-40%
UNIVERSIDAD INTERAMERICANA Puerto Rico LOGIA SAN GERMAN DR HARRIS Texas MASON
$ 9.9
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
VISIT MY STORE /VISITA MI TIENDA
GANE POR CADA COMPRADO / EARN PER EACH BOUGHT
ANA, TNA, NTCA, ECI, CC>CC, NGC, & USNS
*******
UIPR
*******
CENTENARIO
UNIVERSIDAD
INTERAMERICANA
DE PUERTO RICO
***
1912 - 2012
***
INTERAMERICAN
UNIVERSITY
OF PR CENTENNIAL
SPANISH:
!S
aludos! Esta subasta es por una (1) histórica medalla celebrando el centenario de la Universidad
Interamericana de Puerto Rico, la 2da mas grande en la isla. La pieza es en niquel con coloridos detalles en esmalte. El terminado parece proof (flor de cuño) y viene en una cápsula plástica de presentación. Mide 40mm - grande como Peso de plata - y viene con una frase impresa en el borde liso (marca del fabricante). El anverso muestra la efigie del Estadounidense Tejano, Reverendo Presbiteriano Doctor John Will Harris (1876-1956) fundador y primer presidente de la UIPR en San Germán. A su izquierda aparece el logo oficial de la universidad, y a su derecha el símbolo Masónico de la escuadra y el compás con la letra "G" de "GOD" -Dios en inglés-, representativo de la logia masónica Luz de las Lomas # 53, de la que el Reverendo pasa formar parte por muchos años. El reverso muestra a manera artística logo oficial de los actos de conmemoración del evento, el cual consiste en las letras "U" e "I" super impuestas, sobre las cuales se yergue un número 100 con la frase "años de servicio." Aparece además el tigre, mascota de la institución. Esta tirada privada mandada hacer por educadores asociados a la institución para repartir internamente entre profesores y administradores allegados. NO ES VENDIDA EN LA UNIVERSIDAD.
Aparenta ser una tirada
ENUMERADA
de
100
ejemplares.
Tuve la suerte de conseguir una pequeña cantidad para distribuir al precio original de venta. Se venderán en orden ascendente. Si usted desea un número particular, escríbame rápido una vez comprada. Si no se la consigo, le devuelvo su dinero. Se pronostica esta pieza suba de valor rápidamente. Pocas a mano. A continuación, un reportaje sobre la vida del Reverendo Harris - en inglés-.
ENGLISH:
Howdy! This auction is for one (1)
l
imited edition
numbered
medal, commemorating the
Centennial of the Inter American University of Puerto Rico 1912 - 2012. It is made of nickel with enamel, measures 40mm - Silver dollar sized - and includes edge lettering featuring the name of the maker of this
privately commissioned piece
. It comes in a presentation capsule. Low mintage of mere 100 pieces, sure to increase in value before long. Few on hand to sell at the set up initial price of .99. Once gone, they are gone. Below is a copy of an article on Presbyterian Reverend, Dr. John Will Harris, founder and 1st president of Puerto Rico's 2nd largest University:
By Luis A. Otero-González, on January 2012
REVEREND DR. JOHN WILL HARRIS
This year, 2012, the Inter American University of Puerto Rico is celebrating its one-hundredth anniversary of service to the island of Puerto Rico. This centenary institution was the dream of John Will Harris an adopted son from Texas, a visionary who was an outstanding educator, a Presbyterian Minister, and a Freemason.
Dr. J. Will Harris, as he preferred to be called, was born on January 12, 1876, in the town of Dripping Springs, Texas. He was the son of Mrs. Annie Evelyn Buckow, daughter of German Lutheran immigrants, and David Harris, son of Irish Calvinist immigrants. That religious, Protestant home was his first school. He grew up with his brothers David Edward, Charlie, Clarence, and Joe; their sister died when she was only two when they were living at Derby, Texas. Their home of prayer and devotion served as the main ingredient of their daily life which was stamped forever on this Freemason founding father of the Polytechnic Institute of Puerto Rico. The Institute eventually turned into the Inter American University of Puerto Rico, one of the largest private university systems within the higher educational system of the United States of America.
