George W. Hoss Explained

George W. Hoss
Order:2nd
Office:President of the Kansas State Normal
Term Start:July 1, 1871
Term End:December 31, 1873
Predecessor:Lyman Beecher Kellogg
Successor:Charles Rhodes Pomeroy
Order2:8th
Office2:Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction
Term Start2:1864
Term End2:1868
Predecessor2:Samuel L. Rugg
Successor2:Barnabas C. Hobbs
Party:Democrat
Birth Name:George Washington Hoss
Birth Date:6 November 1824
Birth Place:Brown County, Ohio
Death Place:Wichita, Kansas
Spouse:
Alma Mater:Indiana Asbury University
Occupation:Educator

George Washington Hoss (November 6, 1824 – April 11, 1906) was an American educator serving many positions at several institutions. Hoss was most notable for being an Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction and the Kansas State Normal School's (KSN) second president.[1]

Biography

Early life and education

Hoss' parents, Jacob and Jane Kinney Hoss, moved his family to Indiana in 1836, twelve years after Hoss was born in 1824. Hoss attended Indiana Asbury University, where he graduated in 1850 and 1853.[1]

Principal, professor, state educator

After graduating college, Hoss became the principal at Muncie Academy, located in Muncie, Indiana, from 1850 to 1852. After leaving Muncie Academy, he then went to serve as a professor of mathematics at the Indiana Females College in Indianapolis, Indiana from 1852 to 1856 before leaving to become a professor at Butler University from 1856 to 1864.[2] In 1864, Hoss became the eighth superintendent of the Indiana Department of Education.[3] He resigned in 1968.

Kansas State Normal president

On July 1, 1871, Hoss replaced Lyman Beecher Kellogg, to become the Kansas State Normal School's second president.[4] While president, Hoss was able to secure funds needed from the Kansas Legislature to build another building, and the school's enrollment increased to 200. In 1872, Hoss hosted state representatives at KSN, which concluded with the House securing $50,000 for the school with city of Emporia providing $10,000, the day after their visit.[1]

In April 1873, Hoss reported issues with the professors to the Kansas Board of Regents and advised that everyone employed should submit their resignations and for the Board to decide who was to be rehired; the Board decided in May 1873, to rehire Hoss, along with only one other faculty member. In August 1873, Hoss announced his resignation as president to become a professor at Indiana University. He continued until December 31 of that year.[4]

After the normal school presidency

After Hoss resigned from the Normal School in 1873, him and his family returned to Indiana where he became a professor at Indiana University.[5] Seven years later in 1880, Hoss returned to Topeka, Kansas, purchasing The Educationist.[6] In 1884, Hoss became a professor and chair of the English Department at Baker University.[7]

In 1880 after being in Baldwin for six years, Hoss and his second wife, May Engstrom, moved to Wichita, Kansas and founded the Western School of Elocution and Oratory.[8] The Hoss family remained there until his death in 1906.

Personal life

After graduating from Indiana Asbury, Hoss was married to his first wife, Harriet Mitchell, in 1850 and had a son together named Melville Mitchell in 1853.[1] Hoss and Harriet were married until 1886 when she died due to an illness.[1] In 1888, Hoss and May Engstrom united in marriage, in which they had one son named Wendell born in 1892.

On April 11, 1906, Hoss died in Wichita.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: George W. Hoss. emporia.edu. 2015-11-22. 2015-09-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20150906144406/http://www.emporia.edu/~findingaids/ESU001.002.html. dead.
  2. Web site: Report. google.com. 1906.
  3. Web site: Indiana. google.com.
  4. Web site: A History of the State Normal School of Kansas. google.com. 1889.
  5. Indiana University Forty Years Ago - Atwater - Indiana Magazine of History. Iu.edu. September 1905. Atwater. Amzi.
  6. Web site: Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science . google.com. 1893 . Kansas Academy of Science .
  7. Web site: The Journal of Proceedings and Addresses of the National Educational Association. google.com. 1887.
  8. Web site: Report of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. google.com. 1902.