American Decades
Frank, Glenn 1887-194O
UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT, POLITICIAN
A Varied Life.
Evangelical preacher, philanthropist, journalist, college president, politician: Glenn Frank had many careers during his short life, and he excelled at each. A colorful, affable, and intelligent man, Frank was one of the leading college presidents and educational reformers in the United States during the 1930s. A moderate conservative who called himself a liberal, Frank proposed modest programs for educational reform at a time of radical alternatives. He successfully held to the center and then became one of the most articulate conservative critics of the New Deal, becoming for a time a figure who was proposed by many for the presidency of the United States.
Background.
Frank was born in Queen City, Missouri, on 1 October 1887, and he grew up in nearby Green Top, a small agricultural community where almost everyone was white, Anglo-Saxon, and Protestant. Frank...
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1930's Education
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Depression and Education
- Education for African Americans
- The Eight-Year Study and Other School Surveys
- Folk Schools, Labor Colleges, and Other Experiments
- Loyalty Oaths, Red-Baiting, and Academic Freedom
- Management and Labor in Education
- The New Deal in Education
- Progressive Education and Social Reconstructions
- Rural Schools
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1930–1939
