David Worth Dennis (1849-1916) |
In the fall of 1875 he taught natural science at Richmond High School, and later was named president of Wilmington College in Ohio and Bloomingdale Academy in Indiana. In 1884, he was offered a professorship at Earlham College, a position he held until his death. As an educator, he was innovative and influential, and one of the first to advocate "modern" laboratory methods in both Chemistry and Biology. Earlham had one of the earliest laboratories in which each student had access to a microscope. As a tribute to his outstanding career, the first Junior High School in the city was named the David Worth Dennis Junior High School and dedicated in 1922. His wife, Mattie Curl Dennis, died in 1897, and in 1900 he married Emma Zeller. His son, William Cullen Dennis, became President of Earlham College, and his grandson, David W. Dennis, became a lawyer and U. S. Congressman. |
For more information see: David Worth Dennis in Wayne County Pamphlet File Dennis, David W. An analytical key to the fossils of the vicinity of Richmond, Ind. Richmond, Ind. : Daily Palladium Printing House, 1878. [Richmond Collection 560.9772 D41] Fox, Henry Clay. Memoirs of Wayne County and the City of Richmond Indiana, Volume I. Madison, Wis.: Western Historical Assn., 1912: 6-8. [Adult Non-Fiction 977.263 F79a] |
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