Dr. Lincoln Hulley, second president of Stetson University
Born in 1865, Dr. Lincoln Hulley, was reared near Philadelphia, working in the mills from the age of 10 to 17. At 14, he joined the Baptist church. His Sunday School teacher arranged for him to attend Keystone Academy, Factoryville, Pa., and he soon won a scholarship.
Graduating in 1884, he went on to
Enrollment was 210 and DeLand's population was 2,000, except in the winter when it doubled. The young president found dissension among Stetson's leaders, but soon got John B. Stetson reinstated as chairman of the trustees, and in return the
Under his leadership, Sampson Hall was completed as a Carnegie library in 1908 and Cummings Gymnasium was built in 1911. After World War I, he oversaw other building: Hulley Gymnasium (1929, later demolished), the Commons (1937, lost to fire), Stover Theatre (1930, first named Assembly Hall) and
Interested in politics, Hulley was elected State Senator in 1918 and served two terms. He ran unsuccessfully for Governor in 1920. An accomplished orator, Hulley conducted Stetson's chapel and vespers services himself. The vespers services were so popular that they were discontinued because local ministers said they interfered with their Sunday night services. Collections at the vespers services were used to purchase the Eloise Chimes, an 11-bell carillon that was first mounted in Elizabeth Hall's cupola and then moved to
Hulley was also a prolific writer, poet and playwright, who loved having his plays produced at Stover Theatre. He died of heart disease in 1934 at the age of 69, and was interred in a mausoleum on the first floor of
His wife, Eloise Mayham Hulley, for whom the Eloise Chimes are named, was born in