American educator
John Charles Campbell (14 September 1867 โ 1919) was an American educator and reformer noted for his survey of social conditions in the southern Appalachian region of the United States during the early 1900s. He served a term as president of Piedmont College from 1904 to 1907.[ 1]
Background
Campbell was born to Gavin and Anna Barbara Campbell, and grew up in Stevens Point, Wisconsin . He graduated from Williams College in 1892 and received a bachelor of divinity degree from Andover Theological Seminary in 1895.[ 2]
Campbell studied education and theology in New England before traveling to the Southern United States . There he outfitted a wagon to serve as a mobile house as he interviewed working people , particularly farmers .[ 3]
Campbell married first wife Grace H. Buckingham, who died in 1905. In 1907 he married folklorist Olive Dame of West Medford, Massachusetts .
After Campbell's death, his wife Olive established the John C. Campbell Folk School in 1925 in Brasstown, North Carolina .[ 3]
References
^ Lane, Mary Charlotte Ed.D (1997). Centennial History of Piedmont College: 1897-1997 . Demorest, Ga.: Piedmont College. pp. 1โ 228.
^ Davis, David J. (April 1928). "Professor Campbell". Mountain Life and Work . 4 (1).
^ a b "John C. Campbell Folk School: A Unique History" . Retrieved 2008-10-30 .
External links
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