Rufus W. Stimson

Rufus Whittaker Stimson (February 20, 1868 – May 1, 1947) was an American educator who served as the third president of the University of Connecticut (then Connecticut Agricultural College) from 1901 to 1908.[1] Stimson was a major influence on the field of agricultural education.[2]

Rufus Whittaker Stimson
3rd President of the University of Connecticut
In office
1901–1908
Preceded byGeorge Washington Flint
Succeeded byEdwin O. Smith
Personal details
Born(1868-02-20)February 20, 1868
Palmer, Massachusetts
DiedMay 1, 1947(1947-05-01) (aged 79)
Hyannis, Massachusetts
NationalityAmerican
Alma materColby College
Harvard University (B.A., M.A.)
Yale Divinity School (B.D.)
ProfessionProfessor of English literature, academic administrator, agricultural educator

Early life and education

Stimson was born on February 20, 1868, on a farm near Palmer, Massachusetts. His parents were Horace W. Stimson and Harriet A. Hunt.[3]

Stimson graduated from Palmer High School and attended Colby College for two years. He continued his studies at Harvard University, where he studied philosophy under William James and earned his bachelor's degree in 1895 and his master's degree, both in philosophy, in 1896.[2]

He went on to receive his Bachelor of Divinity degree from the Yale Divinity School in 1897.[2]

Career at Connecticut Agricultural College

Stimson served as Professor of English at the Connecticut Agricultural College (now the University of Connnecticut) from fall 1897 to 1901. He also taught ethics, rhetoric, and elocution. On October 5, 1901, college president George Washington Flint was forced to resign by the college's board of trustees, who immediately appointed Stimson as acting president. Stimson was made permanent president more than a year later.

Adept at managing public relations, Stimson quickly repaired relations with the state's agricultural communities, which had unraveled during Flint's tenure. In contrast to Flint's unpopular emphasis on classical education, Stimson maintained that "preparation for practical farming ... is the principal aim of the College."[4] According to college historian Walter Stemmons, Stimson's tenure was "an era of good feeling and growth."[5] Similarly, the Daily Campus student newspaper editorialized that "during his term of service the institution has made commendable progress."[6]

State support and student enrollment increased during Stimson's tenure. Annual state appropriations rose and in 1905, the Connecticut General Assembly voted $60,000 to build Storrs Hall (a men's dormitory) and another $50,000 to construct a horticultural building and greenhouses.[5] By 1907 the college had attracted a growing number of students from outside Connecticut, including from India, the West Indies, and Germany.[4]

Stimson also ramped up summer school courses, consolidated the Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station's offices from Wesleyan University to Storrs, expanded the college's property by purchasing a hundred-acre farm in Storrs, and installed the college's first electric lights.[5]

On February 20, 1908, Stimson presented his resignation to the college's board of trustees, effective at the end of the academic year. On April 25, 1908, trustees appointed E. O. Smith acting president. Stimson's permanent successor was Charles L. Beach.[6]

Later career

Stimson departed Connecticut Agricultural College to become director of Smith Agricultural School, a newly founded secondary school in Northampton, Massachusetts. Louisiana State University professor Gary E. Moore speculated that Stimson resigned to pursue the innovative project method of agricultural education he had developed, in which students received a formal education but applied what they learned on their home farms through use of practical projects.[2] The Smith-Hughes Act of 1917 mandated these kind of supervised agricultural experiences.[7] In 1919, Stimson published a textbook entitled Vocational Agricultural Education by Home Projects.[8]

In 1911, Stimson became state supervisor of agricultural education for Massachusetts. He served in this position until he reached the mandatory retirement age of 70 and duly retired in 1938. The following year, the U.S. Office of Education hired him to write a history of agricultural education, giving him the title of research specialist.[2] This book was published in 1942.[9]

Stimson authored more than eighteen articles in the Agricultural Education Magazine and served as associate editor of the Vocational Education Magazine during the 1920s. He was president of the American Association for the Advancement of Agricultural Teaching (1913–1914) and vice president of Association of American Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations (1906–1907). He traveled across the United States to deliver seminars on agricultural education. He also campaigned unsuccessfully to admit girls to the National FFA Organization.[3]

Personal life

Stimson married Helen Morris (1867–1944) of Boston on October 4, 1899.[3] The couple had no issue.[10]

Helen Stimson coached the first season of the UConn Huskies women's basketball team, which went 2-0 in its first season playing against Willimantic High School.[11]

Rufus Stimson died at the Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, Massachusetts, on May 1, 1947.[12] He was survived by his sister and four brothers, as well as many nieces and nephews.[10]

gollark: ...
gollark: No. Actually explain things instead of expecting people to blindly pattern-match whatever nonsense you're trying to convey out of a heap of stuff.
gollark: If you want serious treatment:- make actual testable claims- try and explain actual ideas involved- don't just dump unreadably vast amounts of random trash and expect people to read them (I doubt you have)- ideally get peer-reviewed papers but the rest is more important
gollark: *This* doesn't make sense. You're not explaining any ideas but dumping piles of irrelevant information at us.
gollark: Yes.

References

  1. Ballestrini, Christine (2019-05-24). "University of Connecticut Office of the President | History". Retrieved 2020-07-28.
  2. Moore, Gary E. (1988). "The Forgotten Leader In Agricultural Education: Rufus W. Stimson" (PDF). Journal of the American Association of Teacher Educators in Agriculture. 29 (3): 50–58.
  3. Harvard University (June 1915). Fifth Report of the Harvard University Class of 1895. Cambridge, MA: Crimson Printing Co. pp. 316–317.
  4. Annual Report of the Trustees of the Connecticut Agricultural College at Mansfield Conn. 1907. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
  5. Stemmons, Walter; Schenker, André (1931). Connecticut Agricultural College: A History. Storrs, Conn. OCLC 926142.
  6. Stave, Bruce M (2006). Red brick in the land of steady habits: creating the University of Connecticut, 1881-2006. Lebanon, NH: Univ. Press of New England. pp. 9–11. ISBN 978-1-58465-569-5. OCLC 836219917.
  7. Agricultural Experience Tracker. "Our Story". www.theaet.com. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
  8. Stimson, Rufus Whittaker (1919). Vocational agricultural education by home projects,. New York: Macmillan Co. OCLC 2501132.
  9. Stimson, Rufus W; Lathrop, Frank W; United States; Division of Vocational Education (1942). History of agricultural education of less than college grade in the United States: a cooperative project of workers in vocational education in agricultural and in related fields. Washington, D.C.: Federal Security Agency, U.S. Office of Education. OCLC 3246996.
  10. "Necrology: Rufus W. Stimson '94". The Colby Alumnus. 1947. p. 29. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
  11. Roy, Mark J. (2002-03-11). "A Piece of UConn History/100 Years of Women's Basketball". UConn Advance. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
  12. Lathrop, F. W. (1947). "Rufus Whitaker Stimson" (PDF). Agricultural Education Magazine. 20: 2020-07-29.
Academic offices
Preceded by
George Washington Flint
3rd President of the University of Connecticut
1901-1908
Succeeded by
Edwin O. Smith
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