In 1890, Reuben Webster Millsaps, a prominent businessman
and Methodist layman, donated $50,000, which was matched by Methodists across
the state, to establish a college in Jackson. A Confederate veteran who was wounded
twice during the war, Major Millsaps (right) was active in the development of the new college
until his death in 1916. [For more on Major Millsaps, please see http://andspeakingofwhich.blogspot.com/2012/11/reuben-webster-millsaps.html.
Today, Millsaps College is regarded as one of the best small, liberal arts
colleges in the nation and is a leader in medical and business education, among
other academic degrees. At one time, Millsaps also offered a degree in law, and
for more than two decades the Millsaps College School of Law was the only law
school in the state capital.
Edward Mayes was born in Hinds County, Mississippi, in 1846.
In 1860, he was in school at Bethany College in what is now West Virginia but
came home to Mississippi with civil war on the horizon. For the first few years
of the conflict, Mayes served as a clerk in Jackson but in April 1864
volunteered as a private in Co. H, 4th Mississippi Cavalry. In the
fall of 1865, he entered the freshman class at the University of Mississippi
and graduated from the law school in 1869. The same year, he married Miss
Frances Lamar, who just happened to be the daughter of L.Q.C. Lamar, and she
was the granddaughter of Augustus B. Longstreet, who was the second chancellor
at Ole Miss. With his pedigree firmly established, Mayes (above) opened his law
practice in Coffeeville and then moved to Oxford in 1872. He joined the faculty
in 1877 and then became chancellor in 1889. He has the distinction of being the
first native Mississippian and the first Ole Miss graduate to become chancellor
of that institution. During his tenure, Ventress Hall was constructed as the
library building; it would later serve as the law school. In addition to Mayes’
ties to L.Q.C. Lamar and the University of Mississippi, he was also a devout
member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and was a member of the 1890
General Conference in St. Louis. Thus, when Millsaps College established its
law school, Mayes was a natural fit, having ended his tenure as chancellor in
1891. While at Millsaps, Mayes somehow found time to write a comprehensive
history of education in Mississippi, a book published in 1899. Edward Mayes
remained at Millsaps College until his death.
Also serving on the faculty was a distinguished lawyer and
jurist named Albert Hall Whitfield. Whitfield, a native of Monroe County,
Mississippi, was born in 1849, too young by a couple of years to serve in the
Civil War. Whitfield graduated from the University of Mississippi in 1871 and
then joined the faculty there, where he taught Greek, Latin, English and
History. After practicing law in Grenada (where he married Miss Isadore
Buffaloe in 1876), he moved to Oxford. Whitfield succeeded Mayes as a professor
of law at Ole Miss until 1894, when he was appointed to the Mississippi Supreme
Court by Governor John M. Stone. Whitfield (left) thereafter served as Chief Justice
for ten years. When the Millsaps College Law School was established in 1896,
Whitfield was already in Jackson and was a natural choice for the faculty. Not
only did Whitfield know Edward Mayes from his days at Ole Miss, he remained the
as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court while teaching law school! By all
accounts, Albert Hall Whitfield was a colorful figure. Like Mayes, he was a
frequent author, writing on such varied subjects as the question of Philippine
annexation in Cosmopolitan Magazine. In
private life, it was well known that he “fretted and fumed a great deal over
things, whether State or society, that he felt were not justified by ethical
standards.” Despite being a member of the Baptist Church, he apparently used
the word “damn” quite liberally and often exclaimed that “Life is just one damn
thing after another.” Whitfield died in Jackson in 1918. In a biographical
account written by his close friend Dunbar Rowland is perhaps the finest thing
that can be said regarding the end of a person’s life: “After a brilliant
career in which he had borne himself well in both public and private life he
retired to his library to happily browse among the books.”
Led by these two men, the Millsaps College School of Law
endured and prospered for twenty-two years. Among those who attended the school
were Luther Manship, Jr. of Jackson, who would serve in World War I as an
artillery officer, and Isaac Lagrone Tigert of Tippah County, who was the
Sergeant-at-Arms for the Mississippi Senate and was later elected to the South
Carolina legislature. In 1917, however, Edward Mayes died suddenly, followed the
next year by Whitfield. Thus, both of the men who had guided the law school for
its entire existence were suddenly gone. More importantly, most of the male
students at Millsaps were by then preparing for the war in Europe. Millsaps was
among the sites selected for the Student Army Training Corps (S.A.T.C.), which
was a program established by the War Department designed to use existing college
campuses as training facilities for military personnel. The S.A.T.C. at
Millsaps was led by Lt. Charles Gueltig (above left), a German immigrant and an attorney
from Missouri. By 1918, Millsaps resembled an armed camp of instruction more
than a college campus and many of the students left to join the war effort. Even
one of Millsaps’ faculty members, Dr. John Marvin Burton (above right), volunteered and was
killed in France. Burton came to Millsaps in 1910 and was a professor of
romance languages and French literature. Apparently, he had volunteered for the
war in allegiance to both of the “world’s greatest democracies.” His death was
mourned by the entire campus and the 1919 annual, the Bobashela, was dedicated
to his memory. In the memorial dedication, the writer stated that it was
through his death that “Millsaps gave the best she had to the struggle for
Liberty, and Fate took the best she gave.” Dr. Burton wasn’t Millsaps College’s
only casualty of the First World War. The other was the School of Law, which
was discontinued in 1917.
For several years after the war ended, there were attempts
to revive the Millsaps law school, but to no avail. In 1930, a law school was
once again established in Jackson, but it was no longer associated with
Millsaps. Known as the Jackson School of Law, the law school was acquired by
Mississippi College in 1975 and since 1980 has been fully accredited with the
American Bar Association. The MC Law School remains the only other law school
in Mississippi besides the University of Mississippi. As dedicated Methodists,
it might displease both Major Reuben Webster Millsaps and Edward Mayes to know that the descendant of their beloved law
school now belongs to Mississippi College.
Photo and Image Sources:
(1) Millsaps: https://m.facebook.com/millsapscollege
(2) Law School: https://archive.org/stream/bobashela1913
(3) https://archive.org/stream/bobashela1910
(4) Mayes: http://www.olemiss.edu
(5) Whitfield: https://archive.org/stream/bobashela1919
(6) Gueltig: https://archive.org/stream/bobashela1919
(7) Burton: https://archive.org/stream/bobashela1919
(8) MC Law: http://lawalumni.mc.edu
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