Washington High School (Cedar Rapids, Iowa)
Encyclopedia
Washington High School is a public high school in Cedar Rapids
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Cedar Rapids is the second largest city in Iowa and is the county seat of Linn County. The city lies on both banks of the Cedar River, north of Iowa City and east of Des Moines, the state's capital and largest city...

, Iowa
Iowa
Iowa is a state located in the Midwestern United States, an area often referred to as the "American Heartland". It derives its name from the Ioway people, one of the many American Indian tribes that occupied the state at the time of European exploration. Iowa was a part of the French colony of New...


The First Washington High School

Construction began on the first Washington in 1855 on the corner of Fourth Avenue and Fifth Street S.E. It was a three-story brick building with a white belfry, and it was the largest public school in Iowa at that time. The original Washington was a grade school, and when it opened officially in 1857 it was only partially occupied. A private school preceded it by a few years, and there was a one-room school built at the corner of Second Avenue and Fifth Street, S.E., in 1847. Washington replaced the one-room school and was a source of great community pride. By 1865 it was fully occupied with 300 students. Professor C. W. Burton took charge that year as the school district’s third superintendent.

In the late 1850s and 1860s, the school was known by various names – “the schoolhouse,” the “Cedar Rapids graded school,” and the “second ward school.” In 1875, schools in Cedar Rapids were all re-named after presidents. The oldest building was called Washington School.

It was 1869 before Washington became a high school, and in 1873 Washington had its first graduating class. There were two boys – John E. Leonard and Gordon Murray – and four girls—Mary McClanahan, Eva Stiles, Julia Sargent, and Harriet Boyce – in the Class of ’73.

In 1887, Abbie S. Abbott began her 34-year tenure as Washington High School principal. There were three teachers and 69 students, but rapid growth lay ahead. Plans were underway for a new Washington High School, and construction began in 1890 on the south side of Greene Square Park. The new Washington High School opened in 1892 with a capacity of 500 students.

The Second Washington High School

In 1897, a fire may have weakened the building’s wooden superstructure. Abbott described the blaze:

“The flames which broke out in the boiler room about 6:30 p.m. caused a great amount of smoke. No one was hurt and the fire was extinguished quickly, but not before some damage had been done by the smoke and water….the fire occurred on Friday. On Monday the pupils were back in their classes.”


Enrollment at Washington High School had grown to 720 students by 1906. The school was badly overcrowded, but city elections failed to pass proposals for a west side high school or a new high school on May’s Island in the center of the city. Finally, voters approved an addition to Washington, which was completed in 1910. In 1911, there were 20 teachers and 838 students at the expanded Washington High School.

Music began at Washington in 1912 with the formation of the school’s first orchestra. The first girls’ glee club was organized in 1912 and re-organized as the Cecelians in 1920. The name came from St. Cecelia, patron saint of music. The ensemble’s motto was “Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.” A boys’ glee club was begun in 1916. Its motto was

“Look up – not down,

Look forward – not back,

Look out – not in,

Lend a hand.”


Even before the origin of any of those ensembles, an opera was performed by the seniors in the Class of 1910. The opera “Priscilla” was given at Greene’s Opera House on April 21 and 22, 1910. According to the yearbook:

“ ….those in attendance were not only greatly pleased with the delightful musical production but also were astonished and gratified at the wonderful talent and ability displayed by the high school students in producing a performance of so high an order of merit.
No less worthy of mention are the two artists of the Class of 1910, Grant Wood
Grant Wood
Grant DeVolson Wood was an American painter, born four miles east of Anamosa, Iowa. He is best known for his paintings depicting the rural American Midwest, particularly the painting American Gothic, an iconic image of the 20th century.- Life and career :His family moved to Cedar Rapids after his...

 and Marvin Cone
Marvin Cone
Marvin Dorwart Cone was an American painter in the regionalist style.He was born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa and lived there most of his life. He graduated from Washington High School in 1910. Cone attended college and traveled to Paris with his contemporary and high-school friend, Grant Wood...

, who added greatly to the stage setting by designing and executing the stockade and block house in the first act, and Priscilla’s cottage, and the ‘Mayflower’ in the second act. To them also is due the credit of effective advertising through their clever posters.”


In 1887, the curriculum was primarily languages, mathematics, history, bookkeeping, lunch, and economics. Abbott added physics, chemistry, and other science courses as quickly as possible, and, by 1921, believed that Washington’s science laboratories “….are among the best in the state.” Abbott thought, however, that the automobile, telephone, and the moving picture had “….a rather bad effect on high school students.” When Miss Abbott resigned as principal in 1921, the faculty included 49 teachers and more than 1,000 students.

