Showing posts with label Franklin Stewart Harris - Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Franklin Stewart Harris - Stories. Show all posts

Friday, July 2, 2021

Code of Life by Franklin S Harris

 

Code of Life

By

Franklin S. Harris

 

I believe that a person should be unfaltering in his determination to live an honest and honorable life.

 

I believe he should be industrious no matter what his wealth or station might be, and that he should be diligent in acquiring the information and experience that will help him to appreciate life.

 

I believe he should do all in his power to make life pleasant for his fellowmen, that he should be courteous with all associates and live in such a way that his life will be a source of inspiration to all with whom he comes in contact.

 

I believe a person should do all he can to spread education and promote industries and occupations that will tend to make humanity more free, and give them a desire to live properly.

 

I believe the Gospel of Jesus Christ embraces all of these principles and is a perfect code of life.  Therefore, I think the important thing is to live in such a way as to have the Spirit of God as a teacher and obey all of its whisperings.

Biography Of Franklin Stewart Harris

 

Biography of Franklin Stewart Harris

 By Eunice Polly Stewart Harris 

            Franklin Stewart Harris was born in Benjamin, Utah County, August 29, 1884.  He was a delicate baby and in his early childhood did not have much pep.  He always said he was too tired when asked to join the other children in their games.  He was passionately fond of pets and enjoyed playing with a doll.  Unless his mother insisted on his going out, he would sit all day holding some pet or looking at a picture book.  He was gentle and affectionate and desirous of pleasing.

            When he was five years of age, on November 6, 1889, he moved with the family to Old Mexico, where his father had gone a few months before to make a home for them.  When he was six years old he started to school in the primary department of the school that afterward developed into the Juaren Stake Academy; but as he was still rather delicate he could not go regularly until he was eight.  As he grew in years he grew in strength until in his later boyhood he was a giant of strength, physically and intellectually.

            His fist appearance before the public was when he was six, when he stood up in Sunday School to say a recitation, as was the custom for children to do at that time.  He finished the recitation, then ran to his father and buried his face in his father’s arms and sobbed until Sunday School was over.  That broke the ice.  He was never so timid again, but was willing to help when asked.

            Three days after he was eight years of age, on September 1, 1892, he was baptized into the L.D.S. Church and he was very happy.

            One of his chief characteristics in his boyhood, his young manhood, and which has remained with him all along through life, and I suppose the one upon which his success has depended, was his desire to study his problems out without help.  He wanted to study away where no one would make a suggestion.  He was always a student.  He learned to read by studying out the letters on signs and advertisements.  He was orderly and industrious and had a fine understanding of the value of time even in his youth.

            He grew and developed as most boys do in rural communities, by working, playing, and going to school and changing from one to the other as circumstances required.  They had to create their own amusements.  He was always ready and willing to do his part in all social activities and in the activities of the family he was at the front, whether it might be riding the range, doing chores, working on the farm, in the cannery, in the store etc.  His younger brothers thought he was quite a hero.  He was willing to come down from the porch of big brother and be one with them in their play, then he could correct them and show them their mistakes and they took it good-naturedly.  He was not only one with his brothers, but he was always democratic, even in his youth, and was a good friend to all.  His charity might well have served as an object lesson to grown-ups.  In considering his ethical characteristics, we must not forget that he lived in an ideal environment and all of his companions measured up to his high standards.

            When he was   ___   years old he joined the bank and learned to play the cornet.

            He received the different degrees of the Priesthood in their order.

            During the school year of 1896 and 1897 the family was temporarily living in Dublan, and Frank attended school there where he finished the eighth grade or public school.

            At the beginning of the school year in 1897 Guy C. Wilson, a teacher, came from Utah and took the principalship of the Academy and Frank began his work as a freshman.  During the year 1899 and 1900 Frank worked in the store and did not attend school.  In May, 1903, when he was nineteen years old he graduated from the J. S. A.  The first class to graduate from a four-year course.  The class all through their high school had as their inspiration the symbolical emblem or motto, “Rowing, not drifting”, and they were truly rowers.  The varied nature of his work through his life fitted him to cope with the many problems he had to work out in his life.

            Charity, industry, sympathy, generosity, honesty, helpfulness, cheerfulness, and democracy were his outstanding characteristics during his boyhood and his young manhood, and they have remained with him during his later life.  In addition to these he was a good mixer.  These won for him many valuable friends among leading men as well as those in the humbler walks of life.

            He and his older brother, Denny, had a great desire for higher education, or at least to have a taste of college life.

            Although the financial condition in that foreign land seemed almost to forbid it, we began planning and struggling to get the necessary money to send them away to college.

