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Edgar Creighton Higbie
President (1920-31)
Dr. Higbie was a native of Wisconsin, having been born at Berlin,
Wisconsin on July 31, 1875. In 1877, the family moved to a farm in
southern Minnesota, and here he spent his childhood. He attended rural
schools and for seven years he clerked in a store at Green Lake,
Wisconsin. Later, he attended Ripon College Academy; taught school in
Bluffton and Fairwater, Wisconsin; taught in a district in Mower County,
Minnesota; was principal at Dexter and Clarkfield, Minnesota; and,
superintendent of schools at Elmore, Minnesota. In the internals of
teaching, he carried on his studies at the University of Minnesota,
Carlton College, and the University of Chicago. He received the A.B. in
1907 and A.M. degrees in 1909 from the University of Minnesota, and his
PhD. from Columbia University in 1921.
While superintendent of schools at Canby, Minnesota, he established the
first high school agricultural department in the State. From 1910-1917,
he was Director of the West Central Minnesota School of Agriculture at
Morris. He resigned to continue his graduate studies at the University
of Chicago and Columbia University. During WW I, he was employed by
private philanthropists at New York in organizing agricultural work for
the rehabilitation of soldiers and worked for the Federal Board of
Vocational and Agricultural Rehabilitation on among soldiers in New
Work, New Jersey, and Connecticut.
In 1920, he accepted the Presidency of State Normal Schools in Madison,
South Dakota. He taught in the summer schools at Boston University and
George Peabody College for Teachers. He began his duties in 1921.
Dr. Higbie was married to Nellie May Leslie of Brownsdale, Minnesota on
June 15, 1904. They had two sons, Howard Ernest, born December 13, 1909
and Leslie Warren born on October 30, 1914.
While in Madison, Dr. Higbie served as the first President of the
Madison Kiwanis Club. He was a member and active in the work of the
Presbyterian Church. He was a member of the A.F. & A.M.
In March of 1931, President Higbie resigned President of Eastern State
Normal School as it was then called. He accepted the Presidency of J.
Ormand Wilson Teachers College, Washington, D.C.
He remained their as President until 1941, when due to ill health he
gave up his administrative duties, but remained on the faculty as an
assistant professor of education.
He was known throughout the nation for his profound study of the
sociological elements and implications of Teacher Education.
He was noted for humanistic approach in the study of education and
always emphasized the importance of setting up educational courses in
scholarly sequence. He was President of District Education Association
for many years. And he authored two books A first Course in the Study of
Education and An Objective Method for Determining Certain Fundamental
Principles in Secondary Agricultural Education. He died from a heart
attack at his home in Bethesda, Maryland on November 24, 1944 at the age
of 69.
Higbie Hall, built
in 1965, was an addition to the growing school and named after President
Edgar Higbie.
Source:
Dakota State University, RG 8, DSU 132, Box 855. Lowry, V. A. Forty Years at General Beadle (1922-1962).
Madison, SD: Dakota State University, 1984. pg 24-43. Olson, Bonnie. Historical Calendar of Dakota State
University (1881-2007). Madison, SD: Dakota State University.
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