From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Category: Professors (page 13 of 14)

Bleeds Scarlet and Grey: Col. George L. Converse

Col. George L. Converse, n.d.

The Reserve Officers’ Training programs for the Army, Navy and Air Force are such fixtures at OSU that it would be difficult to imagine the campus without them. There was a time, however, when there was no such thing as the ROTC program. With the help of George Converse, and several other OSU leaders, the national ROTC program was created and the OSU program flourished.

Converse, who grew up on a farm near present-day Cleveland Avenue, enrolled as a freshman at OSU at age 17, in 1874. After his first quarter, however, he received an appointment to West Point, and eventually graduated in 1880. Two years later, he was a member of the 3rd U.S. Cavalry in Wyoming, when his company was sent to Arizona to combat the uprising by the Apaches, led by Geronimo. In one battle, Converse was shot in the eye and had to ride on horseback for 40 miles to receive medical treatment. The bullet was never extracted, and the rest of his life he wore a black eye patch. University lore said that he could see more with his single eye than most men could see with two.

Due to his injury, he retired from active duty in 1884 and returned to Columbus. He was later called back to serve in the Spanish American War, but returned again to Ohio State in 1900 to serve as the University’s first Commandant of Cadets in the Department of Military Science. He held that position, as well as a professorship and subsequently chairmanship, of that department for 18 years. During his tenure, enrollment grew from 400 to almost 3,000 students. Commandant Converse, whom students affectionately referred to as “Commy,” also gave regular Thursday morning talks to male freshmen. (On Wednesday mornings, the freshmen listened to President William Oxley Thompson.)

Converse Hall, 1949

With the outbreak of World War I, Converse returned to active-duty status, this time as examining officer for all Ohio officer training camps. During that period, as he continued his teaching duties at OSU, he also co-authored the Ohio Plan, along with Pres. Thompson, Gen. Edward Orton Jr. (professor of ceramic engineering) and OSU alumnus Ralph D. Mershon. That plan, which outlined university civilian training programs, became part of the 1916 National Defense Act, which established the ROTC as a national program.

In 1918, he left OSU when the military promoted him to district inspector, overseeing officer training camps in Ohio, Indiana, West Virginia and Kentucky. In 1920, he retired from the military—for good—and returned with his wife, Effie, to their house on Neil Avenue. (Effie had served as interim Dean of Women during the 1918-19 academic year.) He died on November 16, 1946.

Five years before he died, ground broke on the ROTC building, on February 17, 1941. In 1973, the Board of Trustees voted to re-name the building after Converse, who had served longer than any other Commandant at OSU.

Filed by C.N.

Bleeds Scarlet and Gray: Herbert A. Toops

Herbert Toops, 1941

We are celebrating Prof. Herbert A. Toops because it was this week in 1975 that the Board of Trustees named a prize after him for creativity in psychology. And creative Toops was. The expert in standardized testing became involved in data processing, and the psychology department ended up with a free computer because of it, courtesy of IBM.

Toops started his career at OSU as an undergrad, graduating in 1916 with both a B.A. and a B.S. in education. He earned a master’s degree in education the next year, then taught at OSU for a year. After receiving a scholarship to Columbia University, he earned his Ph.D at that university in 1921. After several years working for the U.S. Army and the U.S. Department of Labor, he returned to OSU in 1923 as an assistant professor of psychology. In 1927 he was promoted to professor.

During his 42 years as an educator at Ohio State, Toops became well-known for his work with standardized testing; in fact, he was the creator of the Ohio State Psychological Examination (OSPE), which at one time was given to all incoming freshmen to test their aptitude for college. In his work on standardized testing, he became involved in data processing. According to an obituary published in the Board of Trustees minutes after Toops’ death in 1972, his early involvement in data processing led to IBM giving the Department of Psychology a computer – it was the University’s first.

During his long career at OSU, he supervised 16 doctoral and 20 master’s degree candidates, and published more than 150 articles. He retired in summer 1965 and passed away on August 14, 1972.

Twelve Days of Buckeyes: First telephone line at OSU

Mendenhall, 1874

Ohio State was lucky in its early days to have Prof. Thomas C. Mendenhall on staff. Mendenhall, the first physics professor at what was then called the Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, reportedly used Alexander Graham Bell’s first experimental telephone and he and students from his department were involved in the construction of the first telephone line in the state of Ohio. The line ran from his laboratory on campus to his residence on High Street.  Subsequently, the first transmission of speech by the use of electricity in Ohio was between Mendenhall’s residence and his lab. This was circa 1878, although Mendenhall in his later account of the early days of the campus did not give an exact date.

Telephone in University Hall, 1907

Pretty cool, huh? Even so, ten years later, there appeared to be only one telephone on campus. A “Personal Note” in an 1888 issue of the Lantern said “The Faculty still monopolize the telephone.”

And in light of the recent electronically issued emergency alerts that have been issued by OSU Police, here’s another interesting tidbit: the first Emergency phones, with a direct line to the police department, were placed throughout campus in Autumn Quarter of 1972, and were used that quarter approximately 25 times.

 

 

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