OSC President William J.
Kerr and three former regents who helped elect him in 1907 at the alumni
banquet, 1932.
This photo appeared
in the July 1932 Oregon State Monthly with the following
caption: "As principal speaker at the alumni banquet, B. F. Irvine
(left), editor of the Oregon Journal and a regent of the college
under the old order, honored president Kerr (right center) and
his 25 years of service to the college. Present also at the banquet
were Hon. J. K. Weatherford (right), '72, venerable graduate
and regent, and E. E. Wilson (left center), '89, also a former
regent." Later that year, Kerr became chancellor of the Oregon
State System of Higher Education. [OSU Archives #388.]
Survey
of Oregon higher education conducted by the United States Office of
Education.
Enrollment: 3,347.
Population in Corvallis: 7,585; in Benton County: 16,555; in Oregon:
953,786.
College staff reduced by 66 positions;
Each staff member donated one day's income each month for five months for unemployment relief;
Staff salary cut initiated by staff members.
Reorganization
of the Oregon State System of Higher Education adopted on March 7;
operational management of OSSHE to be by a Board-appointed Chancellor.
Celebration of President William Jasper Kerr's quarter century of service as
president of Oregon State College on June 4.
On September 6, Kerr appointed as the first Chancellor of the Oregon State System
of Higher Education.
As a consequence of higher education reorganization, the School
of Science (E.L.
Packard, Dean, 1932-1938) and the Lower Division of Liberal
Arts and Sciences (M. Ellwood Smith, Dean) established at Oregon
State Agricultural College; the School of Commerce was transferred
to the University of Oregon; Landscape Architecture and Structural
Design in Architecture became a joint curriculum (OSC and U. of
0.); and the School of Mines was discontinued.
Institution name changed to Oregon State College by common usage; although the
official name, Oregon State Agricultural College, as used in the catalogs, did
not change until 1937.
George Wilcox Peavy, Dean and Director of Forestry, and senior member of
the Administrative Council, appointed acting president (October
10, 1932-January 15, 1934).
The donation of 520 acres northwest of Corvallis by Mary McDonald
served as the nucleus for the future McDonald
Forest (currently 6,811 acres).
Secretarial Science reinstated to degree granting status, under Dean of Business
Administration at the University of Oregon.
Graduate Division
(George
Rebec, Dean) established on September 11.
First annual Dad's Weekend organized.
Non-major departments, exclusive of military and physical education, grouped
together under the Lower Division and Service Departments administrative unit.
George
Wilcox Peavy, B.L., M.S.F., Sc.D., LL.D. (January 15, 1934-June
30, 1940), appointed by the Oregon State Board of Higher Education
as the seventh president of Oregon State Agricultural College. Peavy
was the first faculty member to be appointed president of the college.
He continued as Acting Dean of Forestry during his presidency. President
Emeritus and Dean Emeritus (1940-1951).
The income of the college was 41 percent lower than in 1933.
First Ph.D. degrees conferred (three in Science and one in Agriculture) during
the 65th Commencement.
Summer Session extended to ten weeks: first session, six weeks and second session,
four weeks.
Recognition of tenure by the Oregon State Board of Higher Education.
Professional engineering degrees (Ch.E., C.E., E.E., M.E.) established
on April 22.
Frederick
Maurice Hunter, Ed.D., LL.D. (1935-1946), became the second
Chancellor of the Oregon State System of Higher Education (OSSHE).
William Jasper Kerr became Chancellor Emeritus on September 1.
State tuition scholarships authorized by the legislature.
School of Education established a Guidance Clinic.
Oregon State Chapter of Sigma
Xi (National Science Honor Society) installed.
Name of the institution officially changed to Oregon State College.
A fire nearly destroyed the Agricultural
Engineering Building (now Gilmore Hall) on September 9 -- $36,593
in damages to the building and contents. Building reconstructed
and enlarged in 1939.
School of Engineering and School of Home Economics celebrated their 50th
anniversaries.
New Chemistry
Hall (now Gilbert Hall) dedicated on December 2.