William Hamilton Fyfe

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Sir William Hamilton Fyfe (born London, England, 1878, died London, 1965) was an English and Canadian classics scholar, educator, and educational administrator. He served as the 10th Principal of Queen's University from 1930-1936, and was the first layman to hold that position. He served as Principal and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Aberdeen from 1936-1943. He was knighted in 1942.

[edit] Biography

William Hamilton Fyfe was born in Kensington, London in 1878. He attended Fettes College in Edinburgh, Scotland. He then went on to Merton College, University of Oxford, where he graduated with a double first in classics. He taught at Radley College from 1901-1903. He then returned to Merton to teach for 15 years. He married Dorothea White in 1908; the couple had three children, Maurice, Margaret, and Christopher.

During World War I, he served as a major with the British Intelligence Department of the War Office. In 1919, he became the headmaster at Christ's Hospital in Sussex, where he modernized the curriculum, and authored several classical texts.

In 1930, he was recruited to serve as the Principal of Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Fyfe had earlier expressed some disdain for the standard of education at 'colonial' universities, and so was recruited to improve the standards at Queen's. He had limited success in that task, since Canada was mired in the Great Depression, and funds were very scarce. But he did succeed in modernizing the curriculum somewhat, in raising the level of admission and scholarship, and in attracting increased prestige to Queen's.

He returned to Great Britain in 1936 to accept the position of Principal and Vice Chancellor at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland, where he served until 1943, when he retired. He was knighted by King George VI in 1942 for his many diverse achievements. Fyfe died in London in 1965. His grandson Stewart Fyfe earned two degrees from Queen's (B.A. Honours 1949, M.A. 1955), served as a professor of political science at Queen's, and is currently an emeritus professor, and a fellow with the Centre for the Study of Democracy at Queen's University, which is chaired by Thomas Axworthy.

[edit] External links

  • link to biography on official Queen's University site:

http://www.queensu.ca/secretariat/History/people/fyfe.html

Academic offices
Preceded by
Robert Bruce Taylor
Principal of Queen's University
1930–1936
Succeeded by
Robert Charles Wallace