Presidents
of Indiana University
Andrew Wylie (1829-1851)
On
October 19, 1829, the Reverend Andrew Wylie was inaugurated as the first
president of Indiana College. Wylie was the third member of the faculty and
taught classes in moral and mental philosophy and literature. He guided the
school through an important time of transition as the state legislature
rechartered the college as Indiana University in 1838. Wylie died in office
from an injury sustained while chopping wood.
Alfred Ryors (1852-1853)
Alfred
Ryors was appointed the second president of Indiana University on June 3, 1852.
He had been a mathematics professor at IU from 1843 through 1848, but left
Indiana to assume the presidency of Ohio University in 1848, a position he held
for four years. Ryors resigned his IU presidency in 1853 to become president of
Centre College in Danville, Kentucky, a position he held until his death in
1858.
William Mitchel Daily (1853-1859)
After
serving one and a half days as a Trustee of Indiana University, the Reverend
William Daily was elected IU's third president on August 2, 1853. He resigned
under pressure on January 26, 1859.
John Hiram Lathrop (1859-1860)
After
serving as the first president of the University of Missouri and the first
chancellor of the University of Wisconsin, John Lathrop was named as Indiana
University's fourth president in 1859. He held the post for one year before
accepting a professorship at the University of Missouri, stating he preferred
faculty life to that of an administrator. In 1865 he was again made president
of the University of Missouri and died in office in 1866.
Cyrus Nutt (1860-1875)
Cyrus
Nutt was elected to be Indiana University's fifth president in 1860 and was
installed on June 27, 1861. IU became coeducational during Nutt's
administration, admitting its first female student in 1867. Nutt led the
university for 15 years before resigning in 1875. He died a few weeks after his
resignation.
Lemuel Moss (1875-1884)
In
September 1875, the Reverend Lemuel Moss, a Baptist minister, came to Indiana
University as its sixth president. During his administration the curriculum was
expanded and there was an attempt to reduce faculty teaching loads and increase
professorial salaries. He resigned in November 1884 to become a lecturer on
Christian sociology at Bucknell University. He died in New York on July 12,
1904.
David Starr Jordan (1885-1891)
On
January 1, 1885, 34-year-old David Starr Jordan was inaugurated as the seventh
president of Indiana University. Jordan was an outstanding scientist and the
first layman to be named president of IU. He oversaw the university's move to
the new campus at Dunn's Woods in 1885, secured money for new buildings from
the legislature, introduced the major department
system, lectured on the value of the university to the state of Indiana, and
increased IU's enrollment and its number of faculty members. Jordan resigned in
1891 to become president of Stanford University, a post he held until 1913. He
died on September 19, 1931.
John Merle Coulter (1891-1893)
John
Merle Coulter accepted the position of president and professor of botany at
Indiana University in 1891. Perhaps the heaviest responsibility during his
administration was replacing the faculty members that followed past- president
David Starr Jordan to Stanford University. Coulter was also instrumental in
continuing IU's extension work, sending lecturers to the larger cities in the
state. In 1893, Coulter resigned to accept the presidency of Lake Forest
University, a position he held until 1896 when he accepted the appointment of
professor and head of the botany department at the University of Chicago. He died
December 23, 1928.
Joseph Swain (1893-1902)
Joseph
Swain was IU's first Indiana-born president. A native of Pendleton, Indiana, he
attended IU as an undergraduate and graduate student, and began his teaching
career in IU's departments of mathematics and biology. He left his
professorship at IU in 1891 to follow departing IU president David Starr Jordan
to Stanford University. He then accepted the invitation to return to IU as
president in 1893, a position he held for nine years. Swain was a member of the
Quaker Church, and though successful at IU, he ultimately accepted the
invitation to become president of Swarthmore College in 1902. He retired from
Swarthmore in 1921 as president emeritus and died six years later.
William Lowe Bryan (1902-1937)
William
Lowe Bryan, Indiana University's tenth president, was
born on a farm near Bloomington, Indiana. After graduating from IU with degrees
in ancient classics and philosophy, his interests shifted toward psychology and
Bryan went on to earn his Ph.D. in psychology from Clark University in 1892.
That same year Bryan helped organize the American Psychological Association and
became one of its charter members. He returned to IU in 1893 to accept a
professorship in the psychology department and the appointment to vice
president of the university. He succeeded Joseph Swain as president in 1902 and
led the institution for 35 years until 1937, at which time he retired as
president emeritus at the age of 76. Bryan presided over the transformation of
IU from a small, traditional liberal arts college into a modern research
university. His most notable accomplishment was the expansion of graduate and
professional training. During his administration, schools of medicine,
education, nursing, business, music, and dentistry were established. He died in
Bloomington in 1955.
