Wendell E. Dunn
Wendell Earl Dunn | |
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Wendell E. Dunn, Jr. Thomas Dunn | |
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Wendell Earl Dunn, Sr. (October 5, 1894 – July 26, 1965) was a noted educator, longtime principal of Forest Park High School in Baltimore (1935–1961), and president of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.[1]
Early Years in South Dakota
Wendell Dunn was the son of Moncena and Lois Woodward Dunn.
Baltimore teaching career and later life
Dunn served in the Baltimore City School System for 30 of the 43 years he was an educator. The head of numerous local and regional educational groups, he was a vice principal of
On November 25, 1955, Dunn was elected president of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools, the first principal of a public high school to receive this honor. He was named by educators from New York, Maryland, New Jersey, Delaware and the District of Columbia at the opening session of the organization's sixty-ninth annual convention.[6]
Dunn died July 26, 1965, after a long illness, four days after the death of his wife. He had made a lasting impression on the lives of many of his students. One wrote,
Whatever the subject he touched upon, he seemed to go to its core. He spoke our language—with us, never down to us—raising us with his ease and flow of words to an understanding of the ethics and responsibilities that awaited us even as young adults. We are widely scattered today, but wherever we are, we hold the memory of a man who helped to give us direction, who earned the respect and esteem of his students, a mentor to thousands who stand a little straighter because of his guidance.[7]
He was the brother of civil engineer Everett Dunn.
References
- ^ Dunn And Ziefle To End Long Educational Careers. Baltimore Sun. Jun 12, 1961; p 30
- ^ US Patent number: 830979. Filing date: Jan 19, 1905. Issue date: Sep 1906. Title: Absentee balloting system. Inventor: Moncena Dunn
- ^ Wisconsin Man Has New Form of Ballot. Chicago Tribune. Aug 1, 1914
- ^ Wendell E. Dunn, Former High School Principal, Dies. Baltimore Sun. July 27, 1965, p40
- ^ The School Executive, Volume 58 – Page 33, 1938
- ^ Educators elect president. New York Times. November 26, 1955.
- ^ Shirley Balser. Wendell E. Dunn. Baltimore Sun. July 31, 1965 p 10.