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Music school will be named
for Hodgson, former professor |
By Larry B. Dendy
ldendy@uga.edu |
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Hugh Hodgson |
The School of Music will be named for Hugh Hodgson, a renowned Athens
resident and UGA professor who founded the music department and championed
music appreciation and performance throughout the state.
Hodgson was born in Athens in 1893 and graduated from UGA in 1915.
His appointment in 1928 as the university’s first music professor
is considered the start of the music department. He remained on the
faculty until he retired in 1960.
He developed four degree programs in music, including the first graduate
degree, a master of fine arts in music. He was also the first chairman
of the Division of Fine Arts and was named a Regents Professor of
Music by the board of regents.
His many contributions to the university included composing the arrangement
for the Alma Mater and writing the words for the fight song “Glory
to Old Georgia.” He was instrumental in construction of the
Fine Arts Building and helped establish the Atlanta and Savannah symphony
orchestras.
“This naming is a fitting tribute to a most distinguished UGA
graduate and accomplished faculty member,” says President Michael
F. Adams. “The School of Music already provides outstanding
opportunities for our students, but its long-term potential for expanded
excellence is limitless.”
Donald R. Lowe, director of the music school, says Hodgson played
an important role in building the university.
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| Hugh Hodgson joined the UGA faculty in
1928 as the first music professor. |
“Professor Hodgson’s position in the history of the university
and the state of Georgia is distinguished and significant,”
Lowe says. “His influence on the direction of music and the
other fine arts over 40 years was profound and it is entirely
appropriate that his legacy be preserved through naming the school
in his honor.”
The decision to name the school for Hodgson was approved by the board
of regents and the UGA cabinet.
The music department was designated the School of Music in the mid-1980s
to reflect its larger size and more extensive academic curricula and
programs. The Hugh Hodgson School of Music will remain part of the
Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.
Lowe says naming the school for Hodgson is similar to a 1995 decision
to name UGA’s School of Art for Lamar Dodd, whom Hodgson discovered
and persuaded to join UGA’s faculty in 1937. Dodd, a widely
acclaimed painter, was head of the art department for 40 years. After
the department—which was also in the College of Arts and Sciences—was
designated a school, it was named to honor Dodd. A $39 million building
for the Dodd School is now being constructed adjacent to the music
building.
“Professors Hodgson and Dodd laid the foundation for the university’s
present fine arts area,” Lowe says. “The construction
of a building for the Dodd School of Art adjacent to the building
for the Hodgson School of Music will allow these schools to stand
side-by-side as lasting tributes to these two important individuals
in the history of the University of Georgia.”
Lowe says a ceremonial announcement of the naming will occur April
1, which would be Hodgson’s 112th birthday, with a formal dedication
this fall.
With 50 faculty members, 55 graduate assistants, 350 undergraduates
and about 150 graduate students, the music school is one of the largest
units in the arts and sciences college. The school offers majors in
music composition, music education, music performance, conducting,
musicology, music theory and music therapy.
Hodgson conducted the Men’s Glee Club for 14 years and the University
Little Symphony for nine years. In the late 1920s, he began offering
musical programs on Thursday evenings known as “Music Appreciation
Hours.” The series continues today as the 2nd Thursday Concert
Series.
After graduating from UGA with Phi Beta Kappa honors, Hodgson studied
music and mathematics in New York. He returned to Athens in 1925 as
musical director of the Lucy Cobb Institute, a position he held until
he joined the UGA faculty. After retiring, he continued living in
Athens until his death in 1969. |
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