President Roscoe Pulliam , 1935 - 1944
Pulliam was the first alumnus of the University to be elected
as its president.
Armed with a bachelor’s from Southern and a master’s from the University
of Illinois, he first became superintendent of Harrisburg (Ill.) schools before
being chosen to lead his alma mater in 1935.
He set to work democratizing administrative policy, giving greater say to an
advisory council, faculty and students. A faculty senate and a council of elected
students thrived under his leadership.
Students' achievements along with their welfare and aid received greater attention.
Southern evolved from high-ranking teachers college to a university during his
tenure.
“
An ever increasing number of graduates from the best high schools
in Southern Illinois were drawn to Carbondale because the costs
were lower than elsewhere, and it was a first class school nearest
home,” recalls author Eli G. Lentz in “ Seventy-Five
Years in Retrospect.”
Eventually, overwork and lingering World War I injuries forced Pulliam to run
the University from his bed, which he did for months before he died on March
27, 1944.