The 1920s were halcyon years for Washington High School. Fraternities and sororities added to social life on campus, and athletic teams achieved at a spectacular level.

William Shirer first studied journalism at Washington High School. When Abbie Abbott announced her resignation as Washington principal, Shirer wrote a piece about her for the June 4, 1921, issue of “The Cedar Rapids Gazette.” He quoted Abbot as saying:

“ ‘It was in ’87 when I first took up my duties as principal of Washington High School. The building was a small structure containing but four rooms. Not a big affair but then it enabled me to keep a closer eye on the whereabouts of some of my more adventurous students, than I am able to in the present building,’ she added with a twinkle in her eye.”


Shirer summed up Abbott’s career:

“Miss Abby S. Abbott has enjoyed her thirty-four years’ sojourn as principal of Washington High. While her thousands of students know that her strong personality has exerted its influence on them, she believes that the personal contact with so many young people has also had a stimulating effect on herself…She has surely made a record in constructive education that has seldom, if ever, been equaled in the annals of high school work.”


By 1924, Washington High School was becoming overcrowded. Grant School, built on the west side of the Cedar River in 1915 as a vocational high school, was converted to a regular high school. All high school students on the west side began attending Grant instead of attending Washington High School.

In the years between 1922 and 1925, four junior high schools were built in Cedar Rapids. By the 1930s, the Washington High School structure was deteriorating, and additions were constructed at the four junior highs. In 1935, Washington High School was closed for good. The four junior highs became six-year junior/senior high schools. Students in grades seven through twelve on the east side attended McKinley or Franklin; their counterparts on the west side attended Wilson or Roosevelt.

Washington High School was demolished in 1946 after failed attempts to preserve it as a city monument. In 1957, the new Washington High opened at Forest Drive and Cottage Grove Avenue, S.E.

Coach Novak's Tigers

Coach Leo V. Novak’s teams achieved extraordinary successes in basketball, track, and football. Coach Novak is said to have developed more national champions than any other prep coach in the country. Washington athletes were also believed to have held more national prep records than any other high school in America.

In basketball, Novak’s Tigers won several state championships in the 1920s and a national championship at the Stagg Interscholastic Tournament in Chicago in 1921. The Tigers also won the Mid-Western Tournament at the University of Wisconsin competing against teams from ten states.

Novak’s track teams won the State High School Interscholastic Meet five years. They also won the Stagg National Meet at the University of Chicago two years. Those Chicago victories were considered national team championships. His track athletes established numerous event records at Pennsylvania, Duke, Wisconsin, Kansas, Michigan, and Illinois interscholastic meets.

In an almost unbelievable string of accomplishments in the mid-1920s, Tiger track athletes established six national records: quarter-mile relay, three-quarter mile relay, mile relay, 120 yards (109.7 m) high hurdles, 220 yards (201.2 m) low hurdles, and the 440 yards (402.3 m) dash. The quarter-mile relay team of Potts, Loftus, Knapp, and Cuhel also established a world record at the University of Wisconsin on May 3, 1924, with a time of 44.8 seconds.

The Tigers’ football record was also amazing. During the six seasons between 1919 and 1924, the Tigers won 54 games, lost two, and tied two. In 1920, 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924 they were undisputed champions of Iowa. The only loss in 1922 was to Waite High School in Toledo, Ohio.

In 1923, Cedar Rapids Washington and Scott High from Toledo, Ohio, both claimed mythical national championships. To settle the matter, the Tigers traveled to Toledo for a post-Thanksgiving clash with Scott and lost 24-21.

In 1924, Washington won “the national high school championship.” The Tigers, after again winning the state title, squeaked out a 6-0 victory over Du Pont High of Louisville, Kentucky. On Thanksgiving Day, 1924, the Tigers again headed east to meet Harrisburg Technical High School for the national crown. Washington won the title game, 9-0.

The Third and Present Washington High School

September 3, 1957, was the first day of school at new Washington. Principal Fred J. Kluss began the day with an announcement over the intercom, “Here we are, and here we go!” Jefferson High School on Cedar Rapids’ west side did not open until April 1958.

Eastside students had previously attended McKinley and Franklin for grades 7-12. Washington began with grades 10-12 and did not become a four-year high school until 1987.

During the 1956-57 school year, Franklin and McKinley students voted on colors for the new high school and selected royal blue and red. They also picked the “Warrior” to be Washington’s mascot.

