![]() |
Eugene Fair |
|
Upon completing his Masters degree, he was promoted to Professor of American History and when political science and history became separate departments in 1916, he was named Professor of Political Science and head of the department. He took another leave a few years later to return to graduate school and earned a PhD from Columbia University in 1923. Two years later, on September 1, 1925, he took over as 6th President of the school, by this time known as Northeast Missouri State Teachers College. Fair was politically active most of his adult life and in 1920 ran for the Missouri House of Representatives on the Republican ticket. He won the election and served as Adair County Representative to the 51st General Assembly while continuing his position at the college. His other activities outside the classroom included leadership roles in the Missouri State Teachers Association and the American Association of Teachers Colleges; he served terms as president of both organizations. He also wrote three textbooks, Outlines of Oriental History (1908), Government and Politics of Missouri (1922), and Public Administration in Missouri (1923). The son of Joel J and Sarah Jane (Brown) Fair, Clarence Eugene Fair was born October 18, 1877 near Gilman City, MO. He met Alta Mona Lorenz, a fellow Normal student from Kirksville, while in school there and the couple married August 19, 1903. They had three children, Elizabeth June, Robert Eugene and Sarah Eleanor, all of whom graduated from Northeast. Fair was speaking before a session of the first national convention of Alpha Phi Sigma honor society in St Louis on August 12, 1937 when he suffered a stroke mid-speech. He died in a St Louis hospital the following day, August 13, and was returned home for burial at Kirksville’s Maple Hills Cemetery. A student apartment complex built in 1958 was named Fair Apartments in his honor and his portrait hangs with his predecessors in the Presidents Gallery. |
| Please Note: This biographical sketch has been compiled from secondary sources and may not be complete or totally accurate; it is therefore subject to update or correction. |
|
Ryle, Walter H.
Centennial History of the
Northeast
Missouri State Teachers College.
Kirksville: the College, 1972. Selby, P.O. One Hundred Twenty-Three Biographies of Deceased Faculty Members. Kirksville: Northeast Missouri State Teachers College, 1962. |
©Truman State University Archives
Rev 3/16/05
Archives Table of Contents | Special Collections | Pickler Memorial Library
Direct questions and comments to
the
Library WebMaster
Copyright © 1996-2004 by
Truman State University,
Kirksville, Missouri. All Rights
Reserved.
Last Modified
01 February 2006
