If Gargoyles Could Talk: Sketches of Duke University is a
compilation of 71 articles written by Duke University Archivist
William King about the rich and varied history of Duke
University. Chronologically the articles cover the history of Duke
University from the period when it was Union Institute and
Trinity College in Randolph County (1838-1892) through the
movement of Trinity College to Durham (1892-1924), to what is
now called Duke University (1924- ).
This comprehensive text covers events and topics significant to
the history of Duke University and to the history of higher
education. Topics covered include Duke family and campus
individuals, buildings and construction, educational programs
and professional schools, athletics, and other topics of general
interest.
The subjects are colorful and varied: a "forgotten" president; a
visit by Booker T. Washington (his first to a white southern
college); the origin of the Blue Devil mascot; Russian Studies at
Duke; the stone setters who built the campus; student dance
bands in the 1930s; the employment of German Jewish *migr*s
who fled Nazi Germany; the campus controversy over tobacco
through the years; Richard M. Nixon; the vote by the trustees to
divest of investments in South Africa; and Julian F. Abele, the
African American chief designer of the firm that designed the
original Georgian and Gothic University campuses.
The aim of the book is to contribute new historical information
discovered in the university archives and to emphasize that the
modern research university is built upon its predecessor
institution, Trinity College. If Gargoyles Could Talk will appeal
not only to alumni and friends of Duke University but also to
anyone interested in the history of the region or higher education.