James Cameron Mackenzie

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James Cameron Mackenzie (1852- 1931 ) was an American educator, born in Aberdeen, Scotland. He came to America when he was a boy, studied in the public schools of Wilkes-Barre, Pa.. in the Bloomsburg Normal School of the same State, at Phillips Exeter Academy, and at Lafayette College, where he graduated in 1878. After studying theology at Princeton, he organized in 1882 and was head master until 1899 of the Lawrenceville, (N. J.) School for boys. After a few months abroad he was made director of Tome Institute, Port Deposit, Md. (1899). In 1901 he founded the Mackenzie School at Dobbs Ferry, N. Y., of which he was thereafter director. He was one of the three organizers, and president in 1897, of the Headmasters' Association, in 1898 was president of the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of the Middle States and Maryland, and at the time of the Chicago World's Fair (1893) he served as chairman of the International Congress of Secondary Education.

This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.