."
Several other University of Illinois Presidents are buried in
cemeteries around the campus area, including Jonathon Burrill and
Edmund James, while Andrew Draper was buried in Albany, NY, and
Selim Peabody was buried in Mount Hope cemetery in
Chicago.
| Selected Images of Regent Gregory's Grave |
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