Donald B. Fullerton

Fullerton was also a member of the English Dramatic Association, starring as Adriana in Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors[6] and receiving accolades as Abigail in Marlowe's The Jew of Malta.

The review in the Daily Princetonian wrote: The audience did not allow anything humorous to escape it; and once in a while it fairly howled over lines such as the one which announced that Abigail, quite mature as played by Fullerton, was but fourteen years of age.

[11] While serving with Battery E two of his men were killed on 1 November 1918 by shell fragments in the fight near the Grande Carrée Ferme, north of Bantheville.

For miles, hills and valleys presented a continuous kaleidoscope of shell craters, trenches, dugouts and barbed wire entanglements.

Rows of tree stumps lined the roads and canals where wonderful avenues had either been chopped away to open fields of fire or shot down by heavy artillery, leaving a mass of twisted splinters pointing in every direction.

[15] He also wrote of the purpose of writing the history of the unit: It may also give a faint idea of what we accomplished to those who were not so fortunate as we and who wonder why some of us don't talk.

[17] Ultimately he went as a missionary with the Plymouth Brethren to the north west frontier of British India but was forced to return to the United States due to poor health.

[18] Fullerton disembarked, never to return overseas, and spent a short time teaching at J. Oliver Buswell's National Bible Institute in New York.

The first undergraduate president of the PEF, Archibald Fletcher of the Princeton Class of 1938, wrote to The Daily Princetonian that: The purpose of this Fellowship shall be to provide an opportunity for students at Princeton University to enjoy Christian fellowship one with another, to bear united witness to the faith of its members in the whole Bible as the inspired Word of God and to encourage other students to take, with them, a definite stand for Christ on the Campus.

[23] John Frame, a noted Presbyterian theologian, has written at length of the influence of the PEF, Westerly Road Church, and especially Dr. Fullerton on his life through his time at Princeton in the late '50s and early '60s.

Then Fullerton would talk with the student as long as possible and necessary, to discern his spiritual condition, to present the gospel, to answer questions, to urge a decision.

Donald Fullerton in WWI
Dr. Fullerton (right) at the P-Rade (date uncertain, likely late 1970s).
The PEF in 1960 (L-R): William Bryant '60, Chi-Yu King '61, Steve Johnson '60, Don Youngren '61, Ron Fisher '60, Hank Bryant '63, John Frame '61, Jim Renick '60, Suthy MacLean '58, Ken Petzinger '63, Bob Shade '60, Ron Furst '63, Bruce Higgins '60, Bart Campbell '62, Jerry Butler '60. Six became missionaries and one a theologian.