Richard DuBois, the new high school’s first choral director, wrote the “Washington Alma Mater” during the 1957-58 school year. The next year, students voted to adopt the “Warrior Fight Song,” also written by DuBois, as Washington’s official fight song.

In the 1960s, John Quinn, the school’s second vocal director, wrote the lyrics to the “Warrior Chant” and adapted the music from a California school. It soon became a tradition to sing the “Washington Alma Mater” and “Warrior Loyalty Chant” at each graduation ceremony. Both are also sung at formal assemblies throughout the school year.

The Monument was chosen for the name of the school yearbook, and The Surveyor was
picked as the name for the school newspaper. The Surveyor, of course,
referred to George Washington’s early career as a surveyor, and The Monument was a reference to the Washington Monument in the nation’s capitol. Both names have been used from Washington’s first year.

In 1958, Washington students voted on a name for the school’s variety show and chose MuDaCo to represent music, dance, and comedy. MuDaCo has been presented each spring since 1959.

The first Commencement Exercises for the new school were held on June 6, 1958, at Kingston Stadium. There were 419 in the first graduating class. Commencement was held at Kingston Stadium for 21 years. Beginning with the Class of 1979, Commencement moved to the U.S. Cellular Center, during the U.S. Cellular Center renovations (2011–2012) WHS graduations will be held at the Cedar Rapids Ice Hockey Arena.

In 1961, there were only two electric typewriters in the typing classroom. In 1980, the first computer appeared at Washington High School. The class gift from the Class of 1961 was a black and white television set. Donald Hugh, Chairperson of the Mathematics Department and the first National Honor Society Advisor, was the last member of the original 1957 faculty to leave when he retired in 1988.

In 1961, 17625 square feet (1,637.4 m²) of classroom space were added to the south end of the building–12 classrooms. In 1971, the area under the library was enclosed to provide new office space for the counselors. In 1990, a new gymnasium was built to accommodate the increase in women’s sports and the ninth grade athletic program.

In 2003, a large wing of six classrooms and six science laboratories was added to the southwest corner of the building. At the same time, a new band room was completed and the entire original music area was remodeled to house the growing vocal and string orchestra programs.

The first principal, Fred J. Kluss, had been principal at Roosevelt before coming to Washington in 1957. Kluss served at Wash only four years before his retirement in 1960, but his fondness for the school lasted far longer. He personally planted the ivy that still grows on several of the school’s walls because he wanted a Harvard-like appearance to the school. He lived into his 90s and, even in his later years, visited the school to check on the ivy.

Kluss was succeeded as principal by Don Birdsell who served for three years. R.O. Fitzsimmons became Washington’s principal in 1962 and held the position for 4 ½ years before leaving to become the first principal of the new John F. Kennedy High School. Donald G. Nau took over as Washington principal in the middle of the 1966-67 school year. Nau guided the school for 14 ½ years. Dr. Ralph Plagman has been principal at Washington High School since 1981.

Washington Alumni

The three Washington High Schools have produced some remarkable alums. Several of the school’s best-known graduates include:
  • Adrian Arrington
    Adrian Arrington
    Adrian Jarrard Arrington is an American football wide receiver who is currently a wide receiver of the New Orleans Saints. He was drafted by the Saints in the seventh round of the 2008 NFL Draft and called up from the team's practice squad before Week 17 of the 2010 NFL season...

     is a wide receiver for the New Orleans Saints.
  • Dedric Ward
    Dedric Ward
    Dedric Lamar Ward is a former American football player and coach. He played Wide Receiver, having played for the New York Jets, Miami Dolphins, Baltimore Ravens, New England Patriots and Dallas Cowboys...

     (born September 29, 1974 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa) is a former American football player and coach. He played Wide Receiver, having played for the New York Jets, Miami Dolphins, Baltimore Ravens, New England Patriots and Dallas Cowboys. He played college football at Northern Iowa.
  • Rob Bruggeman
    Rob Bruggeman
    Robert Bruggeman is an American football center who is currently a free agent. He was signed by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as an undrafted free agent in 2009...

     is center for the Atlanta Falcons.
  • Merlin Aylesworth became president of the National Broadcasting Company
    NBC
    The National Broadcasting Company is an American commercial broadcasting television network and former radio network headquartered in the GE Building in New York City's Rockefeller Center with additional major offices near Los Angeles and in Chicago...

