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Bradford KNAPP

KNAPP, HURST, WHITE, HOTCHKISS

Posted By: Sarah Thorson Little (email)
Date: 7/23/2012 at 16:52:50

December 24, 1870 –- June 11, 1938

Dr. Bradford Knapp dies at Lubbock after illness of months

LUBBOCK, Tex., June 11 —Dr. Bradford Knapp, 67, president of Texas Technological College and outstanding in agricultural education circles, died today of heart disease. The educator had been in ill health for several months. He was the son of the late Dr. Seaman A. Knapp, known as the "Father of extension work" in the United States. Dr. Knapp became President of Texas Tech in 1932, when he resigned the presidency of Alabama Polytechnic institute at Auburn, where he had been chief executive for four years. Previously, he had been president of Oklahoma A. and M. college at Stillwater from 1923 to 1928. Before he went to Stillwater, he was dean of the college of agriculture at the University of Arkansas. He was associated with his father several years in agricultural work in the south, and practiced law in Clarion, Iowa, from 1899 to 1909. From 1907 to 1909 he was county attorney of Wright county, Iowa. He served as assistant to his father's co-operative demonstration work in the bureau of plant industry of the United States department of agriculture from 1909 to 1911. After his father died in 1911, Dr. Knapp succeeded him in the position and later became chief of extension work in the south. Mrs. Knapp and five children survive. They are: Dewitt Knapp of Lubbock; Dr. Roger Knapp of New Orleans; Bradford Knapp, Jr., of Washington; Mrs. Iryin Hurst of Oklahoma City and Virginia Knapp, a senior in Texas Tech. Funeral services will be held Monday.

Ada Weekly News - Ada, Oklahoma
Thursday, June 16, 1938

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KNAPP, BRADFORD (1870–1938). Bradford Knapp, agriculturist, son of Marie Elizabeth (Hotchkiss) and Seaman A. Knapp, was born at Vinton, Iowa, on December 24, 1870. His precollege schooling was mostly private. In 1885 his father moved from Iowa to Louisiana to manage an extensive plantation, where Knapp gained valuable practical experience in agriculture. In 1888 he entered Iowa State College; after a year he transferred to Vanderbilt University, where he received a bachelor of science degree in chemistry in 1892. After returning to Louisiana, he helped his father manage the plantation until panic brought disaster, when he determined to study law to see whether the loss had been legal. He entered Georgetown University in 1894 and later transferred to the University of Michigan, where he received a B.L. degree in 1896.

After three years as an employee of Iowa State College, Knapp began practicing law in Iowa. In 1909 he went to Washington as assistant to his father, who was then chief of demonstration work. After his father's death in 1911, Knapp was advanced to chief. He prepared a farm program for the South and originated the boys' and girls' farm clubs and home-demonstration clubs. He was sent to Europe in 1913 to study agricultural programs and in 1915 became head of the farm extension program in the South. For outstanding service in increasing food production during World War I, the Agricultural College of Maryland awarded him an honorary doctor of agriculture degree in 1918.

Knapp resigned from government employment in 1920 to enter academic work and served as dean of the School of Agriculture at the University of Arkansas, 1920–23; president of Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College, 1923–28; president of Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1928–32; and president of Texas Technological College, 1932–38. He served with distinction at each institution. As Tech's president, he worked toward development of state support, academic programs, and physical facilities of the relatively new institution. He began a division of graduate studies, the development of the first dormitories, and a new library. He also promoted campus landscape and beautification projects. Knapp Hall, a dormitory on the Tech campus, bears his name.

Knapp was married to Stella White in 1904, and they had five children. He was a Democrat, a Presbyterian, a Rotarian, a Mason, and a member of several fraternal and honorary societies. He served on the National Council of Boy Scouts, the federal Farm Board, and the National Economic League, among other civic involvements. He authored a number of USDA publications and contributed to the periodical literature on agriculture, chiefly on extension work, safe farming, and agricultural economics. Characteristic of the man and his work was his last article, published shortly after his death. The July 1938 article in the Progressive Farmer, a journal in which he had published as early as 1911, was captioned "Needed: A Safe and Secure Agriculture." In the article he outlined a plan of relief for the farming industry.

Knapp had a continuing concern for the family farm and was active in direction of the Ropesville Community Project. Under the Texas Rural Commission, later the Farm Security Administration, the project was established to provide housing and land as well as stock and equipment to low-income farmers. Modest housing, stock, and equipment were made available to more than thirty families in that South Plains project. In June 1938 Knapp presided over the twelfth commencement ceremonies of Texas Tech. He died of a heart attack on June 11, 1938, and was buried in the City of Lubbock Cemetery.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

Sam Hanna Acheson, Herbert P. Gambrell, Mary Carter Toomey, and Alex M. Acheson, Jr., Texian Who's Who, Vol. 1 (Dallas: Texian, 1937). Ruth Horn Andrews, The First Thirty Years: A History of Texas Technological College, 1925–1955 (Lubbock: Texas Tech Press, 1956). Jane Gilmore Rushing and Kline A. Knall, Evolution of a University: Texas Tech's First Fifty Years (Austin: Madrona, 1975). Who's Who in America, 1934–35. Floy Farrar Wilbanks, The Life and Work of Dr. Bradford Knapp (M.A. thesis, Texas Technological College, 1940).

Source: Texas State Historical Association
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fkn01


 

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