Charles Ernest Chadsey (October 15, 1870 – April 9, 1930) was an American educator and school administrator. He served as superintendent of city schools in Chicago, Detroit, Denver, and Durango.[1]
Charles E. Chadsey | |
---|---|
Superintendent of Chicago Public Schools | |
In office March 1919–November 29, 1919 | |
Preceded by | John Shoop |
Succeeded by | Peter A. Mortenson |
Superintendent of Detroit Public Schools | |
In office 1912–1919 | |
Preceded by | Wales C. Martindale |
Superintendent of Denver Public Schools | |
In office 1907–1912 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Charles Ernest Chadsey October 15, 1870 Nebraska City, Nebraska |
Died | April 9, 1930 Urbana, Illinois | (aged 59)
Spouse | Callie Worth Chadsey (née Price) |
Children | Charles Price Chadsey |
Parent(s) | Franklin Chadsey Sallie Maria Chadsey (née Barnum) |
Education | Columbia University |
Alma mater | Stanford University |
Occupation | Educator, Author, College Dean, School Superintendent |
Early life
editChadsey was born in Nebraska City, Nebraska, to Frankin and Marie (Barnum) Chadsey.[2] He graduated from Stanford University in 1892 and from Columbia University in 1894, earning a Ph.D. in philosophy from the latter.[1][2]
Career
editChadsey was a prominent educator.[3] In his obituary, his hometown paper, the Nebraska Daily News-Press, described him as having been, "one of the best known as brilliant young men of his era".[2] In the April 20, 1922 issue of The Daily Illini, (the student newspaper of the University of Illinois, where Chadsey was working at the time) an article about Chadsey and his career was published praising his accomplishments, character, and the high regard in which students and faculty held him. The article declared that, "it was in the positions of superintendent of public schools in Denver, Detroit and Chicago that he proved himself to be the most able man in his line in the country" and considered by many to have been "The foremost school superintendent of the United States."[4]
Chadsey was a member of the National Educational Association and its Educational Council where he served as president of the Department of Superintendence in 1911 and 1912.[5] His fraternal organization affiliations were Phi Delta Theta and Phi Beta Kappa. He was also the author of several books and numerous educational magazine articles.
He additionally served as a lecturer at the University of Colorado and the University of Wisconsin.[2] He also was a writer. He wrote elementary school readers and arithmetics, an historical tract on the Reconstruction era of American history, and articles in educational magazines.[2]
Durango and Denver public schools
editChase began his teaching career working in a high school in Durango, Colorado.[2] He came to serve as the district's superintendent.[5] He, thereafter, spent five years as superintendent of Denver Public Schools. He resigned his job in Denver in 1912 in order to serve as superintendent in Detroit.[2]
Superintendent of Detroit Public Schools
editAfter serving five years as superintendent in Denver, Chadsey was appointed superintendent of Detroit Public Schools at an August 9, 1912 meeting of the Detroit Board of Education after the board had voted to end Wales C. Martindale's fifteen years as superintendent. Chadsey was voted in by 10–1, with a single member of the board instead voting for Dubuque, Iowa school superintendent James H. Harris. No board members that had opposed Martindale's ouster were in attendance, in an apparent failed effort at preventing a quorum. Harris had previously been favored for the job by the members of the board in attendance until Chadsey appeared before the board that night to personally apply for the job.[6] In Detroit, his methods attracted national interest.[2]
Superintendent of Chicago Public Schools
editIn 1919, after the death of superintendent of Chicago Public Schools John Shoop, Chadsey was appointed superintendent. He left his post as superintendent of schools for Detroit to assume the role of Chicago's superintendent in March.[7] The Chicago Board of Education had hired Chadsey with an unprecedented $18,000 annual salary.[2] This very large salary attracted significant public discussion.[5]
On April 2, less than month after Chadsey had started in the position, mayor William Hale Thompson asked that he resign.[2] Thompson had publicly taken issue with Chadsey having not been hired from within the ranks of the school district, remarking,
Chadsey may be a great educator, but it is not fair to our great educational system to go outside of the city for a superintendent. It is not treating our people squarely to lay down the principle that we are incapable of building our own teachers to fill any positions the schools afford.[2]
In late April 1919, being reelected mayor in the Chicago mayoral election earlier that month, Thompson had the majority of Board of Education that was aligned with him strip Chadsey of his powers and duties and replaced him with a "successor". Thompson also had the Chicago police lock Chadsey out of his office at the headquarters building of the school board after Chadsey refused to cooperate.[5][7][8] Supporters of Chadsey brought about quo warranto proceedings seeking to compel his reinstatement by the Board of Education. On November 9, 1919, Circuit Court of Cook County Judge Kickham Scanlan ordered Mortenson removed and Chadsey reinstated with his authority as superintendent.[5][7] However, Chadsey resigned on November 29, 1919, complaining that the Chicago Board of Education had refused to cooperate with his leadership as the school district's superintendent, and declaring that he did not intend to act as a figurehead superintendent.[5] He only been able to act as superintendent for mere weeks of his tenure due to the actions of Thompson and the Board of Education. Some members of the Board of Education were ultimately convicted of conspiracy for Chadsey's ouster and were sentenced by a judge in the Circuit Court of Cook County.[7][8][9]
Later career
editAfter leaving Chicago Public Schools, he taught at the University of Chicago. His career ended at University of Illinois College of Education at Urbana-Champaign where he served as dean until his death at age 59.[2]
Personal life and death
editChadsey married Callie Worth Price of Durango in 1897.[5] They had one son, Charles Prince Chadsey. On April 9, 1930, at the age of 59, Chadsey died in Urbana, Illinois of a heart attack which came following two days of illness. He was survived by both his wife and son.[2]
Works
edit- Chadsey, Charles E. The Struggle Between President Johnson and Congress Over Reconstruction (1897)
- Chadsey, Charles E. America in the making: From wilderness to world power (1928)
See also
edit- Marquis, Albert Nelson. The Book of Detroiters: A Biographical Dictionary Of Leading Living Men Of The City of Detroit (1908) 2nd Edition (1914)
References
edit- ^ a b The Book of Detroiters: A Biographical Dictionary Of Leading Living Men Of The City of Detroit (1908) 2nd Edition (1914)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Death Comes to Famed Educator". Newspapers.com. Nebraska Daily News-Press. April 11, 1930. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
- ^ "January 03, 1919 - Image 7". The Detroit Jewish News Digital Archives. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
- ^ The Daily Illini, April 20, 1922; Volume 51, Number 166.
- ^ a b c d e f g "C.E. Chadsey, Former Head of Schools, Dies". Newspapers.com. Chicago Tribune. April 9, 1930. Retrieved July 24, 2022.
- ^ "Charles E. Chadsey, of Denver, Chosen Head of Detroit School System". Newspapers.com. The Detroit Times. August 10, 1912. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
- ^ a b c d Counts, George S. (1928). School and Society in Chicago. New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co. pp. 68 and 69. ISBN 040503704X.
- ^ a b "Mrs. Snodgrass Draws Penalty". Newspapers.com. The Daily Gate City and Constitution-Democrat. June 23, 1920. Retrieved May 6, 2021.
- ^ James, Michael. The Chicago Board of Education Desegregation Policies and Practices [1975-1985]: A Historical Examination of the Administrations of Superintendents Dr. Joseph P. Hannon and Dr. Ruth Love. Loyola University Chicago. pp. 24–25. Retrieved March 11, 2020.