President of Grinnell College
Since the college's founding in 1846, Grinnell College has had thirteen presidents and seven acting presidents. The College president is responsible for all aspects of the institution's internal and external affairs, including administrative and academic decision-making.[1]
While Iowa College, later renamed Grinnell College, did not have a president for the first years of its existence, after the Civil War, the trustees chose fellow trustee George Frederick Magoun to lead the institution as it matured. From his inauguration in 1865, Magoun served 19 years, the second longest presidential tenure in the college's history.[2]
The current Grinnell College president is Raynard S. Kington, who replaced acting president Russell K. Osgood to become the 13th president of the College on August 1, 2010.[3]
Presidents of the College
- The Trustees of Iowa College 1846-65
- George Frederick Magoun 1865-84
- Samuel J. Buck (acting) 1884-87
- George Augustus Gates 1887-1900
- John H. T. Main (acting), 1900-02
- Dan Freeman Bradley 1902-05
- John H.T. Main 1905-31 (acting in first academic year)
- John Scholte Nollen 1931-40
- Samuel Nowell Stevens 1940-54
- Rupert Adam Hawk (acting), 1954-55
- Howard Rothmann Bowen 1955-64
- James Hartmann Stauss (acting) 1964-65
- Glenn Leggett 1965-75, President Emeritus of the College 1979-2003
- A. Richard Turner 1975-79
- George A. Drake 1979-91, President Emeritus of the College 2005-
- Waldo S. Walker (acting) 1987
- Pamela A. Ferguson 1991-97
- Charles L. Duke (acting) 1998
- Russell K. Osgood 1998-2010
- Raynard S. Kington 2010-
See also
- Grinnell College
- Office of the President, Grinnell College
- Presidents of Grinnell College
- Virtual Exhibit: Presidents of Grinnell College
References
- ↑ Grinnell College, Office of the President. "Office of the President". Accessed May 17, 2008.
- ↑ Jones, Alan. "A Brief History of Grinnell College", pp. 10-17. Accessed May 10, 2008.
- ↑ Grinnell College. (February 17, 2010). "Grinnell announces 13th President Raynard S. Kington, M.D., M.B.A., Ph.D., National Institutes of Health Deputy Director, to lead Grinnell".