John W. Gilmore

John W. Gilmore
John Washington Gilmore (photo circa 1908-1913, University of Hawai'i Library).
Born (1872-05-09)May 9, 1872
White County, Arkansas
Died June 25, 1942(1942-06-25) (aged 70)
Woodland, California
Nationality United States
Fields Agronomy
Alma mater Cornell University

John Washington Gilmore (May 9, 1872 – Jun 25, 1942 )[1] was an American agronomist, educator and academic administrator who served as the first president of the University of Hawaii from 1908–1913.[2]

Biography

He was born May 9, 1872 in White County, Arkansas to Thomas Griffin and Emily Landrum Gilmore. He received his elementary and secondary education in Fort Worth, Texas. He attended Cornell University, obtaining the B.S. degree in 1898 and the M.S.A. degree in 1906.

Upon his graduation from Cornell, he was the assistant director of the Provincial Agricultural College at Wuchang, China from 1898 to 1900, an instructor in charge of agriculture and nature study in the Honolulu Normal and Training School in 1901. He served as a fiber expert for the Philippine Bureau of Agriculture in 1902. From 1903 to 1907, he worked as an instructor and assistant professor of Agronomy at Cornell University, followed by as a professor of Agronomy in Pennsylvania State College from 1907 and 1908. From 1908 to 1913, he was the president of the University of Hawaii. He went on to teach as a professor of Agronomy at the University of California Davis from 1913 until his death[3]

The Gilmore Halls at University of Hawaii[4] and at the University of California, Davis[5] were both named in his honor. Gilmore's son Raymond M. Gilmore was a zoologist and expert on migration of California grey whales.

Selected Publications


References

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