Harris’s formative years were spent in rural Texas helping his father with cattle and horses. Nonetheless his spirit wanted to fly to other parts of the world to serve as an evangelist and educator. He wanted to help others, and to accomplish that dream he had to relinquish his outdoor rural life for a study desk. He left Texas with this clear goal in mind, and in 1902 he graduated with a BA degree from Park College in Parkville, Missouri. After that he was admitted to Princeton Theological Seminary in New Jersey, graduating on May 1905. On April 14, 1905, he was ordained in Brooklyn, New York as a Presbyterian Minister. Years later he was awarded Honorary LL.D.’s from his alma mater Park College and the University of Puerto Rico. He also received an Honorary Doctorate in Divinity from the Polytechnic College in San Germán. On May 17 of the same year he married Eunice White and accepted a pastorate in Pond Creek, Oklahoma.
However, that wasn’t exactly what he thought it was going to be—it was too quiet. He was looking for something more demanding, which moved him to seek a tougher challenge somewhere else with an international assignment. His petition for an international assignment was turned down by the Presbyterian Foreign Mission Board. Instead he was assigned to the new territory of Puerto Rico. He and his wife sailed to Puerto Rico on July 5, 1906, arriving eventually to the town of San Germán, what became his adopted home for the next 30 years.
The San Germán assignment was a real challenge for many reasons. It was a different culture and language in a predominantly Roman Catholic stronghold. In San Germán is located one of the oldest Catholic churches in all of the Americas. The Convent Church of Porta Coeli (the Gateway to Heaven) was built by the Dominican Order in 1609 and is one of the oldest church structures in the western hemisphere. Also the western part of the island, which includes San Germán, was the birth place of many of the liberal minds of the 19th century including the founding fathers of Grand Lodge of Puerto Rico.
Harris immediately started his demanding missionary work which, as time passed, turned into a more educational undertaking. He was a young, energetic, and strong man, described in 1906 by Henry Ford as a “man with a unique capacity.” Henry Ford was a Freemason, and John Will met many other Masons during his life, which without doubt influenced him. Further, many of the Presbyterian Ministers and other fellow American’s he knew on the island were Freemasons, too. He received legal advice from Rev. E. A. Odell, pastor of the Hugh O’Neil Presbyterian Church in San Juan, Hardwood Hull the owner and editor of the Porto Rico Progress, an English-language newspaper and staunch supporter of Harris, and Regis H. Post, former Governor of Puerto Rico, who were all members of St. John the Baptist Lodge No. 12 in San Juan. He was also a friend of Ulises Gregory, the Republican Party Leader in San Germán, a member of Luz de las Lomas No. 53 Lodge in San Germán.
His hard work paid off, and by 1912 his dream started to unfold when he opened the Polytechnic Institute of Puerto Rico on the Loma Linda Hills of San Germán. It wasn’t an easy endeavor but his strong work ethic, his drive to succeed, and his unquestionable desire to help others all bound to his deep faith conceived a dream of a small school that grew to become the second largest higher education system of Puerto Rico and one of the largest private university systems in the United States of America. As he fulfilled his dream of creating this institution, he searched for funds all over Puerto Rico and the mainland. On this quest he met very important individuals and Freemasons outside the island, among others President Theodore Roosevelt and Andrew Mellon.
Between 1912 and 1913 he received a ,500 donation from the wife of prominent New York financier Arthur James for the construction of a girl’s dormitory. Later, Arthur James Jr. gave Harris another ,500 for a boy’s dormitory. By 1912, James Jr. was a minister in San Germán and eventually worked as a teacher in the Polytechnic Institute. We think that Bro. Arthur James and Bro. Eusebio López-Acosta (the lawyer for the Polytechnic Institute), both members of Luz de las Lomas No. 53 Lodge in San Germán, were very influential in getting J. Will Harris initiated into Masonry.