            August 20, 1903, they bade their home and friends goodbye and started to Utah to the Brigham Young University at Provo.  We were filled with anxiety and were undecided as to whether we were doing the right thing in sending those two boys who were so young and so inexperienced as to the ways of the world, where they would meet evils and temptations which they had never faced.  They were registered at the B.Y.U. as students, Frank entering on a scientific course and Denny entering the business college where he was chosen president of his class.  At the end of the school year they worked in Utah until August, when they returned to Mexico, Frank to teach in the J. S. A. and Denny to take over the management of the store in Juarez.

            The spring of 1904 their father bought a large farm near Cardston, Alberta, Canada, and their mother and the other children joined him there later.  Annis and her young children remained in Mexico until the next year when she moved to Provo so the boys still had a home in Juarez.

            At the close of the J. S. A. in the early summer of 1905 Frank went to Canada and worked on the farm.  The last of August he returned to Provo and again entered the B.Y.U. as a student, and at the end of the school year returning to the farm and then back to school.  The summer of 1906 he worked in the B.Y.U. laboratory.

            He graduated from the institution in 1907, when he was 23 years of age, with the degree of Bachelor of Science.  That summer he returned to Canada and worked on the farm.

            After his graduation he signed a contract to teach at the U.A.C., so he went to Logan at the opening of school.  He lived in the home of Dr. Widtsoe, the president of the college, where he was treated like one of the family.  At the Christmas vacation he announced his engagement to Estelle Spillsbery to the family.  The following June 18 they were married in the Salt Lake Temple.  During the summer after their marriage they spent seven weeks on the farm in Canada.

            In his young manhood he set as his goal of achievement the obtaining of the degree of Dr. of Philosophy.  In this desire he received every encouragement from his parents and from Dr. Widtsoe and many of his friends.  His parents thought if he succeeded it would have a good psychological effect on his younger brothers in setting their aim high.  He planned, worked and economized for the accomplishment of that purpose.  Owing to his father having so large a family, he knew encouragement was about the only help the family could give him.

            If the desire is great enough and the courage and determination strong enough in any undertaking, the battle is half won. 

            In August he and his young wife, with their hearts full of faith, hope, and determination, went to Ithica, New York, where Frank entered the Cornell University as a student.  Estelle stood bravely by him to sustain him and give him encouragement, ever willing to sacrifice and economize.  It took great hope to launch out on an undertaking like that without financial backing.  Here he worked and studied for three years, when he obtained the degree of Dr. of Philosophy.

            May 25, 1909, Arlene, their first child, a daughter, was born.  During these three years he did research work to help pay expenses.

            In June the struggle was over.  He has reached the precious and untiringly sought-for goal-- his degree of Dr. of Philosophy, and example of what can be accomplished if the desire be strong enough.  In July, 1911, Frank returned to Logan and the U. A. C. where he took the position of agronomist for the Institution.

            During the years he worked at the U. A. C. he was active in church work.  In 1911 he was called to be a member of the Y. M. M. I. A. Stake board.

            Owing to his democratic, sympathetic, and friendly nature, he made the entrance into college life easier to many bashful, frontier-raised students.

            Chauncy Dennison, their third child was born January 31, 1914.  This same year he was called to the superintendency of the Sunday School in the Fifth Ward.

            In 1914 he wrote his first book, “The Young Man and his Vocation,” and later in connection with George Stewart he wrote on Agronomy, which has been adopted as a text book for schools.

            September 14, 1918, Leah Dorothy, a daughter was born and March 8, 1921, Mildred, their fourth daughter and sixth was born.

            While growing to manhood and dreaming his dreams and building castles of the things he wanted to do in life, in a small frontier town in Old Mexico, the thought that the time would come when he would be honored by being invited to be president of a university could scarcely have had a place in them.

            He had been brought up on the maxim, “Preparation is the key that unlocks the gate to opportunity,” until it became a part of his life and all of his life he had been in preparation for the position that was now offered him.  The call came making him to be president of his Alma Mater-- the Brigham Young University.  He was prepared and he accepted.  By his industry, his studious habits, and his perseverance in overcoming obstacles all of his life, he had been preparing for the great work that was now opened up to him.

            In August, 1921, they moved to Provo.  After the opening of school came the impressive inauguration ceremonies with all their honors.  It could not have helped being proud for him, his family, and his near relatives.  Through his charity, his sympathy, and his democratic principles, he was peculiarly fitted for this position.

            In 1926 he wrote, “Science and Human Welfare,” and in 1927, “The Fruits of Mormonism.”  He is an active member of the general board of the Y. M. M. I. A. of the Church.

