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Harry Burns Hutchins

American academic (1847-1930)


American academic (1847-1930)

FieldValue
nameHarry Burns Hutchins
imagePortrait of Harry Burns Hutchins.jpg
office4th President of the University of Michigan
term_start1909
term_end1920
predecessorJames Burrill Angell
successorMarion LeRoy Burton
office26th Dean of University of Michigan Law School
term_start21895
term_end21910
predecessor2Jerome C. Knowlton
successor2Henry Moore Bates
office3Acting President of the University of Michigan
term_start31897
term_end31898
alongside3James Burrill Angell
birth_date
birth_placeLisbon, New Hampshire
death_date
death_placeAnn Arbor, Michigan
alma_materTilton School
Wesleyan University (no degree)
University of Michigan (BA)
spouseMary Louise Crocker
childrenHarry C. Burns

Wesleyan University (no degree) University of Michigan (BA) Harry Burns Hutchins (April 8, 1847 – January 25, 1930) was the fourth president of the University of Michigan (1909–1920).

Biography

On April 8, 1847, Harry B. Hutchins was born in Lisbon, New Hampshire. Hutchins got his education at New Hampshire Conference Seminary, now known as Tilton School, as well as the Vermont Conference Seminary. Hutchins, at the age of nineteen, entered Wesleyan University in Connecticut. Hutchins, unfortunately, was not able to complete his first year however due to falling ill. Subsequently, Hutchins graduated from the University of Michigan in 1871.{{cite web|url=http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/Faculty_History/H/Hutchins,_Harry_Burns.html|title=Harry Burns Hutchins

Death

Hutchins suddenly become ill on January 22, 1930, and died three days later at his home in Ann Arbor at the age of 82.

Dean of Law at University of Michigan

Hutchins served as Dean of the University of Michigan Law School from 1895 to 1910. Hutchins Hall, the main classroom and administrative building of the law school, is named after him. During Hutchins time as the Dean, he raised the entrance requirements to the law school, as well the adoption of a complete three-year course in Law. Dean Hutchins believed the standards set by a law school should be rigorous.

President of the University of Michigan

Acting President

Hutchins twice served as acting president of the University of Michigan. His first appointment as acting president came in 1897 when current President Angell left to be Minister of Turkey. The second stint as acting president for Hutchins came in 1909 when President Angell resigned. Hutchins was to serve until a new permanent president was found. After a year long search which included the courtship of Woodrow Wilson, the Regents at the University of Michigan decided to offer Hutchins the full-time appointment of President of the University of Michigan. The regents offered 3 years, but Hutchins wanted a 5-year appointment, so after a stormy meeting they agreed on a five-year appointment. However, after 5 years, Hutchins would stay on another five years bringing his time as president to a full ten years.

Alumni Association

Hutchins was very instrumental in strengthening the university's alumni association. As the first Michigan alumnus to serve as president of the university, Hutchins "wanted to reclaim them (alumni) by organization, to persuade them to maintain a continuing interest in the welfare of their university, to advertise in their communities so as to attract the best new students, and to contribute financially toward the University development"

Campus growth

The University saw great growth in his tenure as the student body grew from less than 5,000 to more than 9,000, the Alumni Association grew leaps and bounds, the faculty grew from 427 to 618, the formation of the graduate school, and with the help of the newly organized Alumni Association and their many wealthy donors, there was the addition of many new buildings. The most prized addition in Hutchins' eyes was that of the Michigan Union (1919). The Union was something that he very much pushed for. Many other buildings were erected under Hutchins' watch and many of them are still in use today. That list includes: Hill Auditorium (1913), Martha Cook Building (1915), Helen Newberry Residence (1915), the Natural Science Building (1915), the General Library (1920), and the Betsy Barbour House (1920). Though Hutchins may not have been on the forefront of the development of all the new buildings on campus, the way he was with the union and housing for women, his leadership in establishing an organized alumni organization helped to make much of the new growth possible. During Hutchins' tenure, the University received 130 private gifts, totaling $3,600,000

Graduate school

Hutchins Hall, Law Quadrangle

Hutchins was instrumental in the creation of a separate graduate school from the undergraduate school. He wanted it to be "tough" even if only half the students got in. On January 19, 1910, Hutchins made a speech to the New York University of Michigan Club which was published in the New Yorker; it read, "many of these graduate schools work too hard to get students and too little for results. Some of them are not a credit to the country, and Michigan is not without fault of her own in this respect, but we are working at Ann Arbor to remedy this condition, and we expect soon to have a graduate school in the true sense of the word. There are men in many of the schools who ought to be pushed out into the world to do a man's work instead of hanging around the universities. A reorganization of the system is needed, and at Michigan we are trying to accomplish a renascence. I do not care if we have only thirty students in the school if we only have one real one."

