John Rutherford Everett was born on December 27, 1918, in Portland, Oregon, and was the son of Margaret Myrtle Johnson Everett and Monroe Green Everett, a Presbyterian minister who later served as president of Trinity University, in San Antonio, Texas. He received an AB in 1942 from Park College (later University), in Parkville, Missouri, and an MA in economics from Columbia University the following year. Everett studied ethics at Union Theological Seminary, in New York, and graduated with a BD in 1944. The following year he received a PhD in philosophy from Columbia. Everett married a fellow Park College student, Eunice Elizabeth Sloan, on June 13, 1942, in Connecticut. They had one daughter.
Everett proved to be an energetic and innovative administrator during his decade at Hollins College. Under his leadership, the college constructed four major buildings (including a new library), established a progressive new curriculum and a study-abroad program, and developed coeducational graduate programs in psychology, writing, French, and Spanish. Student enrollment almost doubled between 1950 and 1960, while admission standards tightened and the number of faculty members increased from thirty-nine to sixty-three, the majority of whom held doctoral degrees. Emphasizing the importance of both teaching and scholarship, Everett created a travel and research fund for faculty members and also raised their salaries. He initiated a fund-raising drive and worked to increase the college's endowment to more than $3 million by 1960. That year Roanoke College recognized his achievements with an honorary doctorate of laws.
In 1952 Everett helped establish the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges to strengthen the educational and scholarship programs of small liberal arts colleges and universities in the state. That same year he represented the United States on the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) committee that met in Paris, France, to study the article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights regarding the right to participate freely in cultural and educational pursuits. In 1956 Everett chaired the educational advisory committee of the Council for Financial Aid to Education (later the Council for Aid to Education) and helped to formulate an advertising campaign on behalf of the nation's institutions of higher learning. He contributed articles to scholarly journals and wrote two books, Religion in Economics: A Study of John Bates Clark, Richard T. Ely [and] Simon N. Patten (1946) and Religion in Human Experience: An Introduction (1950). He also continued to teach philosophy while at Hollins.
Everett and his wife divorced in June 1963, and on January 21, 1964, he married Elsie Leivesley Howard, who had a son from a previous marriage. Everett died of pancreatic cancer at a New York City hospital on January 21, 1992. In the twenty-first century, Hollins University continued to offer a scholarship in Everett's name that the school's students had established following his retirement.
Time Line
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December 27, 1918 - John R. Everett is born in Portland, Oregon, and is the son of Margaret Myrtle Johnson Everett and Monroe Green Everett.
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1942 - John R. Everett receives an AB from Park College (later University), in Parkville, Missouri.
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June 13, 1942 - John R. Everett marries Eunice Elizabeth Sloan in Connecticut. They will have one daughter.
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1943 - John R. Everett receives an MA in economics from Columbia University.
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1943–1945 - John R. Everett is an instructor in philosophy at Columbia.
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1944 - John R. Everett receives a BD from Union Theological Seminary in New York.
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1944–1945 - John R. Everett is an assistant in the philosophy of religion department at Union Theological Seminary while working as an instructor in philosophy at Columbia.
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1945 - John R. Everett receives a PhD in philosophy from Columbia.
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1945 - John R. Everett joins the faculty of Wesleyan University, in Middletown, Connecticut and serves as an assistant professor of philosophy for three years.
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1948 - John R. Everett returns to Columbia University as chair of the philosophy department.
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1950 - John R. Everett is elected president of the college by the board of trustees of Hollins College. At age thirty-one, he is the youngest college president in the United States when he takes up his duties in July.
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1950–1960 - Under the leadership of John R. Everett, student enrollment at Hollins College almost doubles while admission standards tighten and the number of faculty members increases from thirty-nine to sixty-three.
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1951 - The U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce names John R. Everett one of the ten outstanding men of 1950 for his contributions to liberal arts education.
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1952 - John R. Everett helps establish the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges to strengthen the educational and scholarship programs of small liberal arts colleges and universities in the state.
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1952 - John R. Everett represents the United States on the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) committee that meets in Paris, France, to study the article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights regarding the right to participate freely in cultural and educational pursuits.
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1956 - John R. Everett chairs the educational advisory committee for the Council for Financial Aid to Education (later the Council for Aid to Education) and helps to formulate an advertising campaign on behalf of the nation’s institutions of higher learning.
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1960 - By this year, President of Hollins College John R. Everett initiates a fund-raising drive and works to increase the college’s endowment to more than $3 million.
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1960 - John R. Everett receives an honorary doctorate of laws from Roanoke College.
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January 1960 - John R. Everett submits his resignation as president of Hollins College, effective on appointment of a successor, to become an educational consultant with Encyclopӕdia Britannica Films, Inc., which contracts with Hollins to develop teaching machine-programs in mathematics and foreign languages for use in public schools.
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June 1960 - John R. Everett resigns as president of Hollins College and accepts an offer to become the first chancellor of the Municipal College System of the City of New York (City University of New York after 1961), where he presides over 80,000 students attending four four-year colleges and three community colleges.
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1962 - John R. Everett resigns as chancellor of City University of New York for personal reasons, and becomes senior vice president of Encyclopӕdia Britannica, Inc., in Chicago.
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June 1963 - John R. Everett divorces Eunice Elizabeth Sloan.
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1964 - John R. Everett is named president of the New School for Social Research (later the New School), in New York City.
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January 21, 1964 - John R. Everett marries Elsie Leivesley Howard, who has a son from a previous marriage.
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1982 - John R. Everett retires as president of the New School.
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January 21, 1992 - John R. Everett dies of pancreatic cancer at a New York hospital.
References
Further Reading
External Links
Cite This Entry
- APA Citation:
Harris, B. S., & the Dictionary of Virginia Biography. John R. Everett (1918–1992). (2016, September 7). In Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved from http://www.EncyclopediaVirginia.org/Everett_John_R_1918-1992.
- MLA Citation:
Harris, Beth S. and the Dictionary of Virginia Biography. "John R. Everett (1918–1992)." Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities, 7 Sep. 2016. Web. READ_DATE.
First published: August 25, 2014 | Last modified: September 7, 2016
Contributed by Beth S. Harris and the Dictionary of Virginia Biography.