Gerald Hagey

Joseph Gerald "Gerry" Hagey (September 28, 1904 October 26, 1988) was a Canadian businessman, academic, and a founder and first president of the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario.

Joseph Gerald "Gerry" Hagey

President of the University of Waterloo
In office
1958–1969
Succeeded byHoward Petch
Personal details
Born(1904-09-28)September 28, 1904
Hamilton, Ontario
DiedOctober 26, 1988(1988-10-26) (aged 84)

Biography

Hagey was born and raised in Hamilton, Ontario, the son of Menno Hagey (1863-1946) and Esther Cornell (1861-1907).[1] In 1928 he received a B.A. from Waterloo College, at that time a small church college affiliated with the University of Western Ontario. After graduation, he took a job in sales for B.F. Goodrich, a Kitchener-based rubber company.[2] By the 1950s he had become an advertising and public relations manager, though throughout this time he had continued to be involved in the affairs of his alma mater, Waterloo College.

In 1953 he left B.F. Goodrich to become the president of Waterloo College. The 1950s and 1960s saw a massive expansion in industry and academia because of the postwar economic boom and because of the impending arrival of the baby boomers at Canadian universities. Hagey's goal was the transformation of Waterloo College into a university with a particular focus on science and technology, and close links with industry through co-operative education.

This idea proved somewhat controversial, and Hagey ultimately became the founding president of the University of Waterloo in 1957, when the science and engineering faculties he had established broke away from the rest of Waterloo College, which later became Wilfrid Laurier University.

He retired in 1969 after the removal of his larynx due to cancer.[1][2] When Hagey retired he had helped the University of Waterloo grow from 75 students in two portable classrooms to a rambling campus worth $80 million and a student population of 9,000. A building on the UW campus, the J.G. Hagey Hall of the Humanities, is named in his honour.

In 1967 he received an honorary doctorate from Sir George Williams University, which later became Concordia University.[3]

In April 1986, he was invested as a member into the Order of Canada.

Hagey was the great-grandson of Mennonite Bishop Joseph B. Hagey and the cousin of Brantford MPP Louis Hagey.

gollark: Presumably it's for authenticating the reader to the bank too.
gollark: You don't need to have the reader thing have a key for that, it could plausibly just use TLS or something.
gollark: If it's an additional requirement on top of negotiation with the actual credit card, I don't think it would be worse.
gollark: Well, that seems fine, people mostly have phones now.
gollark: It seems like bad design to make it so that you need ridiculously secure devices to hold keys instead of just making it so that the user actually explicitly authorizes transactions somehow.

References

  1. "Hagey, Joseph Gerald family fonds". University of Waterloo Library. Special Collections & Archives. 14 April 2014. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
  2. "Gerald Hagey" (PDF). Waterloo Public Library. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
  3. "Honorary Degree Citation - J. Gerald Hagey* | Concordia University Archives". archives.concordia.ca. Retrieved 2016-03-30.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.