     (N.B.C.) in 1926, and later he was publisher of the New York World Telegram. Earlier he had been managing director of the National Electric Light Association (1919–1926).
  • Ella Clancy was a World War I welfare worker and author of several children’s history books.
  • Arthur A. Collins
    Arthur A. Collins
    Arthur A. Collins was an American entrepreneur, who founded Collins Radio Co., which is now Rockwell Collins, Inc..Art Collins' father owned several thousand acres of farmland. After graduating from Washington High School in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Collins attended several colleges although he never...

    , while still a 15-year-old student at Washington High School, gained fame when he used a radio he built to make contact with the MacMillan expedition in Greenland. Later he was first to make radio contact with Admiral Byrd at the South Pole. In 1933, he started Collins Radio Company and was president of the company for 40 years. He personally held 16 patents.
  • Marvin Cone
    Marvin Cone
    Marvin Dorwart Cone was an American painter in the regionalist style.He was born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa and lived there most of his life. He graduated from Washington High School in 1910. Cone attended college and traveled to Paris with his contemporary and high-school friend, Grant Wood...

     (Class of 1910) became a prominent American painter and long-time Coe
    Coe College
    Coe College is a private, four-year, liberal arts college in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Founded in 1851, the institution is historically affiliated with the Presbyterian Church . Its current president is James R. Phifer. It is one of the smaller universities to have a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa...

     art professor. Cone was a close friend of Grant Wood, and together they created the Stone City Art Colony
    Stone City art colony
    The Stone City Art Colony was an art colony founded by Edward Rowan, Adrian Dornbush, and Grant Wood. The colony gathered on the John A. Green Estate in Stone City, Iowa during the summers of 1932 and 1933.- History :...

     that assembled a group of regionalist painters.
  • Louise Crawford became a professor of music at Coe College
    Coe College
    Coe College is a private, four-year, liberal arts college in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Founded in 1851, the institution is historically affiliated with the Presbyterian Church . Its current president is James R. Phifer. It is one of the smaller universities to have a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa...

     and was widely recognized for her music compositions.
  • Frank Cuhel
    Frank Cuhel
    Frank Cuhel was an American athlete who competed mainly in the 400 metre hurdles....

     (Class of 1924) went on to become a track star at the University of Iowa
    University of Iowa
    The University of Iowa is a public state-supported research university located in Iowa City, Iowa, United States. It is the oldest public university in the state. The university is organized into eleven colleges granting undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees...

    . He was indoor Big Ten champion in the 10 yards (9.1 m) high hurdles in 1928 and a member of the Big Ten championship mile relay teams in 1927 and 1928. In the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics, he won the silver medal in the 400 meter hurdles. Cuhel later became a journalist for the Mutual Broadcasting System.
  • Tim DeBoom
    Tim DeBoom
    Tim DeBoom in Cedar Rapids, Iowa is a professional triathlete from Boulder, Colorado.As of 2005, Tim is a two time winner of the Ironman Triathlon World Championship in Hawaii....

     Two time winner of the Ironman Triathlon
    Ironman Triathlon
    An Ironman Triathlon is one of a series of long-distance triathlon races organized by the World Triathlon Corporation consisting of a swim, a bike and a marathon run, raced in that order and without a break...

     in 2001 and 2002.
  • Paul Engle
    Paul Engle
    Paul Engle , noted American poet, editor, teacher, literary critic, novelist, and playwright. He is perhaps best remembered as the long-time director of the Iowa Writers' Workshop and as founder of the International Writing Program , both at the University of Iowa.-Life:Engle is often mistakenly...

    , a Rhodes Scholar and author of eight books of poems, became a leading American poet. Engle taught in the renowned University of Iowa
    University of Iowa
    The University of Iowa is a public state-supported research university located in Iowa City, Iowa, United States. It is the oldest public university in the state. The university is organized into eleven colleges granting undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees...

     Writers’ Workshop and established the International Writing Program. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in 1976.
  • Kent Ferguson
    Kent Ferguson
    Kent M. Ferguson is a retired diver from the United States. He competed for his native country at the 1992 Summer Olympics, finishing in fifth place in the Men's 3m Springboard event....

