Woodward, Hugh M. (Hugh McCurdy), 1881-1940.
Biographical Statement
Hugh McCurdy Woodward served as the first President of Dixie College in St. George, Utah, beginning in 1911 and continuing through 1918. Emily Woodward, his wife, was hired as Domestic Science and Domestic Arts teacher at the St. George Stake Academy in 1911.
Hugh Woodward was born in December, 1881, in Huntington, Utah to Enoch J. Woodward and Ann L. Raymond Woodward. He attended Uintah Stake Academy in 1900-1901, then Brigham Young Academy High School in 1902-1903. He and his wife, the former Emily Timothy, married on October 18, 1905 in Salt Lake City, and became the parents of three children, one son and two daughters. Hugh Woodward attended the Beaver Branch of BYA (Brigham Young Academy) in 1905-06, then Brigham Young Senior High School in Provo again in 1906-08, graduating with the BYH Class of 1908.
He received his Bachelor’s degree from BYU in 1911 and was promptly hired as the first principal of the St. George Stake Academy. In 1914, Hugh M. Woodward was named the first President of the Dixie Normal College, and because of this he became known as the "Father of Dixie College". During the leadership of President Woodward, the original Dixie College Administration Building and Gymnasium were constructed on Main Street in downtown St. George. Through his efforts, approval was given for the establishment of Dixie Normal College in 1916. This guaranteed that St. George Stake Academy would offer two years of coursework post-high school.
During the hot St. George summers, President Woodward had been working on his graduate studies, earning an M.A. from the University of Utah in 1918. In 1918, the Woodward family left St. George and went to the University of Utah. In 1920, Woodward went to the University of California where he earned his Ph.D. degree. He worked for the Bureau of Public Health in Washington D.C. in 1920-1921, then returned to Brigham Young University in various capacities, including Dean of Summer Session and Professor of Philosophy, until 1936. He spent four summers as a Professor of Education at the University of Washington.
In 1935, Hugh McCurdy Woodward was elected to the Utah State Senate, and soon was persuaded to become a Democratic candidate for Governor of Utah in 1936, although he did not win. Dr. Woodward became a Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, and taught there from 1937 to 1940. He died on August 11, 1940, at the age of 58, in San Francisco, California.
Citation:
http://www.byhigh.org/Alumni_U_to_Z/Woodward/HughMcCurdy.htmlFound in 2 Collections and/or Records:
Florence Foremaster collection
The Florence Foremaster collection contain more than 30 documents from the educational career of Florence Foremaster spanning the years 1909 to 1952.
President Hugh M. Woodward collection
The President Hugh M. Woodward collection consists of various school papers related to President Woodward that he kept during his presidency as the first president of St. George Stake Academy [Utah Tech University] as it changed names from St. George Stake Academy, Dixie Academy and Dixie Normal College in the years 1911-1918.