Josiah Little Pickard | |
Birth Date: | March 17, 1824 |
Death Date: | March 28, 1914 (aged 90) |
Office: | 6th President of the University of Iowa |
Predecessor: | Christian W. Slagle (acting) |
Successor: | Charles Ashmead Schaeffer |
Office1: | 3rd Superintendent of Chicago Public Schools |
Term Start1: | June 1864 |
Term End1: | June 1877 |
Predecessor1: | William H. Wells |
Successor1: | Duane Doty |
Order2: | 6th |
Office2: | Superintendent of Public Instruction of Wisconsin |
Term Start2: | 1860 |
Term End2: | 1864 |
Predecessor2: | Lyman Draper |
Successor2: | John G. McMynn |
Party: | Republican |
Josiah Little Pickard (March 17, 1824 - March 28, 1914) was the Superintendent of Public Instruction of Wisconsin, 1860–1864, and the sixth President of the University of Iowa, 1878–1887.
Born in Rowley, Massachusetts, Pickard grew up on a farm near Brunswick, Maine and went to Lewiston Falls Academy in Maine. He graduated from Bowdoin College in 1844. In 1845, he moved west and then moved to Wisconsin, in 1864, and was principal of Platteville Academy now University of Wisconsin - Platteville. From 1860 until 1864, Pickard was Superintendent of Public Instruction of Wisconsin. During that time he was on the University of Wisconsin Board of Regents.
In 1864, he resigned as Superintendent of Public Instruction and moved to Chicago, Illinois to be head of the public school system, a job he began in June of that year. He served until resigning in June 1877 (he alleged that the school board had forced him out in order to appoint his assistant superintendent Duane Doty, which Doty denied).[1] [2]
Finally, he went to the University of Iowa and served as president until his retirement in 1887. He also was President of the State Historical Society of Iowa. After 1889, he retired and from 1900, Pickard lived in retirement with his daughter in Cupertino, California.[3] [4]
Pickard died at his daughter's home in Cupertino after falling from a streetcar and breaking his leg.[5] [6] [7] He was buried in Chicago.[5] [7]