Beginning in 1939, Webster College celebrated Shakespeare's birthday every year with a pilgrimage to his statue in Tower Grove Park in St. Louis. Local dignitaries, high schools, and theater groups in the area were invited to attend a ceremony that included speeches, a wreath laying, and usually a scene from a Shakespeare play. The photograph on this page shows three members of the Loretto Players, Webster's student dramatic club, in a scene from Twelfth Night in 1951.
Special guests were featured on a few occasions. The second photograph to the right is likely from the 1941 celebration with actors Helen Hayes and Maurice Evans. In 1952, Vincent Price, a native of St. Louis and well-known actor, was present – see a signed copy of the 1952 theater program at the bottom.
The person generally regarded as responsible for starting this tradition was a faculty member in the Speech Department named Harry R. McClain. He directed Shakespeare plays at Webster for 36 years, often with the help of his sister, Anna McClain Sankey, who was the department chair for many years. McClain left Webster in 1954 and the pilgrimage tradition seemed to die out shortly thereafter.