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SPEAKERS AND ENTERTAINERS
1906 Governor George H. Utter; Congressman Adin B. Capron; Colonel Daniel Ballou, United States Marshall. 1907 Governor James H. Higgins; Colonel Daniel R. Ballou; Professor William A. Mowry. 1908 Postponed one day on account of weather, speakers could not make it. Scheduled speakers were: Roswell B. Burchard, Speaker of the RI House; Judge Frank B. Fitzsimmons.
1909 Hon. Francis M. Wood of Burrillville; Judge Francis N. Thayer of Blackstone. 1910 Governor Aram J. Pothier; Judge Francis N. Thayer; Rev. Henry Parsons, Assistant Chaplain, Boston Seaman's Friends Society. 1911
Hon. Francis M. Wood, of Harrisville; Myron E. Cady, Westfield, MA; Rev. John Larry of Providence.
1912
Francis Gallagher of Providence; (H. B. Burchard of Little Compton, former House Speaker, canceled). 1913 Rev. Frank Nash of Erie PA; Rev. John Hale Larry of Providence; Clarence Whipple. 1914
First day, Attorney Francis Wood of Burrillville; President Edwards of Rhode Island College; Second day, Attorney Arthur Phetteplace; Attorney Frank Steere.
1915 Rev. W. O. Kierstead; Congressman Ambrose Kennedy; Congressman George F. O'Shannesey.
1916 Rev. William O. Kierstead of the People's Church of Auburn; Congressman Ambrose Kennedy; Miss Elizabeth Upham Yates; Rev. Henry Parsons, Chaplin of Gloucester (MA) Fisherman's Institute.
1917 Jesse B. Mowry, RI Forest Commissioner; Rev. R. J. Chrystie of Mapleville; Attorney Edward F. Lovejoy of Pascoag.
1918
Frederick J. Dark; Rev. Robert J. Chrystie; Rev. Edwin Simpson, Superintendent of the Rhode Island Anti-Saloon League; songs and recitations in the sanctuary. 1919
John C. Ketchum, Hastings, Michigan, Worthy Lecturer of the National Grange; Attorney Edward Lovejoy of Pascoag; Rev. Gilbert Cutler, North Scituate Baptist Church. 1920
Ernest V. Claypool, Superintendent of Rhode Island Anti-Saloon League; Judge Francis Thayer of East Blackstone, MA.
1921 State Treasurer Jennings; Rev. Arthur Burden, Methodist Episcopal Church, Mapleville.
1922 RI Superior Court Judge A. A. Capotosto; Rev. Gilbert Cutler of Rockland. 1923 Judge A. A. Capotosto; Congressman Jeremiah O'Connell; Rev. Henry Parsons, Quidneck Baptist Church. 1924 Governor William S. Flynn; Judge Francis N. Thayer of Blackstone; Judge A. A. Capotosto.
1925 Attorney General Oscar D. Heltzen, Judge A. A. Capotosto. 1926
Congressman Jeremiah O'Connell; Frank Davis of Chepachet, Tax Commissioner of RI. 1927 Lt. Governor Norman S. Case; Frank Davis.
1928 Former Congressman Jeremiah O'Connell; RI Attorney General Charles Sisson. 1929 Congressman Jeremiah O'Connell; Senator Arthur T. S. Phetteplace of Glocester. 1930 Lt. Governor James Connolly; Rev. Harvey Eastman, Slatersville Congregational Church;
State Representative Arthur Phetteplace.
1931 Governor Norman S. Case; Attorney William A. Needham. 1932
State Treasurer, George C. Clark; Frank Davis; William A. Needham, Secretary of Providence Republican Committee.
1933
Judge A. A. Capotosto; Oscar L. Heltzen, State Insurance Commissioner; Burton T. Mowry of Raynham Massachusetts, past Lecturer, Massachusetts State Grange; Jesse B. Mowry. 1934
Governor Theodore Francis Greene; William A. Needham; Burton T. Mowry; Judge Francis N. Thayer, Blackstone, Massachusetts.
1935
Judge Charles A. Walsh, RI Superior Court; Attorney William A. Needham; Burton T. Mowry; Harriet D. Parsons, widow of Rev. Henry Parsons, founder of Old Home Day celebrations, guest. 1936
Attorney (later Judge) Fred B. Perkins; Burton T. Mowry; Frank Potter.
1937 Lawn party, no speakers. 1938
Rev. Vernon Cooke, Pastor Pawtucket Congregational Church. 1939 Rev. Harvey M. Eastman, pastor Slatersville Congregational Church.
1940 Attorney General Louis V. Jackvony. 1941
Harry Sandager (former Congressman); Rev. George F. Sturtevant, Rhode Island State Baptist Convention. 1942 William A. Needham, former Providence City Solicitor. 1943 ? 1944
? 1945 ? 1946 Rev. Kenneth M. Cooper, Director of town and country work for the Rhode Island and Connecticut Baptist Convention 1947 Lt. Governor John S. McKiernan
The following excerpts from Congressman O'Connell's speech are taken from the Providence Sunday Journal, August 22, 1926, page 4:
"... firmly resolve and realize that in this great land there is room for every citizen, native or foreign born, of whatever creed or color, so long as he obeys the laws and is faithful to its institutions.
"What a wealth of sentiment and meaning is contained in those three simple words "Old Home Day." What fond memories do they revive, what pleasant associations do they recall...most often
they are associated with the hamlet, village, town, or city in which we were born, or where our youthful days were spent. And as youth is the springtime of life, so, too, is it usually the time of
pleasure when carefree and light of heart, we look the world and the future in the face with confidence and hope. "On this day ... we recall those loving parents, perhaps long since gone to their heavenly reward,
who cared for us and loved us as only father and mother can. And there pass before our vision the faces of the other members of our families and of those friends of our early days, and our
hearts are softened by their remembrance, and our love of humankind is immeasurably deepened. And we come to the inevitable conclusion ... that in all the world there is nothing greater than
the love and friendship of our fellow men. "On this day out thoughts go back to the home, that institution of the human family which has
been and ever will be the great bulwark upon which civilization and progress is based. It has been the underlying cause of the greatness of our nation and so long as it exists in full flower
and vigor, the institutions of our country are safe. "The great and crying need in our country today is for a united country. We have seen in other
lands the results of hatred and of jealousies, of persecution, oppression, and misrule. The United States of America must think with one mind. It must speak with one voice. The heart of our
country must be sound. Let us not be too critical of our neighbor, but accord to him, as was intended by our forefathers, that measure of freedom of thought and action so long as it does
not contravene the law, which we claim for ourselves. By following such a course of action, we shall be following those fundamental and eternal principles which have made our nation today the
greatest and mightiest in all the world and which will keep her so in the years to come." |
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