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Brown Ayres

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For his grandson the politician, seeBrown Ayres (politician).
American academic administrator (1856–1919)
Brown Ayres
BornMay 25, 1856
DiedJanuary 28, 1919(1919-01-28) (aged 62)
EducationWashington and Lee University

Stevens Institute of Technology

Johns Hopkins University
Occupation(s)University president and professor
Employers

Brown Ayres (May 25, 1856 – January 28, 1919) was an American educator and academic administrator. He was the president of theUniversity of Tennessee and the acting president, dean, and physics professor ofTulane University.

Early life

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Brown Ayres was born inMemphis, Tennessee, on May 24, 1856.[1][2] His parents were Elizabeth Little (née Cook) and Samuel Warren Ayrers, a lawyer.[2] His family moved toNew Orleans, Louisiana, when he was a child.[3]

He enrolled in an engineering course atWashington and Lee University when he was fifteen years old.[3] While there, he was a member of the Fraternity of Delta Psi (St. Anthony Hall).[4] He also founded and was the publisher of a tri-weekly newspaper,The Evening Review, covering Rockbridge, Bath, and Montgomery, Virginia.[5][6] In 1871, he erected a telegraph line in Lexington, Virginia, and taught other students how to use the equipment;[3] his descendants subsequently claimed that his motive for doing so was a desire to communicate more easily with his girlfriend.[7]

He transferred to theStevens Institute of Technology, graduating with a BS engineering in 1878.[8] He was a member ofPhi Beta Kappa andPhi Kappa Phi.[8]

Ayres received a fellowship inphysics atJohns Hopkins University from 1879 to 1880.[1][8] His studies focused on electricity and experimentation with the newly patented telephone, leading to meetingAlexander Graham Bell andThomas Edison.[8][3] In 1878, he helped Bell demonstrate the telephone in New York City.[3]

Ayres was offered a position with Bell's new telephone company but he turned it down to pursue a career in academia.[8] He received a Ph.D. in physics from the Stevens Institute in 1888.[8]

Career

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Ayres started his academic career as a professor of physics andelectrical engineering at the University of Louisiana in New Orleans in 1880; the college becameTulane University in 1884.[8][3] In 1894, Ayres became the dean of Tulane's College of Technology, followed by vice chairman of faculty and dean of the Academic College in 1900.[8]

Throughout his career at Tulane, he followed his interest in electricity.[8] He corresponded with Edison, securing lightbulbs that he used for public demonstrations in New Orleans.[3] He also gave lectures about the benefits of streetcars, guiding the city to install street cars between his home and work.[3] Ayres served on the Jury of Electricity for theWorld's Columbian Exposition in 1893, theCotton States and International Exposition in 1895, and theTennessee Centennial and International Exposition in 1897.[8] He experimented with phonograph recordings and in 1896 was the first person in New Orleans to create anX-ray image.[3]

Ayres correctly predicted the arrival of a comet and received national acclaim for his photographs of a solar eclipse in 1900.[3] In July 1902, he lectured on theoretical physics demonstratedwireless telegraphy (radio) for thousands of educators at the Summer School of the South held at theUniversity of Tennessee.[3] He was a lecturer and planned an exhibit on "Education in the South" for theLouisiana Purchase Exposition in 1904.[9]

In 1904, Ayres became the acting president of Tulane University.[1] Later that year, he became the 12th president of the University of Tennessee, remaining in that position until he died in 1919.[1] Ayres administration at the university focused on fundraising and politics.[3] Under his leadership, the university received its first million-dollar appropriation from theTennessee General Assembly in 1917.[8] This led to improvements in the university's academic standing, admission standards, and increases in enrollment.[3] He also oversaw the establishment of the university's medical school and the division of the business and liberal arts colleges.[3]

Ayres was a fellow of theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science.[2] He served as the president of the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of the Southern States and president of theNational Association of State Universities.[2] He was also vice president of theAssociation of Public and Land-grant Universities.[8] He was a member of theAmerican Institute of Electrical Engineers, theAmerican Physical Society, and the Association for the Promotion of Engineering Education.[2]

Ayres Hall, University of Tennessee

Honors

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Ayres received honorary LLD degrees fromSouth Carolina College, the Stevens Institute of Technology, Tulane University, theUniversity of Alabama, theUniversity of the South, and Washington and Lee University.[1]

Ayres Hall at the University of Tennessee was named in his honor;[3][10] however, for several years, it was named "Ayers Hall".[7]

Personal life

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Ayres married Kate Allen Anderson ofLexington, Virginia, on July 5, 1881.[8][2] The couple had three sons and five daughters.[8] The family lived onSt. Charles Avenue, in theGarden District of New Orleans.[3] Their home was a gathering place for literary people who visited the city.[3]

Ayers was the host and director of the New Orleans Choral Symphony Society.[3] He was also a popular public speaker, known for hismagic lantern shows.[3] He was also involved with the New Orleans Electric Society and was a president of the Louisiana Society of Naturalists.[3] He headed a building campaign and helped establish the Louisiana Industrial Institute, now theUniversity of Louisiana at Lafayette.[3]

Ayres died inKnoxville, Tennessee, at the age of 62 years.[1] He was buried at Greenwood Cemetery in Knoxville.[3]

References

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  1. ^abcdef"Dr. Brown Ayers Dead.; President of the University of Tennessee Dies in Knoxville at 62"(PDF).The New York Times. January 29, 1919. p. 13.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2022-08-10.
  2. ^abcdef"AYRES, Brown – Who's Who In TN". 2013-06-21. Retrieved2024-11-26.
  3. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvNeely, Jack (2021-09-16)."Ayres Hall at 100".Knoxville History Project. Retrieved2024-11-26.
  4. ^Catalogue of the members of the fraternity of Delta Psi - Revised and corrected to August 15, 1912. 5th edition. Sherman P. Haight, 1912. via Family Search
  5. ^"The Daily Picayune".Newspapers.com. New Orleans: The Times-Picayune. 1871-08-17. p. 1. Retrieved2024-11-26.
  6. ^"An Ingenious Youth".Newspapers.com. New Orleans Republican. 1872-08-16. p. 5. Retrieved2024-11-26.
  7. ^abA consequential man: Brown Ayres remembers, by Betty Bean, inKnox TN Today; published November 14, 2018; retrieved January 7, 2025
  8. ^abcdefghijklmnCreekmore, Betsey B."Ayres, Brown".Volopedia. University of Tennessee Libraries. Retrieved2024-11-26.
  9. ^"Manual Training. Progress of South as Shown by Exhibits".Newspapers.com. New Orleans, Louisiana: The Times-Democrat. 1904-07-08. p. 2. Retrieved2024-11-26.
  10. ^"See inside the 100-year-old Ayres Hall on the University of Tennessee campus in Knoxville".Knoxville News Sentinel. February 18, 2021. Retrieved2024-11-26.
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