Howard Foster Lowry (26 July, 1901 Portsmouth, Ohio - 4 July 1967 Oakland, California was an American literary scholar, and president of College of Wooster from 1944 to his death. As a scholar he published widely, with a specialty on British literature, especially Matthew Arnold, a nineteenth-century English literary critic and poet. He served with the American Council on Education and was an active lay Presbyterian leader. [1]
Lowry graduated from Wooster in 1923, took a PhD from Yale University in 1931, where he was a Sterling Fellow in 1930 and 1933. [2] He rose through the ranks at Wooster to become Full Professor in 1931. He held a Guggenheim Fellowship for England in 1934 to study the lives and works of Matthew Arnold and Arthur Hugh Clough. [3] From 1935 to 1940, he was general editor and education review editor of New England Quarterly. [4] In 1941, Princeton appointed him professor of English. His inaugural lecture there was titled "Matthew Arnold and the Modern Spirit". [5]
Lowry's publications were generally well received. The New York Times wrote of his edited volume, The Letters of Matthew Arnold to Arthur Hugh Clough, that "this collection of letters will be of immense interest to students of the Victorian literary scene. The statement should be made stronger; scholars of that period cannot do without them." [6] The reviewer in Modern Language Review welcomed The Poetry of Matthew Arnold: A Commentary, written with C.B. Tinker, specifying that "the critical and textual commentary on the individual poems show the ripe scholarship, judgement and understanding of Arnold which we have learnt to expect from the editors." [7]
In 1944, Lowry left Princeton to succeed Charles F. Wishart as president as Wooster, and served until his death 1967. An admiring history of the college opened by saying “This story begins with Howard Lowry — how could it not begin with Howard Lowry, who brought to The College of Wooster the academic standard that for nearly three-quarters of a century has distinguished it from other outstanding liberal arts colleges; the scholar admired and honored on both sides of the Atlantic; the orator with a baritone so mellifluous that his lectures sounded operatic…” [8]
In his inaugural address, September 1945, Lowry outlined a program of independent study. He stipulated that this was not for honors students alone; honors would be awarded only in the senior year on the basis of accomplishment. This program, he continued, would not just be both progressive and traditional, but "an aristocratic education on democratic princples." [9] Independent Study remains a distinguishing part of the college's curriculum, in which each student prepares a mentored independent project. [10]
Lowry continued to emphasize the college's religious orientation. A reviewer of Lowry's The Mind's Adventure (1950) called it an "important and inescapable book," one that endorsed the belief that "a liberal education which omits religion is not, in the nature of things, liberal education at all." [11] In 1957 Time Magazine reported that Wooster sent 10% to 15% of its graduates into the ministry. An aide to Lowry said that “Christianity is not something we just talk about; it’s something we live here. You simply do not have a liberal education when you divorce learning from man’s deepest inquiry.”' [12] Lowry was energetic and successful in raising money for the college, increasing scholarship aid, and improving campus structures. [13] Others recalled the support he offered to theater and arts programs. [14]
Lowry died while on the West Coast on what the New York Times called "a business and pleasure trip." [1]
His biographer, James Blackwood, wrote that while at Princeton, Lowry met a young woman and that the two fell deeply in love; she broke the engagement, however, when it became clear that Lowry's mother would always live with them. Blackwood writes that Lowry's romances were marked by "desire and innocence."
Lowry's record at Wooster was challenged, however, by detailed reports of repeated instances when Lowry took advantage of his powerful position in order to get close to young women and that he had romanced, inappropriately embraced, or made wedding proposals to women students and faculty members. There were reports that Lowry died on the West Coast visiting one of these women. [13] Some protested having the Lowry Center named for him. [15] The Board of Trustees responded that Lowry had "pursued romantic relationsips with recent graduates in ways that were unwelcome, very persistent, and harmful," but that "these matters do not include physical or sexual assault." [16] The renovated Lowry Student Center was dedicated February 25, 2023. [17]
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