David Starr Jordan

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David Starr Jordan bigraphy, stories - President of Stanford University

David Starr Jordan : biography

January 19, 1851 – September 19, 1931

David Starr Jordan (January 19, 1851 – September 19, 1931) was a leading ichthyologist, educator, eugenicist, and peace activist. He was president of Indiana University and was the founding president of Stanford University.

Biography

Early life and education

Jordan was born in Gainesville, New York, and grew up on a farm in upstate New York. His parents made the unorthodox decision to educate him at a local girls’ high school. He was part of the pioneer class of undergraduates at Cornell University, graduating with a degree in botany. He obtained graduate education from Butler University and the Indiana University School of Medicine. While at Cornell, Jordan joined the Delta Upsilon fraternity.

His first wife Susan Bowen died after 10 years of marriage and he then married Jessie Knight, with whom he had four children.

Career

He was inspired by Louis Agassiz to pursue his studies in ichthyology. He taught natural history courses at several small midwestern colleges before joining the natural history faculty of Indiana University Bloomington in 1879. In 1885, he was named President of Indiana University, becoming the nation’s youngest university president at age 34 and the first Indiana University president that was not an ordained minister. He improved the university’s finances and public image, doubled its enrollment, and instituted an elective system which, like Cornell’s, was an early application of the modern liberal arts curriculum.

In March 1891, he was approached by Leland and Jane Stanford, who offered him the presidency of their about-to-open California university, Leland Stanford Junior University. He had been recommended to the Stanfords by the president of Cornell, Andrew White. His educational philosophy was a good fit with the Stanfords’ vision of a non-sectarian, co-educational school with a liberal arts curriculum, and after consulting his wife he accepted the offer on the spot. Jordan arrived at Stanford in June 1891 and immediately set about recruiting faculty for the university’s planned September opening. With such a short time frame he drew heavily on his own acquaintance in academia; of the fifteen founding professors, most came either from Indiana University or his alma mater Cornell. During his first year at at Stanford he was instrumental in establishing the university’s Hopkins Marine Station. He served Stanford as president until 1913 and then chancellor until his retirement in 1916. While chancellor, he was also elected president of the National Education Association.

In addition to his work as Stanford president, Jordan was known for being a peace activist. He argued that war was detrimental to the human species because it removed the strongest organisms from the gene pool. Jordan was president of the World Peace Foundation from 1910 to 1914 and president of the World Peace Conference in 1915, and opposed U.S. involvement in World War I.

In 1925, Jordan was an expert witness for the defense in the Scopes Trial. That same year, he was a listed member in the Bohemian Club and the University Club in San Francisco.Dulfer & Hoag. , pp. 177–178. San Francisco, Dulfer & Hoag, 1925. Jordan served as a Director of the Sierra Club from 1892 to 1903. He served as a member of the initial board of trustees of the Human Betterment Foundation, a eugenics organization established in Pasadena, California in 1928 in order to compile and distribute information about compulsory sterilization legislation in the United States, for the purposes of eugenics.

Role in coverup of the murder of Jane Stanford

In 1905, Jordan launched an apparent coverup of the murder by poisoning of Jane Stanford. Mrs. Stanford died suddenly while vacationing in Oahu of strychnine poisoning, according to the local coroner’s jury. Jordan then sailed to Hawaii, hired a physician to investigate the case, and declared she had in fact died of heart failure, a condition whose symptoms bear no relationship to those actually observed. His motive for doing this has been a subject of speculation. One possibility is that he was simply acting to protect the reputation of the university. However, given that Mrs. Stanford had had a difficult relationship with him, and at the time of her death was reportedly planning to remove him from his position at the university, a more personal motive has been suspected. Jordan’s version of Mrs. Stanford’s demise was largely accepted until the appearance of several publications in 2003 emphasizing the evidence for an unsolved crime.