Kenyon Butterfield
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Kenyon Leech Butterfield (June 11, 1868 – November 25, 1936) was an American agricultural scientist and college administrator known for developing the Cooperative Extension Service at the Land Grant Universities. He was president of the Rhode Island College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts (1903-1906); the Massachusetts Agricultural College (1906-1924), and the Michigan Agricultural College, (later Michigan State College of Agriculture and Applied Science, which is now
Michigan State University Michigan State University (Michigan State, MSU) is a public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in East Lansing, Michigan. It was founded in 1855 as the Agricultural College of the State of Michigan, the fi ...
) from 1924 to 1928.


Biography

Kenyon Leech Butterfield was born June 11, 1868, in Lapeer, Michigan, to Ira H. and Olive F. (Davison) Butterfield. He married Harriet E. Millard of Lapeer on Nov. 28, 1895. He attended public schools in Lapeer and earned a bachelor's degree in 1891 and master's degree 1902 at Michigan Agricultural College. Butterfield began his academic career as an instructor of rural sociology at Michigan Agricultural College in 1902, and became president and professor of political economy and rural sociology at the Rhode Island College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, serving until June, 1906. On July 1, 1906, he assumed the presidency of Massachusetts Agricultural College in
Amherst, Massachusetts Amherst () is a New England town, town in Hampshire County, Massachusetts, United States, in the Connecticut River valley. As of the 2020 census, the population was 39,263, making it the highest populated municipality in Hampshire County (althoug ...
. He eventually returned to his ''alma mater'' Michigan Agricultural College as president from 1924 to 1928. Butterfield was an early proponent of extension education programming at the Land Grant Colleges rather than extension activities being a direct responsibility of the U.S Department of Agriculture, an idea championed by fellow Extension pioneer
Seaman A. Knapp Seaman Asahel Knapp (December 16, 1833 – April 1, 1911) was a Union College graduate, Phi Beta Kappa member, physician, college instructor, and, later, administrator, who took up farming late in life, moving to Iowa to raise general crops a ...
. Using state funds in April 1904, Butterfield created an Agricultural Extension Department at the Rhode Island College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, and in 1906 did the same at Massachusetts Agricultural College. The organizational structure of these two colleges formed the basis of the Smith-Lever Act of 1914, which authorized federal funding of comprehensive Cooperative Extension programming by Land Grant Colleges and Universities nationwide. He died from a heart attack at his home in Amherst on November 26, 1935.


Legacy

Butterfield Hall at the University of Rhode Island, Butterfield House at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Butterfield Hall of the Brody Complex at Michigan State University are all dedicated in his name.


Selected works


"The Social Phase of Agricultural Education"
'' Popular Science Monthly'' (1905)
Inaugural Address
Massachusetts Agricultural College (1906)
"Federation of Rural Social Forces"
The Making of America Vol. V (1907)
Dedication Address of the Petersham Agricultural High School
(1908)
"Chapters in Rural Progress"
(1908)
"Rural Life and the Family"
Proceedings of the third annual meeting of the American Sociological Society (1908)
"The Country and the Rural Problem"
(1909)
"The Call of the Country Parish"
(1914) *"A State System of Agricultural Education" (1916)
"The Farmer and the New Day"
(1919)
"Education and Chinese Agriculture"
(1922) *"The Christian Mission in Rural India" (1930) *"The Training of Missionaries for Rural Service" (1933)


References


External links


Biographical Information
(Michigan State University Archives & Historical Collections)

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Butterfield, Kenyon L. 1868 births 1935 deaths University of Rhode Island faculty Leaders of the University of Massachusetts Amherst Presidents of Michigan State University Presidents of the University of Rhode Island