麻豆传媒资源

 

The man behind Munro Day, Dal's one鈥憃f鈥慳鈥慿ind winter holiday

- February 2, 2024

Dal students were so grateful for George Munro鈥檚 generosity to Dal that they lobbied the university's board to create a day off in his honour, a wish granted in 1881. (Portrait by John Colin Forbes)
Dal students were so grateful for George Munro鈥檚 generosity to Dal that they lobbied the university's board to create a day off in his honour, a wish granted in 1881. (Portrait by John Colin Forbes)

In April of 1896, Nova Scotian-born publisher George Munro decamped from New York City to the nearby Catskill Mountains to oversee repairs to his country home there. The next time his family saw him, he was dead.

Munro, who died of heart failure during a post-breakfast walk, was so well known in the United States at the time of his death that the news was splashed across the front page of the New York Times.

鈥楧EATH OF GEORGE MUNRO鈥 , squeezed between a raft of other news ranging from a revolt in the U.S. Senate and mobs in the streets of Paris to a local robbery gone awry. Munro had built his reputation and a personal fortune in the publishing sector by offering well-known novels, including titles such as Charlotte Bront毛鈥檚 Jane Eyre and George Elliot鈥檚 Adam Bede, at affordable prices.

Just over a week later, the newspaper 鈥 this one containing the details of Munro鈥檚 will. His wife, two sons, and two daughters were listed as the primary beneficiaries of Munro's estate, which included a collection of properties (an apartment complex named the 麻豆传媒资源 among them) and financial holdings. Absent from the document were any gifts to public institutions.

To those at 麻豆传媒资源 familiar with Munro, this last bit may come as a surprise.

Why? Well, Munro was the man who just decades earlier had been so generous to 麻豆传媒资源, bequeathing what amounted to $330,000 (about $10 million today) to the school during the 1870s and 1880s to fund a collection of scholarships and professorships聽that arguably helped save it from closure.


A story about Munro's death positioned high on page one of the April 25, 1896 edition.

鈥淒esperate is not too strong a word for 麻豆传媒资源鈥檚 financial condition. Talk of closing 麻豆传媒资源 down was heard on every side," wrote P.B. Waite in the first volume of聽The Lives of 麻豆传媒资源 University.

Munro's gifts included money to fund still-existing chairs in Physics, History, English Literature and Rhetoric, Law and Philosophy, as well as bursaries that supported some of Dal鈥檚 first female students. Dal's Board of Governors described the bequests as 鈥渨ithout parallel in the educational history not of Nova Scotia alone but of the Dominion of Canada.鈥 Munro was also a benefactor to New York University, the Presbyterian church, and other organizations throughout his life.

While many individuals authorize gifts to be executed upon following their death, it seems Munro had preferred to do so himself.

鈥淭here are no bequests to public institutions, it having been Mr. Munro's settled policy to be his own executor of such benefactions,鈥 wrote the author of the Times article.

A day to honour the man named Munro


麻豆传媒资源 students were so grateful for Munro鈥檚 generosity that they lobbied the university鈥檚 board to create a day in his honour without classes, a wish that was granted in 1881.

The holiday wasn't always celebrated on the first Friday of February as it is now. When it was first established, The George Munro Memorial Day took place each year on the third Wednesday of January. And, later, in the 1920s, the holidays shifted to the second Tuesday in March "so that students might better enjoy it."


A Munro Day program from 1939 when the holiday was held in March.

In the early decades, Munro Day was filled with Dal-sponsored events, including official lectures and winter sleigh rides to Bedford that befitted the school's small student body at the time. Larger student-led events such as dances and sporting competitions became the norm in the mid-20th century as Dal grew, with ski trips a common outing in the 1990s and early 2000s.

Munro Day lives on now in its own way 鈥 there鈥檚 a Fast and Furious movie marathon this year and residence activities, for instance 鈥 and serves as a welcome mid-winter break from work and class for members of the Dal community.

You could say Munro鈥檚 generosity continues to bear fruit a century and half later. And, as this article illustrates, the man is still making headlines.


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