            In September, 1927, a World’s Congress of Scientists was held in Japan and he was honored by being asked to read a paper before the sessions.  August 20 he sailed for Japan.  They stopped over at the Hawaiian Islands for a while were he was the guest of Antoine Ivins, who did everything possible to show him the most important things in the allotted time.

            While in Japan all the members of the congress were the guests of Japanese Government and they were entertained royally.  They were shown everything of interest in Japan.

            As Frank was half way around the world he decided to continue traveling west and return home via Europe, thus making a circuit of the globe.  He visited China, India, passed through the Suez Canal, Egypt, where he climbed the great pyramid, Palestine, with its scenes connected with the Savias.

            When he reached France he was met by his wife and they toured Europe together, returning home August 20, 1928, just one year from the day he started on the trip.  A wonderful opportunity to have come to them.

            In 1929 the Jews of America sponsored and financed a commission of scientists with the object of investigating conditions as to the feasibility of colonizing the Jews of Russia in Russian Siberia.  Frank was invited to be a member of this expedition and had the distinction of being chosen chairman of the commission.  He spent four months in Siberia, about three hundred miles from the Pacific Ocean, in company with five other scientists, returning home November 3.

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Franklin S. Harris and the Fine Arts



Franklin S. Harris and the Fine Arts

I think I speak for all my cousins in saying that we are honored to be here to 
help celebrate the fine arts at BYU and the contribution of Franklin S. Harris 
to the fine arts.  The BYU legacy is alive in the Harris family.  All of his 
children and many grandchildren and great grandchildren have graduated from BYU.  
There are currently at least five great grandchildren who are students at BYU 
and numerous great great grandchildren. Three great grandsons are currently 
working or teaching on campus.

Prior to becoming president of BYU in 1921 Harris was an agronomist and 
scientist at Utah State Agricultural College in Logan.  More than one person has 
asked why the Harris Fine Arts Center was named for this scientist.  I think 
there are two main reasons.

Harris was a personal patron of the arts.  Shortly after Harris's death B.F. 
Larsen sent some notes to Herald R. Clark in which he quoted Harris as saying, 
"I use my knowledge of science to make a living, but through my interest in art 
I live."  In an abridged version, this saying has been used a number of times. 
Whether he actually said it or not, it certainly characterizes his philosophy. 
As BYU president he attended more arts events than athletic events, which 
probably could not be said of any president since. While traveling, which was 
frequently, he always visited museums and art galleries and attended the theater 
and concert halls.  The amazing thing was that many years later he would 
remember a specific work of art that he had seen. Harris liked to listen to the 
Texaco Metropolitan Opera on the radio on Saturday mornings.  He would be 
disappointed to know that KBYU-FM no longer carries the Metropolitan Opera in 
its programming.  At one point he
 even wrote a letter to the Texaco Company in which he said that whenever he 
listed to the opera it made him want to rush out and buy Texaco gasoline.  His 
children, however, did not remember that he ever bought Texaco gasoline.

In addition to his personal support of the arts, Harris was a great supporter of 
the arts at BYU.  In the 1920s it was very unusual for a university to have a 
curriculum in the fine arts.  Within a few years after his arrival at BYU he 
established the College of Fine Arts with Gerrit deJong as dean.  It was the 
first such college in the western U.S.  With the help of Herald R. Clark he 
brought numerous performers to this small backwater college.  A niece who was 
raised by the Harrises said, "I can remember the many artists of every kind that 
Uncle Frank lured to the Y.  He was very persuasive." In addition to supporting 
the performing arts he acquired about seven hundred art works and had them hung 
in the offices, halls, and classrooms.  In that day the entire campus was Lower 
Campus (where the Provo City Library now is) and a couple of buildings on the 
point of the hill. Finances were tight, but he had a clever way of acquiring 
art.  He gave tuition
 credit to family and friends of artists in exchange for paintings.  Several of 
Minerva Teichert's paintings were acquired in this way.

I sent a copy of this year's fine arts brochure to a cousin on the east coast 
who has had little contact with BYU.  She was thoroughly impressed with the 
quality of the brochure itself and with the quality of the performance offerings 
at BYU.  I think Harris himself would be pleased and impressed with what has 
been built on the foundation he laid for the fine arts at BYU. The entire 
community has been blessed by this growth. At the close of his administration 
Harris is reported to have said, "After all, I think my greatest accomplishment 
is what we have done with the fine arts."  

Janet Jenson
Founder's Luncheon , BYU, 14 Oct. 2014