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Guy Stanton Ford

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Guy Stanton Ford
6th President of the University of Minnesota
In office
1938 (1938)–1941 (1941)
Preceded byLotus Coffman
Succeeded byWalter Coffey
Personal details
Born(1873-05-09)May 9, 1873
DiedDecember 29, 1962(1962-12-29) (aged 89)
ProfessionUniversity administrator

Guy Stanton Ford (May 9, 1873 – December 29, 1962) was the sixth president of the University of Minnesota. Ford had originally come to the University of Minnesota in 1913, serving as the dean of the Graduate School and as a professor of history. He became president in 1938 after the sudden death of Lotus Coffman. He left the University of Minnesota in November 1941 to become the executive secretary of the American Historical Association in Washington, D.C., and Editor of American Historical Review (until 1953).[1]

During the First World War, Ford served as the head of the Committee on Public Information's (CPI) division of Civic and Educational Publications. Ford's division oversaw the production of informational bulletins, sample speeches, and other rhetorical aids for use by the CPI's Four Minute Men, a corps of public speakers tasked with addressing audiences around the nation to bolster support for the American war effort.[2] As an historian of European civilization, Ford also directed the publication of "histories" designed to contrast the positive values of American "progressivism" against the evils of German "Prussianism."[3]

Ford's doctoral thesis (Columbia University, 1903) was entitled Hanover and Prussia, 1795–1803. A Study in Neutrality. Before he went to the University of Minnesota, he was a faculty member of Yale University and the University of Illinois. He was also a member of the Literary Society of Washington and the American Philosophical Society.[4][5]

The annual Guy Stanton Ford Memorial Lecture is a public lecture by a distinguished scholar in any of many different fields.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Guy Stanton Ford, 1938–1941". University of Minnesota Office of the President.
  2. ^ Fischer, Nick (July 2016). "The Committee on Public Information and the Birth of US State Propaganda". Australasian Journal of American Studies. 35 (1): 59–60. JSTOR 44779771.
  3. ^ Rosenburg, Emily S. "War and the Health of the State: The U.S. Government and the Communications Revolution during World War I," in Selling War in a Media Age: The Presidency and Public Opinion in the American Century edited by Kenneth Osgood and Andrew K. Frank, 51. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2010.
  4. ^ Spauling, Thomas M. (1947). The Literary Society in Peace and War. Washington, D.C.: George Banta Publishing Company.
  5. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
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Academic offices
Preceded by 6th President of the University of Minnesota
1938 — 1941
Succeeded by


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