Franklyn Bliss Snyder Explained

Franklin Bliss Snyder
Office:11th President of Northwestern University
Nationality:American
Term Start:1939
Term End:1949
Predecessor:Walter Dill Scott
Successor:J. Roscoe Miller
Birth Date:26 July 1884

Franklyn Bliss Snyder (July 26, 1884 – May 11, 1958)[1] was the 11th President of Northwestern University (1939–1949) and an American scholar of Scottish literature.

Personal life

Snyder was the son of a Congregational minister, Peter Miles Snyder, from Connecticut and grew up in Rockford, Illinois. His sister, Alice D. Snyder, was also an academic. She chaired the English Department at Vassar College.[2]

Education and career

He received his undergraduate degree from Beloit College and a Ph.D. in English from Harvard University in 1909. Snyder's dissertation was on Robert Burns and was published as The Life of Robert Burns in 1932. Snyder joined the Northwestern faculty in 1909, became dean of the Graduate School in 1934, and was elected president of the University in 1939, succeeding Walter Dill Scott. Snyder is remembered as being an ardent conservative and uncompromising administrator.

Notes & references

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Encyclopedia of American biography: New series. Winfield Scott. Downs. American Historical. Company. 15 February 1960. American Historical Society. Google Books.
  2. News: Prexy President At Meeting on Women in War Service. November 18, 1942. Poughkeepsie Miscellany News. New York. 4.