W. J. Adkins
| William Jackson "W. J." Adkins
(Higher education administrator: founding president of Laredo (Texas) College, 1947-1960) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
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| Born | February 28, 1907 Milford, Ellis County, Texas, USA | ||
| Died | May 23, 1965 (aged 58) Austin, Texas | ||
| Spouse | Electa Johnita Morrison Adkins Parents: | ||
| Military Service | |||
| Service/branch | United States Army | ||
| Years of service | 1943-1945 | ||
| Rank | Sergeant | ||
William Jackson Adkins, known as W. J. Adkins or Jack Adkins (February 28, 1907 – May 23, 1965), was from 1947 to 1960 the founding president of Laredo College in Laredo, Texas. At the time the two-year institution located near the Rio Grande was known as Laredo Junior College,[1] an entity of the Laredo Independent School District. It was later named Laredo Community College, and since 2018 Laredo College.
Biography
A native of Milford in Ellis County south of Dallas, Adkins was the second of ten children of William Edward Jackson (1878-1955) and the former Lola Clementine Cook (1888-1971), who outlived her son by six years.[2] Adkins lost his father and a brother, Lonnie Grady Adkins (1912-1955), within six weeks of each other.[3]
Adkins obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1930 from the University of North Texas in Denton, then known as North Texas State College. In 1938, he received a Master of Arts from Texas Tech University in Lubbock, then Texas Technological College. He completed further graduate studies through the University of Texas in the capital city of Austin. In his late thirties, Adkins fought in the anti-aircraft coast artillery from 1943 to 1945 during World War II. In 1944, he was sent to England and assigned to General George S. Patton, Jr.'s United States Third Army as a sergeant in the battalion message center.[4]
Adkins was a high school principal in Claude in Armstrong County, Texas, in Panhandle in Carson County, and Borger in Hutchinson County, all in West Texas. He was the dean of education at Temple Junior College in Temple in Bell County, Texas. In 1947, he left Temple to become the founding president of Laredo College, formerly known too as Laredo Community College, which began with fewer than one thousand students, many returning veterans of the war. After thirteen years, he handed over the presidency of the institutioni in 1960 to Ray A. Laird, who coincidentally was also born in a town called "Milford," in his case Milford, Illinois. Adkins was forty-seven days Laird's junior. In 1964, a master plan was authorized by President Laird to accommodate a college of at least 1,500 students. Under Laird, the institution became self-governing with its own taxing body and elected board of trustees. The enrollment was nearly four thousand students by the time that Laird retired as president at the age of sixty-seven,[5] and the leadership passed to the third president, Domingo Aréchiga, Jr..[6] Campus buildings, all in close proximity to one another, are named for Adkins, Laird, and Aréchiga.
Adkins was a president of the Laredo chapter of Rotary International.[4] Upon leaving Laredo Junior College, he lived in Dallas and then Austin, where he died at the age of fifty-eight in the spring of 1965.[7] His wife, the former Electa Johnita "Babe" Morrison (1904-1988) was born in Oskaloosa in Mahaska County in southeastern Iowa, and died at the age of eighty-three in Clinton in eastern Iowa. She is interred beside her husband at Austin Memorial Park Cemetery.[8]
References
- ↑ jstor=40224489, "Laredo Junior College," no longer accessible on-line.
- ↑ William Edward Jackson (father of W. J. Adkins). findagrave.com. Retrieved on October 26, 2020.
- ↑ Lonnie Grady Adkins (brother of W. J. Adkins). findagrave.com. Retrieved on October 25, 2020.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 William Jackson Adkins. wikitree.com. Retrieved on October 26, 2020.
- ↑ Acknowledgments and Background sections. files.eric.ed.gov. Retrieved on October 26, 2020.
- ↑ Laredo Community College. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved on October 25, 2020.
- ↑ William Jackson Adkins. findagrave.com. Retrieved on October 25, 2020.
- ↑ Electa Johnita "Babe" Morrison Adkins (wife of W. J. Adkins). findagrave.com. Retrieved on October 25, 2020.