"One of seven children, Nathaniel Murray's
other siblings were George Henry, a lawyer who studied at Harvard and Howard
Universities and taught at Cardozo Business High School in Washington; Paul
Evans, a renown concert violinists who later worked for the federal government;
Harold Baldwin, who also studied at Cornell University and worked as an engineer
in Brazil before becoming a paper manufacturer in Mexico; Helene and Pinckney.
Daniel, Jr. was graduate of Oberlin College and also a violinist in New York City.
All of the Murray children attended M. Street School. Nathaniel Murray
graduated in 1905 and would later return to Armstrong as an instructor in science.
In the fall of 1905, Nathaniel Murray
enrolled at Cornell University as a student in the College of Agriculture
and made the acquaintance of his fellow classmates and Charles C.
Poindexter, who worked in the department of Agriculture. During
registration, a photographer caught him sitting on the curb and snapped
a photograph of him. He sent the picture post card home to his parents
with the following inscription: "the picture was taken last Friday morning
while I was standing in line waiting to be registered as a student at Cornell
University. I was sitting down resting myself on the curb in front of the
registrar's office, while this line had temporarily halted. The sun was also
shining on my face."
Coming from one of Washington's most
prosperous families and surrounded by a community of privilege in
Washington, Ithaca offered Murray a different pace with regards
to social and cultural events. He welcomed the changed with the small
community of "colored" citizens he soon became familiar with. The weekend
gatherings that C.C. Poindexter sponsored often consisted of recitations,
poetry readings and music and reminded him very much of his circle of
friends in Washington. These African-American men enjoyed the camaraderie
of each company. While the discussions of establishing a fraternity may have
seemed challenging at times, Murray was a strong advocate for it and recollected
about the early struggle to convince others of its merit. He said:
"As was to be expected, some opposed
and some favored the new proposition. After drifting along for several
weeks with no definite decision forthcoming, I offered the motion that I
believed the time was ripe to disband the social club and organize a
Negro College fraternity."
|