According to the lodge records, John Will Harris was initiated in Luz de las Lomas No. 53 on December 29, 1919, at the age of 43 years. It is interesting to point out two things. First, Lodge Luz de las Lomas No. 53 was chartered in 1912, its first Worshipful being José A. Vivoni, San Germán’s Mayor, and it was the same year that brother Harris started his new college. Second, like the majority of the blue lodges in Puerto Rico, No. 53 still uses the Scottish Rite Ritual and works in the Spanish language.
On May 6, 1922, he was raised as Master Mason and continued to be very active, in particular with his blue lodge. Bro. Harris expanded his relationships with other Freemasons in the island and abroad. He became very good friends with Dr. Juan B. Huyke who was a Presbyterian Freemason from Iris de Paz Lodge in the town of Arroyo, Commissioner of Education of Puerto Rico, interim Governor of the island in 1923, and Deputy Grand Master from 1918 until 1920.
Another important figure was James R. Beverly, a native Texan close friend and Freemason. Bro. James Beverly came to Puerto Rico as Assistant Attorney General in 1925, appointed by President Calvin Coolidge. Later he was Attorney General and acting Governor on a number of occasions and was member for many years of the Board of Trustees of the Polytechnic Institute and Chairman of the Board.
On March 2, 1937, John Will Harris passed the reigns of his beloved Polytechnic Institute to another Presbyterian Minister and Freemason, Brother Jarvis Morris. Dr. Morris’s main legacy was to get the Polytechnic Institute Accredited by the Middle States Association of School and Colleges. This was the first time that any college outside the mainland had been accredited by a regional accrediting agency.
Bro. J. Will Harris retired and moved back to his beloved el Guajolote Ranch in Dilley, Texas. Even then he returned many times to the island and on one occasion to receive a ,000 donation from the Grand Lodge of Puerto Rico for chemistry and physics lab equipment.
After moving to Texas he transferred from his mother lodge Luz de las Lomas No. 53 to Dilley Lodge No. 1301 where he was one of the brethren who chartered that lodge on December 30, 1947. We know that he was very involved in community affairs in Dilley since he was the founding president of the Southwest Texas Clinic which provided medical services to his community.
Bro. John Will Harries died in Texas on June 14, 1956, due to injuries suffered in a car accident. His remains and those of his wife are buried in a monument located in the San Germán Campus of the Inter American University. Dr. John Will Harris was a very religious man, and a great Freemason devoted to his missionary duty and educational passion. He was a man dedicated to helping others in line with the precepts of the Masonic institution.
His dream turned into a great university with a present enrollment over 43,000 students in nine campuses all over the island, offering from associate to professional degrees in engineering, law, and nursing to masters and doctorates in many disciplines. This Institution has been the alma mater for many Puerto Rican’s including MW Hipólito Marcano who was grand master for thirteen years and recipient of the 33rd degree from both Supreme Councils, 33°, SJ and NMJ.
At the time of his untimely death, Brother Harris was active with Dilley Lodge No. 1301 and there is no doubt that the huge Lone Star State gave to Puerto Rico one of its finest sons and the little island of the Lone Star Flag returned back to Texas a great Mason.
NOTE:
Luis A. Otero-Gonzalez is Grand Librarian of the Grand Lodge of Puerto Rico, a Past Master of Army Lodge No. 87, San Juan, Puerto Rico, a member of San Juan Consistory, a member of the Red Cross of Constantine, San Juan Conclave, a Past Patron of Caridad Chapter No. 5 O.E.S., San Juan, a member of Al Rai Saleh Shriners, the editor of Acacia magazine, the editor of Inter Metro Business Journal, and an Associate Professor of Management at the Metropolitan Campus, Inter American University of Puerto Rico.
