Thomas Gatch was born in the town of Milford, Ohio, to Lucinda and Thomas Gatch.[3] In Ohio, Gatch attended Ohio Wesleyan University where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1855.[4] He then moved to Cincinnati, where he took a course at Lane Theological Seminary, and was later awarded an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from the school.[4]
In 1859, Thomas Gatch moved to Olympia, Washington, where he worked as the principal of Puget Sound Wesleyan Institute.[5] The following year, he was appointed as president of Willamette University in Salem, where he served until 1865.[3] He returned to the position as president of the school, serving from 1870 until 1879.[3] During this time Thomas Gatch then earned a Doctor of Philosophy in 1874 from Indiana Asbury University (now DePauw University).[4] He also served as mayor of Salem from 1877 to 1878.[7]
From 1879 until 1881 he was a professor of history at the University of Oregon in Eugene; afterwards he helped found the Wasco Independent Academy in The Dalles, Oregon in 1881.[3] Gatch served as president of that institution until 1886.[3] Gatch was then selected to serve as president of the University of Washington in Seattle in 1887. In 1895 he left the school, and in 1897 he was appointed to the position of president of Oregon Agricultural College (now Oregon State University).[4] While at Oregon State he was also a professor of political and mental science, and was the first president of the school to hold a doctorate degree.[4] Gatch served at the Corvallis school until July 1907 when he resigned as president, though continued teaching until the end of the year.[4]
Later years
After leaving Oregon State in 1907, he returned to his home in Seattle, Washington.[4] Thomas Milton Gatch died in Seattle on April 23, 1913.[3]
References
^Past Presidents. Willamette University. Retrieved on December 23, 2008.
^Horner, John B. (1919). Oregon: Her History, Her Great Men, Her Literature. The J.K. Gill Co.: Portland. p. 125, 153-4, 176
^ abcdefghCorning, Howard M. Dictionary of Oregon History. Binfords & Mort Publishing, 1956.