     Competed in the 1992 Summer Olympics
    1992 Summer Olympics
    The 1992 Summer Olympic Games, officially known as the Games of the XXV Olympiad, were an international multi-sport event celebrated in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, in 1992. The International Olympic Committee voted in 1986 to separate the Summer and Winter Games, which had been held in the same...

     and finished fifth place in the Men's 3m Springboard event.
  • Cyril Kegler (Class of 1921) was president of the Bishop-Stoddard Cafeteria Company from 1929 until his death in 1975. He was the first Iowan to be inducted into American Restaurant Magazine’s “Hall of Fame.”
  • Russell Knapp (Class of 1926) was an outstanding Washington High School athlete who became a prominent Iowa businessman. Knapp founded Securities Corporation of Iowa. In 1994, he was the 16th ranking tennis player in the U.S.A. for 85-89 year-olds.
  • Aaron Parry
    Aaron Parry
    Aaron Parry is an American synagogue rabbi, counter-missionary expert, and author of several beginners books on Judaism.He was formerly the Rabbi of Young Israel of Beverly Hills...

     Prominent Executive Producer. Has worked on movies such as Barnyard
    Barnyard (film)
    Barnyard is a 2006 computer-animated family comedy film, produced by Nickelodeon Movies and Paramount Pictures, directed by Steve Oedekerk . and produced by Steve Oedekerk, Paul Marshal, and Pam Marsden...

    , Fat Albert
    Fat Albert
    Fat Albert may refer to:* Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids, a cartoon show* Fat Albert , a 1973 comedy album by Bill Cosby* Fat Albert , a 2004 live-action film...

    , Scooby Doo, Osmosis Jones
    Osmosis Jones
    Osmosis Jones is a 2001 live-action/animated comedy film directed by Tom Sito and Piet Kroon for the animated segments and the Farrelly brothers for the live-action segments...

    and the television show SpongeBob SquarePants
    SpongeBob SquarePants
    SpongeBob SquarePants is an American animated television series, created by marine biologist and animator Stephen Hillenburg. Much of the series centers on the exploits and adventures of the title character and his various friends in the underwater city of "Bikini Bottom"...

    .
  • Ron Pexa, All-State and All-American basketball player and college basketball referee. He played college basketball at the University of Missouri
    University of Missouri
    The University of Missouri System is a state university system providing centralized administration for four universities, a health care system, an extension program, five research and technology parks, and a publishing press. More than 64,000 students are currently enrolled at its four campuses...

     for Hall of Fame Coach Norm Stewart. He was a men's NCAA Division I basketball referee in The Missouri Valley, Big Eight and Big Ten Conferences.
  • James A. Reed
    James A. Reed
    James Alexander Reed was an American Democratic Party politician from Missouri.-Biography:Reed was born on a farm in Richland County, Ohio. He moved with his family to Cedar Rapids, Iowa at the age of 3. He went to public schools and attended Coe College...

     served as mayor of Kansas City
    Kansas City, Missouri
    Kansas City, Missouri is the largest city in the U.S. state of Missouri and is the anchor city of the Kansas City Metropolitan Area, the second largest metropolitan area in Missouri. It encompasses in parts of Jackson, Clay, Cass, and Platte counties...

     from 1900-1904. He was a member of the U.S. Senate from his first election as a Missouri Democrat in 1911 until 1929.
  • Beardsley Ruml
    Beardsley Ruml
    Beardsley Ruml , was an American statistician, economist, philanthropist, planner, businessman and man of affairs in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. He was born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. His father, Wentzle Ruml, was a country doctor. His mother, Salome Beardsley Ruml, was a hospital superintendent. He...

     earned his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago and later served as Dean of the University of Chicago
    University of Chicago
    The University of Chicago is a private research university in Chicago, Illinois, USA. It was founded by the American Baptist Education Society with a donation from oil magnate and philanthropist John D. Rockefeller and incorporated in 1890...

     Social Science Department. His illustrious career included the chairmanship of R. H. Macy and Company (1941–47), the chairmanship of the New York Federal Reserve Board during World War II, a stint as advisor to President Franklin Roosevelt, and a prominent role in establishing the International Monetary Fund. He is credited as devising the federal tax withholding system (1943).
  • Dieter Schulte
    Dieter Schulte
    Dieter Schulte is a German trade union leader. He was chairman of the German Confederation of Trade Unions from 1994 to 2002.-References:...

