Regulation booklets include information on the organization and duty of officers and cadets, admission requirements, uniforms regulations, courses of instruction, examinations, discipline and room regulations.
Jerome H. Courtney was a member of the Class of 1900. According to a Register of Graduates, Courtney was employed by the government in Trenton, South Carolina after he graduated from The Citadel.***The oldest known Citadel Class Ring dates to 1895,…
John W. Moore was a member of the Class of 1900. After graduating from The Citadel, Moore was headmaster of the Bailey Military Institute in Greenwood, South Carolina.***The oldest known Citadel Class Ring dates to 1895, and features a dark stone…
William W. Smoak was a member of the Class of 1900. According to a Register of Graduates, Smoak became the Proprietor and Editor of the Press and Standard in Walterboro, South Carolina after graduating from The Citadel. To view items from Smoak's…
Wade C. Hughs was a member of the Class of 1901. According to a Register of Graduates, Hughs became a lawyer in Walhalla, South Carolina after graduating from The Citadel. A note in The Citadel Archives ring files says that Wade C. Hughs had his ring…
Thomas P. Lesesne was a member of the Class of 1901. According to a Register of Graduates, Lesesne became City Editor of the News and Courier in Charleston, South Carolina after graduating from The Citadel.***The oldest known Citadel Class Ring dates…
Joseph Palmer was a member of the Class of 1902. According to a Register of Graduates, Palmer became a civil engineer in Sumter, South Carolina after graduating from The Citadel. The stone is not original to this ring.***The oldest known Citadel…
Ervin Maurice Tiller was a member of the Class of 1903. After graduation he became Quartermaster at The Citadel.***The oldest known Citadel Class Ring dates to 1895, and features a dark stone with the year '95 inscribed in the center. Early rings…