Henry N. Snyder
Dr. Henry Nelson Snyder (1865–1949) was an American Methodist educator and author. He served as president of Wofford College from 1902 until his retirement in 1942.
Early life
Henry Nelson Snyder was born on January 14, 1865 in Macon, Georgia.[1] He attended Vanderbilt University, where he was a member of the Chi Phi Fraternity, graduating in 1887.[2] He also studied at the University of Göttingen, Germany earned Snyder a Ph.D.[1]
Career
Snyder taught Latin at his alma mater, Vanderbilt University, from 1887 to 1890.[3] He arrived in Spartanburg, South Carolina, in September 1890 to become professor of English literature. In 1902, he succeeded James H. Carlisle as president of Wofford College.[1]
Snyder was a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South Joint Commission, in which capacity he argued in favour of racial segregation.[4] Snyder served on the Board of Trustees of Spartanburg Junior College from its inception in 1911 until his death and was chairman of that board several times. He served on the Methodist unification commission as well the joint hymnal commission. A Phi Beta Kappa, Snyder was a member of the Modern Language Association and the Religious Education Association [5]
Snyder's autobiography, An Educational Odyssey, was published in 1947.[6]
Personal life
He married Lula Eubanks (1867-1956). Their only child Hugh McCrea Snyder pre-deceased his parents, dying in 1936.
Death
He died at the Mary Black Hospital at the age of 84 on September 18, 1949 one day short of the fifty-ninth anniversary of his arrival in Spartanburg. After funeral services at the Wofford College Chapel (now known as the Leonard Auditorium, in the Old Main building), Dr. Snyder was buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Spartanburg, South Carolina.[1]
Selected bibliography
- 1906 -- The Denominational College in Southern Education. Nashville, TN: Board of Education, Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Reprint from the January 1906 issue of The South Atlantic Quarterly. OCLC 6157055
- 1906 -- Sidney Lanier — A Study of Interpretation. New York: Eaton and Mains and Cincinnati, OH: Jennings & Graham. Part of the Modern poets and Christian teaching series. OCLC 5841515
- 1911 -- Selections from the Old Testament. Edited with an introduction and notes by Dr. Snyder. Nashville, TN: Cokesbury Press, 1927. Part of the Standard English Classics series. OCLC 557574597
- 1926 -- The Persistence of Spiritual Ideals in English Letters. New York: Eaton and Mains and Cincinnati, OH: Jennings & Graham. Part of The Fondren Lectures of 1926 series. OCLC 5842234
- 1939 -- On Being Frontier-minded. Gainesville, FL: University of Florida. The David Levy Yulee lecture. OCLC 427886840
- 1947 -- An Educational Odyssey. New York and Nashville, TN: Abingdon-Cokesbury Press. OCLC 2760583 The publisher reprinted re-issued this work in 1957. OCLC 702564938 The original typescript manuscript An Educational Odyssey: the Autobiography of Henry Nelson Snyder by Henry Nelson Snyder, President Emeritus of Wofford College, Spartanburg, South Carolina containing corrections by the author and the press is in the Wofford College archives, Sandor Teszler Library. OCLC 698377619
References
- The Spartanburg Herald, Monday, September 18, 1949, pp 1-2
- Review of An Educational Odyssey. School and Society 69 (1949), p. 176.
- Becker, Anja (November 2008). "Southern Academic Ambitions Meet German Scholarship: The Leipzig Networks of Vanderbilt University's James H. Kirkland in the Late Nineteenth Century". The Journal of Southern History. 74 (4): 881. JSTOR 27650317.
- Davis, Morris (2008). The Methodist Unification: Christianity and the Politics of Race in the Jim Crow Era. NYU Press. p. 35. ISBN 0-8147-1990-2. Retrieved 2008-06-15.
- "Services for Dr. Snyder To Be Held This Morining", The Spartanburg Herald, Tuesday, September 19, 1949, pp 1–2
- Dodson, Dan W. (November 1947). "Review". Journal of Educational Sociology. American Sociological Association. 21 (3): 189–190. JSTOR 2264137.
External links
- Henry Nelson Snyder at Find a Grave This record is not in the famous section of Find a Grave. You must search all Find a Grave records to find it.
- Wofford Quintessential Chronology