     Washington foreign exchange student in 1958. The youngest member ever elected into the German government.
  • William Shirer, a Washington High School graduate, became one of America’s foremost war correspondents. He was recruited to report from Berlin
    Berlin
    Berlin is the capital city of Germany and is one of the 16 states of Germany. With a population of 3.45 million people, Berlin is Germany's largest city. It is the second most populous city proper and the seventh most populous urban area in the European Union...

     for C.B.S. News
    CBS
    CBS Broadcasting Inc. is a major US commercial broadcasting television network, which started as a radio network. The name is derived from the initials of the network's former name, Columbia Broadcasting System. The network is sometimes referred to as the "Eye Network" in reference to the shape of...

     before and during World War II. Shirer, who worked closely with Edward R. Murrow at C.B.S., also became a well-known author. His books included The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
    The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
    The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich is a 1960 non-fiction book by William L. Shirer chronicling the general history of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945...

     and Berlin Diary.
  • Robert Tomes (1987) earned a PhD in Government and Politics from the University of Maryland, College Park and published several influential articles on counter-insurgency warfare, defense strategy, and leadership. His book, U.S. Defense Strategy from Vietnam to Operation Iraqi Freedom (Routledge, 2007) is required reading at war colleges in the U.S. and abroad. Tomes serves on the boards of two non-profits, the Anna Sobol Levey Foundation and the Council for Emerging National Security Affairs.
  • Robert Stewart joined Theodore Roosevelt’s Rough Riders
    Rough Riders
    The Rough Riders is the name bestowed on the 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry, one of three such regiments raised in 1898 for the Spanish-American War and the only one of the three to see action. The United States Army was weakened and left with little manpower after the American Civil War...

     after graduating from Washington, served in the South Dakota Senate (1893–1903), and became chairman of the Board of Directors of Standard Oil of Indiana (1918–1929).
  • Melvina M. Svec, a long-time educator, began her career in a one-room school in newly-homesteaded South Dakota and taught in various Cedar Rapids schools. She studied her specialty of geography throughout the United States and England, and became a professor at State University of New York at Oswego
    State University of New York at Oswego
    State University of New York at Oswego, also known as SUNY Oswego and Oswego State, is a public university in the City of Oswego and Town of Oswego, New York, on the shore of Lake Ontario...

    . In 1962, the National Council for Geographic Education awarded her its Distinguished Service Award.
  • Brett Edward Stout (class of 1997) fiction novelist and filmmaker. His first novel Sugar-baby Bridge was self-published in 2008 the same year he released his first film, a short documentary about painter/sculptor Ann Royer
    Ann Royer
    Ann Royer is a painter and sculptor living and working in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Her work consists mostly of abstract nudes and horses. She was born in Sioux City, Iowa in 1933.-Education and work:...

    .
  • Carl Van Vechten
    Carl van Vechten
    Carl Van Vechten was an American writer and photographer who was a patron of the Harlem Renaissance and the literary executor of Gertrude Stein.-Biography:...

     (Class of 1898) graduated from the University of Chicago
    University of Chicago
    The University of Chicago is a private research university in Chicago, Illinois, USA. It was founded by the American Baptist Education Society with a donation from oil magnate and philanthropist John D. Rockefeller and incorporated in 1890...

     and became an internationally known writer, artist, critic, and photographer. His interest in African American culture earned him the reputation as “white America’s guide to Harlem.” A pal of Eugene O’Neil, George Gershwin, and Paul Robeson, Van Vechten created a photographic chronicle of his era, a collection of more than 15,000 photographs, many of them portraits.
  • Grant Wood
    Grant Wood
    Grant DeVolson Wood was an American painter, born four miles east of Anamosa, Iowa. He is best known for his paintings depicting the rural American Midwest, particularly the painting American Gothic, an iconic image of the 20th century.- Life and career :His family moved to Cedar Rapids after his...

     (Class of 1910) painted American Gothic
    American Gothic
    American Gothic is a painting by Grant Wood, in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. Wood's inspiration came from a cottage designed in the Gothic Revival style with a distinctive upper window and a decision to paint the house along with "the kind of people I fancied should live in that...

    , America’s best known and most recognized painting, in 1931. That work catapulted Wood to national prominence. Earlier, Wood taught in Cedar Rapids schools and studied painting in Paris
    Paris
    Paris is the capital and largest city in France, situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the Île-de-France region...

     in the 1920s. Later, he was an art professor at the University of Iowa
    University of Iowa
    The University of Iowa is a public state-supported research university located in Iowa City, Iowa, United States. It is the oldest public university in the state. The university is organized into eleven colleges granting undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees...

    .
  • George Nissen
    George Nissen
    George P. Nissen was an American gymnast and inventor who developed the modern trampoline and made trampolining a worldwide sport.-Background:...

     - developer of the modern trampoline.
  • John Lipsky
    John Lipsky
    John Phillip Lipsky is an American economist. He was the acting Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund from May to July 2011. He assumed the post of Acting Managing Director after Dominique Strauss-Kahn was arrested in May 2011 accused of sexual assault...

    (1964) Acting Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund.

External links

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