David Ross Boyd
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Artist: Mike
Wimmer
Sponsor: Sen. Cal Hobson
and President David L. & Mrs. Molly Shi Boren
Dedication: March 7, 2006
Size: 48" x 36"
Type: Oil on Canvas
Location: South Hallway,
5th floor |
When OU’s first President,
David Ross Boyd, stepped off the train in Norman, Oklahoma,
he was greeted with the barren expanse of prairie without
a university building or tree to be seen. His only remark
at this sight of the future location of the University
of Oklahoma was “What possibilities!”
Born on a farm in Ohio in
1853, Boyd raised his tuition for a college education by
growing and harvesting a field of corn. He became a teacher
at an early age and was later offered the position of superintendent
of the Arkansas City, Kansas school system. While there,
he persuaded town leaders to hire many of the future land
run participants who had been camping nearby and organized
them into making improvements to the local roads and schools
buildings.
The first legislature of the
Oklahoma Territory provided for the establishment of a
university. In the winter of 1891-92, a committee from
the Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, which
as yet existed only on paper, came to Arkansas City to
view the heating system that Boyd had installed in the
school buildings. He became acquainted with the regents
and even recommended two potential choices for the presidency
of the new university. The regents, however, selected Boyd.
Boyd reached Norman on August
6, 1892. It was a small town on the prairie with hardly
a tree in sight. In September, he was joined by his wife
and daughter. Construction of the first University building
was completed in August 1893 at a total cost of $32,000.
In the spring of 1893, President
Boyd began planting trees on the University grounds and
along University Boulevard. Using his own funds, Boyd purchased
the stock of a bankrupt nursery in Winfield, Kansas and
built a five-acre nursery southwest of the University building.
He gave these trees to Norman residents who were willing
to plant and care for them under a contract that they must
pay for each tree that died, while those that lived were
free.
Boyd served as President of
the University of Oklahoma from September 1892 to July
1908. He later served as superintendent of education for
the Presbyterian Mission and established schools in Utah
and the Southwest United States. His final position in
the field of education was seven years as President of
the University of New Mexico.
Boyd embodied in his life and
effort the now famous Seed Sower, the central figure of the
University seal, sowing not only the seeds of knowledge and
opportunity, but the seeds of history and tradition. From
humble beginnings, the continued quest for excellence by
University of Oklahoma leaders like David Ross Boyd has created
one of the nation’s premier learning institutions.
Images are copyright
of The Oklahoma State Senate Historical Preservation Fund,
Inc. and the artist. Please contact Pam Hodges at 524-0126
or hodges@oksenate.gov for
further copyright information. |