Women on campus

The University also saw considerable growth for women on campus during Hutchins' tenure. Ruth Bordin writes in her book Women at Michigan: The Dangerous Experiment, that, "by 1920, in addition to Newberry and Martha Cook, four small dormitories in converted houses had been provided, and the Betsey Barbour dormitory opened that year. About 350 women lived in sororities, but the great majority lived in a league house." Specifically the development of the Martha Cook Building was due in large part to the great relationship Hutchins had with William W. Cook, who provided the financial contribution for this all female housing facility in honor of his mother, Martha.

WWI

Much of Hutchins' tenure was during WWI. There was much desire from many alumni, faculty, and students to include military drill as part of the class requirements for the male students, as possible preparation if they were called to duty in the war that was happening in Europe. Hutchins felt differently and would not be stampeded into this idea. Hutchins felt at the outset that the University's unique function was to furnish trained leadership for the nation. To make the University simply another military camp for privates was in his view a gross misuse of its potentials, and he resisted it. Hutchins believed with an ever-changing warfare that the students would be better served in engineering to help with the modern war, "whose weapons were applications of physical, chemical, mathematical, and engineering principles."

Retirement

Hutchins retired in 1920, taking the title of President Emeritus. He would live the next ten years up to his death in 1930 in Ann Arbor.

Sources

References

  1. Slosson, E.E.. (1999). "Great American Universities". Elibron Classics.
  2. (9 April 2009). "February Meeting, 1930".
  3. Hutchins, Harry C. Harry Hutchins Biography page 3,box 19 Bentley Library
  4. Denis Larionov & Alexander Zhulin. "Read the eBook Alumni record of Wesleyan university, Middletown, Conn by Conn.) Wesleyan University (Middletown online for free (page 83 of 111)". ebooksread.com.
  5. "Harry B. Hutchins". law.umich.edu.
  6. (1981). "Presidential Profiles". Michigan Alumnus.
  7. Hutchins, Harry C. Harry Hutchins Biography page 14,box 19 Bentley Library
  8. "University of Michigan Law Quad's corbels tell a story". annarbor.com.
  9. Hutchins, Harry C. Harry Hutchins Biography page 26, box 19 Bentley Library
  10. Smith, S. W. (1951). ''Harry Burns Hutchins and the University of Michigan''. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. p.111 http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015000200546;view=1up;seq=151
  11. Peckham, H. H., & Steneck, M. L. (1994). ''The making of the University of Michigan: 1817 - 1992 ; 175th anniversaty edition''. Ann Arbor, MI: Univ. of Michigan Press. p.111 http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015041316780;view=1up;seq=143
  12. Peckham, H. H., & Steneck, M. L. (1994). ''The making of the University of Michigan: 1817 - 1992 ; 175th anniversaty edition''. Ann Arbor, MI: Univ. of Michigan Press. p. 129 http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015041316780;view=1up;seq=145
  13. Hutchins, Harry C. Harry Hutchins Biography page 36 ,box 19 Bentley Library
  14. Hutchins, Harry C. Harry Hutchins Biography page 22-25,box 19 Bentley Library
  15. Smith, S. W. (1951). ''Harry Burns Hutchins and the University of Michigan''. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. p.142 http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015000200546;view=1up;seq=186
  16. Shaw, W. B. (1941). ''The University of Michigan, an encyclopedic survey ..'' Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan. page 79 http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015046427251;view=1up;seq=97
  17. Peckham, H. H., & Steneck, M. L. (1994). ''The making of the University of Michigan: 1817 - 1992 ; 175th anniversaty edition''. Ann Arbor, MI: Univ. of Michigan Press. p. 141 http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015041316780;view=1up;seq=157
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