PRESIDENT SAMUEL A. BURGESS
As president of Graceland
College of Lamoni, Iowa, Samuel A. Burgess occupies a position of leadership in
educational circles in this part of the state, and his influence has been
widely felt. He was born on the 15th
of September, 1877, in St. Louis, Missouri, a son of Samuel R. and Eveline
Burgess, and of English descent. After
completing his public-school course he entered the St. Louis Manual Training
school and subsequently matriculated in Washington University in that city,
which conferred upon him the A. B. degree in 1900 and the LL. B. degree two
years later. For a number of years he
has been prominent in various societies affiliated with the Reorganized church
of Latter Day Saints and since 1898, with the exception of two years, has been
a member of the general executive committee of the Zion’s Religio-Library
Society, a young people’s organization, and in that connection has done much to
promote the moral and intellectual growth of the young men and women of the
church. For one year he was general
librarian of the Sunday school, while he was the first chairman of the Latter
Day Saints’ Library Commission, of which he has been a member since it s
organization. He has also been president
of the Sunday School Religio-Normal Alumni Association and is a member of the
Church Commission on Social Service.
Since 1911 he has been a member of the board of trustees of Graceland
College; since April, 1914, has served as associate director of the Graceland
Extension Institute; while since June, 1913, he has been president of Graceland
college, a school maintained by the Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints at
Lamoni. Under his direction a high
standard of scholarship has been maintained and the student body has grown
appreciably since he became the head of the school. His relations with the members of the faculty
have been most pleasant and all have worked together for the welfare of the
institution, which is well known in southern Iowa.
On the 15th of
June, 1915, Mr. Burgess was married to Miss Alice May Chase, a daughter of Amos
M. and Eliza Chase, nee France. She was
born October 15, 1892, and is a descendant of Aquila Chase, an Englishman who
landed at Newbury, Massachusetts, in 1660.
Her father is therefore a cousin of Salmon P. Chase, who was secretary
of the treasury under Lincoln and afterward chief justice of the United States
supreme court. Her paternal grandmother
is a direct descendant of -------- Silsbee, an Englishman who landed at Salem,
Massachusetts, in 1626. On her maternal
side she is related to the France family, who came from Illinois to Fayette
township in the early ‘80s, being a granddaughter of Thomas France. She was a student in the public schools of
Lamoni, completing her high school work at the Northwestern State Normal at
Alva, Oklahoma. She took her college
work in the University of Utah at Salt Lake City and in Cornell University at
Ithaca, New York, and from the latter received the degree of Bachelor of Arts
in June, 1914. Her father has been a
traveling missionary of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints for the past twenty years and the daughter was associated with him for
several years as a field worker. It was
as a field worker and missionary that she was in Utah at the time she attended
the university there, all of her spare time outside of school hours being spent
in missionary work, in the church building, various halls and at times in the
streets of Salt Lake City. Despite the
aggressive work against the dominant church of Utah, her scholarship secured
her election to the Gleam, an honorary literary society. Following her graduation at Cornell she
taught Latin and German in the high school at Lamoni. In that connection she was instrumental in
giving the Latin Club a permanent organization with a regular constitution
under student officers, the cub being now known as Nital.
While living in St. Louis Mr. Burgess was a member of the Missouri Athletic Club and of the Civic League of that city and was for two years secretary of the St. Louis Manual Training Association and was a ember of the Washington University Association. He still belongs to the Law Library Association of St. Louis and to the Bar Association of that city, the National Geographic Society of America and the American Economic Association. He also belongs to a number of philosophical organizations and has studied the question of religion and religious training from many viewpoints. He was secretary of the Eight Quorum of Elders and has exerted a deeply felt influence in the work of the Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints. All who know him concede his ability and his personal traits are such that he has also gained many warm and sincere friends.