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History of Fort Hays State University
Excerpts from Lighthouse on the Plains
by Dr. James Forsythe
Fort Hays State University is located at Hays,
Ellis County, Kansas. It is approximately 250 miles west of Kansas
City, Missouri, and 325 miles east of Denver, Colorado. It was
the farthest west of any of the schools in the Central High Plains
when it was founded. The university serves a vast area of western
Kansas that is approximately 250 miles long and 225 miles deep.
It also attracts students from contiguous counties in Nebraska,
Colorado, and Oklahoma. The constituency that once was essentially
agrarian has changed as the new economy of the world has changed.
More non-traditional and international students attend, and thus
there is more of a global view of the world on the campus.
The presidents of Fort Hays State have all been men of vision.
That is not unusual, as most colleges and universities can evoke
the same claim for their schools. However, the unusual circumstances
of the founding of Fort Hays State and its location caused these
men to have special kinds of dreams, special visions, about their
special school. Principal William S. Picken wanted autonomy for
his Normal School. He wanted it to be a college, and he wanted
it to be of service to western Kansas.
President William Alexander Lewis was a man with a vision of the
campus and the mission of the school. He led Fort Hays State from
being a Normal School to being a liberal arts college.
The Great Depression and the Dust Bowl challenged President Clarence
E. Rarick. Instead of fully pursuing his vision, it fell his lot
to preserve the dreams and the visions of Picken and Lewis so
that the lighthouse on the plains would survive.
War forced President Lyman Dwight Wooster, who wanted strong liberal
arts and graduate programs, to make adjustments to accommodate
the military. After the war, he had to struggle to find living
accommodations for students and to find quality faculty to teach
them.
The "Builder-president," Dr. Morton Christy "Pete"
Cunningham, directed Fort Hays through the time of upward spiraling
enrollments. He spent twenty years struggling to keep up with
buildings and locating quality faculty.
President John W. Gustad piloted Fort Hays State through the traumatic
years of Vietnam, student rebelliousness, and social unrest. The
many changes that he brought about were the final steps in preparation
for university status.
Dr. Gerald W. Tomanek had a dream that his college would become
a university, and the dream became reality in April 1977. He also
dreamed of better classrooms. Budgets were a challenge, but he
laid the foundation upon which to build for using computers in
the classroom and for research.
Dr. Edward H. Hammond brought a vision of the campus and where
the campus should be going. His vision of "high tech-high
touch" was carried across the state, and the university became
known for the vision and what has been accomplished.
Dedicated faculty, service to western Kansas, the presence of
an agrarian value system, the Christian heritage, loyalty to the
region, dedication carried to the extreme of sacrifice, the aspirations
of starry-eyed farm youths, patriotism, and, of course, rugged
individualism, these were some of the underlying themes that I
found. Overriding these themes and perhaps equal with the theme
of a special destiny is the pioneering spirit. General Philip
Sheridan thought that it was impossible for anyone to live in
the area that is now served by Fort Hays State. Those who came
to settle were beset by many tribulations, and Fort Hays faced
the same tribulations—"floods, drought, dust storms,
crop failures, depression, loss of crops, and war." These
misfortunes sometimes halted temporarily the progress of the school,
delayed the vision. World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam
War, the Persian Gulf War, action in Kosovo, and the horrible
attack on the World Trade Center in New York City on September
11, 2001 represent global issues that have impacted the university
and still impact it. In some ways, perhaps in many ways, each
of these events changed the campus.
As Wooster wrote, when events like this happened, "there
were always leaders with courage and hope to point the way. 'Dust
or no dust, we sing,' was a slogan used in one of the musical
festivals in the so-called 'Dirty Thirties."' This was the
pioneering spirit, and after the attack on the World Trade Center,
that spirit was joined with patriotism and the belief in America
to create a new spirit in the Centennial year.
But deep down at the local level on campus, it was the pioneering
spirit that permitted the dreams of the visionary leaders to come
true. The rains followed the dust storms, the prairies turned
green in spring and the wheat golden in June, and the farms of
western Kansas were alive. The farm families scratch their livelihood
from the prairies of the High Plains, and they have vision. And
when the fall semester arrives each year, these farm families
in western Kansas, many of them descendants of pioneers on the
Kansas frontier, believe that dreams can still come true. Their
young sons and daughters are sent off to college in the belief
that through education their children might have fuller, more
rewarding lives. Many of these young people become students at
Fort Hays State. To them, the past is prologue. For the rest of
us, it is history-the history of Fort Hays State University.
James L. Forsythe
Hays, Kansas
December 2001
Purchase a copy of Lighthouse
on the Plains by Dr. James
Forsythe.
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