Herman B Wells (1938-1962)
In
1938, Herman B Wells was named Indiana University's eleventh president, and at
the age of 35, was the country's youngest state university president. He served
as president for a quarter century and remained a vital contributor as IU
chancellor for another 37 years. His association with the institution spanned
eight decades, dating from when he was a student to his death. Wells was an
educational visionary who helped transform IU into an internationally
recognized center of research and scholarship. Under the Wells presidency, IU
experienced its greatest growth and widened its scope to encompass the globe.
To many people, Wells was an icon for Indiana University.
Elvis Jacob Stahr Jr. (1962-1968)
Elvis
J. Stahr Jr. became Indiana University's twelfth president in 1962 after
serving as the secretary of the Army during the first two years of the Kennedy
administration. Stahr's presidency saw the Gary and
Calumet campuses combined to form IU Northwest, the joint IU-Purdue University
campus established in Fort Wayne, the founding of the School of Library and
Information Science, and the affiliation of the Herron School of Art in
Indianapolis with IU. Stahr resigned from IU in 1968 to accept the presidency
of the National Audubon Society, a position he held until 1981. Between 1981
and his death in 1998, Stahr practiced law in Washington, D.C., and lobbied for
environmental issues.
Joseph Lee Sutton (1968-1971)
Joseph
Lee Sutton was an academic presence on the Indiana University Bloomington
campus for 13 years before being named president in 1968. His tenure saw the
dedication of the IU Main Library in 1970. Sutton resigned his position as
president in 1971 but continued his work as a professor of political science at
IU. He died on April 29, 1972, at the age of 48, as a result of injuries
sustained in an automobile accident.
John William Ryan (1971-1987)
John
William Ryan became Indiana University's fourteenth president on January 26, 1971.
His 16 years of service to the university saw the establishment of IU campuses
in New Albany and Richmond, the formation of various cultural centers on the
Bloomington campus, and the journalism school became a system-wide entity. Ryan
retired in 1987 and was immediately appointed president emeritus of Indiana
University. He remained an active figure within the university, both as a
professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs and as a member of
several boards and committees until his death in 2011.
Thomas Ehrlich (1987-1994)
Thomas
Ehrlich served seven years as the president of Indiana University after posts
in government and the Ivy League. Though his academic background was in private
institutions, he chose to lead a public university because of the
responsibilities and challenges of providing both broad access and quality
education. On retiring from IU, Ehrlich joined California State University as
Distinguished University Scholar and held that position until 2000 when he
became a senior scholar at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching. He resides in Palo Alto, California.
Myles Brand (1994-2002)
Myles
Brand became Indiana University's sixteenth president on August 1, 1994. He
presided over a period of remarkable growth at IU, including record student
enrollments and national leadership in information technology and the life
sciences, while maintaining the university's traditional strengths in the arts
and humanities. TIME
Magazine named IU Bloomington "College of the Year" among research
universities in September 2001, based on the quality of its programs to help
incoming students adjust to college life. Under Brand's leadership, research
grants and contracts more than doubled, and IU received the largest single private
gift in its history, a $105 million grant from the Lilly Endowment to fund the
Indiana Genomics Initiative. In 2001, IU was the leading public university in
private-sector support. Dr. Brand served as president of the National
Collegiate Athletic Association.
Adam W. Herbert (2003-2007)
In
his inaugural address, IU’s 17th president noted that “the opportunity before
us is to shape and lay the stones that will serve as the foundation for
expansions and additions, new spires and buttresses of this magnificent
cathedral of learning.” He did so by overseeing transformative initiatives in
teaching, research, and public engagement. Under his direction, the faculty
instituted a general education curriculum, and brought more than $1.7 billion
to Indiana in research grants and contracts. He oversaw the development of the
Indiana Life Sciences Initiative, designed to establish IU as one of the
nation’s leading centers of life sciences research and Indiana as a leader in
the life sciences industry. He helped each of IU’s eight campuses become more
market smart and mission centered by launching the Mission Differentiation
initiative and enhanced IU’s relationships with Indiana’s community colleges. He
undertook the university’s first major administrative restructuring in 30
years, expanded IU’s physical infrastructure through the construction or
renovation of more than 3,000,000 square feet of university facilities, and
significantly strengthened the university’s athletic programs. Throughout his
presidency, Adam Herbert placed special emphasis on fund raising, particularly
in the area of student financial aid. He also enthusiastically promoted
diversity in IU’s faculty staff, and student body, challenging each IU campus
to develop concrete diversity goals.
Michael A. McRobbie (2007-present)
Michael McRobbie became
Indiana University’s 18th president on July 1, 2007. As a senior
administrator at IU for the past decade, McRobbie has focused his attention on
increasing external funding for IU programs with the goal of doubling such
funding by 2010. He has been instrumental in securing multimillion dollar
grants for life sciences initiatives such as the Indiana Metabolomics and
Cytomics Initiative (METACyt) and the Indiana Genomics Initiative at IU
(INGEN), as well as for the popular New Frontiers in the Arts and Humanities
programs, which supports the creation of major new works of art in a variety of
genres.
Source: History of IU Presidents, Indiana University Office of the
President