- Marquis Lafayette Wood
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Marquis Lafayette Wood (October 23, 1829 – November 25, 1893) was a Methodist minister who served as president of Trinity College, the predecessor of Duke University, following the death of Braxton Craven. Wood raised the first endowment money for Duke. He is the only president of Duke who was also an alumnus, and submitted the 1889 resolution to move the school from Randolph County, North Carolina. Wood's one-sentence definition of the college presidency was that "All great enterprises require time and patience and labor and suffering and money." Following the end of his presidency in 1884, Duke was governed by a Committee of the Board of Trustees for three years, until John Franklin Crowell became president. Prior to his tenure at Duke, Wood served as a missionary in Shanghai.[1]
Notes
- ^ Duke's President's. Duke University Archives. Accessed on December 11, 2006.
External links
Presidents of Duke University Brantley York (1838–1842) • Braxton Craven (1842–1863, 1866–1882) • Marquis Lafayette Wood (1883–1884) • John Franklin Crowell (1887–1894) • John Carlisle Kilgo (1894–1910) • William Preston Few (1910–1940) • Robert Lee Flowers (1941–1948) • Arthur Hollis Edens (1949–1960) • Julian Deryl Hart (1960–1963) • Douglas Knight (1963–1969) • Terry Sanford (1969–1985) • H. Keith H. Brodie (1985–1993) • Nannerl O. Keohane (1993–2004) • Richard H. Brodhead (2004–)
The institution was not officially established as Duke University until 1924.
Categories:- 1829 births
- 1893 deaths
- American academics
- American Methodists
- Duke University alumni
- Presidents of Duke University
- North Carolina stubs
- American academic administrator stubs
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