ENVIO / SHIPPING :
EMPAQUE /
PACKAGING
Enviamos dentro de mica, cartón, cápsula, o protector acrílico, envuelto entre cartón grueso o burbuja, dentro de sobre o caja sellado con cinta adhesiva a los 4 lados. Haremos todo lo posible por resolver su problema y ganar su satisfacción. Algunas medalla o moneda quizá sea enviada en cápsula de acrílico como cortesía nuestra. Debido a que usted pagó por la medalla o moneda, y no por la cápsula, nosotros no somos responsables de reemplazar cápsulas recibidas rotas. Debido a que las medallas vienen con alguna que otra imperfección de fábrica, es normal que una medalla contenga algún rayacito o cantacito mínimo de lo cual no somos responsables. Las antiguedades que vendemos tienen imperfecciones por vejez, uso y desgaste, que pudieran no reflejarse en las fotos. Por eso sólo reemplazaremos o devolveremos dinero en caso de mercancía recibida gravemente dañada. Clientes que abusen con reclamaciones exageradas e infundadas serán bloqueados en el futuro.
Items are put inside plastic wrap, coin flip or capsule, foam insert, card protector, bank note jacket, FDC jacket, or similar protective method, then shipped padded within card board or bubble wrap inside an envelope or box. We’ll do everything we can to help you and get your 5 stars. Some medals or coins may be shipped inside plastic capsules as a courtesy of ours. Because you paid for a medal or coin, and not for an acrylic capsule, we are not to be held responsible over capsules received cracked or broken. Medals received from the factory will feature minor scratches or nicks over which we shouldn't be held responsible. Likewise, vintage items we sell may feature imperfections due to age, tear, and wear, which may not reflect on the photos. Due to this, we will only replace or provide refund on items received greatly damaged. Clients maliciously seeking to take advantage of the system by placing bogus or exaggerated claims will be blocked from making future business with us.
GASTOS DE ENVIO
/ SHIPPING CHARGES
SUBASTAS pagan envío: 1er ítem gano pagará .99 o más; cada ítem adicional pagará .99 de envío.
(a menos que se indique lo contrario)
AUCTION ITEMS will pay: 1
st
Auction item won pays either .99 or MORE. Each additional item will pay .99 each.
(unless otherwise noted)
EXTRANJEROS /
INTERNATIONAL BUYERS
Para más seguridad y proteger su inversión, utilizamos el Sistema de Envío Global Ebay. Si desea método alterno debe informarme antes de comprar. El comprador pagará los gastos de envío, incluyendo seguro y c
ódigo de seguimeinto. NO ENVIAMOS SIN SEGURO PAGO.
To insure your investment, we use Ebay’s Global Shipment system. If you want another method we must be asked prior to any purchase. Buyers will pay all shipping charges, to include insurance and tracking.
WE WON’T SHIP ITEMS UNINSURED!
PAGO TARDE /
LATE PAYMENT POLICY
Para facilitar y aligerar el proceso de envíos, hemos automatizado nuestro sistema de cobro: EBay procesará todo comprador malicioso que no haya saldado su compra en 7 días.
Due to the large amount of items being sold, and to streamline expedient shipping process, effective APRIL 3, 2014 Ebay's automated non-payer assistant will start processing orders not paid within 7 days of purchase.NO EXCEPTIONS!
TIEMPO DE ENVIO /
WAITING TIME
Todos los artículos serán procesados y enviados dentro de 10 dias laborables a partir de la fecha de pago. Visitamos el correo sólo 1 vez por semana, y NO somos responsables por artículos que tarden más de lo debido por culpa del sistema postal. CON SU COMPRA, USTED APRUEBA LO ARRIBA ESCRITO Y SE COMPROMETE A NO QUEJARSE POR RETRASOS EN EL RECIBO DE SUS ARTICULOS, SOBRE LO CUAL NO TENEMOS CONTROL.
All items will be processed and shipped within 10 working days from date paid. We ship items only Once a week, and we are definitely not liable for items that might take longer to arrive than expected due to our postal system’s mismanagement. BY PURCHASING FROM US YOU UNDERSTAND OUR POLICIES, AND YOU AGREE NOT TO FILE ANY MALICIOUS COMPLAINT IN REGARDS OF ANY DELAY INCURRED, OVER WHICH WE HAVE NO CONTROL.
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PURCHASE RETRACTION
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